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Charlotte Colbert: Ordinary Madness

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Date: 
Friday, 1 July 2016 to Saturday, 13 August 2016
Opening: 
Thursday, 30 June 2016 - 6:00pm

Charlotte Colbert’s forthcoming show at Gazelli Art House, to open this July, examines and plays around with the familiar icons of instant communication. Colbert, a natural visual storyteller with a penchant for the surreal, examines temporality through the prism of how we relate to the emoji and whether these digital icons are capable of transcending borders and cultural differences or an invasion of personal expression.

While recent studies show that the meanings of emojis can vary hugely between platforms, causing miscommunication, Colbert takes the digital image and places them over the faces of her naked female subjects in a derelict setting. The genesis of the idea for the show started when the child of one of her friends saw a butterfly on a window and tried to zoom into the creature to try and make it bigger. Herself a new mother to a baby girl, she thought about how we technology relates to us on a human level and how it has become as perfunctory as eating and drinking. Colbert explains that she started thinking of civilization in the developed world as parodies of emoji families, she says, “There’s something wonderful about technology but something very dark. We’re coming back to a symbolic way of writing but it’s someone else’s interpretation.”

As theories of the ‘sassy pink lady emoji’, and what it means is world news in itself, Colbert focused on creating juxtaposition between old and new, to decontextualise her subjects within human temporality and history. Half-erased figures disappear against crumbling walls. Colbert questions, what trace will the digital age leave behind? Shooting in her staple black and white medium format film, she uses double exposures to layer images of circuit boards, artificial intelligence and electronic waste presenting ghostly, holographic portraits where computers and human life are intertwined and fused into one.

Colbert shot the series in a now abandoned, former lesbian commune in east London. Many of the female nudes who appear are members of a feminist commune in the capital, brought along by one of the subjects, a friend of Charlotte’s, an ex-model-turned-stripper. Colbert explains, “There was something really powerful about the nudity on the shoot and I thought it tapped into a fantasy of ancient Greek female warriors.” Using props, distorting mirrors, costumes as well as long and double exposures, Colbert creates a surreal parody of daily life as seen through twenty-first century language. Nude figures unable to connect, couples frozen in a forced state of feeling, a surreal army of circuit board women, an emoji wasteland where madness, fantasy, comedy and chaos coexist.

Artist ( Description ): 

Charlotte Colbert is a photographer and screenwriter based in London. Charlotte has developed a distinct narrative to her work, which can be followed from her large-scale triptychs, to her film-noir series and medium format stills. Drawing from her experience as a screenwriter, Colbert’s photographic work is strongly anchored within the language of film and story telling. They are mostly conceived as a series, a sequence developed in script format before being shot. Her work has strong philisophical undertones, and often plays on questions of time, space and identity.

Colbert has been described as “A truly original visual storyteller her images are hauntingly evocative” by Laura Bailey in Vogue and Dorothy Bohm, photographer and co-founder Photographer’s Gallery in London has written of her “Some photographers take pictures and others make them. Colbert is most definitely in the second category, her pictures a gateway into […] her search for meaning and her very special way of seeing”.

Her work has been likened to the surreal work of Toomer, Breton and Dali (Phaidon) and described as “surreal and delicate” (Huffington Post), an “exploration of the human mind” (Vogue) and as “existing in that space dreams and nightmares” (Las Ultimas Noticias).

Telephone: 
+44 (0)20 7491 8816
Venue ( Address ): 

Gazelli Art House
39 Dover Street
London
W1S 4NN

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