Friday 29 June 2018

Olaf Otto Becker's photographs at Huxley-Parlour Gallery.

Summer has finally arrived, it's wonderful to wake up every morning and a see a clear blue sky and the sun shining. The problem is when you step out into the outside world and you find out that trains are delayed or cancelled and it takes you twice as long to get across literally anywhere. You are amazed to discover that train companies use tracks that don't expand with the heat like they do in hot countries I guess they do this to save money as they would require less maintenance then expandable tracks. It seems the train service here only runs when the weather is perfect. If it is too cold or snowy or windy trains don't run properly and in the summer it is the same. I can't remember when was the last time I took a train  that was running on time, they are generally delayed. On the hottest  day of the year I found myself stuck on the train for two hours on a journey that usually should take half an hour. The driver first took us on a grand tour of the area, then the train stopped for nearly an hour in the heat just in front of the next station, we could see the platform but could not get off; the driver kept whispering something but we couldn't hear exactly what. If outside it was 28-30C inside it was 40C, we were gasping for air. I was really glad when we finally reached the station which was in a stage of complete chaos, I got out as quickly as possible. It is only when things are majorly disrupted that one understands how over-crowded London is. My friends told me that on the road it was no better with short journeys taking up to 3 hours long.

Photo by Olaf Otto Becker courtesy of Huxley-Parlour Gallery
The exhibition of Olaf Otto Becker's photographs at Huxley-Parlour Gallery near Piccadilly displays pictures taken during his many trips to the western coast of Greenland. He used a rubber raft to move between places while using a large format camera to take pictures of the glaciers, documenting the effects of global warming on the coastal landscape. He also took photographs of isolated, vividly painted wooden houses. His main preoccupation, however, was to document the ever changing landscape of the glaciers and icebergs. 

Photo by Olaf Otto Becker courtesy of Huxley-Parlour Gallery
The photographs show the vastness and magnitude of the glaciers and icebergs; they are calm, meditative pieces, and again they made me think of Tacita Dean's work,  in particular her mountain peaks which I recently viewed at the Royal Academy, all about the idea of the sublime. Each photograph has to been seen in the context of the others; they create a story, the icebergs turn into living sculptures, they are majestic, but still also scary due to their size.  Some of the  photographs have been taken from below the icebergs, looking up at them,  making them look even bigger;  this is a specific narrative in which the glaciers and icebergs are the central figures see pics above and below.

Photo by Olaf Otto Becker courtesy of Huxley-Parlour Gallery

He documents the evidence of over-population and the consequences this is having on the natural landscape, with global warming, and highlighting how the land and water are becoming scarce in many areas of the world. The photographs reminded me of the painter Caspar David Friedrich in their composition; he was a 19th century romantic landscape painter, whose contemplation of nature, and through it getting close to the sublime, produced pictures where the viewer is encouraged to experience the sublime potential of nature. His winter landscapes are solemn and still. 

Hochgebirge painting by Caspar David Friedrich courtesy of Pinterest

The Sea of Ice painting by Caspar David Friedrich courtesy of Pinterest
The colours of the icebergs are so clear and beautiful that they make them almost feel unreal, singling out pieces of the icebergs, showing them in one shot and making them feel more like relicts in the still water, imparting a fragility to them that suggests they will soon disappear. All these chunks of icebergs floating along that will soon no longer be there, where the wooden structure of the houses actually looks more solidly based then the glaciers themselves, this is scary! 

Photos by Olaf Otto Becker courtesy of Huxley-Parlour Gallery
The wooden houses with human belongings spread around them look like they don't belong there in the midst of the stillness of the landscape; this is quite poignant. The houses and floating icebergs are juxtaposed next to each other in the exhibition and they are all in white frames. The icebergs are like cut flowers they are living and dying at the same time.
This is an interesting and thought provoking exhibition about the consequences of global warming.
https://huxleyparlour.com/exhibitions/olaf-otto-becker/

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