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Camera
Prism in Front of Grid, 2009, archival pigment print, 20'' x 28''
Bill
Burke
Destrukto
February
11 - March 15
Opening
Reception: Friday, February 11th 6 - 8pm
Howard Yezerski Gallery is pleased to present Destrukto, a recent
series of photographs by artist Bill Burke. Burke's work is visceral
and immediate, but behind the action and explosions, the exotic
locales, gruesome scenes and outré material there is a
rigorous examination of photographic conventions. Throughout his
career Burke has continually called into question the idea that
the camera is, or could ever be, a disinterested tool, objective
recorder of events, or device for the scientific collection of
data. Instead, he revels in the inherent subjectivity of the photographic
image, making art and books with a vitality that comes from being
as untidy and irreducible as the world around us.
The Destrukto photos are large color images that riff on photography's
history as a tool of scientific inquiry--think of Muybridge's
studies of animal locomotion or Edgerton's images showing milk
droplets frozen in miniature explosions--but, there is little
sense of a clinical approach in Burke's freeze-frame photos showing
the burst of glass and debris at the moment a bullet impacts an
old camera or the thick spray of froth set spinning as a can of
beer is shot with a high-powered rifle. If the spirit of scientific
inquiry is present in these photos it is only as a comic foil,
an excuse to pursue kinetic thrills, and the joy of wanton destructiveness.
Burke's choice of targets is deliberate. Cans of Spam or Campbell's
soup recall Pop art's insouciant take on Americana, while images
of exploding Nikons and Yashicas make Burke's iconoclastic attitude
toward photography abundantly clear.
The mayhem of the Destrukto works reminds us that photography
was once an adventurous vocation. Bill Burke acknowledges that
he was attracted to it because a photographer's life seemed to
be one that combined danger, freedom, and a kind of heroic creativity
into a heady and glamorous mix. As he developed his aesthetic
in the early seventies he learned from New Journalism, especially
photographic practitioners like Robert Frank, Larry Clark, and
Danny Seymour, and writers like Hunter S. Thompson. He admired
work where artistry and reportage were inseparable and artists
who, defying standards that had previously defined quality in
their fields, dispensed with the pretense of objective distance
in order to present a picture of the world that was bracing, expressive
and lyrical.
Born in 1943 Burke received his BFA and MFA from the Rhode Island
School of Design. His works can be found in the collection of
the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Museum of Modern Art, the
International Center of Photography in New York, the Los Angles
County Museum of Art, the J. Paul Getty Museum, the San Francisco
Museum of Modern Art, the Museum of Fine Art Boston, and the Smithsonian.
He has been awarded Five National Endowment for the Arts grants,
and a John Simon Guggenheim Fellowship.
For further information please contact Howard Yezerski Gallery
617.262.0550 Tuesday - Saturday 10-5:30pm