Latent Images On My Skin.

Christie Contemporary

May 5 - June 10, 2023

Core Exhibition of CONTACT Photography Festival

 

Lobbies, doorways, and escalators populate Toronto artist Jessica Thalmann’s video essay, Latent Images On My Skin. A rumination on time as a measure of distance, as a transformational space that converts experience into lingering imprint, the work traces the history of photographic chemistry, folding in photography’s earliest pioneers (and friends) John Herschel and Julia Margaret Cameron.

Drawing parallels between the imperceptible chemical interactions of photographic development and the absorption of experience into memory, Thalmann considers the cyanotype printing process while navigating the destabilizing space of trauma and personal grief. At times ethereal and poetic, as well as disorienting and remote, the artist’s camera moves through architectural spaces of transit as a means of emotional navigation, while other sequences forge connection with the details relayed in her voice-over, recorded as an explanation of the process as an observed series of impressions.

The creation of cyanotype printing is historically associated with scientific progress—the mixing of tinctures, the precise, timed exposure to light, the regimented acts of rinsing, and the final step of drying each experiment. This history prompted Thalmann to reflect on the cyanotype’s seminal figure, British scientist John Herschel, who formulated the process almost two hundred years ago. While Herschel is mechanically described as a scientific innovator, the artist asked herself what compelled him to pursue such a magical invention. She muses on Herschel’s long friendship with British photographer Julia Margaret Cameron, contemplating her gestures of care when asked to take the scientist’s final portrait in his old age. Shifting the frame of reference back to the present day, Thalmann considers her own model of care for her mother, who had recently emerged from a coma. This time-based work is both chronicle and inquiry, charting the impressions, attempts, and ruptures that characterize the pursuit of durability and connectedness across time.

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Distance of Desire