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Gerardo
Suter: Labyrinth of Memory
|
Arraigo (Rootedness) 1995 Gelatin
silver print |

|
Cielo (Sky) 1995 Gelatin
silver print |
Gerardo Suter: Labyrinth of Memory, an
exhibition of the work of one of Latin America's leading photographers, draws together
pre-Columbian images, human figures and primal themes, providing a unique and thought
provoking visual experience. The exhibition covers several periods of the artists
work, grouped by theme and time.
El archivo fotografico
del profesor Retus (The Photographic Archive of Professor Retus), is composed
of architectural photographs taken from 1983 to 1985 which emphasize the artist's medium,
using gelatin silver prints, acids, and artistic laboratory techniques to impart age and
subtle effects to the photographs. Suter silhouettes ancient monuments against expansive
dramatic skies, giving them an even more imposing appearance. These lonely structures seem
to stand as ancient temples to human ideals.
In his collection Desde
la tierra del dia y la noche (From the Land of Day and Night) and De esta
tierra. Del cielo y los infiernos (Of this Earth, Heaven, and Hell), the
dramatic lighting and painstaking composition are reminiscent of Maplethorpe. But unlike
Maplethorpes work, Suter is not placing emphasis on the person as a subject. All of
his subjects are masked or posed to hide their features. There is an absence of faces in
Suter's work - he says that he especially avoids showing the subjects eyes in his
pieces, because he is not interested in portraiture or images of individuals. These
figures, photographed wearing primitive masks, represent more elemental images. In El
animal de las sorpresas (The Animal of the Surprises), a young man, or perhaps
a woman, is shown in a horned mask, ineffectively hiding its face behind its hands. The
hollow eyes of the mask stare back at you emptily. The image evokes mans tribal
roots, hiding mysteriously from us and yet exposing the mysterious to us.
In the collection
entitled Codices, Suter further explores this theme, combining Latin American
images with images of human suffering, bondage and sacrifice. Disturbing, fascinating,
timeless - Suter's images make us witness to imagined events from a distant past.
In his most recent
collections, Anahuac and Geografia de la memoria (Geography of Memory),
Suter uses the human body to tell his story without the use of masks or architectural
elements. His style has evolved to elucidate the same complex themes with economy of
means, using light, shadow and a few rudimentary props. El sueno de un recuerdo (The
Dream of a Memory), focuses on a pair of dramatically lit hands forming a circle; the
universal symbol at once embodies the circular nature of life, its strength and its
fragility.
The exhibition
provides an opportunity to observe Suters work develop over a 15 year period. It
leaves the powerful impression that behind these photographs of people and primitive
subjects we share in the essential mysteries of life itself and the forces that drive
humanity. The exhibit is also a testament to the unique effectiveness of photography
as an art.
- Jerry Becerra
Labyrinth of Memory: The Art of Gerardo Suter (1999),
Gerardo Suter
other books:
Desires and Disguises: Five Latin American Photographers
(1993), Amanda Hopkinson (Editor)
A Song to Reality: Latin-American Photography 1860-1993
(1998), Erika Billeter