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Dislocation
Panorama, 2016
34 x 60 inches, 86,3 x 152,4 cm Ed. 1/7 +2 A.P.
22.67 x 40 inches, 57 x 101,6 cm Ed. 1/7 +2 A.P.
Archival pigment print
© Lauren Marsolier

Lauren Marsolier »

Dislocation

Exhibition: 12 Oct – 26 Nov 2016

Wed 12 Oct 18:00

Galerie Richard

121 Orchard Street
10002 New York

212-510-8181


galerierichard.com

Tues-Sat 12-19

Dislocation
Landscape With Lawn, 2015
34 x 60 inches, 86,3 x 152,4 cm Ed. 1/7 +2 A.P.
24 x 42 inches, 60,9 x 106,6 cm Ed. 1/7 +2 A.P.
Archival pigment print
© Lauren Marsolier

Galerie Richard, New York is pleased to present the third solo exhibition by Lauren Marsolier titled Dislocation from october 12 to November 20, 2016.

Located somewhere between fiction and reality, her images represent a mental landscape affected by a world of constant change. They show an unreality, transitional non-places where human action and inhabitation are recorded in strange antitheses of nature and artifice, or, better still, artificial nature and natural artifice.

In a world where photographs are taken and shared in an instant, Marsolier’s images go through many stages and possibilities before finding their definitive form. Created from multiple photographs captured in a variety of locations, each composition is shaped slowly, over time, layer by layer, through trial and error. This approach allows her to represent the world photographically without showing a specific place, focusing instead on a mental experience. Hers is a kind of perceptual photography, exploring what is sensed rather than the immediately visible. In a composite photograph, liberated from the single point of view of indexical representation, a new visual vocabulary can emerge. A subtle combination of multiple perspectives, lighting sources, and distances is used to produce disorientation in the viewer. The landscapes are ambivalent, familiar and yet not identifiable. The work probes our relationship to a globalizing world, marked by the loss of its certainties and an overall sense of placelessness. It constructs an experiential bridge between self and environment, blending the physical landscape with the landscape of the mind. As art critic George Melrod put it, the work exists 'in a limbo-like, in-between state, between fiction and document, between virtual and physical reality (1). Collector William M. Hunt coined a new word to define her works: e-scapes (2).

Marsolier currently lives and works in Los Angeles. In 2015 she was included in a panel discussion at the Tate Modern in London discussing contemporary landscape photography, along with fellow artists: Thomas Struth, Penelope Umbrico, Massimo Vitali and Mishka Henner. Her work is included in the collections of institutions such as the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, the Center for Creative Photography and the Phoenix Art Museum. Marsolier is the recipient of the 2013 Houston Center for Photography fellowship award, which included a solo exhibition of her work at the institution. In 2013, she was also featured alongside Mitch Epstein, Robert Adams, Simon Norfolk, Edward Burtynsky, and others, in the London exhibition Landmark: The Fields of Photography, curated by William Ewing at the Somerset House. She was also part of the Humble Art Foundation 2012 selection of "31 Women in Art Photography" and was featured in the British Journal of Photography as one of 20 photographers to watch in 2013. Her work has been reviewed in such magazines as Artforum, Art LTD, the Huffington Post, PDN, and Musee Magazine. Her 2015 monograph Transition published by Kerber Verlag received International Photography Awards 2015 First Prize in the Fine Art Book category.