Face to Face. 18
Artist
Ann Hamilton
(American, born 1956)
Date2001
MediumInk on paper
DimensionsOverall: 3 1/2 x 10 in., (8.9 x 25.4 cm,)
ClassificationsART
Credit LineMuseum Purchase
Object number2003.4.6
DescriptionImage of a woman who appears to be up to her neck in water. Top of head is cropped. Image taken with a pinhole camera held in the artist's mouth; bottom row of her teeth are visible.On View
Not on viewCollections
Copyright© Ann Hamilton
Label TextAnn Hamilton's artwork investigates the interface between our perceptions of the world and how we reveal our interior selves to the world. While language is a dominant form of human expression, Hamilton is fascinated by cognition through multiple senses and through the body. She has stated:
"I'm very interested in the hierarchies of our habits of perception, and how …we trust [words to] have more legitimacy than other kinds of information or ways of knowing. I think that I'm just trying to take this access and tilt it, so that the felt-quality of the words is equal to, but not dominant over, other kinds of sensory perceptions."
To this end, Hamilton created a series of images made from a pinhole camera held in her mouth. In this hyper-visual world, she finds that "eyes have become voracious like mouths." Hamilton describes the process: "I have made a set of pinhole cameras that fit in my mouth. So the act of speaking is like the act of letting light enter my mouth [or the act of seeing] … As I open my mouth I am exposing film. "
Hamilton's Portal series document herself looking at a mirror while in the Face to Face series she photographs other persons, places, and objects.
MEM
10/03