





In the 1800s, Nicéphore Niépce, widely credited as the inventor of photography,
produced a picture of a table set for dinner for one.
In the various reproductions of the original image we’re able to see
now, you can make out a bowl, plate, knife, spoon, wine glass, teapot,
wine bottle, vase of flowers, neatly arranged set on a white tablecloth.
It is among the first examples of a still-life photograph.
Looking at the photograph, titled “La Table Servie”, it is easy to
trace the evolution of Niépce’s aesthetic interests to the
object-centric photography being produced today; there are tensions in
the image between the ‘real’ and the ‘constructed’, it contains within
it the theatricality of the everyday, the elevation of the banal through
the photographer’s lens. These interests have increased with the
development of technologies and the disillusion with the world around us
– when you don’t see the world you want outside, you have to create the
world you want to see.
Meatwreck is a photographic collaboration between artist couple Mitra Saboury and Derek Paul Boyle. Saboury completed an MFA at
Goldsmiths in 2013 before returning to the US, where she set up a studio with Boyle in
Los Angeles.
While the two continue to exhibit their individual work, including
photos, sculptures, installations and performances, Meatwreck has taken
the internet by storm. Using their daily encounters with objects and
their relationship as inspiration, the pair create visual puns and
paradoxes that are by turns hilarious and gross, but always spontaneous
and brilliantly inventive, recalling Erwin Wurm’s One Minute Sculptures.
Their feed is a theatre of the domestic: ketchup, bread and, of course,
cold cuts are frequent motifs, but really, you never know what you’ll
see next with these two.
Ahead of their residency and new exhibition at Alter Space in San
Francisco, we asked them for a few words about their work and practice..... //
Texte & lien :
dazeddigital
http://www.meatwreck.com/