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Anna Gaskell

Anna Gaskell (born October 22, 1969[1]) is an American art photographer and artist from Des Moines, Iowa.[2]

Anna Gaskell
"Untitled #2" in Gaskell's photography series, "wonder"
Born (1969-10-22) October 22, 1969 (age 53)
Des Moines, Iowa, US
Known forPhotography

She is best known for her photographic series that she calls "elliptical narratives" which are similar to the works produced by Cindy Sherman. Like Sherman, Gaskell's works are influenced by film and painting, rather than the typical conventions of photography.[1] She lives and works in New York.[2]

Early life and education

Gaskell's mother was an evangelical Christian who brought Anna and her brother along on "wild pilgrimages throughout the Midwest," where they would witness miracles being performed, acts of healing, people speaking in tongues, and other Charismatic Christian practices. She claims that she does not remember anything strange about these acts, "but more a feeling of excitement and a security in the faith that [she] felt from everyone there." Gaskell says that her work revolves around a similar idea of faith, believing the possibility of the impossible and suspension of disbelief.[3] After studying for two years at Bennington College,[2] she received her BFA from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago in 1992.[4] In 1995, she received her MFA from Yale School of Art, studying under Gregory Crewdson.[4][5]

Career

Gaskell stages all of her scenes, using the style of "narrative photography," wherein each scene exists only to be photographed. Gaskell pioneers a new discourse of contemporary photography where within each of her series, the narrative of her photographs is disrupted, "its fragments functioning like film stills excised from their context but suggesting a missing whole."[3] There are gaps of space and time left between each photograph, evoking a "vivid and dreamlike world."[6] In a 2002 interview with curator Matthew Drutt of the Menil Collection, Gaskell describes her creative process and the inspiration she draws from other sources in the following way: "The stories and events that I choose to use as jumping-off points are simply that. They are only a part of what goes into the work, and perhaps a useful reference for viewers. [...] Trying to combine fiction, fact, and my own personal mishmash of life into something new is how I make my work. Into all of this, I try to insert a degree of mystery that ensures that the dots may not connect in the same way every time."[3]

1990s

1996

In haunting photographic scenes of preadolescent girls, Gaskell alludes to well-known children's literature, such as Lewis Carroll's Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, which can be found in two of her series: wonder (1996–97) and override (1997). Gaskell made her international debut with the twenty photograph series, wonder (1996–97),[7] the first series Gaskell created after receiving her MFA at Yale University School of Art.[8] wonder, which draws the viewer in with stained-glass coloration intensified by lamination,[7] features two identically dressed Alices photographed together and separately and at oblique angles that recall the disorienting experiences of Alice in Wonderland.[9] For example, in Untitled #1 of wonder, one of the Alices is pictured treading in a pool of her tears, "her body grotesquely distorted by the refraction of light on the water"[7] and in Untitled #2, one Alice leans over the other, plugging her nose, seemingly about to perform mouth-to-mouth resuscitation. These two photographs also demonstrate how Gaskell takes on the role of "unreliable narrator" within her series by her "use of photography as a format which invites the suspension of disbelief, with her codings and fragmentations of the frames exposing the viewer to the inconsistencies and assumptions that are held in place by realist photographic as well as narrative conventions.” [10] Through the use of different sized photographs, Gaskell displays an instability in Alice by referring to the character's growth spurts and shrinking spells.[2]

1997

In the series override, allusions to Alice's Adventures in Wonderland are made again, as in wonder, but in this series, the scenarios are drawn from Gaskell's own imagination.[7] override features seven versions of Alice which alternate between roles of victim and aggressor. A description about the series written by Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum curators states, "[The seven versions of Alice] try to control the changes to her body by literally, physically holding her in place — a potent metaphor for the anxiety and confusion experienced by children on the verge of adolescence."[6] Color and chiaroscuro play a large role in Gaskell's work as they lead the viewer to the main source of action in each piece. While the wonder series features cool blue tones, the photographs featured in override were captured in the "golden hues of Twilight." The constantly changing scale of the photographs, the physical stretching and pulling actions performed by the models, and the range of size of the photographs themselves (6 x 7 1/4 inches to 60 x 90 inches) all relate to the central metaphor of Alice in Wonderland: change.[7]

Gaskell's film Floater repeats in a backwards sequence a scene of an Ophelia-like young woman in a pool of water, trying to decide whether she should drown or save herself. The theme of this cycle of indecision is seen again in her series half life in 2002.[3]

