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Creation Date

2011-2

Description

The drawings for this exhibition are hand tracings of distressed film stock from early silent cinema, old master paintings and contemporary conservation x-rays. The ongoing intention of my work is to register and map the effect time has on the materials and supports of early film and iconic paintings.

This work focuses on the relationship of time to the historical and contemporary uses of the lens across 3 areas:

  1. Vermeer’s use of optical lenses in the construction of painting
  2. the camera’s development in early cinematic language
  3. contemporary digital x-ray conservation imaging

Each of these 3 areas and time periods are examined through three new complementary drawing series. The first series looks at the effect of time on the surface of late Vermeer paintings. The second series records the effect of nitrate decay on film stock primarily from 1922, a significant year for both silent film and Modernism. The main film used is Beyond The Rocks with Rudolf Valentino and Gloria Swanson. This film was thought to have been lost and when found in 1995 became a major restoration project before its release in 2005. The third uses contemporary digital x-ray images of iconic work by Vermeer and DaVinci that reveal the time before these painting were completed.

The gathering of these particular time periods presents a framework for reflection on the role that time and technology plays in mediating our understanding of image creation, the preservation of its unstable form and the making visible of its own history.

Rights

Copyright Brian Fay

Creative Commons License

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License.

Keywords

Solo Exhibition, Brian Fay, Royal Hibernian Academy

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