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In Profile

2013-2015


 Da Contents H2

LIVENESS BY DEGREES
September 16 2015
In Profile: Zoe Scoglio, artist
Urszula Dawkins

RT PROFILER 11, 22 JULY 2015
July 22 2015
In Profile: Jason James, artist
Andrew Harper

In Profile: Nick Power, b*boy, choreographer

RT PROFILER 7, 12 NOVEMBER, 2014
November 12 2014
In Profile: André Lawrence, emerging curator
Chris Reid

In Profile: Angus Cerini, writer, performer, director
John Bailey

In Profile: Julian Day, composer
Matthew Lorenzon

RT PROFILER 6, 17 SEPTEMBER, 2014
September 17 2014
In Profile: David Rosetzky, Gaps
Urszula Dawkins

In Profile: Matt Warren, mumble(speak), III - real and imagined scenarios Gail Priest
Gail Priest

RT PROFILER 5, 30 JULY, 2014
July 30 2014
In Profile: Lawrence English, Wilderness of Mirrors
Gail Priest

RT PROFILER 5, 30 JULY, 2014
July 30 2014
In profile: Natalie Abbott, Maximum
Gail Priest

RT PROFILER 4, 2 JULY, 2014
July 2 2014
In Profile: Lily Hibberd, Twin Cinema: Four Devils and a Woman in Red
Urszula Dawkins

In Profile: Prying Eye, White Porcelain Doll
Kathryn Kelly

RT PROFILER 3, 21 MAY 2014
May 21 2014
In profile: AñA Wojak, 3 Decades
Jeanti St Clair

In Profile: Chris Bennie, Fern Studio Floor: a cosmology
Virginia Rigney

In Profile: Paper Cut Contemporary Performance Collective
Gail Priest

In Profile: Wyatt Moss-Wellington, Sanitary Apocalypse
Oliver Downes

RT PROFILER 2, 26 MARCH 2014
March 26 2014
In Profile: Alison Bennett, Shifting Skin
Gail Priest

RT PROFILER 2, 26 MARCH 2014
March 26 2014
In Profile: Chris Howlett, ARGARMENIA
Christy Dena


November 20 2013
In Profile: Rachael Dease
Gail Priest

In Profile: Sarah-Mace Dennis
Gail Priest

September 25 2013
In Profile: Keg de Souza
Gail Priest

In Profile: Miranda Wheen
Gail Priest

September 18 2013
In Profile: Michaela Davies
Gail Priest

In Profile: Pia van Gelder
Gail Priest

 

In Profile: Alison Bennett, Shifting Skin

Gail Priest


Alison Bennett, Shifting Skin Alison Bennett, Shifting Skin
courtesy the artist
Artist statement

Shifting Skin is a series of artworks featuring 3D augmented reality over high quality photographic prints of human skin marked by tattoos. This work was made in the course of my creative practice research as a member of the Deakin Motion.Lab. Development was guided by a consideration of surface in digital photography. My previous work has tested the representation of interior space in digital images. Having reached something of a conclusion in this line of investigation in Cavity—a series of stitched panoramas of the interiors of caves with an overlay of inhabitation—I realised that space and surface were co-creative: space is defined by surface.

Prompted by an invitation to make work on the subject of queer beards, I was experimenting with the possibilities of scanography to reveal forensic details in skin—pores and hairs, scars and tattoos. While meditating on surface as a creative constraint, I realised that skin is a primary surface, the site of subjectivity, the border at which we perceive and are perceived.

Alison Bennett, Shifting Skin, Untitled (zombie), 2013 Alison Bennett, Shifting Skin, Untitled (zombie), 2013
courtesy the artist
I wanted to set up a dialogue on the collapsing boundaries between material and virtual via the connecting metaphor of skin. As an image, skin embodies many of the paradoxes of materiality and immaterial embodiment within digital culture. Indeed, there is also an emerging tendency to conflate the biological metaphor of skin with the surface of digital media, and the metaphors of the digital interface with biological skin.

