ROBBERT
FLICK: TRAJECTORIES
Robbert Flick
Hardbound,
11.5" x 11.75", 304 pages
225 color
illustrations
2004, Steidl/LACMA
Edited by Tim B. Wride
Essays by Michael Dear and David L. Ulin.
Robbert Flick's work extends the
same visual, philosophical, and theoretically fertile tradition
set by the highly influential and iconoclastic Robert Heinecken.
But while Heinecken's emphasis can be said to rely on the manner
in which images function within the intersection of popular culture
and the fine arts, Flick has characteristically concentrated more
intently on the artifactual, conceptual, and receptive properties
of photography--specifically landscape photography. The distinctive
retinal and conceptual strength of Flick's work has been evident
since his early essay-format images of the 1960s. In his more
recent digital work, he extends his participation in the critical
discourse established around the interpretation, evaluation, and
assessment of visual constructs related to the landscape. And
yet, this movement has only become possible through a conceptual
transition from a position of creating unique objects to an emphasis
on interactivity and multiple access using still and moving images
that allow for the work's insertion into the broader socio-political
arena where the application defines the discourse. Trajectories
traces the artist's career from the 1970s to the present, providing
the opportunity to examine his visual development while also charting
the conceptual and philosophical impact of contemporary culture
on landscape, cultural geography, and technology.
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