The exhibition Mirrors and Windows was created by John Szarkowaski in The museum of Modern Art. Mirrors and Windows are used to act as binary opposites. Mirrors ‘Reflect a portrait of the artist who made it’. They are:
- Subjective
- A Self-Reflection
- Tableaux
- Romanticism
- Synthetic
- Staged
- Manipulated
- Acts as a projection of the self on the world.
Windows are ‘Through which one might better know the world?’ They are:
- Objective
- Documentary
- Authentic
- Reality
- Straight
- Public
- Act as a view into the exterior world explored authentically.
Example:
This is an image taken by Robert Heinecken which I believe represents the mirror.
Robert Heinecken was an artist who created surreal sculptures based on the idea of juxtaposition with re-purposed images from magazines and product packaging. On first glance, his work could seem like conceptual art however he dubbed himself a ‘paraphotographer’ due to his work in darkrooms and alteration of images despite rarely taking the images himself.
This image is a Mirror for numerous reasons. One being that there is no clear cut meaning to this image making interpretations dependant on the person. This subjectivity makes it a mirror. Had this image been taken differently and it was simply an image of some blocks it could have been a window as it would have been a documentary image. This image however has an image printed onto the blocks which makes it a staged image. Since this image has been heavily manipulated, the photographer has projected himself onto the image also making this image a self reflection and therefore a mirror.