|
|
| |
Emil Salto
"MUTE SCIENCE"
Emil Salto has in this series of photographic
works sought to expand the framework of classical photography to the
extreme. MUTE SCIENCE is photography, not in the traditional sense, but
in a process based restraint and representation of light, time and
space, arising there from and in between.
Given the almost
physical silence prevailing in the pictures, it seems very natural,
almost given, to read the title MUTE SCIENCE poetically. In the words
of the French philosopher Gaston Bachelard, it is the emptiness that
binds the silence. Here it is the silent imagery of science: the
photographs show a number of silent spaces which in sequences of grey
tone graduations repeat infinitely.
The photographs in MUTE
SCIENCE are photograms. Created in the darkroom with a classical
photographic process using only light, chemistry and photographic
paper. There has never been a camera, a lens or pattern, though it
could be said that the dark chamber (and the artist inside it) is the
work. Whereas traditional photography to some extent relate or refer to
reality presented, Emil Salto’s works are simply the result of the
elements involved in their genesis.
The works are to some extent
circular. Self-referential, they embody their own time, and the process
becomes the image. There are obvious references in the their visual
language, to artists such as Josef Albers and Kazimir Malevich, amongst
others, who have worked with the geometric-abstract. Emil Salto’s
preoccupation with the basics of geometry and in the case of MUTE
SCIENCE, the square creates a conceptual emptiness and opens up space
for contemplation regarding notions of time, shape, cycles and
dimensions. MUTE SCIENCE is about these formal shapes and sizes, which
naturally affect us all and which in Emil Salto’s knowledge never
refers to anything recognizable or concrete, enabling it to remain
alluring. |
|
|
|
|