Quick Draw Artist Interviews are a series of
interviews conducted by Otino Corsano using Facebook's IM Chat feature.
Spontaneous conversations with international artists are recorded and
documented specifically for publication on this blog.
Quick: Bud. Gilded framed Picasso print. A collector,
old friend, bronze focus. Regatta regalia; it was he who left the massive model
ship to be repaired. Gluing thin rope and then reattaching the toothpick
pushpit. “Thanks for spending time.” At the doorway. Every time repeating the
action reinforces tide. Draw: art about art.
Chris Shepherd (b. Grimsby, ON) started off his artistic
career as a painter, before turning to photography. He studied Art History,
Film and Artistic Practice at Ryerson, Waterloo and McMaster Universities. In
the late 80s he moved to Toronto permanently and photography helped to
familiarize a city that he initially felt very alienated from. During this
important process of exploration, Shepherd solidified his interest in the
passed-over or ignored movements and places of day-to-day metropolitan life.
Chris Shepherd is represented by Bau-Xi Photo. His most recent and
fourth solo exhibition at Bau-Xi Photo, "Wandering," was exhibited in
January 2013.
Chris Shepherd
All images © Chris Shepherd, unless otherwise noted.
Chat Conversation Start
Today
Chris
8:48pm
Candida
Höfer
Candida Höfer "The Metropolitan Opera New York VIII" 2005
Otino
8:49pm
You
got it.
I
literally just found her gallery website.
We
are good to start then?
Chris
8:51pm
Yup.
I do love her work. I just saw an older original at Birch Libralato a few
months ago.
Paterson Ewen, "Rain on Coastline", 1977, acrylic on gauged wood;
Francis Alÿs, "Ghetto Collector", 2003,
tin, magnets, rubber wheels (sculpture), edition 97/99;
Candida Höfer, "Rohbau Müncher VII", 1997, C-Print;
All courtesy of Jeanne Parkin and Birch Libralato Gallery
Otino
8:52pm
I'm
a fan of your work as well so thanks for taking the time to discuss your
practice.
Can
I start with a preamble for this dialogue?
Chris
8:53pm
Certainly.
Otino
8:54pm
I
think it may be helpful to list the route I traveled in the context of requesting
an interview with you.
It
started with Justin Bieber and the idea young Canadian men (especially those in
the spotlight) have the potential to be positive role models for others... in
the Arts and beyond, etc...
Then
I started thinking about Justin Trudeau and the weight of historical significance
resting on his shoulders each day...
From the "Collection of Pierre Trudeau Letters" @ Steve Szentesi Fine Art
JT | © FRED CHARTRAND / THE CANADIAN PRESS
And
then I arrived at your work. Maybe I should explain further?
Chris
8:57pm
That's
circuitous and timely because I just saw an image of Justin Bieber parading
through an airport without his shirt.
Otino
8:58pm
I'll have to post the image here. thanks.
Photo by Larry Busacca, © 2011 WireImage
In
my own work I've been considering aspects of mentorship.
Chris
8:59pm
The
weird thing about the idea of mentors is that I sort of wish I had one now.
I've always liked the model of learning by passing on information.
Otino
9:00pm
Exactly.
Or even a literal apprenticeship: the opportunity to work alongside and develop
with an experienced artist as rite of passage and progression towards new
approaches and results.
Chris
9:02pm
To a
some degree I help other artists, yet I'm pretty new myself.
I
came to visual art photography late in life.
This
picture of me was right around the time I really wanted to be a dancer or an
actor and I really thought I'd go to RADA or some other crazy art school.
At
the time the romantic ideal was to work so hard at something in a process akin
to formal apprenticeship.
Otino
9:03pm
Yes.
Recently, I’ve been trying to study with dancers myself.
© Jeremy Mimnagh 2013
I
thought this dialogue would be interesting since we are both colleagues and I
hope I am not presumptuous to state equals as artists?