1998

In her photographic series, hide, Gaskell references a lesser-known Brothers Grimm tale, "The Magic Donkey."[11] This series features young girls alone in a gothic mansion, creating a sense of dread and underlying sexual intrigue that takes its impetus from the tale of a young woman forced to hide beneath animal skins to hide from the matrimonial desires of her father.[9] The name of the series is drawn from the children's game hide-and-seek, the dual personality of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, and the literal skin, or hide, that creates a boundary between the inside and the outside, the self and the other.[12]

1999

In 1999, Gaskell produced two series, Sally Salt says and by proxy, both of which featured Sally Salt, the female protagonist in The Adventures of Baron Munchausen, a 1988 British comedy film based on the tall tales told about 18th-century German baron Karl Friedrich Hieronymus von Munchausen. by proxy takes on a darker tone by combining the fictional, gullible, and lovable Sally Salt character with a real-life serial killer, Genene Jones, a pediatric nurse who, in the early 1980s, was found guilty of the murder of several children in Texas. Gaskell's models in by proxy wear white nurse's outfits. The girls in the photographs represent Genene Jones at different stages in her life, battling with her own tormented mind. The title of the series draws from Munchausen syndrome by proxy, a type of child abuse in which a caregiver purposefully makes a child under their care ill, usually to attract the attention or sympathy of others upon themselves. Though all of her series are imbued with a sense of darkness, compared to the fictional stories depicted in her previous series such as override and wonder, by proxy is all the more unsettling in that it highlights real-life and disturbing subjects such as Munchausen syndrome by proxy and the Jones murders.[11]

2000s

2002

Gaskell's half life—drawn from stories such as Daphne du Maurier's Rebecca, Elizabeth Gaskell's (no relation) "The Old Nurse's Story," and Henry James' The Turn of the Screwbegan as an idea for a film installation and evolved into an exhibition combining still and moving images with ten photographs and a film installation. The unnamed central character of Rebecca, a tale from 1938 about an ingénue who goes abroad, marries a middle-aged patrician, and follows him back to his ancestral estate in Cornwall. There the young woman finds the house filled with the memory of the man's dead first wife, Rebecca, which torments the heroine to the brink of suicide. half life draws from the idea of Rebecca's presence in the estate and the heroine's mind. This series explores the human psyche, including the experiences of fear, isolation, and uncertainty. As seen in her previous works, the protagonist of half life is a young woman who finds herself between "the purity of youth and the gradual loss of innocence that comes with maturity." Differing itself from previous series, the question of identity is pushed to a new level in half life by the almost total exclusion of the main figure. When shown, the woman often has her back to the camera or remains hidden behind her hair.[3] Gaskell uses dynamic camera angles and elaborately decorated interiors in her photographs in half life creating a sense of vertigo or claustrophobia. The accompanying 21-minute film, similar to her piece, Floater (1997), features a woman floating under water in a state of non-being, neither fully dead or alive.[12]

2007

In her video, Acting Lessons, Gaskell plays the protagonist, an actress who is performing a monologue and is continuously interrupted by an acting coach off screen. In this piece, Gaskell adopts "a mundane living room as the setting for her portrayal of emotional power struggles."[2]

Exhibitions

Solo exhibitions

1997

1999

2000

2001

2002

2003

2004

  • Casey Kaplan Gallery, New York
  • At Sixes and Sevens, Yvon Lambert, Paris[27]

2005

  • 1991, Galleria Massimo De Carlo, Milan[28]
  • Erasers, Galerie Gisela Capitain, Cologne[14]

2006

  • Everything That Rises, Second Street Gallery, Charlottesville, Virginia[29]

2007

2009

  • Replayground, Galerie Gisela Capitain, Cologne[14]

2010

  • Turns Gravity, Yvon Lambert, New York[33]

2013

  • Penguin, Yvon Lambert, Paris[34]
  • The Romantic Exiles, Galerie Gisela Capitain, Cologne[14]

2014

  • Vampyr (with Douglas Gordon), Yvon Lambert, Paris[14][35]

Select group exhibitions

1998

2002

2007

2012

Reception

Grace Glueck, writing in The New York Times in 2004, described Gaskell as an established "maker of spooky, tension-filled feminine fictions", her work recalling Lewis Carroll's Alice in Wonderland, Daphne du Maurier's novel Rebecca and the films of Alfred Hitchcock. In Glueck's view, Gaskell's method is "to create a narrative expectation without fulfilling it", each picture hinting at a situation or story, provoking the viewer to speculate. Glueck does not necessarily approve of this, calling the process of challenging the viewer to make a story "do[ing] the artist's work".[40]

