Friday, 8 October 2010

Rechard Orjis

Question:Choose 3 terms and relate to the practice of Richard.



This week we had a wonderful lecture given by artist Richard Orjis who made some very attractive photography. I like taking pictures very much and Orjis' work inspired me a lot. Also, I realised that Orjis use other medias to present his idea or relate to his photography works. Like the performance art we saw in the video, portrait drawing by using mud as drawing materials. Orjis contained plenty of visual art elements in his work like symbolism, beauty, surface/substance, nature, juxtaposition, dream/fiction and so on. I'd like to select three elements which are strongly reflect from Orjis' work.


Nature

I think it is obvious to see that some nature facts from his work, the beautiful and colourful plants in the images are very attractive. However, it's not easy to understand why Orjis put some beautiful flowers, especially stems of Orchids in fount of a dirty body. I like the idea of how he use objects in nature to state his idea. In western country, Orchids has been known as the " most sexiest flowers on the earth". It looks like talks about the concept of the sex desire and danergous, which is not quite obvious from surface. In My Empire Of Dirt Orjis states that "Nature can be seen as beautiful and pure, and intrinsically good, but also as dangerous and destructive, a spectacle of the devourers and the devoured."(http://www.physicsroom.org.nz/gallery/2008/orjis/)


Surface/Substance


In my opinion, this term has a close relationship with Nature. I think the colourful flowers Orjis put on the human body with runny mud are so delightful and attractive. And that is about surface, the surface of nature. But the surface is not the real meaning of the work. The substance can be seen by permeate the surface of the flowers. Just like things said in the handout of Orjis' lecture" These bouquets and stems if orchids and other flowers may be a form of eye candy, but it's eye candy with a poisonous tinge"


Beauty


When I just look at those portraits with black dirt and mud, they just remind me of miner who working in coal pit and with black dirt on face every day and night. Commonly, people do not think miners could got some beauty. However, it's great to see that Orjis can let people understand that some improbable materials can also be used for present beauty. The video of Orjis' performance art could prove this point. In the gallery, many naked people with coal on the body, walking around and making some actions in an area with creepy background music. All these things could effectively make a kind of cult, culture atmosphere.


In this week, we also watched a DVD called "Manufactured Landscapes", I think the photography work Edward Burtynsky made can also reflect the point- beauty found from improbable materials. I still remember Ed Burtynsky said that he started his project by taking landscapes pictures. And the pictures about the Manufactured Landscapes are mostly taken in China. The content of those pictures are all about the labours, abandoned materials, recycled materials and scene of factory. If you look at Edward Burtynsky's photography from a long distance, you might feel that the mountains stacked by scrap iron are looked like real natural scene. However, When you look them closer, the details can remind people of the hard life of those poor labours, the circumstance made by the life commodities we throw everyday.


So, in the future, about my own practice, I'd like to try to use more materials to present the beauty which can hardly be found from the surface of the materials.

1 comment:

  1. Thanks Chris, a very thoughtful entry! What you were saying about mud being an unusual background for flowers makes me think you have never been a gardener! The point of nature is that it comes from dirt - even the most beautiful flower has its roots in dirt! This is the overlooked aspect most people don't want to recognise - but this is the part that Richard celebrates, and in a way, makes glamorous.

    TX

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