The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Eclectic mix of photograph­ers from across country at MOCA GA

- By Felicia Feaster

“Fast Forward//Rewind” at the Museum of Contempora­ry Art of Georgia is an exhibition of photo-based work steeped in blazing color, theatrical­ity, eccentrici­ty and a definite streak of humor.

The show’s origins are the annual “Ones to Watch” exhibition­s organized over the past eight years by local collector and curator Mary Wilson Stanley and presented as part of the annual Atlanta Celebrates Photograph­y event to highlight a group of national photograph­ers of note selected by Stanley.

The array of artists included here defies easy categoriza­tion beyond personal taste: Well-establishe­d vets like Nancy Floyd, Bill Yates and Carl Martin rub elbows with new kids on the block like Portland-based Holly Andres. Andres continues her fascinatio­n with retro-infused storytelli­ng, part film still and part storybook in her inimitable, wonderfull­y elliptical “The Summer of Hornets.” In a series of Kodachrome-rich images, we watch a lovely middle-American family contend with a plague of insects invading their sunny domestic calm.

If there’s a unifying thread in much of “Fast Forward// Rewind,” it is a shared love of excess in both theme and form and a curator who enjoys the art of juxtaposit­ion, the better to goose a reaction from viewers. And though there are works in black and white in the mix, it’s the highly stylized, saturated color work like Langdon Clay’s grimy, atmospheri­c ’70s-era color shots of cars on New York City streets coordinate­d to their settings like chameleons miming their environmen­t that tends to stand out in “Fast Forward//Rewind.”

There is some laugh-outloud funny work here. Suggesting a canny Elliott Erwitt observer of the small-scale absurditie­s of modern life, Trenton Moore offers images of commuters waiting for the bus glued to their individual cellphones or of a pot-bellied flaneur traversing the city on a Segway. Though living cheek to jowl, the people in Moore’s shots seem to spirituall­y reside on separate planets. Brooklynba­sed artist Tommy Kha’s related images of disconnect­ion are moody self-portraits of the diminutive photograph­er being passionate­ly kissed by a rotating cast of Brooklyn hipsters. Kha stands side-eyed and passive, a block of wood amid all of that demonstrat­ive amour. If you were so inclined, it would be tempting to read the series as a larger statement about the difficulty of intimacy in the age of Tinder.

For sheer audaciousn­ess, it’s hard to beat the Hieronymus Bosch-meets-Matthew Barney lunacy of another NYC-based artist, Sarah Small. Her video piece “Tableau Vivant of the Delirium Constructi­ons,” staged on scaffoldin­g in an enormous

historic bank building, is an outsize, fleshy spectacle modeled on Victoriane­ra tableau vivants, or “living pictures.” In the video, an array of 120 models in every shape and size and in various states of undress are arranged like dancers in a Busby Berkeley musical number as they act out a wedding cake scene of sex and romance. Small has said the work is about “the human quest for intimacy,” and there is a strange sweetness and vulnerabil­ity in all of these exposed, diverse people assembled for this carnivales­que performanc­e.

Offering up even more indie sexiness is photograph­er Teri Darnell’s theatrical portraits of gender-bending dress-up in the “Berlin Kabarett Der Namenlosen” series in which guys and dolls in elaborate wigs and costumes act out some Weimar Republic decadence.

In more socially engaged work, Deepanjan Mukhopadhy­ay examines the soulcrushi­ng grind of outsourcin­g in “Outsourced: Fall.” And suggesting a redo of myths about black masculinit­y, Pulitzer Prize-winning San Francisco photograph­er Preston Gannaway offers tender images of playful, loving, complex gay black men.

 ??  ?? Amanda Greene’s “Gourds” (2017).
Amanda Greene’s “Gourds” (2017).
 ??  ?? Sinziana Velicescu’s photograph “North Hollywood, CA,” is featured at the Museum of Contempora­ry Art of Georgia.
Sinziana Velicescu’s photograph “North Hollywood, CA,” is featured at the Museum of Contempora­ry Art of Georgia.
 ??  ?? A still from Adam Forrester’s HD Video “The Deluge” (2014), which is featured in the Museum of Contempora­ry Art of Georgia exhibition “Fast Forward//Rewind.”
A still from Adam Forrester’s HD Video “The Deluge” (2014), which is featured in the Museum of Contempora­ry Art of Georgia exhibition “Fast Forward//Rewind.”

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