0557 - Charles  Cohen
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8
8
70,9
97,2
70,9 x 97,2 cm
£ 310,00
LIMITED EDITION, EDITION OF: 200, SIGNED,
LAMBDA COLOR PHOTOGRAPH, NO.: CCO03
Ready to hang
 
Lumasec
£ 279,00
(artist recommendation)
0,0
External dimension: 70 x 97 cm
All details
Total
(incl. vat plus shipping)
£ 0,00

Limited Editions - therefore subject to selling out and price increases

  • Buff
  • 0017
    0017
  • 0036
    0036
  • 0062
    0062
  • 0119
    0119
  • 0054
    0054
  • 0086
    0086
  • 0272
    0272
  • 0557
    0557
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Buff

The transformation is simple. In the case of Buff, the commonplace is rendered abstract by denying the image its original function. A void replaces what ought to be present, or rather, what is expected. Buff does not have to be based on pornography, but because its intended function is simple and explicit, to entertain the voyeur, it is thus easily manipulated. Ironically, it is because pornography suggests participation that we can observe the phenomenon of stimulation in a more heighten fashion. This is the process of abstraction.
While in most cases the pictures are still clearly erotic, one finds oneself appreciating the image in ways not common to porrnography. This is the effect of abstraction. The color palette, the interaction of light and shadow, negative space, and references to art history contribute to an unexpected beauty. Several dualities become apparent and are changed: the background and the subject (foreground), the refined and the crude, the private and the public, the perceiver and the perceived, and the present and the absent, among others. The relationships between these themes find a dynamic equilibrium dependent on the viewer.
It is the spirit that the participant lends to an object that makes it more than the sum of its parts. If one chooses to react to Buff the way one would to pornography, perhaps one might welcome the opportunity for insight into one’s own relationship to the images. The little bit of abstraction that I introduce is intended to alter a conditioned response just enough to draw attention to the preconceptions that we bring to the act of observation as well as the process of abstraction itself.

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