Sunday, 30 March 2014

JoAnn Verburg (assignment # 6)

A Snip on JoAnn Verburg's “Present-Tense Enterprise”


Photographer JoAnn Verburg pairs her images from various points, capturing visual echoes of live performance.

Hero (Crucifixion). 2011


'Performance disappears as you look at it,' she is quoted...'It is unique and unrepeatable, and each viewer who sees it sees it from a different vantage point and therefore has a different experience from every other viewer' (NYT).”

Hero (Superman), 2011


Verburg is a veteran in doing multiple-image and extending the frame. Her husband, Jim Moore, has long been one her subjects. He is a poet who has charmingly written on his experience on being a constant subject. Moore also offers us, a poem on it, at:

http://click.si.edu/Story.aspx?story=340




Still Life With Jim, 1991

Verburg explains that, in the centre image he seems to share the same time and place with the viewer. 'Finally, in the third photo, on the right, he engages the viewer in the present tense.'she said (NYT).”

3 x Jim, 1989




Verburg maybe found in Minneapolis or in Florida, but generally in Italy where she and her husband spend extended periods of time.


Diptych of a gnarled olive tree, Tango/Tangle, 1999, from the series“Exploding Triptych, 2000” 
Spoleto, Italy.

     “The 5-by-7 view camera Ms. Verburg uses to photograph olive trees is designed with the lens mount and the film holder connected to each other with an accordion-like bellows. They are traditionally parallel to each other so that every detail during exposure is given equal focus. The bellows enables Ms. Verburg to tilt the lens and the film away from each other to alternate the focus within an exposure or, as she said, to extend “space within the image.
'When I’m under the darkcloth working, what I’m doing is a little like what I used to do with clay or wire when I studied sculpture: torquing the image and squeezing it and stretching it into being more lively or wacky or improbable...'
To create a stable horizon line from one image to the next, she uses tracing paper on the ground glass, drawing the horizon line in the first exposure so that she can align the second, third and fourth, maintaining a continuity that adds to the sense of movement (NYT).

    Living — being alive — is a present-tense enterprise.”
      JoAnn Verburg (born 1950) has a B.A. In Sociology form Wesleyan University and M.F.A in Photography from Rochester Institute in Technology. She has an extensive and distinguished carrier in photography.


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