For
Immediate Release:
Roe Ethridge
Rockaway Redux
September 4 - October 4, 2008
Dear Harry Since we were having so much trouble with the press release,
which is always the case, I thought it might be helpful to write you a letter.
I remember Michael Bevilacqua did this and the gallery used the letter as
the press release. It thought it was great and really touching. Not sure that
type of thing is the way to go here but maybe we can use it for the pub.
A couple years ago, after finishing the Gagosian show, I felt like needed
to change something up, learn to use a digital camera. For that show Iíd used
8 pictures culled from the flat file that for one reason or another were never
published or exhibited, there were many more but these were the best 8. This
little inventory selection became a kind of armature for the rest of the work.
For me it seemed to be about old things. Old pictures, old things. Pictures
of old things. It wasnít like "the end is near" but it wasnít far
off. At that point, I'd already started taking pictures in Rockaway but since
it was something so personal I was a bit hesitant. Itís like I didnít want
to exploit it for itís vernacular charm. But after I saw those images of projected
sea levels with a big chunk of long island and NYC under water I started thinking
of Rockaway as a place that would disappear. For me it is becoming relic.
For the new work I wanted to be more thematically concise but I didnít want
to just dig in, deliver a solid documentation of Rockaway. Given that the
name of the place has the word "away" in it, it made sense to broaden
the scope, this was the "next thing indicated" as David Milch says.
And since I was thinking of it as a book project first I knew I could use
a lot more pictures than I would in an exhibition. It gave me an alibi for
getting a little out of control and seeing where things would go. As you know,
there are pictures from Mumbai, St Barts, Cornwall, Atlanta, New Mexico, LA,
Florida, B.C., Montauk, Williamsburg as well as Rockaway. As it turned out
I used quite few older images too including a handful of 4 x 5 Polaroidís
that I turned up after looking through PLís Polaroid book.
For Rockaway Redux I wanted to continue the themes and motifs from the book
but with the exhibition in mind rather than the publication. The sunsets were
shot on the last day of what was a bizarre, difficult trip to a Caribbean
paradise. I think it was a relief that we were leaving the next day and that
sunset was a nice send off. I liked that they were serial but also depicting
a very short period of time. The rephotographed images on the plastic lattice
are from the grocery store in my neighborhood, Tops on the Waterfront (which
it is not). I liked the word play of the "Tide" bottles and the
"Ready Crust" tangented nicely with the two refracted suns in the
"Sunburst with Refracted Suns". The teddy bear netting is from this
little hammock thing we used to put Lee in her bath. It had a sort of ramp
shape and would keep her head out of the water. The picture of Nancy is from
last summer in Wellfleet when she was pregnant. The self-portrait is a b +
w Polaroid, slightly distressed. It was originally for the Journal as an opener
for the interview portion of the piece. The pictures of Jake were shot for
Vice. It was a wintertime surf story boringly titled "Dawn Patrol".
It was going to be called "Neoprene Dreams" but that seemed too
Teen Beat at the time. The Cappy portraits were also for Vice, his publicity
shots in the captainís outfit sealed the deal for me. The still life images
were shot at the new studio. The net piece is a rephotograph of the "Cliff
in Montauk" with a decorative fish net over it. Not sure if that means
itís caught or if the net is just blocking the view. The "Beach Scene"
is a bunch of elements collected over the last couple years, the dress I bought
a couple days before, it reminded me of Outerbridge.
One of the reasons Iíve been so interested in this kind of displaced, broad
scope approach is an effort to embrace the arbitrariness of the image and
image making. For me serendipity and intention are both necessary. Another
reason for the wild style is the dread of conclusiveness. The dread of finitude.
This work is against death and finality. No, that's too hyperbolic, let's
say itís about working in the service of the image and getting my kicks too.
I hope this helps explain how I got to this point.
Rockaway Redux will be on view from September 4 - October 4, 2008. A reception
will be held for the artist in the gallery on September 4, 6-8 pm at 525 West
22nd Street, New York City. For information contact Erin Somerville at 212-741-8849,
or erin@andrewkreps.com.