
White Trash Beautiful I (29 Palms, CA),
1999
Stefanie Schneider
Photography : C-print
38 x 36 x 0.1 cm 15 x 14.2 x 0 inch
Second NOT DISPLAYED BLUR TEXT
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About the artwork
Type
Numbered and limited to 30 copies
2 copies available
Signature
Signed artwork
Authenticity
Sold with certificate of Authenticity from the artist
Invoice from the gallery
Medium
Dimensions cm • inch
38 x 36 x 0.1 cm 15 x 14.2 x 0 inch Height x Width x Depth
Framing
Not framed
Artwork sold in perfect condition
Artwork location: United States
1999, 38x36cm, Edition 4/30.
Digital C-Print, based on a Polaroid.
Certificate and Signature label.
Aartist Inventory # 794.27.
Not mounted
Stefanie Schneider:
THE GREATER THE EMPTINESS THE GRANDER THE ART – Stefan Gronert
Not “Twenty-six Gasoline Stations” but “29 Palms, CA”! Forty-two years after Ed Ruscha’s legendary book, there is no gasoline station at the beginning of the book that is here at hand. Instead it is the open hearted Radha – with orange hair, pink-colored overalls and a bashful, or rather cunning, gaze that is directed downward – with which this book begins! And with her and with Max – attention: a woman –, one whose appearance is in accordance with the same styling, it comes to an end as well – after Radha has in the meantime colored her fingernails pink, again endowed with the same open heartedness and the same look which now, however, reveals in combination with her altered facial expression an “old-maidish” turning away from the viewer. This may serve as an example for a vivid and understandable transformation which flows into a large-scale representation of a cheerless settlement beneath a shining, blue sky – there a figure, lost straightaway, becomes overwhelmed.
Pictures which in 1998/99 play in the harsh California sunlight or in spaces that are not exactly cozy and comfortable. “Play” is the correct word in this regard, for precisely in view of the pictures of persons, there remains more than just doubt as to whether we are looking at staged scenes or have simply happened upon the high-strung “reality” of a (wannabe) film world. Yet not all the pictures have the same character of a glaring, plastic world. Upon flipping through the pages, we also encounter unpretentious, literally “colorless” scenes in undefined interiors, or unspectacular views resembling a still life and opening out onto a nowhere land. That which connects all participants in these picture-worlds is the observation that they appear to be exhausted, lost, empty or uncertain about their existence. One is almost reminded of the empty gazes and loneliness of the protagonists in the pictures of large cities painted by Manet or Degas in the era of Early Modernism.
With one exception, all the photographs which are reproduced here, which originally measure 60 by 70 cm but which here, in their present size and configuration, make productive use of the possibilities presented by the medium of the book, manifest several elements of B-movies: smoking, naked, made-up and muscular persons who are not inclined to conform entirely to the vision of Hollywood dreams. Beauty and vexation, eroticism and loneliness enter into a mixture which reveals the rift between desire and truth. From a distance, one is reminded of the “Untitled Film Stills” of Cindy Sherman, which in this regard are not nearly as drastic. Yet whereas her photos from the seventies are characterized by a cool, objective mode of representation in historicizing blackand-white, the photographs of Stefanie Schneider evince a soft, sometimes seemingly pictorial visual language with a coloration ranging from the pale to the artificial-glaring. As in many other pictures of Stefanie Schneider which often present themselves to us as sequences, these photos refer back as well to the perceptual stereotypes of film. Making use of instant photography, proceeding from which significantly enlarged C-prints come into being, her pictures summon up the impression of a narration without ultimately becoming part of a plot that is readable in a linear fashion. The illusion of the narrative element, however, simply enhances the experience of a renunciation of just this aspect. For the picture titles as well – and also the title of this publication – provide no real help with the imaginary construction of a story.
Nevertheless, names return which include the first name of the artist herself: hence is everything not in fact a game but rather a series of authentic and instantaneous images, or is it after all nothing other than a staging, a game – how real is life? The paucity of plot elements, which contradicts all expectation of a cinematic style, as well as the emptiness and loneliness of the persons, enters into a peculiar, sometimes seemingly surreal association with the magic of the sun-drenched expanses of the dreamlike landscape. Just as the fantasy and imagination of the viewer are stimulated, so to the same great extent does the redemption of these visual figures of love founder on a void whose glaze is created, not least of all, by the peculiar blurriness of the photographic representation. The seemingly amateur character of these pictures, which have in no way been treated with any excessive scrupulousness, leaves us with a stimulating incertitude as to their interpretation, one in which the spheres of reality, fiction or dream are scarcely capable any longer of being differentiated. Thus the gaps and the scenic openness of what is presented ultimately set in motion a self-appraisal.
So what remains after “29 Palms, CA”? Perhaps that hope which deviates from the saying of Ruscha that is quoted in the title: The stronger the photography the better the reality will be!
Translated by George Frederick Takis
Stefanie Schneider lives and works in the California High Desert and Berlin
Stefanie Schneider's scintillating situations take place in the American West. Situated on the verge of an elusive super-reality, her photographic sequences provide the ambience for loosely woven story lines and a cast of phantasmic characters.
Schneider works with the chemical mutations of expired polaroid film stock. Chemical explosions of color spreading across the surfaces undermine the photograph's commitment to reality and induce her characters into trance-like dreamscapes. Like flickering sequences of old road movies Schneider's images seem to evaporate before conclusions can be made - their ephemeral reality manifesting in subtle gestures and mysterious motives. Schneider's images refuse to succumb to reality, they keep alive the confusions of dream, desire, fact, and fiction.
