Documentation celine duval: semiose galerie.
Too, Jian-Xing
The artist Celine Duval, who chooses to be known as documentation
celine duval (all lowercase), has steadily built up a huge stock of
photographs and classified them according to personal impulse. She is
best known for her appropriation of amateur photographs, notably from
family albums. Regrouping pictures on the basis of recurrences in pose,
subject, or composition, she reproduces them in artist's books or
blows them up for digital slide shows and as prints. Staging new focal
points within the photographs, dcd effectively disorganizes the memories
crafted by the albums. Her frequent choice of jovial pictures, however,
makes it hard not to think that she is primarily creating monuments to
the golden days of photography, when, for example, friends and family
would willingly pose in acrobatic formation.
Her series "Les Allumeuses, 1998--2010" (The Teases, or
The Igniters; all works 2011) represents a powerful rift within that
oeuvre. Begun in 1998--when Duval started to collect and categorize
advertisements and other pictures from women's and general-interest
magazines to combat the bafflement their inane thematic trends
inspired--this series did not find its form until 2010, when she became
fed up with both the pictures themselves and the ultra-capitalist ethos
they promote. She decided to burn this part of her stock. The eleven
videos in this show, each titled Les Allumeuses, 1998-2010, with a
subtitle, arc static shots of neat piles of magazine clippings on a
brick hearth. Each video, tightly framing a stack of cuttings, shows a
hand picking up a picture and immediately taking it off camera. We hear
it being crumpled. And we hear the fire it has just fed. Picture by
picture, the pile diminishes until it's gone. The stacks are
grouped according to recurrent details: props such as telephones,
swings, or tree trunks; settings such as swimming pools, forms such as
circles and spheres; literal or implicit gestures such as masturbation.
The extent to which the subjects in dcd's clippings bend and twist
themselves out of shape for the camera is staggering.
dcd's burnings are anything but dramatic. Nor are they
ceremonious. The camera films from an informal angle while reflections
from the fire slightly obscure the document. The artist's decision
to perform the incineration off-screen circumvents even the beauty of a
burning photograph. Such printed matter usually ends up in the dump
anyway, if not as tinder for the fireplace. In the long feminist history of taking images from magazines, most artists, from Hannah Hoch on, have
employed photomontage. In dcd's case, there is no collage, just
crisp, squarely cut pictures. Perhaps the closest comparison for her
work would be that of the little-known Marianne Wex, who in 1979
published the book Let's Take Back Our Space: "Female"
and "Male" Body Language as a Result of Patriarchal
Structures, which brings together a vast archive of found photographs of
the human figure mixed in with her own pictures, all categorized
according to bodily postures. The material singularity of dcd's Les
Allumeuses, however, is that in filming her thoughtfully ordered
clippings destined for destruction, the artist managed to orchestrate a
montage in one continuous static shot.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
dcd came to a point in her work where she had to burn it,
incinerating twelve years worth of pictures selected from magazines, all
carefully trimmed and classified. The bold incisiveness of her gesture
is plain in the fact that its only remnant is a nonsacralized digital
recording. Ironically, a pigment-ink print at the far end of the gallery
reproduces an ad for archival boxes, something dcd will need fewer of
after this reduction of her personal image bank.