Los Angeles Times

Photos’ digital DNA altered

- calendar@latimes.com

Whether of gardens, dogs or vegetables strewn in the street, the photos in Julien Bismuth’s exhibition at the Box are all subjected to the same manipulati­on.

Each image is paired with a text, and the text is digitally encoded into the image, altering the picture to varying degrees.

Bismuth’s cousin, an engineer, wrote a program that replaces the ones and zeros of a digital photograph with the ones and zeros of a text file. Basically, Bismuth is messing with his images’ DNA, creating mutations.

He provides an unaltered copy of each photo for comparison, and the difference­s range from minuscule shifts in color to the striations of digital corruption to flat-out dissolutio­n. At the highest level of interferen­ce (or integratio­n, as it were), the image becomes a field of gray, digital mush.

The work pushes us to consider the boundaries of human perception and the convention­s by which we recognize and “read” things, whether images or text.

A photo of live dogs lounging around a sculptural dog is instructiv­e. Different things often look alike; the difference­s that matter aren’t always things you can see.

There’s really not that much divergence between the altered and unaltered prints … until there is. And then it is absolute: that gray mush. Operating at digital ground zero, Bismuth pushes the computer to places we can’t follow.

The Box, 805 Traction Ave. (213) 625-1747, through Oct. 31. Closed Sundays through Tuesdays. www.theboxla.com

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