Robert Mahoney, reviewing Gaskell's first exhibition of color photographs in 1997, calls the show a "masquerade" with a pair of "pretty twins" playing at Alice in Wonderland in blue pinafores, white tights and "black Mary Jane shoes". Mahoney calls this an intense search for identity, observing that the use of twins brings out the "mirror-like clarity" of Alice's dream journey. In his view, the blue and white coloration recalls the Virgin Mary, while the use of young women to represent "prepubescent girls" brings sexuality into the images.[41]

Christopher Mooney, writing for ArtReview in 2014, reviews an exhibition in Paris of Gaskell's photographs alongside her ex-partner Douglas Gordon's "wall, floor, and corner works". Mooney calls it a swan song, the exhibition featuring swan taxidermy in "many" of Gordon's works, and a Bolshoi ballet prima ballerina, Svetlana Lunkina, who "danc[es] across Gaskell's screens". Mooney finds Lunkina the strongest element in the show, Gaskell's photographs displaying her as both graceful and "affecting".[42]

Awards

References

  1. ^ a b "Anna Gaskell". Artnet.com. November 23, 2013. Retrieved November 23, 2013.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g "Anna Gaskell". Guggenheim Collection Online. The Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation. Retrieved 9 February 2016.
  3. ^ a b c d e Drutt, Matthew (2002). Anna Gaskell: half life. Houston, Texas: Menil Foundation, Inc. ISBN 0-939594-54-4.
  4. ^ a b c "Gaskell, Anna." Benezit Dictionary of Artists. Oxford Art Online. Oxford University Press. Web. 17 Mar. 2014.
  5. ^ Higgins, Jackie (2013). . Prestel. pp. 136–137. ISBN 978-3-7913-4851-3. Archived from the original on 2013-12-03. Retrieved 2013-11-24.
  6. ^ a b c Moving Pictures: Contemporary Photography and Video from the Guggenheim Museum Collections. The Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation. 2003. ISBN 0-89207-269-5.
  7. ^ a b c d e f Clearwater, Bonnie (1998). Anna Gaskell. Museum of Contemporary Art. ISBN 1-888708-05-0.
  8. ^ Hofmann, Irene E (2005). Bits & Pieces Put Together to Present a Semblance of a Whole: Walker Art Center Collections. Minneapolis, MN: Walker Art Center.
  9. ^ a b Nancy Spector, "The Fiction of Fiction: An Exquisite Unease," in Anna Gaskell (NY: powerHouse Books: 2001) ISBN 1-57687-069-3.
  10. ^ Kokoli, Alexandra M. (2009). Feminism Reframed: Reflections on Art and Difference. Cambridge Scholars Publishing. ISBN 9781443815116.
  11. ^ a b c Anna Gaskell: by proxy. Aspen Art Museum. 2000. ISBN 0-934324-28-X.
  12. ^ a b "Anna Gaskell: Half Life". White Cube. Retrieved March 3, 2016.
  13. ^ . caseykaplangallery.com. Archived from the original on 2016-04-27. Retrieved 2016-04-13.
  14. ^ a b c d e f g h (PDF). GALERIE GISELA CAPITAIN. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-03-07.
  15. ^ Cube, White. "Anna Gaskell: Hide | White Cube". whitecube.com. Retrieved 2016-04-12.
  16. ^ "Anna Gaskell | Museum of Contemporary Art North Miami". mocanomi.org. 18 October 1998. Retrieved 2016-04-13.
  17. ^ Gaskell, Anna; Des Moines Art Center (2001-01-01). Anna Gaskell. Des Moines, Iowa: Des Moines Art Center. ISBN 1879003368. OCLC 50280913.
  18. ^ "Anna Gaskell | Castello di Rivoli". www.castellodirivoli.org. Retrieved 2016-04-13.
  19. ^ Edwards, Kathleen A; University of Iowa; Museum of Art; Neuberger Museum of Art (2005-01-01). Acting out: invented melodrama in contemporary photography. Iowa City, IA: University of Iowa Museum of Art. ISBN 0874141494. OCLC 57391868.
