Sunday, February 17, 2008

Eileen Neff

Neff structures her photographs like abstract paintings, blocking them into geometric sections that go against the grain of the blur. Each part becomes a kind of figure that can stand out against the others; focusing on one changes the figure-ground relationship. In some works the blur becomes the atmospheric background for the landscape, in others the reverse occurs....If the blur represents unconscious feeling and the landscape self-conscious reflection, then Neff is struggling to overcome the split between reason and feeling, which T.S. Eliot called the curse of modernity.

- Donald Kuspit (ARTFORUM)

This work was featured in "Eileen Neff: Between Us," at the Institute of Contemporary Art, University of Pennsylvania.


"The Field and the Plane," 2007, C-Print mounted on aluminum, Edition of 7, (39 x 37.75 inches), through Locks Gallery.

6 comments:

Tobias Gounod said...

This is breathtaking.

Alice Olive said...

Absolutely superb. I LOVE the simplicity of this. Stunning.

Joanna Goddard said...

really beautiful. i love this. thanks, paul.

Julie at Virtual Voyage said...

Thanks for visiting - have been fascinated to see the diversity of material you have covered here.
Recently read Perls on gestalt - interesting insight re photo.

Monique said...

How ordinary grass can look this beautiful is beyond me, but somehow you've done just that. Thank you for sharing.

zs said...

I love Eileen Neff. Her work is sublime... thanks for posting this.