Wednesday, January 26, 2011

Funeral At the Factory

Artist Statement

The 'Funeral at the Factory' project is about one of the first modern factories in Korea, a cigarette factory built in 1923 in the city of Daegu. This project was made in collaboration with the artist, Jino Park.  All photographs were taken by Cally Iden during June and July of 2009 in Daegu, South Korea.

One of my photographs shows two actors reaching out to each other, an empty salute, for one man cannot see the other (7th from the top).  They are reaching across the walls of a camera obscura, which divide the reality of the interior space from the dream of the projected exterior.  Though the two actors exist on different planes, they are able to meet within this space.  Throughout my work echoes this theme of two irreconcilable things meeting.  It is about making something new from something forgotten.
























The Factory Project

At the KT&G cigarette factory in Daegu, South Korea, My husband, Jino, and converted the fourth floor of the warehouse into a camera obscura.  We staged a number of performances on site, and I documented our activities and the factory space.

KT&G was founded by the Japanese during their occupation of Korea, and was one of the first modern factories built on the peninsula. The site of this work is the company's now defunct, largely abandoned factory. It is situated in Daegu, a city so much on the extreme politcal right, that there is hardly a left turn (one is directed make a u-turn and then a right). KT&G, formerly owned and subsidized by the government, continues to be the the sole manufacturer of cigarettes in Korea today. A pack costs around 2 dollars.

This work was made in collaboration with the support of LeeAhn Gallery and with the gracious permission of KT&G.


Sunday, January 23, 2011

The Multiple

Though it may seem rather backward, there is a certain inexplicable power to the photographic multiple-- a grid of images that animate an action, a progression or an evolution of something in a rather old-fashioned way.  In particular, I like the work of Robin Rhode, a South African artist, who brings extroardinary humor to his "animations." I appreciate the fact that his work is also a temporary installation and public performance. Take a look at a few of his images; the second is strangely instructional in nature, like it belongs in a booklet about how to play craps with "virtual" dice ;-)

Saturday, January 22, 2011

Glad you stopped by...

Night Hike in the Desert, Arizona

I work with photography in a variety of different ways, often without any conventional camera to speak of. Over the course of the next few posts, I would like to plot out the paths of my personal image-making as well as influences and sources of inspiration.