  20. ^ "KUNSTFORUM international | Login". www.kunstforum.de. Retrieved 2016-04-13.
  21. ^ ""Consciousness from the Ground Up" by Gaston, Diana – Afterimage, Vol. 28, Issue 6, May 2001".[dead link]
  22. ^ "Exhibitions – The Menil Collection". The Menil Collection. Retrieved 2016-04-12.
  23. ^ Hay, David (2002-09-29). "ART/ARCHITECTURE; Photographs on a Wall, Doors to a Haunted Manor". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2016-04-12.
  24. ^ Gaskell, Anna; Drutt, Matthew; Menil Collection (Houston, Tex.) (2002-01-01). Anna Gaskell: half life. Houston, Tex.: Menil Collection. ISBN 0939594544. OCLC 53228408.
  25. ^ . www.andover.edu. Archived from the original on 2016-04-24. Retrieved 2016-04-13.
  26. ^ "How Some Children Play at Slaughtering". kunstaspekte.
  27. ^ Gaskell, Anna; Rosenfield, Israel; Gioni, Massimiliano; Galerie Yvon Lambert (2004-01-01). Anna Gaskell: at sixes and sevens. Paris; New York: Galerie Yvon Lambert. ISBN 2913893104. OCLC 84612290.
  28. ^ . www.teknemedia.net. Archived from the original on 2016-04-23. Retrieved 2016-04-13.
  29. ^ "Culture- ART FEATURE- Mind games: Gaskell's missing memories". www.readthehook.com. Retrieved 2016-04-13.
  30. ^ "Paint Your Own Pictures – NY Arts Magazine". NY Arts Magazine. 19 March 2015. Retrieved 2016-04-13.
  31. ^ Services, Miami-Dade County Online. "Vizcaya Museum & Gardens – Anna Gaskell March 15 – June 1, 2007". vizcaya.org. Retrieved 2016-04-12.
  32. ^ . wexarts.org. Archived from the original on 2016-04-02. Retrieved 2016-04-13.
  33. ^ . www.yvon-lambert.com. Archived from the original on 2012-07-25. Retrieved 2016-04-12.
  34. ^ . www.yvon-lambert.com. Archived from the original on 2013-03-12. Retrieved 2016-04-12.
  35. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-10-16.
  36. ^ Boxer, Sarah (2002-10-24). "A Citywide Treasure Hunt for Photographs With Vision". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2016-04-13.
  37. ^ "Brooklyn Museum: Global Feminisms". www.brooklynmuseum.org. Retrieved 2016-04-13.
  38. ^ "Exquisite Corpses: Drawing and Disfiguration | MoMA". The Museum of Modern Art. Retrieved 2016-04-13.
  39. ^ "Ecstatic Alphabets/Heaps of Language | MoMA". The Museum of Modern Art. Retrieved 2016-04-13.
  40. ^ Glueck, Grace (30 April 2004). "Art in Review; Anna Gaskell". The New York Times. The New York Times. Retrieved 17 May 2016.
  41. ^ Mahoney, Robert. "Anna Gaskell's 'Wonder'". ArtNet. Retrieved 17 May 2016.
  42. ^ Mooney, Christopher (December 2014). "Anna Gaskell and Douglas Gordon: Vampyr". ArtReview. Retrieved 17 May 2016.
  43. ^ . The Photographers' Gallery. Archived from the original on 2015-12-08. Retrieved 2016-04-12.
  44. ^ Nancy Graves Foundation. http://www.nancygravesfoundation.org/grants.html 2013-11-26 at the Wayback Machine
  45. ^ "Until the Woods Began to Move | Greater Des Moines Public Art Foundation". Greater Des Moines Public Art Foundation. Retrieved 2016-04-12.
  46. ^ . 2007-07-06. Archived from the original on July 6, 2007. Retrieved 2016-04-12.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  47. ^ "NYFA Artists Now: Happy October!". NYFA.org – NYFA Current. 7 October 2015. Retrieved 2016-04-12.
  48. ^ "2010 ArtsLink Projects Awardees | CEC ArtsLink". www.cecartslink.org. Retrieved 2016-04-12.
  49. ^ "The Bohen Foundation". www.bohen.org. Retrieved 2016-04-12.