Chris
9:04pm
I
would consider this flattering. In the past, I could be a little self-deprecating
at times; I really do like the idea of calling myself an artist now, and I
always considered you one.
Otino
9:05pm
I'm
thinking this exchange then could be less hierarchical as we juxtapose our
respective notes on visual art practice - your work considered alongside other
artists whose work I think could be of interest to possibly other (younger
male? or gender/age-free?) artists?
So
my main intention for this discourse is to possibly enact character
development.
Chris
9:07pm
I
quit any formal training I had over 25 years ago and never really conducted
formal studies much since. To a degree I'd call Sara Angelucci a mentor.
Sara Angelucci,"Lacrimosa (Maddelena)", 2010
Sara Angelucci,"Lacrimosa (Pia)", 2010
Sara Angelucci,"Lacrimosa (Silvia)", 2010
She's
a visual art photographer who's given me the most guidance and encouragement.
Otino
9:07pm
Great.
Let's talk specifically about your work first.
“Tree
- Don Valley Pathway Fall”
Chris
9:09pm
That's
a piece that was born out of desire to move from a totally urban focus to a
more natural setting and at the same time to invoke a bit of humour. It was a
found object though, so that also played into it.
Otino
9:09pm
Reminds
me the work of my good buddy Andrew Wright.
Andrew Wright, from the "Illuminated Landscape" series, 2001 - present
Andrew Wright,"Tree Correction 5", 2012
Miles Coolidge,"Bed", 2006 @ AMCE Los Angeles
Chris
9:10pm
I
was channeling Jon Sasaki.
Jon Sasaki,"Hang In There", 2012 HDV 2:48 silent, looped
I
hope that's not to presumptuous, Jon is an artist I totally respect and I love
his work.
Otino
9:11pm
"Tree
CNE Grounds" seems to provoke this notion of nature surviving against all
odds.
Almost
like the struggle of analogue processes in photography still lingering. Are you
fully digital now?
Chris
9:12pm
I'm
glad you see the positive. A lot of people view this piece, or others like this
one, and think I'm being negative, when the exact opposite is true. It's about
this type of perseverance.
Yes
I'm fully digital now. I actually question the current analog discourse. I mean,
I love analog photography, but not as a badge of validity.
Nevertheless,
I do have a view camera upstairs I plan to utilize in a very complicated way.
Otino
9:14pm
Works
like
"City
Land - Inside the Clover Leafs of Toronto" and
"City
Land - Inside the Clover Leafs of Toronto 1"
remind me of a photo essay published in Toronto Life featuring images of the Don
Valley Parkway during one of the two seasonal durations when it is closed for
cleaning and repairs ~ images of beautiful landscapes with finally no cars in
sight.
© Beth Kaplan, 2012
Catherine
Opie created a series like this of LA freeways.
Catherine Opie,"Untitled #40" (Freeway Series), 1995, Regen Projects
Catherine Opie,"Untitled #9" (Freeways Series), 1995, Regen Projects
Catherine Opie,"Untitled #34" (Freeways Series), 1995, Regen Projects
Where
are the "Clover Leafs" located in Toronto?
Chris
9:15pm
The
Clover Leafs are right beside the DVP at Eglinton Avenue in Toronto. It is the
greenbelt beside my day job office tower. I guess it's really called the
Flemingdon Park area.
Those
spaces are very powerful for me. I feel like an explorer in a place where
nobody bothers to travel. This idea of visiting the less-explored surfaces a
lot in my previous subject matter as well. These little ecosystems are so
amazing, yet so passed over... literally.
Otino
9:16pm
So
they are like photographic pastoral escapes?
Chris
9:18pm
Definitely,
yet there's also something strangely exciting about their "pedestrian"
appearance. It's not a large landscape area...
I'm
searching for the word that's usually used to describe epic landscape painting
and nature.
Otino
9:19pm
Ansel's
'Sublime'?
Chris
9:20pm
Sublime!
That's it.
