Guggenheim Museum Exhibitions The Collection Education Museum Store Membership Visit Us Search
1860-1869
1870-1879
1880-1889
1890-1899
1900-1909
1910-1919
1920-1929
1930-1939
1940-1949
1950-1959
1960-1969
1970-1979
1980-1989
1990-1999
2000-2009
SEARCH
Shortcut Help
Full search
DIRECTORIES
Artist Movement
Title Medium
Date Concept
Museum
<Previous 1980-1989 work Next 1980-1989 work>
Perpetual Photo (No. 244)
Enlarge
Allan McCollum, Perpetual Photo (No. 244), 1982/1990. Sepia-toned silver print, 45 x 49 inches, framed. Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, Gift, Bing and Migs Wright. 2007.7.




After Abstract Expressionism [more], one of the wider critiques of modern art was its fetishization of originality. Participating in this discourse, Allan McCollum (b. 1944, Los Angeles) reduced difference to a lowest common denominator in Surrogates, begun in 1978. Each painting in the series is unique in size but otherwise adheres to a formulaic pattern. More recently his Perpetual Photo series (1982/1990) investigates the idea of the simulacra, a copy several degrees removed from the source, whose own existence is questionable. The artist photographs television stills and further abstracts his shots through cropping and enlargement to the point that the original image is impossible to locate. His manipulated picture frustrates the viewer’s gaze; and its pretense of representing something draws the eye into a cul-de-sac of seeing, yet continually defers recognition. One sees only an extracted image in a sepia-toned print, an abstract form meant to capture the essential nature of photography. Through a series of copies, McCollum has drawn out a tense, unstable original. —Helen Hsu