Ori 
                  Gersht Time After Time 
                   
                  10 October - 10 November 2007    Private view 
                9 October, 6-8pm | 
               
               
                    
                  Mummery + Schnelle is pleased to announce an exhibition of a 
                  new body of work by Ori Gersht entitled Time after Time. 
                  In this series of photographs and films, Gersht explores questions 
                  concerning optical perception, the conception of time and the 
                  relationships between the photographic image and objective reality.  
                   
                  The exhibition will focus on a group of newly completed large-scale 
                  photographs entitled Blow Up. These depict elaborate 
                  floral arrangements, based upon a 19th Century still-life painting 
                  by Henri Fantin-Latour, captured in the moment of exploding. 
                  Gersht´s compositions are literally frozen in motion, 
                  a process dependent on the ability of the advanced technology 
                  of photography to freeze-frame action, something inconceivable 
                  to the Old Masters. This visual occurrence, that is too fast 
                  for the human eye to process and can only be perceived with 
                  the aid of photography, is what Walter Benjamin called the ‘optical 
                  unconsciousness’ in his seminal essay ‘A Short History 
                  of Photography’.   
                  The latest digital technology has enabled Gersht to create contemporary 
                  versions of frozen life, bringing the concerns of Fantin-Latour 
                  and other still-life masters into a contemporary context. His 
                  photographs echo the appearance of oil paintings and allude 
                  to the inherent shadow of death and decay hanging over traditional 
                  still-life and vanitas painting. Yet they are distanced from 
                  them due to the instantaneous digital process employed, which 
                  captures each shattering still-life at a speed of 1/6000 of 
                  a second and stores the information immaterially as data on 
                  a hard drive until each is fabricated as a Light Jet print, 
                  returning the image to the material realm of two-dimensional 
                  artworks.   
                  Flowers, which often symbolise peace, become victims of brutal 
                  terror, revealing an uneasy beauty in destruction. This tension 
                  that exists between violence and beauty, destruction and creation 
                  is enhanced by the fruitful collision of the age-old need to 
                  capture “reality” and the potential of photography 
                  to question what that actually means. The authority of photography 
                  in relation to objective truth has been shattered, but new possibilities 
                  to experience reality in a more complex and challenging manner 
                  have arisen.    
                  Ori Gersht was born in Tel Aviv in 1967 and studied at the Royal 
                  College of Art in London. He has exhibited internationally since 
                  1999. Solo exhibitions include ‘Afterglow’ at the 
                  Art Now room at Tate Britain, an expanded version of the same 
                  exhibition at the Helena Rubenstein Pavilion for Contemporary 
                  Art, Tel Aviv Museum, both in 2002 and ‘The Clearing’ 
                  at the Photographers’ Gallery, London in 2005/06. Recent 
                  Group exhibitions include ‘In Focus: Living History’ 
                  at Tate Modern in 2007, ‘Twilight: Photography in the 
                  Magic Hour’ at the Victoria & Albert Museum London 
                  and ‘Inside-Out, Contemporary Artists from Israel’ 
                  at MARCO, Vigo, Spain both in 2006. | 
               
              
                
				
  				
				 
				
  				
				 
				
  				
				 
				
  				
				 
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            On Reflection 
2014 
 
Places That Were Not 
2010 
 
Time After Time 
2008 
 
 
 
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