Sublime Smoke is a curated display of works from Lisa Oppenheim’s photographic series Smoke paired with John Stezaker’s cropped found images from the series Sublime. The practices of Oppenheim and Stezaker make an unlikely convergence across time and material approaches in their respective use of found images of billowing smoke that they have cropped to suggest the sublime beauty of clouds in the sky. The display in the Annexe gallery concurs with Sam Windett’s solo exhibition during the fall programme at The Approach.
Oppenheim has been making her Smoke works since 2013, in which she appropriates found imagery of explosions, smoke bombs, air raids and erupting volcanoes in the form of vintage negatives from archives or news images from the internet. The has artist cropped the source of the smoke from the image and inverts it into a positive, whereby the black smoke appears like white clouds against a dark sky. These images evoke the sublime beauty of epic skies in Renaissance paintings and frescoes. The dramatic events that caused the smoke are recorded in the title of each work. The titles read like newspaper headlines, such as the diptych from 2015 in this display: A sequence in which a protester throws back a smoke bomb while clashing with police in Ferguson, Missouri. Oppenheim re-introduces the element of fire into her Smoke images through the photographic process, in which she replaces the light of the enlarger with the flame of a match.
The series Sublime by John Stezaker was made during 1987-89 using found images depicting steam trains with smoke clouds puffing from their chimneys. Stezaker cropped the images so that only the exhaust emerging from a thin sliver of chimney at the bottom edge of each picture remains. The remaining ethereal and fluffy smoke clouds appear at remove from the weight, speed and thundering noise of the steam trains that are eclipsed from the images. The resulting horizontal vistas evoke the art historical trope of transient clouds in a vast sky, as do Oppenheim’s works. The subtle presence of the chimney however reveals the source of the smoke as the result of the burning of coal to power the steam engines. Sublime plays on the characteristically British nostalgia for the glorious railways as well as resonating with contemporary environmental concerns, such as President Trump’s attempt at reviving the coal industry.
The display will be accompanied by a written ‘in-conversation’ in which the artists respond to questions to discuss their respective works.