Camera Austria International

165 | 2024

  • ALEXANDRA SYMONS-SUTCLIFFE
    Thresholds
  • NIKLAS TALEB
  • GABRIELLE MOSER
    Mis-Registrations: Sim Chi Yin’s Photographic Transpositions
  • SIM CHI YIN
  • NATASHA CHRISTIA
    Einverleibungen—Or, On the Object and What Remains
  • SARA-LENA MAIERHOFER
  • CARA LERCHL
    Painting Beside Herself
  • LISA HOLZER

Preface

Camera Austria International no. 165 takes its point of departure from the bipartite exhibition Exposure / Double Exposure, which in September 2023 kicked off the program of Camera Austria’s curator Anna Voswinckel. In two group exhibitions, which flowed seamless­ly into each other and at times overlapped, artists presented works reflecting the concept of “exposure” that defines photography. On the one hand, the term stands for the technical realization of the image-making process, namely, the exposure of the photographic paper. On the other, “to expose” as a verb inherently signifies the unmasking or uncovering of a situation or a person, while the adjective “exposed” denotes the moment of becoming bare or vulnerable.

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Camera Austria International 165 | 2024
Preface

The magazine issue at hand takes its point of departure from the bipartite exhibition Exposure / Double Exposure, which in September 2023 kicked off the program of Camera Austria’s curator Anna Voswinckel. In two group exhibitions, which flowed seamless­ly into each other and at times overlapped, artists presented works reflecting the concept of “exposure” that defines photography. On the one hand, the term stands for the technical realization of the image-making process, namely, the exposure of the photographic paper. On the other, “to expose” as a verb inherently signifies the unmasking or uncovering of a situation or a person, while the adjective “exposed” denotes the moment of becoming bare or vulnerable.

Alexandra Symons-Sutcliffe focuses on the “oscillations in attention and concentration which define the artist’s style” in her reading of Niklas Taleb’s series of photos, which he has developed with great precision for this issue. She investigates how his pictures move back and forth between the act of making visible and the state of remaining concealed, yet at the same time take on very different forms depending on the presentation context. “Encountered in the magazine format, Taleb’s photographs adopt the narrative logic of the printed press. This is a conscious transformative gesture on the part of Taleb. The repetition of images in his selection encourages this reading, and at the same time suggests an inverse fetishization of flatness.”

The photographs and multimedia installations of Sim Chi Yin place (auto)biographical aspects in relation to historical visual memory and the narratives emerging from it. Based on three of Sim’s works that were on show in the aforementioned Camera Austria exhibition, Gabrielle Moser discusses how the artist initiates alternative readings of historical circumstances through her transpositions and “mis-registrations.” In the series The Suitcase Is A Little Bit Rotten (2023) this for instance takes place when Sim thematizes her grandfather, who was abducted and murdered in 1949 during the anti-
colonial war in Malaya, and her son through the subtle retouching of glass plates, first seen around the year 1900, thus recalling the didactic use of magic lantern projections.

The reactualization and questioning of the presentation of colonial artifacts is a theme that runs through the work of Sara-Lena Maierhofer, especially through her continuous project Kabinette (2018–ongoing). Natasha Christia notes in her contribution that the artist’s practice “points to a series of critical multiexposures. [. . .] They also expose the camera’s complicity with the voyeuristic imperatives of imperial museal displays, while invoking, at the same time, their potential to subvert, rewrite, and inscribe the aforementioned imperatives and their narratives onto a postcolonial frame, by unearthing the lacunae and ghosts of the colonial past.”

Cara Lerchl reads Lisa Holzer’s photographic series against the backdrop of David Joselit’s essay “Painting Beside Itself,” in which he addresses, among other topics, the meaning of the “broader network” in which an artistic work is situated. Tying into this, Lerchl considers Holzer’s work to be in continual exchange with the artist’s surroundings, as well as with the contexts and sites in which her works are presented: “[She] moves between figuration and abstraction and in various media including photography, text, and related performative gestures; she inscribes herself into the concept of the network Joselit lays out as a chain of associations and working methods.”

This issue marks a change in the editorial team of Camera Austria International. After almost thirteen years of playing a key role in shaping the magazine’s content with her undying commitment and eagle eye, Margit Neuhold has retired from everyday editorial life with this issue. We are extremely pleased, however, that she will remain a part of the Camera Austria team as author and member of the board. At the same time, it is a pleasure to welcome June Drevet to our team as an experienced copyeditor and author whose texts and thematic interests have been repeatedly inscribed into the pages of this magazine since 2019, which she will now continue to shape in her new role as editor.

Christina Töpfer and the Team of Camera Austria
March 2024

Lisa Holzer, Family (10), 2024. Pigment print on cotton paper, 110.3 × 77 cm. Courtesy: the artist and Layr, Vienna. Copyright: Bildrecht, Vienna, 2024.