I am a digital native. My father was a computer scientist in the 60s and I grew up with a computer in the house in the days before there was a tangible difference between a PC and a Mac. Digital images make sense to me and I am endlessly fascinated by the cultural and psycho-social implications of digital technologies. There has been a profound shift in our engagement with what has been termed 'cyberspace' from an alternative virtual reality to an overlay embedded in the everyday and the physical. Augmented reality is not only emerging as a media technology but as a potential conceptual model to describe the contemporary dynamic between the so-called physical and digital. The digital is overlaid and embedded, not a virtual alternative.

www.alisonbennett.com.au



Tattoo dreaming

There’s a lot of ink around today. Sometimes I imagine a future in which so many generations have been tattooed that there’s a Darwinian glitch and babies come out of the womb pre-decorated. This of course would be a disaster as it undermines the very spirit of getting a tattoo—the agency involved in choosing your own new skin.

Alison Bennett’s Shifting Skin depicts a number of lovingly chosen body decorations but rather than photographing them she has scanned them, using a modified flatbed scanner. Studying someone else’s tattoo can be intimate at the best of times and Bennett’s scanning method, along with the scale of her images, makes it even more so, highlighting the skin’s scars, flaws, puckers and gaping hair follicles.

Alison Bennett, Shifting Skin, Untitled (birds & butterflies), 2013 Alison Bennett, Shifting Skin, Untitled (birds & butterflies), 2013
courtesy the artist
The unaugmented images are fascinating in themselves as they bear glitches—rifts, pleats and curious ruptures of full spectrum rainbow colours. (Bennett admits that some of these interruptions are the happy accidents caused by scanner malfunction.) It’s often hard to ascertain where on the body these tattoos might appear as they are seemingly peeled off and flattened, depicted floating in a black space. This disembodiment becomes total when the images are viewed using a tablet or smart phone sporting Aurasma, an augmented reality app.

Pointing the device’s camera at one of the images, the flatness begins to buckle and fold developing hills and valleys, sharp cliff edges and chasms—a contour map of the skin. Bennett avoids any literalising of the images. Rather than simply transforming the flat illustration into a three dimensional version of itself, she disrupts the tattooed image with extraneous lumps and bulges that don’t so much complement the image as mutate it into something else altogether.

Alison Bennett, Shifting Skin, Untitled (dragon), 2013 Alison Bennett, Shifting Skin, Untitled (dragon), 2013
courtesy the artist
Bennett applies subtly different treatments to each image. Untitled (dragon) depicts a bold and colourful image of a dragon and an Asian girl. When augmented the blackness seems to extend infinitely backwards into deep space and shafts of what could be stars shoot out towards you, while the dragon and girl seem to float, writhing together in this new universe. Untitled (mother) is quite a simple tattoo, just the outline of an iconic 1950s housewife, but Bennet has augmented this with a range of swellings that from some angles seem to imply an even larger womanly shape—an über frau swallowing up the smaller. With Untitled (birds & butterflies) the skin becomes a garden with hillocks and secret caverns. These shapes are reminiscent of the alarming hyperreal mutations of Patricia Piccinini’s lumpen creatures though Bennett’s are perhaps more disturbing for the visceral “skin-ness” that she maintains in the morphing process.

As she mentions in her artist statement above, Alison Bennett sees the skin as a border. In Shifting Skin this works not only as a border between what is in and outside the body, but here it also operates on a metaphoric level with skin becoming the semi-permeable membrane between reality and fantasy. The material world crosses over to meet the fantastical, or perhaps the fantastical reaches out and grabs the real. For the viewer it’s this moment of border crossing that is most exhilarating, but as the technology becomes increasingly utilised for commercial means (there are already multiple examples of corporate clients on the Aurasma website), the initial thrill may begin to normalise. Then it will be the content that becomes most important and artists like Bennett will hopefully lead the way, bending reality in ever more conceptually challenging ways. Gail Priest


Shifting Skin, Alison Bennett, 10x8 Gallery, Central Park, Chippendale, presented as part of the Sydney Gay & Lesbian Mardi Gras Festival; http://10x8gallery.com/; www.alisonbennett.com.au

© Gail Priest; for permission to reproduce apply to [email protected]

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