Jonathan Silbert: Insights
Artist/educator Bryan Whitney is this week’s guest editor on LENSCRATCH. Over the next four days, he introduces the work of four of his past students at the International Center of Photography whose practices revolve around spirituality, inner-life, and the natural world.
Concerning the Spiritual in Photography is a course I have taught for many years at the International Center of Photography. The class explores spirituality within the creative process and considers how we can consciously cultivate it in our work. We study influential writings on the subject—from Kandinsky to Minor White—and discuss the rich cross-pollination between art and spirituality. Participants integrate these ideas with their own insights through exercises such as “Create Your Own Ritual,” “Body and Soul,” “Memento Mori,” and “Image Duet.” Leading this class with such a dynamic group of photographers has been profoundly rewarding, and I am delighted that Lenscratch is featuring several of these talented artists.
Each of these artists, working with the medium of light and shadow, has created deeply personal and distinctly spiritual work. Juliette Ludeker’s painterly, storm-tossed underwater worlds are awe-inspiring scenes, captured in a humble backyard stream. Olga Fried’s large-format paper negative images evoke an otherworldly terrain, their barren beauty illuminated by vast, star-filled skies. Anne Earden McDonald’s abstract scrolls are masterworks of alchemical symbolism and chemical process, where the elements themselves become image- makers. Jonathan Silbert’s sly, haunting abstractions both surprise and unsettle, challenging our perceptions of body and soul.
As the third installment of this week, we present Johnathan Ludeker’s project, Somewhere You Can Never Go. An interview with the artist follows.
Jonathan Silbert has pursued image making in a variety of mediums, including clay, metal and paper, with photography always being present, but like a cousin at holiday meals. Motivating these efforts has been a poetic exploration with intention to express the ineffable nature of identity in the context of the superficial. He works as a graphic designer and lives Philadelphia.
© Jonathan Silbert, Shadow 1
Insights
These photographs arise from a prompt to present how our bodies exist in the world. As I don’t love to stand in front of the camera, I turned to abstraction as a way of moving beyond the literal, opening a more poetic point of reflection.
The resulting images bring me to the hard-to-name; the mysterious in-the-dark, that which is lingering in the shadows – are all compelling. Though these spaces may feel unsettling and off-putting, the presence in the depths of shadows has always been a rich field, a resource for understanding, if we have the courage to look deeply and meet what is otherwise ominous and vague. Shadows do not exist without context. A light source is needed, as is an object which blocks that light, whether the object is seen or not and then, a receptive plane. But when the shadow becomes the both object and the subject, what are the implications for identity?
In approaching these abstractions, I think of Nietzsche’s admonition about gazing long in to the abyss. I’ve long found that in dreams, the monsters that we may be inclined to fight are best dealt with directly, not in combat and supremacy, but intimately seen in the light of understanding. In my experience, turning to look at what is frightening has proved more rewarding than trying to dominate. While these images may not be as potent as dreams that scare you awake, there does seem to be some element of the fearful unknown with implicit foreboding or an unfathomable presence which may at once be threatening and rewarding.
© Jonathan Silbert, Shadow 8
Bryan Whitney is a photographer and artist in New York City whose work involves experimental imaging techniques including x-rays, lensless imaging and alternative processes such as cyanotype. Whitney holds an MFA in Photography from the Tyler School of Art and a BA in the Psychology of Art from University of Michigan. He has taught photography at Rutgers University and currently teaches at the International Center of Photography in New York City and the New York Botanical Garden. A recipient of a Fulbright Grant for lectures on American Photography he has exhibited across the United States and internationally. His work has appeared in magazines such as Harpers Bazaar, Fortune, the New York Times, as well as being featured in books, posters and billboards. His X-ray botanical images have recently been acquired as a stamp designs by the US Postal Service.
Follow Bryan Whitney on Instagram: @bryanwhitney.art
Posts on Lenscratch may not be reproduced without the permission of the Lenscratch staff and the photographer.
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