
|
Gotscho
"Photographies
habillées" for
Gilles Dusein
The idea for the exhibition developed from a number of
exeptional encounters. First of all Gotscho met Gilles
Dusein, who was to become the first gallery owner to show
his work in Paris. Urbi et Orbi, Dusein's gallery in the
rue de Turenne, was a major showcase for contemporary
photography, and it was here that Dusein gave his
enthusiastic support to artists whose work
"fictionalizes" the human body. These artists
included Pierre Molinier, of course, and to an even
greater extent Nan Goldin, the brilliant American
photographer whose "Ballad of Sexual
Dependancy" had such a profound influence in the
eighties.
The next important encounter was between Nan Goldin and
Gotscho. This meeting not only marked the beginning of a
firm friendship, it also resulted in a series of poignant
portraits - the ones Gotscho uses in this exhibition.
With seven of today's most stimulating fashion designers
(Agnès B., Dirk Bikkembergs, Jean Colonna, Ann
Demeulemeester, Martin Margiela, Ocimar Versolato, and
José Lévy à Paris), Gotscho has created collective
works that are fiercely personal.
Gotscho breaks new ground by
dressing the photographic image, which in this way
becomes a model. The garment is sewn onto the image and
becomes indissociable from it. By dressing the image,
Gotscho conceals its original subject, and the portrait
in effect becomes sculpture.
In breaking away from
traditional fashion photography and photomontage, Gotscho
achieves a truly radical stance. An elegant iconoclast,
he does not tear icons apart but instead uses seams,
folds and stitches to bring about carefully planned and
orchestrated fragmentations.
Jean-Luc Monterosso
Director
|