· 1999
The work of Cecile Wick is one of the cornerstones of contemporary Swiss photography. Following her first book, KopfFall, a collection of dreamlike black-and-white pinhole camera images published by Edition Patrick Frey in 1996, America presents digitally enhanced color images of vast, elementary landscapes. While attending the University of California, Davis, she traveled by train across America, photographing the passing panorama from the constant, window-level camera angle. This perspective imparts a beguiling, intense luminosity to the stark views of plains, horizons and mountain ranges, and the sparse reminding traces of civilization.
Cécile Wick's work, oscillating among photography, painting, and drawing, is one of the most important oeuvres in contemporary Swiss art. Solo exhibitions in various galleries and a large retrospective at the Museum of Fine Art in Berne have recently showcased her prints and etchings to great acclaim. Cécile Wick. Colored Waters offers readers the first glimpse of the artist's more recent photographs and, in particular, drawings. Watercolors, ink drawings, inkjet prints and photographs are presented in series, putting media and motifs in a dialogue and revealing new aspects of Wick's work. Around 160 color reproductions of artworks are complemented with essays by Martin Jaeggi and Nadine Olonetzky on subjects such as light, traces, signs, buildings, nature, and rhythm in Wick's oeuvre.
Text in English, Italian & German. Whereas the mountains in Swiss art have always occupied a central position in national iconography and, in their powerfulness and unalterability, have been regarded as a constantly recurring symbol of the original Helvetian character, they have recently figured increasingly as a metaphoric territory in which the contradictions in the behaviour of post industrial man towards nature and the landscape are shown in a particularly conspicuous and suspense-filled fashion. In his "Snow Management" photographs, Jules Spinatsch has created an impressive document of the post-modern development of the Alps into a leisure theme park, In precisely illuminated and some-what eerie scenes. he has given a visible form to the alienation of man and the artificiality, of his con-sumption of nature. Prototypical of the "mountain entertainment industry', his work contains shad-owy images that in their alienation and absurdity, express the complex and bizarre relationship of urban man with the mountains. Cecile Wick, on the other hand, took a different course, tracing the remains of sublimity and mystery that the mountains have retained as a myth robbed of its magic in monochrome, black-and-white or delicately tinted light-dark images. She seeks deserted landscapes, unspoilt nature that appears to have resisted the interventions of civilisation, although they have long since been more of a memory than a wilderness. Her occasional use of 'primitive" techniques and blurring, as well as of classical image composition express the remembered character of the landscape, at the same creating a vivid poetry arid beauty that the medium had almost lost. The combination of pathos and absurdity, a longing for nature and remoteness from reality, is the basis of Nicolas Faure's ironic visual criticism. In his photo essay, taken over several decades, he shows the average mountain enthusiast" as a neon visual disturbance in the mountain panorama. In his recent group of works, entitled "Les jeux sont faits", on the other hand, he seeks the scene of his childhood memories in the landscape. With himself as an adult in the woods of his childhood, Nicolas Faure reviews his inner images in the light of their relevance to the present in a sometimes melancholy, sometimes mischievous fashion, and tries to bring his longing in line with reality. No one in recent times has created a more, convincing document of the touching uselessness of "back to nature" with-out falling into a simplistic visual thinking.
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· 1997
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