Entries

Forum

Presented by the editors
Rebekka Bauer
Laura Sperl
Karla Hiraldo Voleau
Hiroshi Takizawa
Felipe Romero Beltrán
Aindreas Scholz

Exhibitions

Coco Fusco: Tomorrow, I Will Become an Island
Kunst-Werke Berlin, 14. 9. 2023 – 7. 1. 2024
RAIMAR STANGE

Rituelle Dekonstruktionen
Katalin Ladik: Ooooooooo-pus
Ludwig Forum Aachen, 7. 10. 2023 − 10. 3. 2024
Moderna Museet, Stockholm, 9. 11. 2024 – 20. 4. 2025
Haus der Kunst, Munich, 3. 3. – 10. 9. 2023
CHRISTINA IRRGANG

Velvet Terrorism: Pussy Riot’s Russia
MAC—Musée d’art contemporain de Mon­tréal, 25. 10. 2023 – 10. 3. 2024
JON DAVIES

History Tales. Fakt und Fiktion im Historienbild
Gemäldegalerie, Akademie der bildenden Künste Wien, Vienna, 27. 9. 2023 – 26. 5. 2024
MARGIT NEUHOLD

Joel Sternfeld: American Prospects
Albertina, Vienna, 27. 9. 2023 – 28. 4. 2024
MAX L. FELDMAN

Parastoo Anoushahpour, Faraz Anoushahpour, Ryan Ferko: Lovers’ Wind
Mercer Union, Toronto, 20. 1. – 23. 3. 2024
JACOB KORCZYNSKI

Sabine Bitter & Helmut Weber: Dunkelkammer Bildungsmoderne. Über Form & Gebrauch
station urbaner kulturen / nGbK Hellersdorf, Berlin, 15. 9. 2023 – 3. 2. 2024
ANNA-LENA WENZEL

Floodlit Room—Women’s Photographic Practice in Croatia
Technical Museum Nikola Tesla, Zagreb, 24. 10. – 3. 12. 2023
The Ethnographic Museum, Zagreb, 26. 10. – 25. 11. 2023
TANJA VERLAK

Corps à corps: Histoire(s) de la photographie
Centre Pompidou, Paris, 6. 9. 2023 – 25. 3. 2024
MARIACARLA MOLÈ

Ulrike Rosenbach: heute ist morgen. Werke seit 1969
ZKM – Zentrum für Kunst und Medien Karlsruhe, 24. 6. 2023 – 4. 2. 2024
THERESA ROESSLER

Épreuves de la matière: La photographie contemporaine et ses métamorphoses
BnF – Bibliothèque nationale de France, Paris, 10. 10. 2023 – 4. 2. 2024
STEVEN HUMBLET

Glitch. Die Kunst der Störung
Pinakothek der Moderne, Munich, 1. 12. 2023 – 17. 3. 2024
CHRISTIAN EGGER

Ukrainian Dreamers: Kharkiv School of Photography
Kunstmuseum Wolfsburg, 13. 10. 2023 – 7. 1. 2024
Kommunale Galerie, Berlin, 6. 3. – 2. 6. 2024
CHRISTIN MÜLLER

. . . that creeps from the earth
Tavros, Athens, 2. 2. – 13. 4. 2024
DESPINA ZEFKILI

Was bleibt, wenn die Evidenz scheitert?
Images of the Present. 30 Jahre Dokumentarfotografie Förderpreise der Wüstenrot Stiftung
Staatsgalerie Stuttgart, 11. 10. 2023 – 18. 2. 2024
PAUL MELLENTHIN

Books

Jacob Birken, Vom Pixelrealismus. Takeshi Muratas Stillleben Cyborg
Schlaufen Verlag, Berlin 2023
PETER KUNITZKY

Are we there yet?
Nicole Gravier, Romans-Photos, Mythes & Clichés 1976–1980
L’éditeur du dimanche, Paris 2023
NINA STRAND

Anna Orłowska, Warm Mother Cold Mother
Bored Wolves, Kraków 2023
EWA BORYSIEWICZ

Generalüberholung der Moderne
Joachim Brohm, Lessmore. Buildings, sites and scenes in reference to Ludwig Mies van der Rohe
BR-ED, Leipzig 2023
JOCHEN BECKER

Re-Readings
Paralleles Denken 2: Walter Benjamin
REINHARD BRAUN und MARC RIES

Imprint

Publisher: Verein CAMERA AUSTRIA. Labor für Fotografie und Theorie.

Owner: Verein CAMERA AUSTRIA. Labor für Fotografie und Theorie.
Lendkai 1, 8020 Graz, Austria

Editors: June Drevet, Margit Neuhold, Christina Töpfer (editor-in-chief).

Translations: Dawn Michelle d’Atri, Catherine Henry, Clemens Ruthner, Andrea Titze-Grabec.

English Proofreading: Dawn Michelle d’Atri.

Acknowledgments: Felipe Romero Beltrán, Rebekka Bauer, Lewis Chaplin, Natasha Christia, Karla Hiraldo Voleau, Lisa Holzer, Nicolai Howalt, Steven Humblet, Sandra Križić Roban, Cara Lerchl, Alexandra Leykauf, Maria Lund, Sara-Lena Maierhofer, Kyveli Mavrokordopoulou, Gabrielle Moser, Aindreas Scholz, Andrea Scrima, Sim Chi Yin, Laura Sperl, Alexandra Symons-Sutcliffe, Hiroshi Takizawa, Niklas Taleb, Sandra Vitaljić, Anna Voswinckel, Despina Zefkili, Daniela Zehetner.

Copyright © 2024

No parts of this magazine may be reproduced without publisher’s permission.
Camera Austria International does not assume any responsibility for submitted texts and original materials. Although every effort has been made to find the copyright holders of all the illustrations used, this proved impossible in some cases. Interested parties are requested to contact the editors.

ISBN 978-3-902911-79-7
ISSN 1015 1915
GTIN 4 19 23106 1800 9 00165