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TRANSFIGURATIONS
Megan Jenkinson: water-into-aether [detail] 2014. Concertina Ultrachrome inkjet prints on Hahnemühle Photo Rag, 95.5 x 144cm, edition of 5 + 1AP

Megan Jenkinson »

TRANSFIGURATIONS

Exhibition: 20 Aug – 20 Sep 2014

Stills Gallery

36 Gosbell Street . Paddington
NSW 2021 Sydney

+61 2-93317775


www.stillsgallery.com.au

Wed-Sat 11-17

TRANSFIGURATIONS
Megan Jenkinson: wind fall [detail] 2012. Concertina Ultrachrome inkjet prints on Hahnemühle Photo Rag, 139 x 47.5, edition of 5 + 1AP

MEGAN JENKINSON
"TRANSFIGURATIONS"


Exhibition: 20 August – 20 September 2014

Do you remember how wondrous those magic postcards used to be? That simple pleasure of tilting them backwards and forwards to see an image transform in your hands? Celebrated New Zealand photographer Megan Jenkinson is well known for working at the cutting edge of that same ‘lenticular’ technology. In the past she has reanimated the atmospheric anomalies of glacial islands, desert oases, and the illuminated nights skies of Aurora Australis. Now, in a selection of recently created works, Jenkinson takes us to the other end of the technological spectrum—presenting meticulously hand-folded photographic concertinas, which return us to that seemingly simple illusion. But like its viewers, this illusion has grown in scale and sophistication.

Jenkinson’s panoramic photographic collages—turned three-dimensional objects—are strikingly seductive, but not in an obvious sense. The natural beauty of fruit and flora, trees and sparkling water, is transformed by the zig-zagged concertina surfaces into stripey semi-abstraction. Each concertina comprises two distinct images, which only appear uninterrupted when viewed from either side. An effect, like flipping a ‘moving’ postcard, which keeps you walking back and forth. Previously, Jenkinson used this movement to make environmental illusions appear and disappear as they might have done for the explorers of exotic lands. In contrast, her new works create a more immediate sense of discovery—immediate because the illusion is so explicitly revealed, and because the transformations they capture take place much closer to home.

wind fall for instance, animates the seasonal change of a Persimmon tree. Yet, rather than moving from past to future, its ripe and richly coloured orange fruits shift back and forth in time; between their swelling days of glory and the autumnal moment of fall. In "water-into-aether", Jenkinson looks to the transformative possibilities of a camera’s focus. As a humble fountain shoots into the sky, its drops of water resemble a sprinkling of crisp snowflakes, while from the opposite direction they expand into orb-like crystals, hovering midair. There is a gentle irony in the way Jenkinson animates these tiny but significant shifts; the quiet magic of the natural world. After all, it is only when we pass them by that her concertinas reveal to us what might so often pass us by.

Jenkinson has long explored the artistic possibilities of sophisticated digital intervention, and the panoramic images comprising these concertinas are no exception. Nevertheless, there is something comforting about the folded physicality of her ‘simple’ constructions; the sculptural splicings seem to offer respite from the intangible nature of digital manipulation. This does more than create a sense of nostalgia, whether for the magic of ‘moving’ postcards, or for another illusion—pre-digital ‘authenticity’. It makes explicit and uncomplicated the complexity of the natural world, and the temporal, spatial and conceptual mediations of that world, when transfigured through the lens of photography.

Megan Jenkinson has exhibited extensively since the 1980s, including in seminal shows, such as Photography Now, Victoria & Albert Museum, London (1989), the Sydney Biennale (1990), and the Sharjah Biennale (1999). She has been the recipient of numerous grants and awards. Her work is held in the AGNSW, NGA, Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa, Auckland Art Gallery, Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris, and The Victoria & Albert Museum, London. Jenkinson is an Associate Professor of Fine Arts at the University of Auckland.