suzette bross
DESCRIPTION
ÂTRANSCRIPT
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WALKS
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
FOREWORD
WALKS :
ESSAY BY ALLISON GRANT
WORKS
ARTIST BIO
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FOREWORD
We are very privileged to present Suzette Bross: Walks. The images in this
exhibition represent the continuation of themes that have been at the center of
her work for the past twenty years.
Bross’ photographs force us to consider the time between events and the
spaces between our destinations. Taken in both public and private forums, the
series is both extremely personal and broadly universal.
The results is a body of work that reads as a complex chronological mediation
on modern life. Allison Grant describes the work, saying: “Bross expertly
expresses a complex account of what it means to navigate the small journey’s
of daily life.”
We would like to thank our family, friends and supporters who have made
this exhibition possible. We also extend our appreciation to Allison Grant for
her exceptional essay that accompanies the show; and to Andrew Green, who
assisted in the catalogue composition.
Above all, we are grateful to Suzette. We can’t thank her enough for her
generous spirit, all that she has done and for the exceptional works that you
will see in this exhibit.
Dolly and Jack Geary
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WALKS
ALLISON GRANT
Deep reflection often occurs at moments that appear outwardly mundane.
The spaces between obligations and scheduled appointments—the
commute, the line at a checkout, a walk around the neighborhood, or a
midday coffee—serve as intervals when the body is kept busy enough
with routine tasks to allow the mind to ruminate on more profound
aspects of life. The quotidian nature of routine makes it a grounding force
in life: a rhythm that allows the waking mind to move into spontaneous,
enigmatic dreaming.
Artist Suzette Bross uses routines from her daily life to create
contemplative artworks that elevate the mundane time spent commuting
or wandering into moments of essential importance to the human psyche.
Her photographs contain identifiable subject matter; however, the camera
is not used in service of faithful documentation, but rather it is used to
describe experiences of interiority and to consider how the mind wanders
in relation to external visual stimulus. Specifically, Bross works within
the patterns and rhythms that occur as she moves from place to place,
as is evident in her recent series Walks (2012–2014). In precisely-aligned
grids of photographs taken from waist level looking down at the ground,
the artist documents walks step-by-step as she traverses pathways,
city streets, hallways, and building interiors. The textures of the terrain
she crosses never fully conform to the rigid logic of her photographs’
gridded sequencing. Dizzying patterns emerge where the geometry of an
environment appears to continually morph beneath her feet, seemingly in
sync with her own internal thoughts.
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In Michel de Certeau’s book The Practice of Everyday Life, a chapter titled
“Walking in the City” describes the immersive experience of walking
through urban space as a process of invention where the body navigates
a complex composition designed by industrial forces far larger than the
individual. The bodies of those who walk he argues, “follow the thicks and
thins of an urban ‘text’ [which] they write without being able to read.”i Here
he emphasizes the agency of the individual as an author of her own path,
invented on the fly while moving in a sea of intricate passageways that
embody their own logic—a sentiment picked up in Bross’s photographs.
As a series, the works in Walks frame the dynamic interplay of body, mind,
and surroundings that accompanies the process of finding one’s way. The
optical bends and spatial confusion in each neatly organized artwork is a
nod to the elasticity of the lone walker’s movements that bend around a
more rigid, encircling world. Devoid of familiar points of orientation, such
as a horizon line or recognizable landmark, the works prevent viewers
from lingering on the familiar. Without points of orientation, Bross leaves
viewers to ruminate on the density of individualized experiences available
within a single route.
Throughout the project, Bross’s feet appear over and over amid routine
movements that contain the accompanying stress, dreaming, and drifting
that fill the gaps between a starting point and destination. So often, in
the technologically connected present, in-between moments such as
these become occasions to escape the mundane and divert attention to a
smartphone. Always at arm’s length, screens and the networked worlds
they contain have become stitched into the fabric of human consciousness.
Photography, too, has become instantaneously accessible via tiny phone
cameras that allow users to halt and mediate the surrounding world,
and make it more legible as it is removed from the turbulence and
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inconsistency of the real. Ever mindful of these realities, Bross opted to
use her camera phone to make the photographs in Walks as opposed to
using the more sophisticated optics available in high-end cameras. This
decision renders her images in at least two important ways. Held at waist
level, Bross’s phone is positioned in precisely the location where it is often
found as one walks while multitasking. From this perspective, the camera
moves along with the body and is wrapped into the flow of navigation
and perception. Rather than working in slow and calculated ways, Bross’s
process integrates her photographic device into the swirling and darting
energy of her own movements, allowing her to remain enmeshed in
the process of walking and thinking, rather than stopping to pause for
reflection. Additionally, the hazy, granular quality of cellphone photography
lacks crisp definition and therefore lends itself to describing consciousness
as constantly shifting and ungraspable in its entirety. Rather than isolating,
simplifying, and controlling specific aspects of space in singular pictures,
the multiple, time-based images in Walks transcend static description and
use imprecision to animate the constant perceptual fluctuations that mark
bipedal movement.