External links

    anna, gaskell, born, october, 1969, american, photographer, artist, from, moines, iowa, untitled, gaskell, photography, series, wonder, born, 1969, october, 1969, moines, iowa, usknown, forphotographyshe, best, known, photographic, series, that, calls, ellipti. Anna Gaskell born October 22 1969 1 is an American art photographer and artist from Des Moines Iowa 2 Anna Gaskell Untitled 2 in Gaskell s photography series wonder Born 1969 10 22 October 22 1969 age 53 Des Moines Iowa USKnown forPhotographyShe is best known for her photographic series that she calls elliptical narratives which are similar to the works produced by Cindy Sherman Like Sherman Gaskell s works are influenced by film and painting rather than the typical conventions of photography 1 She lives and works in New York 2 Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Career 2 1 1990s 2 2 2000s 3 Exhibitions 3 1 Solo exhibitions 3 2 Select group exhibitions 4 Reception 5 Awards 6 References 7 External linksEarly life and education EditGaskell s mother was an evangelical Christian who brought Anna and her brother along on wild pilgrimages throughout the Midwest where they would witness miracles being performed acts of healing people speaking in tongues and other Charismatic Christian practices She claims that she does not remember anything strange about these acts but more a feeling of excitement and a security in the faith that she felt from everyone there Gaskell says that her work revolves around a similar idea of faith believing the possibility of the impossible and suspension of disbelief 3 After studying for two years at Bennington College 2 she received her BFA from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago in 1992 4 In 1995 she received her MFA from Yale School of Art studying under Gregory Crewdson 4 5 Career EditGaskell stages all of her scenes using the style of narrative photography wherein each scene exists only to be photographed Gaskell pioneers a new discourse of contemporary photography where within each of her series the narrative of her photographs is disrupted its fragments functioning like film stills excised from their context but suggesting a missing whole 3 There are gaps of space and time left between each photograph evoking a vivid and dreamlike world 6 In a 2002 interview with curator Matthew Drutt of the Menil Collection Gaskell describes her creative process and the inspiration she draws from other sources in the following way The stories and events that I choose to use as jumping off points are simply that They are only a part of what goes into the work and perhaps a useful reference for viewers Trying to combine fiction fact and my own personal mishmash of life into something new is how I make my work Into all of this I try to insert a degree of mystery that ensures that the dots may not connect in the same way every time 3 1990s Edit 1996In haunting photographic scenes of preadolescent girls Gaskell alludes to well known children s literature such as Lewis Carroll s Alice s Adventures in Wonderland which can be found in two of her series wonder 1996 97 and override 1997 Gaskell made her international debut with the twenty photograph series wonder 1996 97 7 the first series Gaskell created after receiving her MFA at Yale University School of Art 8 wonder which draws the viewer in with stained glass coloration intensified by lamination 7 features two identically dressed Alices photographed together and separately and at oblique angles that recall the disorienting experiences of Alice in Wonderland 9 For example in Untitled 1 of wonder one of the Alices is pictured treading in a pool of her tears her body grotesquely distorted by the refraction of light on the water 7 and in Untitled 2 one Alice leans over the other plugging her nose seemingly about to perform mouth to mouth resuscitation These two photographs also demonstrate how Gaskell takes on the role of unreliable narrator within her series by her use of photography as a format which invites the suspension of disbelief with her codings and fragmentations of the frames exposing the viewer to the inconsistencies and assumptions that are held in place by realist photographic as well as narrative conventions 10 Through the use of different sized photographs Gaskell displays an instability in Alice by referring to the character s growth spurts and shrinking spells 2 1997In the series override allusions to Alice s Adventures in Wonderland are made again as in wonder but in this series the scenarios are drawn from Gaskell s own imagination 7 override features seven versions of Alice which alternate between roles of victim and aggressor A description about the series written by Solomon R Guggenheim Museum curators states The seven versions