Anyway,
nobody sees this beauty and I want to capture it and maybe call it out.
Otino
9:20pm
"Don
Valley Pathway Twin Towers"
These
massive apartment buildings are just south east of Leaside: Thorncliffe in East
York Centre, right? Many new Canadian Immigrants live in this area - true?
Chris
9:21pm
Tons
of immigrants live in this area.
Those
Towers were shot from the Don Valley Pathway…
same
place I shot the log in the road.
It's
a super interesting mix of cultures with lots of great places to eat.
Otino
9:22pm
Yeah,
IQBAL Kebab & Sweets Centre was one of my favourite places to eat when I
lived in the area.
"Harris
Water Treatment Plant Toronto" seems to have a historical documentation
slant. The project here partly seems to be to record these modern relics and
their architectural timelessness before they are gone.
And
"Horizon Triptych No.1" looks like Toronto's waterfront in the
balance.
Chris
9:25pm
That's
true of the "Harris Water Treatment Plant" image. I was originally drawn to the water
around it. It became a sort of muse for my earlier work that was in a very
Hiroshi Sugimoto type vein, but then I fell in love with the buildings and the
machinery and the history that Michael Ondaatje talks about I think in Skin of
a Lion about building the Bloor Bridge and other distinctly Toronto things.
Otino
9:27pm
"Thinking
of Friedrich" also seems to give away your intentions here with these.
Chris
9:28pm
“Thinking
of Friedrich” had nothing to do with it when I took it.
The ‘Friedrich’
part was more in response to Andrew Wright's latest Polar Photograph that's
called “After Freidrich” which I love. But it was a truly romantic photograph and that's not what I'm known for. Studying Art History, I liked him and others in
the Hudson Valley school of (again) sublime natural landscape painting.
Otino
9:28pm
"Signals
Junction Triangle" is my fav from your series of natural landscapes
featuring hints of urban evidence lingering as a second thought.
To a
degree I feel manipulated by these images. The slight saturation of colour,
pulled focus and the clouds coerce the viewer into a romanticized view of both
traditional landscape photography and contemporary, even Vancouver School-esque
aesthetics.
Chris
9:30pm
I
can't escape from the Vancouver School, nor do I really want to.
I
saw the Jeff Wall show at Ydessa Hendeles' some 25 years ago and it has really
stayed with me. I sometimes think I want to replicate his work, but I want my
work to be comprised of all found subjects rather than constructed ones. I
don't fully understand all the rhetoric of the Vancouver School; still, I love
the idea of showing in Vancouver this August 2013.
Otino
9:31pm
It
will be interesting to see how the West Coast Art Community reacts to your work
when East Coast reads of this vein have been somewhat critical. Are you hoping
to find acceptance or affirmation of your work there at all?
Chris
I'm
less interested in acceptance now than simply expanding my horizons. I hope to
progress the work through the context of public gallery shows. I love what I do
and really want to continue to expand my photo-based work into painting,
sculpture and performance. All this ties into photography, however I'm not
really keen on being described solely a "photographer" as defined by
most.
The
pulled focus thing was an unintentional nod to Toni Hafkenscheid who commands
the technique. I'm referencing a lot of people here as my work is based on
significant earlier artists and their practices.
Otino
9:33pm
I always
thought Adobe Systems should have named the new CS6 blur tools after Toni. The
"Iris Hafkenscheid" etc...
Your
work is quite eclectic and diverse although some of your "Google Street
views" appear to almost mimic your own style.
Like in "Google Streetview Alaska Crossroads".
Like in "Google Streetview Alaska Crossroads".
Was
this intentional or a move to distinguish your appropriation of this genre from
other similarly formal practices – e.g. Jon Rafman?
Chris
9:39pm
I
like the idea of being a ‘jack of all trades’ and I say that without a bit of
irony. I'm not interested in being the best photographer in the world or the
best "anything" - I'd rather engage discussion and thought. What really
is best?