Walks builds upon Bross’s previous series Commute (2001–2003), which
similarly mines her own emotional stratum using photographs that were
captured with a Nikon Coolpix, one of the earliest hand-held consumer
digital cameras. The series includes pictures of water towers, roadways,
chain link fences, street signs, and other common roadside scenes in
slightly blurred images that are reminiscent of passing glimpses. Each work
is taken through a car window with a point-and-shoot camera that, similar
to Walks, allows the artist to remain in a faraway state of dreaming rather
than pulling herself into full concentration to create highly composed
pictures. Across both series, Bross expertly expresses a complex account
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of what it means to navigate the small journeys of daily life. She weaves
introspection into a medium that is typically used to point outward, and
in doing so, allows her personal experiences to become opportunities
for reflection on the importance life’s mundane routines. Commuting,
wandering, and drifting are activities bound by life’s more dramatic
events; however, as Bross asserts, they contain important moments of
dynamic contemplation.
Allison Grant
Assistant Curator, Museum of Contemporary Photography
i De Certeau, Michel. “Walking in the City.” The Practice of Everyday Life. Berkley and Los Angeles: U of California, 1984. 93. Print.
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WORKS
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Walk 7/24/14 Lake Side, Michigan (5:38:09-5:40:05pm)
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Walk 6/14/14 Forbidden 1, Boston (1:12:35-1:16:51pm)
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Walk 6/14/14 Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum Garden, Boston (12:28:53-12:31:34pm)
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Walk 3/23/14 One Allen Center, Houston (12:20:54-12:24:06pm)
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Walk 6/20/14 Mirabel, France (6:12:25-6:13:25pm)
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Walk 5/1/14 After Eloise, NYC (5:06:32-5:07:58pm)
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Walk 5/3/14 Friend with Orange Bag, NYC (5:08:14-5:11:54pm)
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Walk 3/22/14 Winter Street Studios, Houston (6:40:27-6:41:35pm)
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Walk 6/28/14 Soccer Practice, Chicago (1:03:38-1:05:23pm)
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Walk 9/22/13 To Church, Chicago (9:19:48-9:23:17am)
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Walk 7/29/14 Vail Mountain (10:36:29-10:39:40pm)
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Walk 1/20/13 Snowstorm, Tuileries Garden, Paris (5:35:21-5:56:46pm)
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Walk 2/3/14 Division Street, Chicago (5:29:54-5:30:53pm)
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Walk 2/5/14 Astor Street, Snowstorm, Chicago (9:11:40-9:12:38am)
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Walk 2/5/14 Rush & Chestnut, Snowstorm, Chicago (9:20:32-9:21:41am)
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Walk 2/6/14 MoMA, New York (3:54:44-3:55:49pm)
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Walk 2/7/14 Brooklyn Museum, New York (2:01:03-2:02:00pm)
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Walk 2/25/13 Division Street, Dunkin Donuts, Chicago (3:00:31-3:01:27pm)
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Walk 2/25/13 Mariano Park, Chicago (2:57:31-2:58:27pm)
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Walk 2/25/13 Rush Street, Chicago (2:51:54-2:52:36pm)
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Walk 3/12/14 Stud Horse Point, Utah (2:41:16-3:12:34pm)
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Walk 3/28/13 Purple Nikes, California (3:14:51-3:17:05pm)
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Walk 3/28/13 Palm Desert, California (8:25:36-8:26:15am)
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Walk 5/23/13 Art Institute of Chicago (11:03:46-12:15:59pm)
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Walk 5/28/13 After Lunch with Kristi & Tash, State Street, Chicago (2:17:33-2:19:40pm)
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Walk 6/15/13 Errands, State Street, Chicago (2:54:24-2:56:04pm)
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Walk 7/9/13 St. Georges Motel, France (8:23:14-8:25:24pm)
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Walk 9/20/13 EXPO, Chicago (1:48:35-2:18:49pm)
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Walk 3/23/14 Forbidden 2, Houston (6:35:49-6:40:50pm)
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ABOUT THE ARTIST
Suzette Bross is a photographer living and working in Chicago, Illinois.
Her work is in the permanent collections of The Art Institute of Chicago,
The National Gallery of Art, DC, Museum of Contemporary Photography in
Chicago, The New Mexico Museum of Art, the Block Museum, Mass College
of Art in Boston, and more.
With an MFA from the Institute of Design at IIT, Bross has taught at
Columbia College Chicago,the Milwaukee Institute of Art & Design and
the Northwestern University Medical School. Her work has been exhibited
internationally and across the United States. Bross was commissioned by
Northwestern Memorial Hospital to create a permanent portrait series of
Chicago women (2007).