of Alice try to control the changes to her body by literally physically holding her in place a potent metaphor for the anxiety and confusion experienced by children on the verge of adolescence 6 Color and chiaroscuro play a large role in Gaskell s work as they lead the viewer to the main source of action in each piece While the wonder series features cool blue tones the photographs featured in override were captured in the golden hues of Twilight The constantly changing scale of the photographs the physical stretching and pulling actions performed by the models and the range of size of the photographs themselves 6 x 7 1 4 inches to 60 x 90 inches all relate to the central metaphor of Alice in Wonderland change 7 Gaskell s film Floater repeats in a backwards sequence a scene of an Ophelia like young woman in a pool of water trying to decide whether she should drown or save herself The theme of this cycle of indecision is seen again in her series half life in 2002 3 1998In her photographic series hide Gaskell references a lesser known Brothers Grimm tale The Magic Donkey 11 This series features young girls alone in a gothic mansion creating a sense of dread and underlying sexual intrigue that takes its impetus from the tale of a young woman forced to hide beneath animal skins to hide from the matrimonial desires of her father 9 The name of the series is drawn from the children s game hide and seek the dual personality of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde and the literal skin or hide that creates a boundary between the inside and the outside the self and the other 12 1999In 1999 Gaskell produced two series Sally Salt says and by proxy both of which featured Sally Salt the female protagonist in The Adventures of Baron Munchausen a 1988 British comedy film based on the tall tales told about 18th century German baron Karl Friedrich Hieronymus von Munchausen by proxy takes on a darker tone by combining the fictional gullible and lovable Sally Salt character with a real life serial killer Genene Jones a pediatric nurse who in the early 1980s was found guilty of the murder of several children in Texas Gaskell s models in by proxy wear white nurse s outfits The girls in the photographs represent Genene Jones at different stages in her life battling with her own tormented mind The title of the series draws from Munchausen syndrome by proxy a type of child abuse in which a caregiver purposefully makes a child under their care ill usually to attract the attention or sympathy of others upon themselves Though all of her series are imbued with a sense of darkness compared to the fictional stories depicted in her previous series such as override and wonder by proxy is all the more unsettling in that it highlights real life and disturbing subjects such as Munchausen syndrome by proxy and the Jones murders 11 2000s Edit 2002Gaskell s half life drawn from stories such as Daphne du Maurier s Rebecca Elizabeth Gaskell s no relation The Old Nurse s Story and Henry James The Turn of the Screw began as an idea for a film installation and evolved into an exhibition combining still and moving images with ten photographs and a film installation The unnamed central character of Rebecca a tale from 1938 about an ingenue who goes abroad marries a middle aged patrician and follows him back to his ancestral estate in Cornwall There the young woman finds the house filled with the memory of the man s dead first wife Rebecca which torments the heroine to the brink of suicide half life draws from the idea of Rebecca s presence in the estate and the heroine s mind This series explores the human psyche including the experiences of fear isolation and uncertainty As seen in her previous works the protagonist of half life is a young woman who finds herself between the purity of youth and the gradual loss of innocence that comes with maturity Differing itself from previous series the question of identity is pushed to a new level in half life by the almost total exclusion of the main figure When shown the woman often has her back to the camera or remains hidden behind her hair 3 Gaskell uses dynamic camera angles and elaborately decorated interiors in her photographs in half life creating a sense of vertigo or claustrophobia The accompanying 21 minute film similar to her piece Floater 1997 features a woman floating under water in a state of non being neither fully dead or alive 12 2007In her video Acting Lessons Gaskell plays the protagonist an actress who is performing a monologue and is continuously interrupted by an acting coach off screen In this piece Gaskell adopts a mundane living room as the setting for her portrayal of emotional power struggles 2 Exhibitions EditSolo exhibitions Edit 1997 wonder Casey Kaplan Gallery New York 7 