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The Small
and the Big of Dirk Braeckman's Art
by Gregory Salzman
Dirk Braeckman's art associates the senses of sight
and touch. In his art, sight finds no clear aim or definite
object and undergoes a certain blindness. Rich and profuse
texturing on all scales and levels, in co-operation
with various global impedients to clarity, endows his
art with emphatic tactility. Sombre grisaille
pervades his pictures like a deep, supportive basso
continuo. This tonal warmth and depth augments
the preponderant sense of enclosure, containment, and
spatial compression, all of which contribute subjectivity.
The emphatic tactility of Braeckman's art is affirmed
at the expense of textual legibility, articulation,
and elaboration. Significantly, the most intriguing
and compelling of Braeckman's pictures are those in
which the subject is presented incompletely through
the muffling and blurring of details, or through partial
masking or occlusion.
In the work of the past two years, from 2000 on, the
pictorial space is generally shallower and the sense
of spatial compression has intensified. Indices of tactility
increasingly are contradicted by features that erase
solidity. The work's compression of space, which confers
physical resistance and supports tactility, also perplexes
its rational and physical consistency. In certain pictures,
objects, whose surfaces are either blank or which act
as liquefying mirrors, appear in front of and partially
block or mask more plastically articulated, textured
surfaces, thus undermining an implicit depth and physical
solidity.
Elision and blurring of detail and other corresponding
reductions of descriptive fullness and clarity sponsor
the transformative dimension of his art, its paradoxical
concreteness and intangibility, and its paradoxical
inscription of duration and temporal suspension.
Passages of spatial and objective indetermination in
the pictures are what create opportunities for metaphoric
inscription, as, for instance, in various pictures that
morph from still-lifes into landscapes of unassessable
depth. Light's agency, as always in Braeckman's pictures,
is duplicitous. It reveals and conceals. It moulds space
yet also collapses it. It conveys physicality yet equally
sublimes it.
Ubiquitous flares, bursts, and nebulae of light in Braeckman's
pictures - pivotal formal devices that activate space
and undermine its uniformity - disturb formal consistency
and introduce contingency and instability. Instead of
illuminating the subject, they partly obliterate it
and so present themselves as flaws. These seemingly
erroneous - yet, in fact, cunningly artful (anti-) formal
elements signal the realism of Braeckman's art. One
aspect of any kind of realism is its transactual dimension.
Negotiation between interiority and exteriority is promoted
by the aforementioned "flaws," as well as by the fragmentary
identity of the pictures, which opposes and delimits
their emphatic sense of containment.
The largely prosaic, nondescript, and remarkable subject
matter supports his art's ambiguous transparency and
opacity. The ready-at-handness and banality of the subject
matter are consonant with the transparency and casualness
of the presentation and framing, whereas the muteness
of the subject matter registers opacity. Overall, the
identity of the subject matter is of less importance
than the far-reaching play between concreteness and
illusiveness in the work. Ultimately, the liminal condition
of the work, its mediation of inside and outside, its
equal conferral and ungrounding of depth, its fusion
of objective and subjective qualities, and its refusal
of clarity and legibility are the terms that severally
and concertedly determine its significance.
The intimate aspect of Braeckman's art, experienced
as sensual warmth and vibrancy and as physical presence,
closeness, and contact, resists and contests photography's
intrinsic abstractness and its alien smoothness, coldness,
and fixity. The affording of intimacy is limited and
qualified by the insurmountable distancing and inherent
poignancy of the photographic medium. Braeckman's art
tests the limits of the medium, reflects on its specificities
and utilizes it to implicate and convey fundamental
human desires and concerns.
www.braeckman.be
Press
release (PDF)
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