Friday, January 11, 2008

Tina Barney


The other day, this photo arrived in the mail. A late Christmas card from a distant family friend? Not quite. Flipping it over, I realized it was a postcard from the Fay Gold Gallery announcing this month's show of Tina Barney's photographs.

Barney began photographing friends and family in the 1980's in well-to-do enclaves of the East Coast. While her settings are staged, the resulting photograph captures the spontaneous movement and split-second thoughts that may flicker across the mind of her subjects. An artistic precursor to reality television, perhaps?

Each photograph is a little mystery, and fans of Barney's work spend hours trying to unravel the story provided by clues in the details. Faces may be tense or indifferent--challenging the notion that material wealth yields smiling happiness.


If you are in Atlanta this month, I highly recommend the show at Fay Gold which combines early American work with her more recent photographs taken in Europe.

13 comments:

  1. Terrific! Thanks for sharing!

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  2. Cool, I like those!

    xo

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  3. Very, very interesting. Quite different -- I like the mysterious aspect!

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  4. Ohhhh...I would so love to see that exhibit. I love the ajective used by jennifer: mysterious. It makes me wonder what else was going on in the room at the time.

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  5. Thanks for the tip. Will definitely have to check that out.

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  6. These photos have such a unique quality to them - thank you for the introduction.

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  7. Fascinating! I much prefer these portraits to the typical posed one. Thanks! :)

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  8. I love these photos! Thanks so much for sharing the info!

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  9. They remind me of one of my favorite painters,
    "Fairfield Porter" - He painted the "privileged" in a modern way, one that seems as if they were watching him. In interesting introspective quality,

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  10. I love the reworking of the concept lets not forget that symbolism has been a part of art for ever. Think Leonardo,the Mona Lisa, Last Supper I am sure that if cameras where around they would have done the same.

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  11. thanks for the reminder. Apart from the psychological aspects, complexity etc, the interiors are Sargent-worthy lush.

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  12. I absolutely ADORE Tina Barney's work. But, at a staring price of $15,000, it's still out of my price range... oh to dream!

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  13. love that chic woman in the top photo. interesting spin on typical portraits. they tell a story with out telling you a thing. actually... they leave me wanting so much more! fabulous. thanks for the link ;)

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