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  • [DUMBO, Brooklyn]

  • [Daniel Gordon, Artist]

  • [Daniel Gordon Gets Physical]

  • When I was in college, I did a couple of things

  • to try to understand the mechanics of a photograph.

  • And then, pretty early on, I hit on this thing.

  • I realized that I could make myself fly, through photography.

  • That was one very specific idea,

  • that you set up a camera,

  • you're photographing an event

  • where the camera kind of transforms

  • what's in front of the lens.

  • And something happens,

  • and that thing that was there didn't happen,

  • or didn't look like what it is in the picture.

  • It's a fiction and a truth at the same time,

  • and I think it was that transformation

  • that really drew me to photography.

  • I did not set out to have a studio-based photographic practice.

  • I developed, over many years, a process that enabled me

  • to attempt to do that transformation in my own way.

  • I was shooting with continuous lights, 8-by-10 slide film,

  • and they stopped making the film.

  • So I had to switch to strobe lights,

  • which is just the flash and you can't see what the shadow is doing.

  • And so I had to kind of paint the shadows in myself.

  • And then I started tweaking the colors

  • and kind of them more of a part of the composition,

  • and just getting wild.

  • [shutter clicking]

  • So, the first picture that I made using found images

  • was of a picture of a toe transplant operation.

  • When I was a kid, my dad who was a hand surgeon

  • made lots of photographs of his cases.

  • They were just like totally gory and crazy looking,

  • but fascinating.

  • Yeah, I really like this picture.

  • I don't know if this is a toe transplant operation,

  • and I don't know if my dad is this guy,

  • or the guy taking the picture.

  • And it kind of came full circle,

  • transplanting a toe into a thumb

  • and transplanting images from online into physical space.

  • So I thought, what if I could kind of

  • transport these images that probably had no other life

  • other than the life that they've had online,

  • and give them a body--

  • give them a form in real life.

  • This is my wife Ruby's silhouette,

  • taken two weeks ago

  • by me.

  • There's been a lot of talk about appropriation,

  • in a critical sense.

  • But I like to think about what I'm doing as, like,

  • an optimistic version of appropriation

  • where I'm kind of naive.

  • The images are all ground up and blended together in a way that

  • the history of them is not important.

  • What I do want somebody to think about is just the picture.

  • It's not that one can't have a really compelling conversation about art

  • in the world via appropriation,

  • but I do think that as I continue to make pictures

  • I've been allowing things to be more beautiful--

  • allowing those relationships

  • between physical things within a photograph

  • to kind of make meaning.

  • [shutter clicks]

  • I never really know what I'm going to get,

  • even though I spend so much time with it

  • in the process of making it.

  • I kind of like not knowing,

  • and then getting the film back and being surprised

  • by how it morphs from, kind of,

  • jumble of pretty shoddily-made stuff

  • into something that does have depth

  • and substance

  • and kind of turns into something real.

  • It's really transformed through making the photograph.

  • I mean, I'm happy about this

  • black kind of blend in

  • to the foreground and the background,

  • and have the white blend in

  • with the foreground and the background.

  • I like it.

  • I'm really interested in those points

  • where one extreme meets another extreme,

  • and you're not quite sure what you're looking at.

  • The transparency will be drum scanned,

  • which is just a very good scan.

  • And I work with Anthony from Green Rhino.

  • We'll do, like, four or five meetings,

  • starting with small prints,

  • just to work on the color.

  • We can color correct for specific parts.

  • So, say the reds aren't quite the right red,

  • we can select that part

  • and make it correct.

  • But, more or less what we're doing is just

  • correcting it to make it look like

  • what it looked like.

  • Looks good.

  • It is interesting

  • how I spend ninety-nine percent of my time in process--

  • finding images,

  • printing them out,

  • constructing them into a three-dimensional thing,

  • photographing that,

  • processing that film,

  • scanning it on my little scanner,

  • making a print,

  • looking at it on the wall--

  • and how little time

  • I get with the actual work.

  • If I'm lucky, it's in a show,

  • and I get to look at it

  • while I install it,

  • and spend a little time with it.

  • But the final thing does really matter,

  • and it's important that it resolves,

  • in the end,

  • as a print.

[DUMBO, Brooklyn]

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