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ArchiveExhibition

John Stezaker: Spell

6 Sep-28 Sep 2024
PV 5 Sep 2024, 6-9pm

The Approach
London E2 9LY

Overview

Spell brings together two new bodies of work, the Spell and Life Room series, alongside Stezaker’s ongoing Mask series (1982 – Present).

Created during the emergence from lockdown, the Spell series is inspired by images of animal/human hybrids in Classical mythology and fairytales and their associated themes of magical enchantment and metamorphosis. By cutting silhouettes from his preferred source imagery of 1950s publicity portraits of film stars, Stezaker imposes his cutouts onto natural history illustrations. These contemporaneous illustrations of invertebrates and their aqueous underworlds are used as metaphors for the instability of human identity, through interspecies hybrids and gender fluidity. Figures, like the nymph and the siren, are what the late writer Roberto Calasso (1941-2021) would refer to as mediators between worlds: real and unreal, sacred and profane. In their metamorphic states they bring the magic of the unknown into the everyday world. For Stezaker, 1950’s cinema cast a similar spell: a shadow world of deception and psychological entrapment on the one hand and a space of magic and enchantment on the other.

The Life Room series superimposes male and female silhouettes from an artists’ anatomy book in which figures are posed in similar ways with identical props. It is a doubling strategy in which the delineations of masculine and feminine bodies intertwine ambiguously. These androgynous figures occupy an austere landscape of Platonic forms (plinths suggesting sculptures) which, in their association with gender mutations, take on an otherworldly significance.

Stezaker’s Mask series is an ongoing body of work in which the faces of 1950s publicity portraits are obscured by found vintage postcards. These incompatible images come together to create an ambiguous presence, part face part mask. The contours of a jawline becomes a cliff’s edge; a foaming waterfall becomes the flowing coiffure of the 50s movie star. It is a play on paradoelia, the human predisposition to see faces and figures in amorphous and otherwise non-human configurations. These ambiguous images act as meeting points of receptive (optical) vision and projected (imaginary) vision. Stezaker’s images resist the cultural domination of the former, ultimately restoring the viewers’ participation in images. By removing images from mass circulation, Stezaker cultivates a poetic strangeness from the generic and the everyday.

Press

John Stezaker: Spell press release
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