For their exhibition My Quiet of Gold, Cooper and Gorfer traveled to the rural areas of Kyrgyzstan to collect sagas and stories in conversations and interviews with local inhabitants. Out of these tales, the duo created striking photographic portraits that go far beyond mere documentation to tell and visually interpret romantic-melancholy stories of love, sorrow, and betrayal in a completely new and non-linear ways.
"Like the portrait in Oscar Wilde's novel 'The Picture of Dorian Grey', our images show more than just an objective view of the person portrayed. Instead, they also depict something we cannot see - the past, the insubstantial and intangible, where the life and sentiment of the person photographed are woven together with our perception and experience of the moment. In the end, our pictures are the stories' beautiful remains."
~~ Cooper & Gorfer
Sarah Cooper and Nina Gorfer live and work in Gothenburg, Sweden.
My Quiet of Gold is an exhibition from the renowned Hasselblad Foundation in Gothenburg, and is currently on view at Gestalten Space, Berlin. A book of the same name has also been published, and is available through the gallery.
My Quiet of Gold
© Cooper & Gorfer, Shola and the Cat, 2010
© Cooper & Gorfer, Shola and Islam in a Field of Newly Planted Trees, 2010
© Cooper & Gorfer, Nazgul Holding Wheat in Green, 2010
© Cooper & Gorfer, Blue Shola, 2011
© Cooper & Gorfer, Brothers and Arms, 2011
© Cooper & Gorfer, 1916 - The childline, 2011
© Cooper & Gorfer, The Carpet Picture, 2011
© Cooper & Gorfer, Red Shola Standing, 2011
Courtesy Cooper & Gorfer / Gestalten Space, Berlin
My Quiet of Gold
October 27 - November 27, 2011
This post is also featured on the Huffington Post
This post is also featured on the Huffington Post
Post a Comment