Mirrors and Windows

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.

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