Installation view of Special Problems at Josh Lilley, presenting Matt Lipps
Installation view of Special Problems at Josh Lilley, presenting Matt Lipps
Installation view of Special Problems at Josh Lilley, presenting Matt Lipps
Installation view of Special Problems at Josh Lilley, presenting Matt Lipps
Installation view of Special Problems at Josh Lilley, presenting Matt Lipps
Installation view of Special Problems at Josh Lilley, presenting Matt Lipps
Installation view of Special Problems at Josh Lilley, presenting Matt Lipps

Artworks

Travel by Matt Lipps, 2013
Print by Matt Lipps, 2013
1973-1975 by Matt Lipps, 2013
Color by Matt Lipps, 2013
Special Problems by Matt Lipps, 2013
Perpective by Matt Lipps, 2013
Camera by Matt Lipps, 2013
Photojournalism by Matt Lipps, 2013

Matt Lipps

Special Problems

25 April – 29 May 2014

Josh Lilley is delighted to present a new series of photographs for Matt Lipps second exhibition at the gallery Special Problems.

Over the past three to four years Lipps' work has engaged with juxtapositions of scale, time, and familiarity focusing on subjective hierarchies in order to explore ideas of context and categorisation within our culture. Through a process of extracting images from diverse source materials, Lipps would cut out and re-organise visual icons from our social history, forging his own compositions within built up three-dimensional sculptural stage sets. While this new series of photographs sees this process continue with the cutting-out of almost 500 figures, Lipps Library actually points to a far more personal take on the practice of appropriation, paying tribute to the analogue medium while posing new questions about the future of digital photographs and imaging.

From 1970-72, Time-Life published a 17-volume set of books called Library of Photography. Each volume delivered a comprehensive how-to manual on everything photographic, from techniques and genres to the conservation of photographs, each illustrated with exquisite black-and-white gravure reproductions. As a perfect template for a historical commentary on the practice of photography, Lipps cut out and assembled hundreds of figures from the books, building cardboard structures for them, so they became autonomous, moveable actors on a set of small glass shelves built in his studio. Each volume would then become the subject and title of each of the 17 works in his series where Documentary, Photojournalism, Caring, Camera, Travel, and Special Problems would all contain a relevant or suggestive background image taken from Lipps' own archives.

Acknowledging the prescribed and didactic way the publication reached out to its audience, Lipps was reminded of a series of 35mm images he took while studying photography. Some appeared to be generic — knock-offs, almost, of luminaries such as Ansel Adams or Walker Evans. In re-examining these images, filling them with colour through digital enhancement, Lipps makes a comment on the conformity of production giving new life to images, both his own and appropriated. The final work — a photograph of the sculptural construction in front of his own archival image — creates a scale shift that not only reflects on the very operation of photography, but reveals a tension between the subjective and objective uses of the medium and its perspectives on history.

Matt Lipps (b. 1975, California, USA) lives and works in San Francisco. Lipps gained his Masters in Studio Art from the University of California in 2004. Previous solo exhibitions include The Populist Camera, Jessica Silverman Gallery, San Francisco, 2014; Library, Marc Selwyn Fine Art, Los Angeles, 2013; HORIZON/S, University of California Riverside, Museum of Photography, 2012; and Matt Lipps, Josh Lilley, 2012. Group exhibitions include Battleground States, Utah Museum of Contemporary Art, 2012; Photography is Magic!, Daegu Photo Biennale, Daegu, South Korea, 2012; Figure and Form in Contemporary Photography, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, 2012; and Out of Focus: Photography, Saatchi Gallery, London, 2012.