Domain changed to archive.palanq.win . Feb 14-25 still awaits import.
[75 / 17 / ?]

So this is the Power of Photographic Schizophrenia?

No.3702399 View ViewReplyOriginalReport
>Sophie Calle is an artist of the unexpected. She explores what it is to be an observer and to be observed; she stalks; she writes down her findings with the precision of a police report or a psychiatrist’s case notes. Her work – which ranges from photography and film to performance and installation – has electrified the Paris art scene with its quest-like intensity (she is not far removed from other performance artists like Marina Abramović). For one experiment, The Detective in 1980, Calle hired a private detective to follow her and noted how that day she visited all the places in Paris which held some emotional significance for her. Leading him through the Luxembourg Gardens, Calle remembers her first kiss which took place there, though the detective’s report simply states, “The subject crosses the Jardin de Luxembourg”. It is this disparity between personal and objective realities she explores throughout her work.

>She stumbled upon her next project. She met a man, Henri B., at a party. He said he was moving to Venice, so she moved to Venice and there, she began to follow him. Suite Vénitienne was the resulting book, first published in 1979 and re-released this month in collaboration with Siglio. Calle documents her attempts to follow her subject. She phoned hundreds of hotels, even visited the police station, to find out where he was staying, and persuaded a woman who lived opposite to let her photograph him from her window. Her photographs show the back of a raincoated man as he travels through the winding Venetian streets, a surreal and striking backdrop to her internalised mission. The very beauty of her surroundings has a filmic quality, intensifying the thriller-esque narrative of her project. Sometimes her means of following Henri B. are methodical – enlisting Venetian friends to make a phone call on her behalf – and sometimes arbitrary – following a delivery boy to see if he will lead her to him.