Dirk
Braeckman (born in 1958 in Eeklo, Belgium) is a
Belgian photographer who lives and works in Ghent, Belgium.
Dirk
Braeckman has had numerous group exhibitions and several solo shows
in Europe, including ones at at Ghent’s SMAK (2001)and the De Pont
Foundation in Tilburg (2004). He has received considerable acclaim
for his portraits of the Belgian king Albert II and Queen
Paola, photographs commissioned by the Royal Palace of Brussels.
In
addition to his photographic body of work, Braeckman creates site
specific installations, for varying projects such as Beaufort in
Ostend or Watou’s art and poetry festival. Recently a permanent
installation of a monumental photowork (of which a facsimile is now
presented at Robert Miller's Gallery) has been inaugurated at the
new Concert Hall of Bruges.
In
2002 Braeckman was granted the cultural award of the University of
Louvain[2] and received the Cultural Prize of the Flemish
Community, Section Fine Arts in 2005. Braeckman’s images have
appeared in numerous magazines, books and catalogues. Most recently
in the Photo Art book, published by Dumont, Thames &
Hudson and Aperture.
« Photographer
of the darkening, of the vanishing: this is how one might describe
Dirk Braeckman (b. 1958). His photographs have no intention of
clearly illuminating the world, but douse it in a kind of twilight.
They are hazy, blurred, highly suggestive. They are not here to show
us something. They offer no spectacle, no new insight, no revelation.
What appears quickly disappears again. These – at least at first –
shy images nonetheless have great presence. In any case, the images
manifesting themselves on the flawless white walls of Museum M in
Louvain are not frail.
The
power of these photographs is not gleaned from their size. Although
they are not actually small, the format is usually relatively modest
– certainly in the generous Museum M galleries. When his images are
in fact enlarged to giant proportions, as in the final gallery on the
top floor of the museum, Dirk Braeckman has manipulated them in such
a way that what strikes us is their delicacy, not their format. He
has printed them on light, fragile paper and attached them to the
wall without reinforcement, support or framing. The intangibility of
these images, which seem connected to nothing else (not even the
paper on which they are printed, or the wall on which they are hung)
leaves viewers dumbfounded.
We
lack, it seems, the right words to describe these photographic
images. One might even ask oneself if these are in fact still
photographs. Indeed, they are undoubtedly photographs, because they
have been produced with photographic techniques and remain
recognizable as photographic images (impossible to confuse with
photorealistic paintings, for example). They do not disguise their
technical origins: they are not ashamed of being just photographs.
They
do not function as photographs do, however, or at least they do not
do what people have come to expect from photographic images. To
begin, these are not transparent windows onto the world, even though
they show recognizable places, situations or bodies. We see, amongst
other things, a portal, a waiting room, a bedspread, a window, a
curtain, a blind wall with a few vague scratches, a corridor, or a
nude body, but all refuse to let whatever is there be a decisive
presence. What humbly moves forward in the picture is no more than a
shadow, a phantom image that we cannot get a grip on.
Could
we read these images differently, as mirrors that allow the
appearance of something of the inner world of a maker of images, thus
as images that visualize a unique vision and relationship to the
world? Although there are striking similarities between the different
images – Braeckman clearly has a preference for desolate, dark and
shabby spaces –, they simply will not pull together into a unified
and legible reflection. The viewer never has the feeling that he
comes any closer to the photographer, that he is allowed a glimpse
into his character, however briefly.
There
is something fundamentally wrong with these images. They refuse to
communicate. They tell us nothing at all about what they depict and
equally little about their maker. Let loose, out on their own, they
stubbornly follow their own inimitable trajectory. Eye to eye with
them, what we most experience is a shimmering stubbornness. Old,
accepted power relationships are turned in on themselves: it is not
we who have sovereignty over the images, but the images that hold us
captive (they drink us into their blackness).
In
the crisp white galleries of the museum, these images hang like
silent, dark spots. Titles and informative data are missing. Nowhere
do the images cluster together or engage in interaction with one
another. There is no apparent trajectory, no clear system that binds
them. Each image retains all possible autonomy. Together, they are
nothing more than a loose collection of images. Here too, the
photographer – a title that we apply to this maker of images only
with great reservation – has broken free from the laws that govern
photographic exhibitions. Braeckman refuses to allow his images to
work together, refuses to line them up into a series with a complex
or multilayered message. They do not function as a powerful visual
argument, but as muffled, insular manifestations. They have no agenda
of their own. They have no wish to announce anything, have nothing to
defend or to protest (just like that naked body folded in on itself,
the young woman we descry in one of the images: resting within
oneself is enough).
These
images are silent, but there is something – a great deal, in fact –
brewing beneath the surface. The images are layered, not in the
figurative sense of the word, but literally: they have been built up
in different layers. Take, for example, the picture with the
partially drawn curtain. Behind the curtain, we see a blind wall
intended to be removed from view. The interplay between open and
closed and the suggestion of unveiling that this implies, in fact
results in disappointment. Again and again, there are inevitably
those contrary materials that will not move out of the way, that cut
off our investigation, our searching gaze (in another image, one of
the few in which there is a window, a tulle curtain hangs in front of
the glass, so that even here, we are given no opportunity for a clear
look through). Time and again, we hit the flat wall of the image.
To
achieve this impenetrability, Dirk Braeckman frequently makes use of
flash. Again, there is the paradox: that which should open up the
space for us is in fact that which closes it off. The ball of light
that he causes to explode in the dark turns everything opaque. Just
see how the mercilessly hard light of the flash brings forward the
background of a painted mountain landscape, burning away the central
mountain motif (the portrayal). It is as if an acid were eating away
the depiction, until all we have left is its physical support. These
violent, iconoclastic images are not about the fleeting world of the
representations, but about reality being solidified into matter,
about the unfathomable quality of the material (the ding-an-sich)
against which we are constantly banging our heads.
Photography
is writing with light, or so the etymology of the word suggests. What
people sometimes forget is that in photographic emulsions, light
originally manifests itself as a blackening (it is for exactly this
reason that Raoul Hausmann once christened photography as
‘melanography’). The sunlight streaming in is blinding. It
erases, destroys. The capturing of light creates darkness (it makes
that which should be light dark, and vice versa). It is only when
this negative image is subjected to subsequent manipulation that the
new inversion of light values takes place, and an image arises, which
appears to be a recognizable impression of reality: the positive, the
Phoenix rising out of its own ashes. In the case of Braeckman, we see
images that seem to have never completed the whole conversion
process, as if they had become hung up somewhere along the way. The
images continue to waver, balancing on the threshold of appearance.
They wrestle (hopelessly?) with the darkness in which they had
originally seen the light.
In
his work, Dirk Braeckman explores the difficult – if not impossible
–transformation of world into image. The fact that he wishes to
evoke this confrontation with obstinate reality with the help of a
medium specifically intended to conquer, as much as possible, the
resistance of objects and bodies, immediately reveals the immense
ambition of this creator of images. While photography usually reduces
its subject to a light, manageable picture that can change its
support with no significant loss of meaning, which can circulate on a
massive scale and with unanticipated speed, a Dirk Braeckman
photograph is a heavy, laboriously hard to decipher, unmanageable and
unique ‘object’ (an anti-photographic image). The frivolous
manoeuvrability of the photographic image must here make way for the
unwieldy toughness of the material itself: blackness pushes away
lightness, slowness takes over from speed, and the disconcerting
directness of palpable touch replaces detached, disengaged looking. »
(Dirk Braeckman: Melanographer, by Steven Humblet)
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