“My subjects evoke
the vanity or fragility of our existence.”
Valérie Belin
Valérie Belin
The French photographer Valerie Belin excludes the narrative and
documentary aspects of the medium in preference to philosophical approach that
explores its abstract possibilities.
As she told the Style.No.Chaser online magazine’s Kwesi Adjin
“My
work is articulated in series of images based on a subtle play of repetitions
and variations that explore a form of photographic abstraction. The absolute
frontality of the viewpoint, the radical two-dimensionality, the absence of
context, and the monumentality of the formats bestow an iconic value on these
subjects chosen for their powerful evocation of the uncertainties and paradoxes
of “life.” My work transcends issues of identity and probes a more existential
realm.”
“I consider myself more an artist than a photographer. I have never
worked on the documentary side of photography. I have always viewed my work in
the same way a painter would consider painting,” the 49 year old Parisian states.
Studying painting and sculpture at the École nationale supérieure d'art de Bourges
in her early 20’s it was her lack of drawing skills saw her gravitate to
photography.
As she recalled “From secondary school onwards, I was significantly captivated
by lessons connected to creation, literature and the history of art in
particular, but I had no specific talent for drawing, I therefore joined the
beaux arts (fine arts) with a great lack of awareness! The freedom that I found
in this institution very rapidly enabled me to consider photography as a prime
tool which allowed me to formalize a relationship with the world… After graduating in 1987, I went to university
to study the philosophy of art where I tried to analyze the relationships
between American minimalism and the changes in the urban fabric.”
Now with museum exhibitions than span
three continents Belin continues to explore her interests of illusion and
artifice that has seen her photograph live models, masks, mannequins, body
builders, plastic fruit and abandoned computers in a search that questions
reality.
As she says “The choice of my subjects is always the fruit of a
necessity to portray an autobiographical character. My work may be
regarded as an obsessive attempt at appropriating the tangible where empathy
with my models plays a major role. I have a marked preference for permanent
metamorphosis that objects and people are subjected to by their social
environment. In this respect, my subjects become artifacts, provisional
displays, fiction; many metaphors of the ‘artificial paradise’ incurred by the
globalization and media coverage of living beings.”
Belin’s current exhibition Super
Models is on show at Edwynn
Houk’s New York gallery until the 19th of December.
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