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Catherine Yass - at Foam - Photography Museum
Saturday, 23 July 2005 10:50
AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS.-Foam – Photography Museum presents Catherine Yass - Passage. Foam - Photography Museum Amsterdam’s exhibition Passage introduces the work of British photographer Catherine Yass to the Dutch public. Yass is well known for her experiments with photographic techniques, through which she has developed her characteristic use of color. Most of her work is shown in large light boxes. Catherine Yass’s visual images have an astonishing psychological quality. This is due partly to her choice of subject: corridors, cells and stairs are recurring themes. Equally important is her technique. By combining a color positive with a negative of the same subject, and printing the two together, a fascinating color effect is achieved. Displaying the result in a large light box emphasises the surreal and intense luminescent quality. Catherine Yass’s work is about mental rather than physical space. This work features views of corridors in a psychiatric hospital in London. The bizarre light and the empty, archetypical corridors create an ominous, sinister atmosphere. As if the corridors are not part of the architecture, but psychological, pulsating arteries of a living organism. Yass transforms the web of corridors into a shimmering, magical reality.
In her pictures of cells, capsules, stairways and corridors Yass consciously chooses subjects that evoke a powerful sense of claustrophobia, or form a link between two areas. Gangways, crossings and passages represent mental processes in her work, where architecture is above all a metaphor. They are like x-ray photos of a subject, revealing the underlying skeleton. Indeed, Yass’s work is often associated with the subconscious and the spiritual. Catherine Yass was born in London in 1963. She studied at Slade School of Art in London and graduated in 1990 with a Master of Arts at Goldsmiths College in London. In addition to photography, Yass has also worked with film. Yass was nominated in 2002 for the Turner Prize.
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