Stefanie Schneider received her MFA in Communication Design at the Folkwang Schule Essen, Germany. Her work has been shown at the Museum for Photography, Braunschweig, Museum für Kommunikation, Berlin, the Institut für Neue Medien, Frankfurt, the Nassauischer Kunstverein, Wiesbaden, Kunstverein Bielefeld, Museum für Moderne Kunst Passau, Les Rencontres d'Arles, Foto -Triennale Esslingen.
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Presentation
Stefanie Schneider (1968) is a German photographer living in Berlin and Los Angeles. Schneider's photographs exhibit the appearance of expired Polaroid instant film, with its chemical mutations. It has been released in books and exhibition catalogs, and in her own feature film 29 Palms, CA (2014). Her work has also been used as the cover art for music by Red Hot Chili Peppers and Cyndi Lauper, and in the film Stay (2005).
Schneider's preferred choice of location is the American West (especially Twentynine Palms, California, which served as location and title to one of her books), and the mounting of sequential images in a panel, the photographs evoke the impression of faded dreamy film stills. She holds an MFA in photography from the Folkwang Hochschule in Essen, Germany.
Schneider completed 29 Palms, CA in 2014. A feature film, art piece that explores the dreams and fantasies of a group of people who live in a trailer community in the Californian desert. The project includes six films: "Hitchhiker", "Rene's dream", "Sidewinder", "Till death do us part", "Heather's dream" and the feature film "The Girl Behind the White Picket Fence". A defining feature is the use of still Polaroid images in succession and voice over. Characters talk to themselves about their ambitions, memories, hopes and dreams. The latest of these short film is "Heather's dream", starring Heather Megan Christie and Udo Kier, and was selected in May 2013 by the International Short Film Festival Oberhausen and is also nominated for the 2013 German short film award.
In a review of her book Stranger Than Paradise, Daniel Kothenschulte writes in the German magazine Literaturen that:
Stefanie Schneider is an internationally known artist that takes analog photographs and makes experimental movies with them. Schneider has cribed some of the titles of the series of her enlarged Polaroids from her favorite movies: Red Desert, Zabriskie Point or The Last Picture Show. Even if most images remain connected to the genre of road movies—in one case one seems to get a glimpse of Ridley Scott's tragic runaways Thelma and Louise.
Collections
DZ Bank, Francfort, Allemagne
Dreyfuss, Bâle, Suisse
Schmidt Bank, Ratisbonne, Allemagne
Groupe d'édition Holtzbrinck, Stuttgart, Allemagne
Collection Sander, Berlin, Allemagne
Ocean Foundation, Zurich, Suisse
Germanisches Nationalmuseum, Nuremberg, Allemagne
Impossible Collection, Vienne, Autriche
Collection Luc LaRochelle, Montréal, Canada
Collection d'art du canton de Zug, Suisse
Expositions
Expositions individuelles
2014 Motion Photography – 6 Finalists, Saatchi Gallery, Londres, GB
2014 Instantdreams, De Re Gallery, Los Angeles, USA
2014 Stefanie Schneider, c.art-Galerie Bregenz, Autriche
2013 The girl behind the white picket fence, Galerie Catherine et André Hug, Paris, France
2012 Stranger than Paradise, Christian Hohmann Fine Art, Palm Desert, USA
2012 Stefanie Schneider, Gallery at Cliff Lede Vineyards, Napa Valley, USA
2011 California Dreaming, ROLLO Contemporary, Londres, GB
2010 Stefanie Schneider, Galerie Walter Keller, Zurich, Suisse
2010 Instant Dreams, Frank Picture Gallery, Santa Monica, USA
2009 29 Palms, CA, Moravian Gallery, Brno, République tchèque
2008 Sidewinder, Städtische Galerie am Mozartplatz, Salzbourg, Autriche
2007 Wastelands, Kunstverein Recklinghausen, Allemagne
2006 Wastelands, Zephyr / Reiss-Engelhorn-Museen, Mannheim, Allemagne
2005 Last Picture Show, Galerie Caprice Horn, Berlin, Allemagne
2004 Suburbia, Galerie Kuttner Siebert, Berlin, Allemagne
2004 Stefanie Schneider, Galerie Michael Sturm, Stuttgart, Allemagne
Expositions collectives
2014 Nude, Pop-up Art Gallery Berlin, Allemagne
2013 Images for Images, GASK – Gallery of the Central Bohemian Region, Kutná Hora, République tchèque
2013 The Polaroid Years: Instant Photography and Experimentation, Frances Lehman Loeb Art Center, Poughkeepsie, USA
2013 Road Atlas - Straßenfotografie, DZ Bank Collection, Kunsthalle Erfurt, Allemagne
2012 Polaroid (Im)Possible – The Westlicht Collection, Forum de la culture et de l'économie du land de Rhénanie du Nord-Westphalie, Düsseldorf, Allemagne
2010 Mapping Worlds: Welten verstehen – Aufbruch in die Gegenwart, 8ème triennale internationale de la photo, Esslingen, Allemagne
2009 True Lies, Kunsthaus Essen, Allemagne
2008 Les Rencontres d'Arles, organisées par Christian Lacroix, nominée pour le prix découverte
2007 Breaking the Waves, Arthaus, Los Angeles, USA
2006 Artists for Tichy - Tichy for Artists, Museum für Moderne Kunst, Passau, Allemagne
2006 Out of the Camera: Analoge Fotografie im digitalen Zeitalter, Kunstverein, Bielefeld, Allemagne
Land in Translation, Riverside Museum, USA.
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