The polaroid series “How I wonder what you are” uses (and abuses) juvenile imagery to explore and challenge our perception of childhood.
The series demonstrates a visual language and aesthetic sensibility that is intimate, and one that deviates from the mere representation of facts. The medium is used as a vessel to transcend the viewer into an emotional experience, while at the same time challenging the medium of photography by the employment of an old recording device; one that reminds us of our childhood and brings memories to the viewer's attention.
In this sense, the work is universal and open-ended; there’s room for the viewer to imagine, think and attempt to decipher the nuances of the particular situation. At the same time, the polaroids each seem to carry their individual part of a collective, coherent narrative in which the sense of innocence traditionally associated with childhood is left withered and dismantled.
amateur category
How I Wonder What You Are (Series)
DESCRIPTION
AUTHOR
Kasper Kruse is a visual artist molded in the contrasty seasons of Scandinavia. His photographic work has been defined as “short story photography” – a curious blend of literary story-telling and art photography, or, as he himself describes it, “a bastard format”.
His projects tend to be characterized by a troublesome love for “magnetic melancholia”, a kind of existential darkness that does not push you away but draws you near.
His projects tend to be characterized by a troublesome love for “magnetic melancholia”, a kind of existential darkness that does not push you away but draws you near.
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