Paul Shambroom: Picturing Power
Reckitt, Helena; Mullin, Diane and Scoates, Christopher. 2009. Paul Shambroom: Picturing Power. In: "Paul Shambroom: Picturing Power", Weisman Art Museum- University. of Minnesota, United States, 1 April 2008 - 5 April 2009. [Show/Exhibition]
Item Type: |
Show/Exhibition |
Creators: | Reckitt, Helena; Mullin, Diane and Scoates, Christopher |
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Abstract or Description: | 'Paul Shambroom: Picturing Power" was the first exhibition to bring together selections from all five of the American photographer's most important–and highly acclaimed–series to date: Factories (1986-1988), Offices (1989-1990), Nuclear Weapons (1992-2001), Meetings (1999-2003), and Security (2004-current). It aimed to demonstrate the indelible mark made by Shambroom's work on the landscapes of photography and political discourse. His series-based colour photographs reveal both local and global manifestations of power, depicting scenes in industrial, business, community, and military environments. The exhibition, which travelled to four venues throughout the US, presented the artist's examination of active, critical and questioning citizenship. In the exhibition, works from the late 1980s depicted manufacturing sites and office spaces throughout the US where many people spend the majority of their day, from gritty industrial factories, to immaculate biotech labs and empty office cubicles. For his next series, Shambroom gained access to long-restricted nuclear sites, where he produced eerie images of slumbering bombs and immaculate, empty war rooms. For Meetings, Shambroom traveled to municipal meetings in small communities as far flung as Bernice, Louisiana and Baltic, South Dakota, to document public officials in a formal portrait style. His most recent work in the exhibition documents security training at facilities across the country. In this series, past and future, reality and fiction, blur as each figure creates a picture of threat and resistance in our post-9/11 age. While diverse in subject matter, Shambroom’s series all record and demystify secret and little-seen loci of power. His images are remarkable both for their stark portrayal of such places, and as evidence of his access to the sites. Negotiating this access in an open and democratic manner is a hallmark of Shambroom’s practice. |
Contributors: | Hebdidge, Dick (Author) and Horodner, Stuart (Author of introduction, etc.) |
Official URL: | http://www.artscenecal.com/Announcements/2009/0109... |
Additional Information: | 'Paul Shambroom: Picturing Power' was organized by curator Diane Mullin of the Weisman Art Museum (Minneapolis, MN), and co-curators Christopher Scoates (Director, University Art Museum, CSU, Long Beach) and Helena Reckitt (The Power Plant Contemporary Art Gallery, Toronto). A fully illustrated catalogue featuring essays by the exhibition curators and scholar Dick Hebdige, and an interview with the artist by Stuart Horodner accompanied this exhibition. Selected extracts from reviews of the exhibition: Shambroom’s frank documentary depictions of places glimpsed by most of us only in nightmares—high-security military sites, including missile command centers, Trident submarines, and weapons storage facilities—made for riveting viewing, even as cold-war fears of certain doom seemed to be loosening their grip. Now, in a vastly changed cultural context, the Minneapolis-based artist’s first comprehensive midcareer survey, which originated at the Weisman Art Museum at the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis, brings together his nuclear series and four other major bodies of work: “Factories,” 1986–88, “Offices,” 1989–90, “Meetings,” 1999–2003, and “Security,” 2004–2007. As these photographs indicate, Shambroom is drawn to what he calls “spaces of power,” but his definition of power is far from formulaic… Viewed retrospectively, and despite the series’ varying strengths, Shambroom’s work urges us to rethink ever-shifting regimes of power and the ongoing governmental fixation on national security threats. This exhibition also prompts a reconsideration of the function of documentary photography today, given constantly changing conditions of secrecy, access, and transparency. Can carefully staged photographs maintain their relevance amid the increasing flood of information available instantaneously through all media? Most of Shambroom’s images do—perhaps because they insistently present themselves not as information but as rigorous pictures, depictions of specific things at specific moments, all the more resistant to abstraction because of their mundanely convincing particularity. As with his photograph of the unassuming man sweeping the floor in front of one-megaton bombs, Shambroom is at his best when his exposés achieve a level of unexpected intimacy.
ArtForum, "Reviews: Paul Shambroom, University Art Museum at California State University, Long Beach", Summer 2009, Bryan-Wilson, Julia. |
Departments, Centres and Research Units: | Art |
Date range: | 1 April 2008 - 5 April 2009 |
Event Location: | Weisman Art Museum- University. of Minnesota, United States |
Item ID: | 7628 |
Date Deposited: | 20 Feb 2013 08:58 |
Last Modified: | 29 Apr 2020 15:47 |
URI: |
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