The project centres around queer identity as it posits itself within realms of inherited masculinity, the Liminal rite, and the double. Drawing on the techniques of photography to manipulate time and space, the photographs string together a narrative that is inherently non-linear and perpetually shifting. Time acts to shift the course of action, thought, and perception, while introducing an intimacy between viewer and image. Between being and becoming - the photographs present still life, landscape, and portraiture in ways that extend beyond initial interpretation and presentation, allowing for the creation of poetry and rhythm throughout the works. Focusing on research drawn from Victor Turner’s interpretation of the Liminal, and Virginia Woolf’s literary use of the multi-narrative, the work coalesces photographic ideals revolving around the Uncanny, bridging gaps between the abstract in the mundane. Working primarily with 5x4 photography, the works resonate with a pull between the past and the present, the archive and the contemporary. Perpetually falling in on themselves, they alternate perception and associate the autobiographical from several different perspectives.
“I think when you’re so used to living here, with fire inside of your mouth - how are you supposed to be happy any other way?"
professional category
I'm You, Just Here (Series)
DESCRIPTION
AUTHOR
Daniel John Bracken is a Visual Artist working primarily with Photography and Installation. Currently enrolled in the MA Photography Programme at the Royal College of Art, the artist focuses on interdisciplinary relations of space, time, and diary in photography. Currently based in London, Daniel has had a number of group exhibitions as well as solo and group publications that have been displayed at Purchase College, Printed Matter's NYABF, World Money Gallery, Offprint at Tate Modern, Art Academy Newington, and PH21 Gallery - Budapest, as well as at the Royal College of Art. Focusing on queer identity - the artist has produced an array of works that weave seamlessly throughout ideas of queer masculinity, personal identity, and liminality as they pierce through the mundane aspects of reality. Originally from the United States, Daniel finds himself within a shifting socio-political world that exacerbates his emphasis on queer identity while maintaining a place in society which is constantly shifting: between being accepted and rejected – between being and becoming.
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