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FRAGMENTS 4, New York Photograph

Laurent Elie Badessi

United States

Photography, C-type on Aluminium

Size: 73.5 W x 49.5 H x 2 D in

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About The Artwork

Photograph is mounted face to a non glare acrylic (Diasec) framed in black maple wood floater frame. My can be seen on www.badessi.com/fragments.html FRAGMENTS is Badessi's focus on abstract art with the medium of butterflies wings. To make the "Fragments" series appear painterly, Badessi used one of the most fascinating possibilities of photography, drawing with light. He was able to capture these abstract images by using a skillful technique. He dragged the shutter of the camera and kept the lens very close to the butterfly wings, while constantly moving the camera during the exposure. The "Fragments" photographs were very much created in the manner of abstract expressionist paintings, where motion is an important part of the process and color is a major ingredient. When looked at up-close, the large-scale "Fragments" photographs reveal extremely rich and diaphanous gradients in the sections where the colors meet. This quality gives the pieces a great depth and an ethereal feeling, with a spirituality that seams to emanate from within. ----------------------------- I created “Fragments” to further explore the notions of fragility and eternity, as well as to visually defy the chaotic compositions from the “Innocence” series. In contrast, these new pieces made with butterfly wings are serene, minimalist and more abstract. They dive into the realm of primitivism, with a deep relationship between form, space and color. Once viewed together with “Innocence”, they now become a whole as they carry the same DNA. These photographs are based on speed and movement, as well as light and colors. Instead of capturing an image in a fraction of a second like in the “Innocence” series, they were technically created thanks to the reversed process, which is the slow capture of time. A technique that could be compare to drawing or painting with light thanks to a camera. In real life, the colors of the butterflies come from the reflection of light on their scales, which are covering by millions their wings. These extremely tiny scales that cling loosely to the wing and come off easily, up close, look like pigments. As a kid, I had noticed it when catching them, even with great caution, that butterfly wings would color the tip of my fingers. This observation, as well as the symbolic reference to the extreme fragility of life, led me to this new approach for the second part of “The unavoidable temporality of existence” project. I challenge myself to create these abstract architectonic compositions by using the same key elements from the “Innocence” series—cardboards of solid colors, silver foil (as reflectors) and light—in addition to the colors of the butterfly wings. This time, when making these pieces, the cardboards were directly in contact with the butterfly wings, which enabled me to isolate the colors efficiently as if the wings were one big single scale of one color. Technically, I achieved this result, thanks to the fast motion of a handheld camera and by dragging the shutter as I was taking the photographs—literally like painting with light. Without using Photoshop, this method turned out to be the best solution to not only erase what I call the “veins” (which are the dark lines holding the actual wing together), but also the unwanted colored spots. It allowed me to capture each wing as a solid color and to use them then like if they were natural “pigments”. The other important part in the making of this series, is that I utilized my camera like a microscope with the cardboards as laboratory slides. Keeping the lens at an extremely short distance (about half an inch) from the matter (the wings and the cardboards) emphasized the abstract effect that I was looking for. It made the pieces appear as a floating atmosphere of shapes and colors, out of the universe of the infinitesimally small and the infinitesimally big. The “Fragments” compositions are as vibrant as the “Innocence” pieces, but they are calmer, even though they have technically been achieved with great motion and speed. The colors, which in the making necessitated very little amount of light, radiate against each other exceptionally because of the reflection generated by the silver foil. To my surprise and because of the way they have been achieved—with the use of motion and colors—some of the pieces can recall works by abstract expressionist painters such as Mark Rothko or Helen Frankenthaler. When looked at up-close, these large-scale photographs reveal extremely rich and diaphanous gradients in the sections where the colors meet. This quality gives the pieces a greater depth and an ethereal feeling, with a spirituality that seams to emanate from within and only feasible thanks to the photography medium.

Details & Dimensions

Photography:C-type on Aluminium

Original:One-of-a-kind Artwork

Size:73.5 W x 49.5 H x 2 D in

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Laurent Elie Badessi is a Franco American fine art photographer born in France. He belongs to a family with three generations of photographers. From an early age, this enabled him to explore and appreciate the art of photography. After studying language and communication sciences at Université des Lettres d’Avignon, Badessi enrolled in a photography course at Université de Paris VIII. Curious about the psychological aspect in the interaction that occurs between a photographer and his sitter during a photo session, he decided to base his M.A. thesis on that subject. To explore this phenomenon further, he used the technique of “La photographie négociée” (The Negotiated Photography) and spent several months in Niger, Africa taking photographs of isolated tribes that had never (or very rarely) been exposed to the medium. For this project titled “Ethnological Fashion Photography”, he received the prominent “Bourse de l’aventure” (The Adventure Grant) among several other grants and awards. Badessi started his career in Paris and continued working abroad before moving to the United States in the early 1990s. After spending ten years focusing on the human figure, Badessi’s work SKIN, which was compiled in a book of the same name, was internationally released in early 2000 by the prestigious Swiss publisher Edition Stemmle. The book contains introduction by Sondra Gilman, Founder and Chairperson of the photography committee at the Whitney Museum. In 2004, Badessi was chosen by the company Charles Jourdan to produce a series of photographs for their advertising campaign. Because of the emblematic relationship between the medium of photography and this brand, Badessi accepted the project. Like photographer Guy Bourdin, who helped build that relationship thanks to his iconic images, Badessi was also given carte blanche. To bring his own vision to life, he played with fetishism and mythological symbolism. He created memorable visuals that are in the permanent collection of Le Musée des Arts Décoratifs in Paris, Louvre. At the peak of the American war in Iraq, Badessi created American Dream, This is not a dream (2006), a powerful series of portraits based on the propagandist campaigns elaborated by the army to attract new recruits during the war. In 2011 American Dream, This is not a dream was selected for the prestigious “Arte Laguna Prize” and shown at the Venice Arsenale. Innocence (2009-Present) and Dreaming Marilyns (2012-13) followed.

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