SCREEN MEMORIES: A CONVERSATION WITH JOY EPISALLA
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TV 8 (Chicago), 2007 - 2008
chromogenic print mounted to plexiglas + wood frame
20 x 22 x 2
inches
edition of 7 + 2 A/P
|
DG: I was wondering if you could tell
me how you first started the series, what initiated it?
JE: The TV series was an outgrowth of
previous work: for many years I'd been photographing domestic interior objects
such as pillows, carpets, cushions and curtains -- it involved a kind of
examination of the traces left behind, and the history of use. I shot objects
and situations that were rather mundane/everyday, even on first glance perhaps
unremarkable. Always without people. I was interested in conveying the
simultaneity of presence and absence. The TV series is diaristic: all
are places I've stayed in when traveling. There is a parallel between the
surface of the blank TV screen and the film plane inside the camera.
DG: In how many different places
were the photographs taken?
JE: There are now 17 sites recorded in the series--
to see more:
There are many more that I've shot but haven't
printed, and may or may not end up being in the series.
DG: For how long (how many individual
exhibitions) did you exhibit them before you felt the series was completed.
JE: The series is ongoing, and may never be
"completed." The most recent one, TV 19 (Washington DC), was
shot in 2014 and printed in 2015. I have shown some works from the series
previously, in Chicago in 2008 and in Brussels in 2012.
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TV 6 (Buffalo), 2006 - 2008
chromogenic print mounted to plexiglas + wood frame
20 x 23 x 2
inches
edition of 7 + 2 A/P
|
DG: Was there another artist whose
work influenced you in conceptualizing and originating it?
JE: No one particular artist--in general, of
course, I would say I've been influenced by a large number of artists, writers,
filmmakers too numerous to mention. A few: Chantal Akerman, Hollis Frampton,
Felix Gonzalez-Torres, Henry James, Johannes Vermeer.
DG: In what variety of instances did
the aesthetic moments occur when you decided to take a picture?
JE: It's always the same, and I have rules: I take
a photograph of whatever is reflected in the screen of the TV when I'm leaving
the room for the last time--nothing is arranged or staged--just what is
reflected in that moment, with me not seen in the screen, which is why many of
the images are from one side or the other and not straight on. Most of the
photos were shot with a 35 mm SLR film camera, hand held, only the last few
have been shot with a digital camera. Also the TV's screen surface has changed
over the time I've been recording the series--from convex glass to flat screen.
DG: Out of how many images total did
you end up with these final choices?
JE: I only shoot maybe 3 shots--max, of the same
angle: the differences between each shot having to do with the light,
exposure, and focus. I am interested in working in and around the sculptural
possibilities of photography--in this case, the way in which the physical frame
sets up a context for the framing of the shot in the blank TV screen, mimicking
the original object in some ways. I am also interested in the conceit of
inserting my own private content and queer narrative into the screen.
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TV 19 (Washington DC), 2014 - 2015
archival pigment print mounted to plexiglas + wood
frame
18.5 x 23 x 2 inches
edition of 7 + 2 A/P
|



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