Afterglows
By Tom Wachunas
“For
that is the power of the camera: seize the familiar and give it new meanings, a
special significance by the mark of a personality.”
-Alfred Stieglitz
“…Walking
through some of these spaces, you could almost feel some of the spirit that
this town grew up with so many years ago…”
-Michael Barath,
speaking to Dan Kane, The Repository, Aug. 6, 2015
EXHIBIT: Interiors, photographs by Michael Barath
- on view THROUGH AUGUST, at Julz by
Alan Rodriguez, 220 Market Avenue N. in downtown Canton / Tues.- Fri. 9:30 a.m.
to 5:00 p.m. / Sat. 9:30 a.m. to 3:00 p.m.
The 20 photographs
by Michael Barath in this exhibit, presented by TRANSLATIONS at Julz by Alan
Rodriguez, constitute a ruminant journey through abandoned buildings from
bygone days in Canton. The images depict various interiors of the now dormant
Hercules Engine plant (its original building dating to the late 1800s), as well
as interiors of other unspecified Victorian residential structures. Barath’s
deftly composed images of atrophied architectures are certainly a nostalgic
unveiling of sites long hidden from most of us, and a sobering witness to the
ravages of time and neglect.
Yet curiously
enough, the character emanating from these images isn’t strictly one of doleful
ruination. There is an aura of enchanting hauntedness that makes these “dead”
spaces breathe with a mystical light. The factory interiors, some of them
cavernous, such as Factory Afternoon,
are imbued with a hushed luminosity that softly illuminates their structural
rhythms and shadowed recesses. The sensation of dysphoric emptiness is delicately
balanced with a misty, even reverential light that borders on the Gothic. And for
that matter, Barath’s approach can additionally seem almost painterly in the
way it captures, not unlike Romantic-era artists, a dramatic atmosphere.
A similar
ethereality is at work in many of the residential spaces depicted - Victorian
Bathtub and Victorian Blue Bath, for
example – framed to focus on their
strangely intricate geometries and textures. These pictures are both pragmatic
and poetic records of evanescence. People lived here once.
Amid the tactile grotesqueries of fallen
plaster, rubble-strewn floors, or layers of peeling wallpaper, Barath’s
compelling images of domestic relics arrested in time nonetheless leave us with
an uncanny sense of lingering elegance, and of dignity in the deterioration.
PHOTOS, from top
(courtesy Michael Barath, https://mbarath.smugmug.com/Site-Pages/About
): Factory 20, Factory Windows, Factory
Afternoon, Victorian Blue Bath
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