After Abu Ghraib (2009) Pitzer Art Galleries, Pitzer College, CA
In 1928, newspaper photographer Tom Howardacting as an official witness to an executionstrapped a miniature camera to his ankle and snapped the exact moment of Ruth Snyders death by electrocution. Published in the New York Daily News the following day, this historic blurry image marked the first photographic record of death by electric chair.
If Howards image was the benchmark for public acceptance of gruesome and lurid imagery in the late 1920s, then todays equivalent must surely be the naked, hooded and shackled Iraqi prisoners photographed by American soldiers at Abu Ghraib. Twistingly choreographed into pornographic vignettes, the blatant sadomasochistic contentprisoners piled in heaps, forced to perform degrading sexual acts amongst themselves and in some cases with their captorsportrays a cruelty that is almost (but not quite) beyond belief. They refuse to fade, existing as a testament to our capacity to behave egregiously.)
By intentionally corrupting the digital files of these insistently barbarous Abu Ghraib pictures, Los Angeles-based artist Clayton Campbell transformed them into large-scale, geometric, painterly works. Bands of translucent reds, blues and purples migrate across the surface, shredding and obscuring as they go, allowing an indulgence in sensuous abstraction, a short-lived reprieve from the heinous acts. Resembling ancient Mesopotamian sculptural fragmentslike those looted at the beginning of the US Operation Iraqi Freedom, the bodies detach and re-combine in surprisingly exquisite arrangements. The bands, reminiscent of those used to adjust the color image on our televisions, imply our readiness to accommodate and compromise our points of view. In a post 9-11 world, are we willing to accept torture and surrender our civil liberties? What are our true colors and how much are we willing to adjust them? Campbells formal filter of distortion becomes a metaphor for averting our eyessomething we are only too eager to do. Ciara Ennis Director/Curator, Pitzer Art Galleries