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Animal Logic

Richard Barnes

April 29 – June 5, 2010

Ape, 2004 24 x 20 inch Pigment Print

Ape, 2004
24 x 20 inch Pigment Print

Murmur #9, 2005

Murmur #9, 2005

Murmur #1, 2005

Murmur #1, 2005
40 x 40 inch Pigment print

Single Ungulate and Man with Blue Crosses, San Francisco, 2008

Single Ungulate and Man with Blue Crosses, San Francisco, 2008
40 x 50 inch Chromogenic print

Diorama with Bobcat Removal, San Francisco, 2005

Diorama with Bobcat Removal, San Francisco, 2005
40 x 50 inch Chromogenic print

Animal Logic Triptych, 2002

Animal Logic Triptych, 2002
40 x 32 inch (each) Pigment print

Smithsonian Cheetah, 2005

Smithsonian Cheetah, 2005
40 x 50 inch Chromogenic print

Smithsonian Monkey, 2005

Smithsonian Monkey, 2005
50 x 40 inch Chromogenic print

Backlit Hoofed Animals, San Francisco, 2005

Backlit Hoofed Animals, San Francisco, 2005
40 x 50 inch Chromogenic print

Diorama with Yak, Ottawa, 2007

Diorama with Yak, Ottawa, 2007
40 x 50 inch chromogenic print

Flayed Man, MCA, Paris, 2005

Flayed Man, MCA, Paris, 2005
48 x 60 inch Chromogenic print

Horse and Cow Diptych, 2003

Horse and Cow Diptych, 2003
40 x 50 inch (each) Chromogenic print

Horses with Horse Paintings, Cairo, 2009

Horses with Horse Paintings, Cairo, 2009
30 x 40 inch Chromogenic print

Bird Heads, Cairo, 2009

Bird Heads, Cairo, 2009
30 x 40 inch Chromogenic Print

Richard Barnes

April 29 - June 5, 2010

  Press Release

    Foley Gallery is pleased to present a solo exhibition of photographer Richard Barnes.

  

 
Examining the role of the museum in contemporary culture, Animal Logic is a behind-the-scenes look at the curatorial process of evaluation and representation.  Exhibited concurrently will be Barnes’s Murmur, a photographic series of the flight formations of starlings.  The contrast is stark between the free and living natural world of Murmur and the frozen world of affectation in Animal Logic.

 
 
 
Barnes’s work investigates the relevance of context in archeology, insisting that the viewer to look past what is being displayed to question why and to what effect. Though the objects in each photograph are natural artifacts, the true subject here is the human hand, which chooses and arranges, imbuing the objects and the spaces themselves with importance, relevance, and value.  Carefully placed behind glass or in front of a painted scenery, draped in protective sheathing or crated, the taxidermied animals and propped skeletons convey a tension between their original wild, living context and the imitation thereof as approximated by their current containers.  Implicit in the artistry of each synthetic wilderness display is the fact that in order to observe, we must first destroy and dissemble.

 
 
 
In Murmur, Barnes observes the flocks of starlings that cloud the skies of EUR, a suburb of Rome.  In this series, Barnes depicts nature as it behaves on it’s own, alive and breathing.  The photographs capture the birds’ aerial displays, which seem to take on the form of suspended mesh sculpture.  The two visual essays juxtapose nature as displayed by museums with the uncontrollable fluctuation of nature as it moves on its own.

 
 
 
Richard Barnes graduated from the University of California at Berkley with a BA in Fine Arts.  He went on to work as the photographer for the joint Yale/ University of Pennsylvania excavations at Abydos, Egypt.  His work is included in the collections of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Philadelphia Museum of Modern Art and the Los Angeles County Museum of Art.  Barnes received the Rome Prize in 2005/2006, the Alfred Eisenstadt Award in Photography and the Sidman Fellowship for the Arts in 2009.

 
 
 
Animal Logic will remain on view until June 5, 2010. Foley Gallery is open Tuesday - Saturday 11AM - 6PM. For more information or to request images, please contact the gallery at 212.244.9081 or via email at info@foleygallery.com.