I’m drawn to artwork that is historically referential, that subtly tips its hat to the artists and works that came before it and helped breathe it into being. This photograph by Ryan Schude, Pepper Tree, does just that. What, at first blush, appears to be a woman, reading under the shade of a California Pepper tree in her backyard, upon closer inspection reveals a deeper, more intricate message.
To me, the image recalls a painting by Jean Augusté Ingres called La Grande Odalisque, from nearly 200 years ago, 1814. This painting, considered hideously erotic and inappropriate in its day, features a naked woman with her back turned to us. She is surrounded by sumptuous textiles and lavishly adorned accessories, and she is neither ashamed of her nudity, nor particularly interested in the reason you, the viewer, have interrupted her reverie. In the 1800s, Schude’s female protagonist’s bowl of fruit, some of which has been peeled and left, carelessly, to spoil, would have been an outrageous extravagance, even more so by the fact that it is wasted. The misty, foggy atmosphere of Schude’s photograph imparts an aura of the mysterious to the image, similar to the atmosphere of Ingres’ painting, in which the odalisque has surely been smoking hookah or opium as evidenced by the pipe sitting by her left foot. That’s why Pepper Tree is my Pick of the Week.
Matthew Brandt, "Lakes and Reservoirs"
Matthew Brandt is equal parts documentary and landscape photographer. What sets him apart from his ilk is his printing process, in which he soaks his large-format, C-prints in the waters of the lakes that form his subject matter. While the photographs of the subjects could easily replicated, the transient nature of the lakes, their chemical makeup, the presence of various biological life-forms, ensure that Brandt's photographs are as unique and elegant as the waters from which they draw their composition. The resultant body of work is dreamy, spectacularly flawed, and dynamic. They make me dream of summers spent on Lake Michigan, and I become nostalgic for those impossibly long days and electric nights.
* all images courtesy of the artist, Matthew Brandt's portfolio can be found HERE