DIRK BRAECKMAN

Posted on 2016-06-27

First experimenting with photography in the 1980’s, Dirk Braeckman’s work has evolved into a singular form that evokes minds of sensual ambiguity and intimate solitude. Through the use of black and white, analogue photography and dark lab techniques, the artist develops a relationship between what is photographed and post-production manipulation. This relationship allows for the found, often commonplace subject…a row of curtains, an empty doorway or a woman’s crossed legs…to arrest attention and command a space that is ordinarily unobserved.

Braeckman transforms the darkroom into a field of experimentation, working closely with the materiality of the photograph. This intimate relationship with his photographic materials mirrors the intimate perspective when photographing his subjects. By utilizing tonalities of the gray-scale and focusing on acute details, such as the folds of afabric or the curvature of the female form, Braeckman asks the viewer to engage with simple subjects that are often lost in shades of gray.

Opposite – X.L.-I.C.-16

Exhibition runs through to August 13th, 2016

Rose Gallery
2525 Michigan Avenue
Los Angeles
California
CA90404

www.rosegallery.net