1999 by proxy Casey Kaplan Gallery New York 13 Sally Salt says Galerie Gisela Capitain Cologne 14 Hide White Cube London 15 Anna Gaskell Museum of Contemporary Art North Miami Museum of Modern Art Oxford Astrup Fearnley Museet Oslo Hasselblad Center Gothenburg Sweden 16 2000 by proxy Aspen Art Museum Colorado 11 2001 Des Moines Art Center Iowa 17 Castello di Rivoli Turin Italy 18 Resemblance Casey Kaplan Gallery New York 19 Remarkable Places Kolnischer Kunstverein Cologne 20 Future s Eve New Langton Arts San Francisco 21 2002 Half Life The Menil Collection Houston White Cube London 22 23 24 Addison Gallery of American Art Phillips Academy Andover Massachusetts 25 Le studio Yvon Lambert Paris2003 Anagram Galerie Gisela Capitain Cologne 14 How Some Children Play at Slaughtering Project Room Chicago 26 2004 Casey Kaplan Gallery New York At Sixes and Sevens Yvon Lambert Paris 27 2005 1991 Galleria Massimo De Carlo Milan 28 Erasers Galerie Gisela Capitain Cologne 14 2006 Everything That Rises Second Street Gallery Charlottesville Virginia 29 2007 Paint Your Own Pictures Yvon Lambert New York 30 Still Life Vizcaya Museum and Garden Miami 31 Erasers The Box Wexner Center for the Arts Columbus Ohio 32 2009 Replayground Galerie Gisela Capitain Cologne 14 2010 Turns Gravity Yvon Lambert New York 33 2013 Penguin Yvon Lambert Paris 34 The Romantic Exiles Galerie Gisela Capitain Cologne 14 2014 Vampyr with Douglas Gordon Yvon Lambert Paris 14 35 Select group exhibitions Edit 1998 Sightings Institute of Contemporary Arts ICA London 2 2002 Photography Past Forward Aperture at 50 Aperture s Burden Gallery New York 36 Moving Pictures Solomon R Guggenheim Museum New York 6 2007 Global Feminisms Elizabeth A Sackler Center for Feminist Art The Brooklyn Museum New York 37 2012 Exquisite Corpses Drawings and Configuration The Museum of Modern Art New York 38 Ecstatic Alphabets Heaps of Language The Museum of Modern Art New York 2 14 39 Reception EditThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it May 2016 Grace Glueck writing in The New York Times in 2004 described Gaskell as an established maker of spooky tension filled feminine fictions her work recalling Lewis Carroll s Alice in Wonderland Daphne du Maurier s novel Rebecca and the films of Alfred Hitchcock In Glueck s view Gaskell s method is to create a narrative expectation without fulfilling it each picture hinting at a situation or story provoking the viewer to speculate Glueck does not necessarily approve of this calling the process of challenging the viewer to make a story do ing the artist s work 40 Robert Mahoney reviewing Gaskell s first exhibition of color photographs in 1997 calls the show a masquerade with a pair of pretty twins playing at Alice in Wonderland in blue pinafores white tights and black Mary Jane shoes Mahoney calls this an intense search for identity observing that the use of twins brings out the mirror like clarity of Alice s dream journey In his view the blue and white coloration recalls the Virgin Mary while the use of young women to represent prepubescent girls brings sexuality into the images 41 Christopher Mooney writing for ArtReview in 2014 reviews an exhibition in Paris of Gaskell s photographs alongside her ex partner Douglas Gordon s wall floor and corner works Mooney calls it a swan song the exhibition featuring swan taxidermy in many of Gordon s works and a Bolshoi ballet prima ballerina Svetlana Lunkina who danc es across Gaskell s screens Mooney finds Lunkina the strongest element in the show Gaskell s photographs displaying her as both graceful and affecting 42 Awards EditCitigroup Private Bank Photography Prize 2000 4 43 Nancy Graves Foundation Grant 2002 44 Des Moines Art Center Artists Residency Des Moines 2005 45 KunstFilmBiennale Cologne best film in the art category Erasers 2005 46 NYFA Grant 2010 47 Artslink Grant 2010 48 Bohen Foundation Grant 2010 49 Recollects Residency Paris 2011 14 References Edit a b Anna Gaskell Artnet com November 23 2013 Retrieved November 23 2013 a b c d e f g Anna Gaskell Guggenheim Collection Online The Solomon R Guggenheim Foundation Retrieved 9 February 2016 a b c d e Drutt Matthew 2002 Anna Gaskell half life Houston Texas Menil Foundation Inc ISBN 0 939594 54 4 a b c Gaskell Anna Benezit Dictionary of Artists Oxford Art Online Oxford University Press Web 17 Mar 2014 Higgins Jackie 2013 Why It Does Not Have to Be in Focus Prestel pp 136 137 ISBN 978 3 7913 4851 3 Archived from the original on 2013 12 03 Retrieved 2013 11 24 a b c Moving Pictures Contemporary Photography and Video from the Guggenheim Museum Collections The Solomon R Guggenheim Foundation 2003 ISBN 0 89207 269 5 a b c d e f Clearwater Bonnie 1998 Anna Gaskell Museum of Contemporary Art ISBN 1 888708 05 0 Hofmann Irene E 2005 Bits