MAGAZINE - Brian Oglesbee
Transcription
MAGAZINE - Brian Oglesbee
HYLAND M A G A Z I N E High-end residential decoration, design, architecture, art, travel, fashion, cuisine, and charity. A digital monthly full lifestyle magazine. Available for all digital devices. Subscribe at hylandmagazine.com Edition 12: ‘Commerce & Design’ Kinetic Covers Serving the high-end design and discerning consumer communities www.hylandmagazine.com Hyland Publishing LLC WS-06 Photographer BRIAN OGLESBEE HYLAND J WS-65 HYLAND ulie Taymor, the genius behind Broadway’s Spiderman, Lion King and a dozen other smash theatrical hits made a pilgrimage to New York state’s least populated county, Allegany. She journeyed there to witness firsthand the ingenious photographic work of Brian Oglesbee, in particular, the Aquatique images from his Water Series photographs. Her team was stymied: how could Oglesbee achieve such wondrous effects? Were they, in fact, computer facilitated? The images, displaying a combination of artifacts taken from nature, textiles and water with female figures floating just below or above them, intrigued Team Taymor. WS-96 HYLAND Brian ‘s Water Series was a tremendous inspiration in the conception of my film of THE TEMPEST. His surreal play with nature and the human form is not only visually exquisite but quite mysterious and moving. Amazingly, it is shot without any digital or visual effects enhancement, and thus it has a true visceral feel while the play of lighting on the figures and the elements is magical. Director Julie Taymor, speaking about the images in ‘Aquatique: Photographs by Brian Oglesbee’ HYLAND WS-109, WS-127 Georg Friedrich Handel’s Water Music should be playing when one views the images in Brian Oglesbee’s monograph, Aquatique. The large black and white images, many of them full bleed, reproduced on excellent, heavy paper, depict several female models seemingly in or above water, their faces and bodies distorted: romantic, spectral, ecstatic, glamorous and slightly disturbing, these water nymphs are compelling. They are transformational, lingering between earth and the beyond. Distorted, they appear sometimes as phantoms, sometimes as angels, nereids, the water goddesses, in Greek mythology, helpful to sailors. WS-74 and WS-127 encapsulates elements of all of the above. HYLAND WS-116 Other Oglesbee images, WS95-7 2004 and WS-96 2004 recall the Shroud of Turin. Julie Taymor’s favorite image, WS-65 2001 summons the Demon Barber of Fleet Street in Sweeney Todd: within her office it was present as the cover image for the screenplay of The Tempest. The archsurreal image, WS13 1995, chosen by Eastman House for their permanent collection, would enthrall Dali and Teilhard du Chardin. Three hands surround a seemingly floating stone, the latter surreal, the former, set just above the center of the image, evokes Chardin’s belief that God is at the heart of the matter, in stones and minerals, as much as in the soul. However much these images might have occurred by chance and/or design, the visual results are pregnant with metaphor and meaning. HYLAND Part of a triptych WS-100 HYLAND Distorted, they appear sometimes as phantoms, sometimes as angels, nereids, the water goddesses, in Greek mythology, helpful to sailors. Part of a triptych WS-100 HYLAND Part of a triptych WS-100 Demonstrably, one of Oglesbee’s masterworks, WS-06 1995, depicts a woman, head emerging, upside down, from the bottom of the image, her left hand extended towards us behind her head, her right hand poised to emerge just below a ripple in the water’s surface. Three stones, randomly placed, remind us of ideal groupings in Japanese gardens or the Trinity. Could the hand be stretching out to touch the tripartite God? The subject’s eyes, clear and compelling, are rolled back towards her forehead, viewing us, calmly, ethereally; her lips appear parted. As in so many of these images, twigs, branches and leaves appear like nature’s lace at river’s edge. The model’s apparently long hair and her body extending out, floating just below the water recalls classic PreRaphaelite imagery: John Everett Millais’ famous Ophelia, now in the Tate, depicting Shakespeare’s character from Hamlet singing just before she drowns, her, at first air-borne clothes having become waterlogged. HYLAND The flanking angels support an archangel, an emissary from the Almighty, holding in her aquaborne hands an energy, never dying, eternal, forever. CH HYLAND Above: triptych WS-100 Both Millais and Oglesbee, along with Shakespeare, evoke images central to the ancient belief that springs, lakes, streams and rivers afford access to the gods, through the chalice and host, transubstantiation and rebirth, or on Charon’s raft on the River Styx, a conveyance to the world beyond the mortal. Recall, that in the Mayan world, a giant stone was rolled, submerged in a spring at a crucial moment in the moon’s passage, thereby connecting the earth and celestial deities. Oglesbee’s photographs speak to fertility, health and prosperity; the leaves, as the decaying logs in Hudson River paintings did, remind us of a transient, transformational narrative. The triptych comprising WS-31 1999 on the viewer’s left and WS-33 1999 on the right with WS-100.3 #17 2005 in the center presents an image of the eternal. The flanking angels support an archangel, an emissary from the Almighty, holding in her aquaborne hands an energy, never dying, eternal, forever. These images speak of a world beyond the temporal, a forever world, in contrast to the transience of other images, however spiritually charged. Oglesbee joins an historic line of architects, garden designers, artists, photographers and cinematographers who have employed water as both striking formal element and metaphor. Mogul and French water gardens and modern day pools and showers surely inspire Oglesbee. A plethora of earlier photographers and cinematographers engage H20 as creative and metaphorical device: think of Alfred Hitchcock’s famous shower scene in Psycho HYLAND WS-41 HYLAND Hyland HYLAND or, in a more sensuous vein, Herb Ritts’ watered-down models. In WS-104 2006 Oglesbee joins significant artists in portraying the human figure as literally upright, free-standing water font, but with his own remarkable twist. As in all of these images, one asks, “how did he do it?” That is his secret, for the viewer to ponder. All of this work derives from the pre-digital, silver print era, including those later printed digitally. Brian Oglesbee celebrates the female figure as water goddess, celebrating her form, her timeless connection to the sea in numerous ways: romantic, tragic, powerful and triumphant, as in Venus rising from the sea, seen in WS-16 1997 and WS-17 1997. Although possessing triste overtones, there is a persistence and steadfastness within his images; they form an integral part of the fabric of life, virtually, in some instances, what appears to be the hide, as in 1999. Stephen Tennant would have loved Oglesbee’s work; surely, Jean Cocteau, like Taymor is, would be fascinated, immediately engaging him as he did Lucien La Clergue, at Picasso’s suggestion, to document his cinematographic art. There is about Oglesbee’s art an atmosphere that would have been appealing to those lively souls who populated the interwar years, the Bloomsbury crowd in England and the Paris visionaries. HYLAND There is freedom in Oglesbee’s work: a life fully engaged artistically. There is liberation, not so much like that found in Kenneth Anger’s avant garde film, Eau d’Artifice but in that found in a life assiduously lived in Allegany County. H Christopher Hyland WS-40 Brian Oglesbee +1 (917) 796-6548 [email protected] 114 Jefferson Street, Wellsville, NY 14985 USA Aquatique: Photographs by Brian Oglesbee ISBN-10: 1933784172 HYLAND