Susan Wides - Visual Artist | Environmental Art - All The Worlds 2011-2013




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Voice of Silence I
Voice of Silence II
And something happens to the light
This: seasons
Arachnoid
I, Kaaterskill
I, Manahatta
Fresh Kills
Mobile Views
The Name of And
Waxworld
Books

In the nine panoramic photographs that make up "All the Worlds," Susan Wides tracks her lens on our everyday drama and urban spectacle as both observers and participants in the "theatrum mundi" of our city’s streets. She illuminates the moments of struggle and transcendence in the many worlds that we collectively experience–the cultural, global, corporate consumer, and natural.

At a time when it’s possible to do almost anything virtually, Wides reveals the poignancy of our human desire to be in our environment, to feel "in the heart of the multitude…in the midst of the fugitive and the infinite," as Baudelaire said about the passionate city spectator, the flaneur. She chooses a perch above the drama. At this distance her lens blends her subjects with their surroundings to express the interconnectivity of culture and humanity, as well as space itself.

Through the dynamic tension she creates between icon and abstraction, Wides shows us that we live in a coded world. We see these abstractions through Wides’ lens manipulations (in "Times Square", for example) where corporate and media icons are brought into sharp focus, while individuals are left vague and spectral. We see it through her use of color to communicate the tone of our social relationships, the spectrum of consumer experiences. It is also evident in Wides’ less crowded images, where she deconstructs the composition, emphasizing the spare to express the essential.

All the Worlds is part of Wides’ ongoing "I, Mannahatta" project about New York, where she re-imagines the ever-shifting cultural and social landscape of the city and surrounding areas. Here, Wides homes in on sensation, happening–people and place, energy, light, and space—as expressed across the "theatrum mundi". These are our worlds at their vital core.

Met Museum [September 12, 2012]