Untitled
Adam Fuss British
Not on view
For the past two decades Fuss has been using living things-from mushrooms to babies-in his photograms, allowing the chance effects of their movement to help generate the picture's design. For this work, he let loose half a dozen snakes on a large sheet of photographic paper dusted with a fine coating of talcum powder. Over time, as the paper was exposed to light, the movement of the snakes "drew" the image by more or less delicately shifting the powder into fan- and swag-shaped forms. With its monumental scale, allover composition, and gestural vitality, the picture recalls the work of Abstract Expressionists such as Pollock and De Kooning, but here the guiding hand of the artist has been replaced by the ego-less energy of reptilian life.
This image cannot be enlarged, viewed at full screen, or downloaded.