Zabo ChabilanD


VISUALS ARTS                       FR  

Anatoms sonores
Neuzusammensetzung
Anatoms
Corps en suspens
Read Lips
Etudes
The black project
Profiling Watermarks
Polyptyque
VOID Project
SOUND PERFORMANCES

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©
Zabo Chabiland 2024

       




THE BLACK PROJECT
Series of 22 black on black portraits  
1988-1992


At first, the eye perceives only a surface that is both full and empty, uniform, as when it goes from light to dark.
Gradually, the eye adapts and distinguishes one by one the distinctive features of a face until it grasps it in its entirety.

Here: renderings simulating the intermediate stage of vision cannot be reproduced by reproduction.
.



Walking into Zabo Chabiland's installation, The black project, the viewer is confronted with a series of squares, black canvases, whose depth and solidity give them the status of objects or architectural features. The mood is sombre and ordered, with minimal and classical associations, while the canvases themselves allude to representations of an infinite space or a barren void.
It is with these ideas in mind that the viewer begins to detect disturbances of light breaking through the black surfaces, which on closer inspection reveal the faintest traces of a human face. Each image/object - the status is now ambiguous - 'contains' a face: disembodied, eyes closed, hovering somewhere behind the picture plane. The faces, though barely visible, register as photographic images, which, when matched with an overall three-dimensionality, give the works an unnerving human presence. But, like death masks, the faces betray no indication of an expressive life. We are left to consider them as relics whose physiognomic stories might be read more by anthropologists, or as abstract signs of a precarious human condition. Chabiland's simple and eloquent works have a spectral grace that seems at odds with a time when pain, trauma and visceral revelations of death are writ large in our collective consciousness - a time when death, both private and public, is considered fair game for advertisers. These are reverent, unsettling works, dark spaces where the emblems of the human spirit lie dormant, just out of reach.

David Chandler, Exhibition Manager, The Photographer's Gallery, London.
Texte in the catalog of the exhibition "Presence" 1993.



Bara Fall
Analog print printed on linen
and mounted on stretchers.

50 X 50 cm. 1990
Madeleine Shlumberger
Analog print printed on linen
and mounted on stretchers.

90 X 90 cm. 1992
Lawrence Goldhuber
Analog print printed on linen
and mounted on stretchers.

50 X 50 cm.  1992
Charles David
Analog print printed on linen
and mounted on stretchers.

90 X 90 cm. 1992
Maya Grafin
Analog print printed on linen
and mounted on stretchers.

50 X 50 cm. 1992
John Debella
Analog print printed on linen
and mounted on stretchers.

90 X 90 cm. 1992
Louis Schlumberger
Analog print printed on linen
and mounted on stretchers.

50 X 50 cm.  1990
Auto-portrait
Analog print printed on linen
and mounted on stretchers.

50 X 50 cm. 1990
Nestor Piredu  
Analog print printed on linen
and mounted on stretchers.
.
50 X 50 cm. 1992





South-East Museum for Photography, Daytona Beach. 1992
South-East Museum for Photography, Daytona Beach. 1992
South-East Museum for Photography, Daytona Beach. 1992
John  Debella, 90 X 90 cm.  Louis Schlumberger 50 X 50 cm.
“Illivisibillité” AB Galerie (albert Benhamou) Paris, 1993
"Presences" The Photographers’ Gallery, Londres. 1992

 








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