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![]() groundspeed (Rose Petal) #17, 2001 C-Print 128 x 213 cm Courtesy the artist; DZ Bank Kunstsammlung © Rosemary Laing; Galerie CONRADS, Düsseldorf groundspeed (Red Piazza) #05, 2001 C-Print 106 x 163 cm Courtesy the artist; DZ Bank Kunstsammlung © Rosemary Laing; Galerie CONRADS, Düsseldorf The Australian artist Rosemary Laing moves between different genres in her work, drawing upon installation, performance and photography at the same time. The groundspeed series is the result of a sort of “field trip” to the eucalyptus forests of southern Australia. Together with a team of assistants, Laing produced a series of images of landscapes in which reality and fiction combine through the insertion of ordinary industrially produced carpets in practically unspoilt natural settings. Her work thus weds the open landscape of the image in the background with an element in the foreground that instead recalls an interior, an inhabited human environment. But where is the reality or where is the fiction? Are we sure we can believe in the reality of pure and idyllic nature? The artist’s working method is comparable to filmmaking. A team of professionals goes to the selected location and creates a set that meets all of the artist’s requirements and is therefore ready to be photographed. This procedure enables Laing to achieve results that would be impossible through digital manipulation of the images alone. The flower-patterned carpets Laing uses belong to a European tradition that was very popular and widespread in Australia when she was young. She thus “grafts” a piece of European culture onto the Australian landscape. She intervenes in nature and alters it. Reverberating in her works is an explicit criticism of the appropriation of the Australian continent by European colonizers, a process underway for at least 200 years. In the light of these considerations, Laing’s apparently idyllic and fantastic images suddenly take on a bitter and dramatic aftertaste. The artistic representation thus succeeds in arriving at a higher level of truth than that of the concrete visual reality it uses. groundspeed (Red Piazza) #5, 2001 groundspeed (Rose Petail) #17, 2001 Exhibition view © Centro di Cultura Contemporanea Strozzina, Firenze; Valentina Muscedra Rosemary Laing (Australia, 1959) The subjects of the groundspeed series of photographs are luxuriant greenery and woodland offered to the aesthetic contemplation of viewers attracted by the light and colour of nature in all its beauty. The lens appears to have been tilted slightly downwards at the moment of taking the photographs so that the viewer’s eye is automatically guided to the ground. It is precisely this angle of vision that leads to more careful analysis of the image. The ground, glistening with light and colour, is in reality a carefully laid carpet. But why put a carpet down in a forest? |
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