Otino
9:39pm
"Google
Streetview Japan Dirt Pile"
It
seems as though you also 'composed' these images as well.
Chris
9:42pm
The
Google stuff came out of a serious bout of melancholy. I'm exploring. Others
have explored this avenue before me; still, the Google car doesn't see what it
photographs. It takes someone else to look at the millions of images it captures
and contextualize them. I'm just interpreting them with my own aesthetic as a
guide. Again the concept about seeing what's already there comes to mind. Yeah,
in this regard, I definitely composed the images you mention.
Otino
9:42pm
I especially
like the uber-photo dialogue set-up in
"Google Streetview Aquarium
Tourists Singapore "
also inset in the detail of missing tourist torsos.
How did you find this image?
Chris
9:45pm
I'm weirded
out about people taking pictures of everything. It's like they can't remember.
The camera reduced to a tool for memory is lame. I mean it functions well in
this regard, however, there are so many better uses for it than simply remaining a
recorder of life events.
This
is why I'm not interested in people as subject matter. When I go to a concert
and there are 100 nobs filming and taking pictures on their phones it bugs me.
Just watch and experience. If you can't remember it than it wasn't worth
remembering.
I found that image in a very strange way. I literally looked at Singapore for hours until I discovered these unique, little, single streetview dots taken by the photographers. I'd have to show you.
I found that image in a very strange way. I literally looked at Singapore for hours until I discovered these unique, little, single streetview dots taken by the photographers. I'd have to show you.
Otino
9:46pm
How
was "Google Pon Construction" composed?
Chris
9:46pm
Google
Pin Construction was actually made in Photoshop. I took a single pin and
replicated it and moved it around the canvas until I had it completely covered.
Otino
9:46pm
crazy
man.
I
want to return just for a second to our starting point.
Chris
9:47pm
Take
the conversation anywhere.
Otino
9:47pm
I
really think your images offer (younger?) photographer/artists a lot to
consider.
Chris
9:48pm
That's
very flattering but why?
Otino
9:49pm
Words
of advice always seems quaint; yet I find these next signature works (I hope it
is o.k. to call your series of vacant rooms your signature approach) to be the
most elucidating images on many levels.
Chris
9:50pm
I'll
always shoot vacant rooms.
Otino
9:50pm
Let's
face it:
"Tux
Condos Empty Office"
is
classic Shepherd - right?
Chris
9:51pm
I've
shot that place in about 5 different incarnations and I remember it when it was
an auto garage.
Otino
9:51pm
I also
find the school environments to be the most poignant like
"Nelson
High School Large Gymnasium"
"Nelson
High School Small Gym"
These
are formally ‘perfect’ and yet they also seem to reveal a remainder of
'regret'?
Can
I take another side road for a second?
Chris
9:53pm
Side
road away.
Otino
9:55pm
So I
hear the word "respect" tossed around a lot in the context of Character
Development strategies in educational circles, especially regarding:
self-respect; respect of property; respecting your parents, adults and elders, etc...
Yet
I wonder if it makes more sense to focus on “regret” in terms of making the
best choices at the time - decisions best for all - rather than promoting social
mores in the façade of etiquette?
I
think your work does a great job of healing the past and showing future
potential using photographic space as a stage.
Chris
9:58pm
I'm
not sure I follow.
Otino
9:58pm
In
my perspective, your work isolates these timeless moments as visual locations
for contemplation bracing sustained thought and review?
Chris
9:59pm
That's
pretty insightful I think.
OK,
sustained thought and review I can totally get.
Otino
10:00pm
"Medical
Offices on Roncesvalles"
It
is impossible not to place subjective narratives into these spaces ~ right?
Times
we were injured, time to heal, patient, waiting...
"Seaforth
Surgical Changeroom" the conversations from these walls are loud and
silent at the same time to me.
Chris
10:02pm
Pretty
much so. Although for me they're mostly line, angle and colour.
