Bettina Lockemann.
Contact Zones
30 January – 11 April, 2010
Württembergischer Kunstverein Stuttgart
Schlossplatz 2
D – 70173 Stuttgart
Germany
With their unspectacular gesturing, Lockemann’s works particularly stand out within contemporary photographic art. The high pictorial quality, the complexity of content, and the precise conceptualization characterizing her works attest to a well-reflected treatment of both the aesthetic and theoretical parameters of photography.
In her elaborate series, the artist pursues various explorative questions relevant to society. She pinpoints urban situations, global structures, constructions of the other, politically defined spaces, or scenarios of control and surveillance. Here, the investigation of relations between image and reality always takes center stage: Which projections and expectations tend to influence our perception of reality? In what ways are these projections inscribed in pictures? Or rather, how can theses projections be undermined by pictures?
Lockemann avails herself of documentary aesthetics, that is, of a pictorial language that we are tempted to interpret as a neutral and veritable representation of reality, even while being aware of its malleability. It is precisely from this point that the artist sets off to consciously mislead the viewer, as is apparent, for instance, in the series Code Orange (2003). This series shows black-and-white photographs of the streets of Washington, D.C. and New York City where the vacuity of interchangeable urban situations intersects with allusions to surveillance and control. Views of blockades, vans, helicopters, and persons are arranged in such a way as to imbue the viewer with a sense of experiencing secretive conspiratorial operations—or a Hollywood film set.
Thematized in the photo series Contact Zone (2008), shot in Japan, is the scrutiny of the other. Here, in lieu of confronting the viewer with documentation in keeping with conceptions of the other, Lockemann instead evokes one’s own culture, which is easily overlooked when focusing upon that which is unfamiliar.
In most of her works, Lockemann is surveying public urban spaces. The series EP/2006/K (2006–2007), in contrast, was captured in interior spaces: in the hallways, conference rooms, or office spaces at the European Parliament in Brussels. Although—or precisely because—the photographs depict the inside of the administrative apparatus, they reveal and illustrate its impenetrability.
The artist’s most recent project, Undetermined Terrain (2009), came to life over the course of several different visits to Istanbul and Ankara. At the fore of her urban excursions in Turkey was a desire to explore the vestiges of change as well as the question of the presence, or absence, of tangible boundaries between Asia and Europe. Here, the eye trained on urban structures is frequently shifted through the emergence of people, vehicles, or buildings.
In addition to photographs, the exhibition is also introducing several video works by the artist, including Border Patrol (2001), a work comprised of three projections in which various border zones—in the sense of invisible borderlines and urban interspaces—are pictorially circumscribed.
Many of Lockemann’s images portray vacuous, interchangeable urban landscapes where the few visible people appear as were they mere staffage. Yet the artist is not only intent on showing modern cities in their facelessness. She moreover brings the faceless into play as a screen of projection, thus exposing images to be read.
For further Information visit:
www.wkv-stuttgart.de/en/press/2010/press-release
www.wkv-stuttgart.de/en/programme/2010/exhibitions/bettina-lockemann