amp Pieces Put Together to Present a Semblance of a Whole Walker Art Center Collections Minneapolis MN Walker Art Center a b Nancy Spector The Fiction of Fiction An Exquisite Unease in Anna Gaskell NY powerHouse Books 2001 ISBN 1 57687 069 3 Kokoli Alexandra M 2009 Feminism Reframed Reflections on Art and Difference Cambridge Scholars Publishing ISBN 9781443815116 a b c Anna Gaskell by proxy Aspen Art Museum 2000 ISBN 0 934324 28 X a b Anna Gaskell Half Life White Cube Retrieved March 3 2016 ANNA GASKELL BY PROXY Casey Kaplan caseykaplangallery com Archived from the original on 2016 04 27 Retrieved 2016 04 13 a b c d e f g h GALERIE GISELA CAPITAIN Anna Gaskell Biography PDF GALERIE GISELA CAPITAIN Archived from the original PDF on 2016 03 07 Cube White Anna Gaskell Hide White Cube whitecube com Retrieved 2016 04 12 Anna Gaskell Museum of Contemporary Art North Miami mocanomi org 18 October 1998 Retrieved 2016 04 13 Gaskell Anna Des Moines Art Center 2001 01 01 Anna Gaskell Des Moines Iowa Des Moines Art Center ISBN 1879003368 OCLC 50280913 Anna Gaskell Castello di Rivoli www castellodirivoli org Retrieved 2016 04 13 Edwards Kathleen A University of Iowa Museum of Art Neuberger Museum of Art 2005 01 01 Acting out invented melodrama in contemporary photography Iowa City IA University of Iowa Museum of Art ISBN 0874141494 OCLC 57391868 KUNSTFORUM international Login www kunstforum de Retrieved 2016 04 13 Consciousness from the Ground Up by Gaston Diana Afterimage Vol 28 Issue 6 May 2001 dead link Exhibitions The Menil Collection The Menil Collection Retrieved 2016 04 12 Hay David 2002 09 29 ART ARCHITECTURE Photographs on a Wall Doors to a Haunted Manor The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2016 04 12 Gaskell Anna Drutt Matthew Menil Collection Houston Tex 2002 01 01 Anna Gaskell half life Houston Tex Menil Collection ISBN 0939594544 OCLC 53228408 Phillips Academy The Addison s Artist in Residence Program www andover edu Archived from the original on 2016 04 24 Retrieved 2016 04 13 How Some Children Play at Slaughtering kunstaspekte Gaskell Anna Rosenfield Israel Gioni Massimiliano Galerie Yvon Lambert 2004 01 01 Anna Gaskell at sixes and sevens Paris New York Galerie Yvon Lambert ISBN 2913893104 OCLC 84612290 GASKELL AIRO BERTI Galleria Massimo De Carlo Dettaglio mostra www teknemedia net Archived from the original on 2016 04 23 Retrieved 2016 04 13 Culture ART FEATURE Mind games Gaskell s missing memories www readthehook com Retrieved 2016 04 13 Paint Your Own Pictures NY Arts Magazine NY Arts Magazine 19 March 2015 Retrieved 2016 04 13 Services Miami Dade County Online Vizcaya Museum amp Gardens Anna Gaskell March 15 June 1 2007 vizcaya org Retrieved 2016 04 12 Erasers wexarts org Archived from the original on 2016 04 02 Retrieved 2016 04 13 2010 YVON LAMBERT www yvon lambert com Archived from the original on 2012 07 25 Retrieved 2016 04 12 2013 YVON LAMBERT www yvon lambert com Archived from the original on 2013 03 12 Retrieved 2016 04 12 ANNA GASKELL DOUGLAS GORDON Vampyr PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2015 10 16 Boxer Sarah 2002 10 24 A Citywide Treasure Hunt for Photographs With Vision The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2016 04 13 Brooklyn Museum Global Feminisms www brooklynmuseum org Retrieved 2016 04 13 Exquisite Corpses Drawing and Disfiguration MoMA The Museum of Modern Art Retrieved 2016 04 13 Ecstatic Alphabets Heaps of Language MoMA The Museum of Modern Art Retrieved 2016 04 13 Glueck Grace 30 April 2004 Art in Review Anna Gaskell The New York Times The New York Times Retrieved 17 May 2016 Mahoney Robert Anna Gaskell s Wonder ArtNet Retrieved 17 May 2016 Mooney Christopher December 2014 Anna Gaskell and Douglas Gordon Vampyr ArtReview Retrieved 17 May 2016 Current Exhibitions The Photographers Gallery The Photographers Gallery Archived from the original on 2015 12 08 Retrieved 2016 04 12 Nancy Graves Foundation http www nancygravesfoundation org grants html Archived 2013 11 26 at the Wayback Machine Until the Woods Began to Move Greater Des Moines Public Art Foundation Greater Des Moines Public Art Foundation Retrieved 2016 04 12 KunstFilmBiennale Koln 2005 2007 07 06 Archived from the original on July 6 2007 Retrieved 2016 04 12 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link NYFA Artists Now Happy October NYFA org NYFA Current 7 October 2015 Retrieved 2016 04 12 2010 ArtsLink Projects Awardees CEC ArtsLink www cecartslink org Retrieved 2016 04 12 The Bohen Foundation www bohen org Retrieved 2016 04 12 External links EditGuggenheim Collections Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Anna Gaskell amp oldid 1140181379, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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