I
think I’m interested in the manner in which these specific images operate because
they are uncomfortable places, although when you focus on their compositions
you see something else altogether.
I
like the idea of architecture changing people, when the term architecture truly
begins to mean something. Most of what we see in the city is not architecture,
it's building. Those medical offices I shot on Roncesvalles are brutal!
Otino
10:03pm
"Hospice
Room Seaforth Ontario" seems reflective of these significant moments of
architectural manifestations towards narrative then?
That
is a narrative set-up in purely formal terms?
Chris
10:07pm
“Seaforth”
was again about seeing place through others eyes.
Yes,
I felt uncomfortable in hospitals as a patient, but as a photographer I feel
excited and amazed. It was also acknowledging the fact workers in hospitals are
very comfortable in these areas where others are not.
The
Hospice room is again personal, but not in a narrative way.
It's
just what my Brother and Sister do for a living and they are good at helping
people. We all die, so if I can become comfortable about dying whenever, I'll
have done something good. This room was the favourite in the little hospital
because although it was full of pain, people did important things in there.
They died. That's good work.
Otino
10:07pm
"Retail
Vacancy 5th Avenue" reminds me of Justin Bieber again. Maybe it’s the
purple neon.
Chris
10:08pm
This
photo was the first time I found a good vacant spot in New York.
I
love New York but I couldn't for the life of me figure out what the space used
to be used for. I have a good anecdote about NYC cops involving photographing
this shop as well.
Otino
10:08pm
I'm all
for a good cop story.
Chris
10:11pm
In
short, he approached me after I had taken that photo and I thought I was in sh*t.
Instead, he just started talking about cameras and which one should he buy. He
was so friendly, in fact my greatest memory about New York is everyone was so
friendly. The preconception of the place
scared the crap out of me on several occasions. I always thought I was going to
get abused or bugged by someone and every time they turned out to be super-friendly
and simply inquisitive.
Otino
10:11pm
ha.
awesome.
"The
Bronx NYC Mezzanine"
I
grew up riding the TTC. So although set in NYC your subway shots also speak to
me in a way enabling me to revisit and reconsider the context and situations I
was faced with as a young artist.
Chris
10:12pm
I'd
like to live in New York - in Queens, the Bronx or Brooklyn.
Otino
10:12pm
"Times Square NYC Tunnel"
Somehow
I think your work would be well suited there.
Chris
10:12pm
I
wouldn’t want to permanently relocate, just spend a year two to take pictures
and make art. It would be so impossible not to get lost in the millions of
people who are also trying to produce work successfully there!
Otino
10:13pm
"Tarps
No.1" seems to be about possible next steps as ‘projects in the works’?
"Tarps
No. 2" as in 'white' cloth?
or under
'light' cloth rather.
Chris
10:15pm
Yeah,
I'm confronted on several sides by tarps.
I
just recently saw work by Betty Goodwin that freaked me out.
Betty Goodwin "Tarpaulin No. 3", 1975
I
was working away on my ghetto Christo ideas and all of a sudden I find her tarp
stuff. Now, more and more, I see artists using tarps in their work. I might
have to abandon the idea just because of this repetition.
I
really want to wrap myself up in the stuff and take self-portraits so I need to
find a studio assistant to help so I don't suffocate myself.
Jeanne-Claude and Christo “Running Fence”, 1976
Otino
10:15pm
You'd
be a great mentor I’m sure Chris.
Chris
10:16pm
I
don't produce enough, unless ideas count.
I do
find myself being more and more optimistic though.
I
mean, I might be slightly melancholy at times; yet I believe in people,
goodness and all that dreamy stuff. If I stop now there wouldn't be much point.
Otino
10:16pm
I'm
still considering your great "ghetto Christo" line.
Your work has greatly helped me develop my character.
Your work has greatly helped me develop my character.
Thanks
for taking the time Chris.
Chris
10:17pm
Thanks
for the interest Otino.
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