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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE EXHIBITION: Marcos
Zimmermann South American Nudes DATES: February
27 – April 17, 2010 OPENING: Artist’s Reception, Saturday, February 27, 6 – 8 pm GALLERY HOURS: Tuesday
- Saturday, 11am - 5pm Couturier Gallery is pleased to
announce Marcos Zimmermann’s exhibition “South American Nudes” opening
Saturday, February 27th (through April 17th), a selection
of 30 gelatin silver prints from his recently published book Desnudos
Sudamericanos (Ediciones Lariviere, Buenos Aires, 2009). One of Desnudos sudamericanos (South American Nudes), a six year project that took Marcos Zimmermann through
seven South American countries, is a daring and challenging accomplishment. Although implied by the nature of nude
photography itself, Zimmermann’s photographs do not deliberately refer to his
subjects’ sensuality nor are they intended as erotic images though, depending
on one’s point of view, it is certainly possible to construe them as such. Zimmermann’s objective with Desnudos
is to document South American individuals in their natural environments: “These are photographs of real
people, and the frank exposure of their bodies is no more than a way of further
revealing their truths, both shoe that are personal and those of their
environment. The way they have exhibited
themselves shows their history, their fears, their hopes. The scenes behind them hint a another half to
their lives. I set out to take portraits
that would reflect this dual dream, aiming to photograph men whose faces showed
signs of the land where they were born, its landscape and climate. Bodies
showing traces of their past, hinting at their ways of loving and perhaps even
providing an indication of their future.
As part of this search, I have portrayed children who had not yet lived
their lives, young men who had just very recently discovered their manhood, mature
fathers, and old men whose lives had almost run their course, and who no longer
had any fears. I photographed youths who
had the appearance of their countries, gauchos as sensual as their land, and virile
males with the scent of The subjects are not so much stripped of their clothing as
they have barriers removed, lending the images a feeling of frankness physically
expressed in their willingness to show themselves in their natural form and
setting. One reason for the stark
nakedness is “…[an] attempt to recover the profound meaning that the nude
represented originally in art, with models stripped of all that is external as
a way of expressing a commitment to purity and truth.”2 Although the subjects are many, their
stories and backgrounds varied, Zimmermann emphasizes that “…All the men
photographed here are but one man. One
man echoed thousands of times throughout Many of his
subjects who agreed to be photographed (and were remunerated) are of the
working class and the modeling work was a much needed opportunity. In the works titled “Mario, porter, Rodríguez Market,
La Paz, Bolivia.” and “Ramón, gaucho,
Highway 2, Provence of Buenos Aires, Argentina, “one sees the weathered
expressions, spent bodies, calloused hands and feet reflected in their
belongings or tools of their trade. At
the same time, an intense stare or a resolute jaw line belies an
approachability or openness revealed in their eyes. Francisco the miner as well as Miguel Ángel
and Ismael, two other gauchos photographed, also have the clenched fists and
weathered look that a hard life fosters.
These are people who populate the countryside’s and mountains, yet do
not appear different from those who live in the city. They carry something in common more than
their nudity, something that cannot always be described in words. For Zimmermann, the characteristics all these
men share is their culture, heritage, families and struggles. This is reinforced by the exposure of their
maleness, which figuratively levels the field and guarantees one commonality. It gives the viewer a startling revelation
seeing a culture familiar to many presented in unexpected bare truth. Some of these images are deliberately based on
familiar photographs of toreadors, gauchos, farmers, however, the viewer is
“shocked” into re-examining what is at first quickly dismissed as “déjŕ vu.” Marcos Zimmermann
was born and educated in Zimmermann, having already captured
the vast expanses of For
additional information or press images, please contact the gallery. 1 Marcos Zimmerman, Desnudos
Sudamericanos / South American Nudes (Ediciones Larivičre, 2009)
foreword. 2 Zimmerman foreword 3Marcos Zimmermann, Desnudos
Sudamericanos / South American Nudes (Ediciones Larivičre, 2009)
epilogue. 4 Marcos Zimmermann,
2009, <http://www.marcoszimmermann.com/proyectos/desnudos.htm>. 5 Zimmerman foreword |