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American
Excess:
Twenty Years of Photographs by Ellen Vartanian-Maher
Exhibited
at the Aurora Public Art Commission, Aurora, Illinois
Curated by Rena Church and the artist
Accompanying essay by Nate Larson
In
the world of Ellen Vartanian-Maher, there is nothing unusual about
a Jesus figure directing a massive rhinoceros, a giant chicken atop
a striped Cadillac, or a tiny dinosaur emerging from an immense
tipi. Vartanian-Maher has sought out the odd and unusual from American
roadways since 1985, constructing striking black & white infrared
images with universal visual appeal. Her photographs tap into a
peculiar sort of American ethos, one of the roadside curiosity and
carnivalesque aesthetic. The photographs function as a document
of sorts, but the primary intellectual drive is one of construction,
molding the medium to create intricate and strange new worlds. She
uses these odd situational displays as a vehicle to playfully illuminate
the culture that generated them.
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| Ellen
Vartanian-Maher, Untitled |
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Ellen
Vartanian-Maher, Untitled |
These
types of curiosities have had an irresistible pull for photographers
since the inception of the medium. The medium of photography has
always been linked to the notion of documentation because of the
connection to the “real world” in front of the lens
at the moment of exposure. Photographers make images of the odd
and unusual as a sort of cultural record, to prove that these things
really existed and to verify their place in the world. Among the
American giants, Walker Evans had an affinity for ostentatious advertisements
and signs throughout his long and distinguished career. Evans photographed
everything from gas stations literally covered with hand-lettered
signs in the Deep South to campy advertisements for suburban subdivisions.
His photographs serve as documents, but also function as a tool
for cultural analysis, inviting study of the culture that produced
these artifacts. Edward Weston, best known for his tightly focused
modernist abstractions, was also drawn to these types of objects
later in his career. This is best illustrated by “Hot Coffee,
Mojave Desert” (1935), which shows a dilapidated oversize
plaster coffee cup with the words “hot coffee” printed
on the side. The artist has turned the camera away from the context
of the coffee shop, and instead, frames this oddity against the
bleak and barren desert, creating an irony between the location
and the advertised product. By shifting the context, Weston illuminates
the humorous nature of this object and others like it.
In
a similar way, Vartanian-Maher’s photographs function as testaments
to the existence of these objects, but more importantly, transform
and exaggerate these objects through the choices made in the act
of photographing. These carefully composed photographs are designed
to spotlight the absurd, heighten incongruous elements, and expose
bizarre juxtapositions. These choices are enhanced through the use
of black & white infrared film, which enhances the surreal and
dreamlike properties of her compositions. With these choices, Vartanian-Maher
re-contextualizes this strange subject matter to simultaneously
create a new hyper-reality and expose the artificial facade of the
roadside curiosity.
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| Ellen
Vartanian-Maher, Untitled |
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Ellen
Vartanian-Maher, Untitled |
Her
interest in this subject matter stems partially from living abroad
in England in her early twenties. Her (then) husband was an English
citizen living in America, and was drafted for the Vietnam War,
despite previous assurances to the contrary. The couple moved to
England to avoid military service, living there from 1971 –
1974. In England, Vartanian-Maher encountered a prim and proper
culture, one where everything was carefully tasteful and historically
refined. She was amazed to discover a cultural landscape without
so much as a McDonalds. Upon her return to America in 1974, she
was further astonished to rediscover the comparatively garish and
vulgar American landscape. This culture shock would later lead her
to make photographs in response to this landscape that she now saw
through new eyes.
Since the early days of the project, her working process has been
to wander and photograph curiosities easily sighted from the road.
Only the occasional AAA travel guide and her instincts aided her
in these early days. Now, with the advent of the Internet, she utilizes
it as a tool to research possibilities and to help direct her path
of travel. The Internet has also connected her to a community of
kindred spirits, such as the web site Roadside America, which documents
and catalogs like-minded roadside kitsch. Roadside America even
borrows some of Vartanian-Maher’s photographs to illustrate
their catalog of oddities, though tellingly has recently added a
disclaimer that her photographs may exaggerate the spatial characteristics
of the object. Her photographs function as a record of her travels
and encourage others to do the same, tapping into the uniquely American
mystique of the open road.

Ellen
Vartanian-Maher, Untitled |
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Ellen
Vartanian-Maher, Untitled |
All
of us have encountered similar curiosities in our own travels and
Vartanian-Maher’s photographs transform these constructions
of commerce and tributes to the bizarre into fanciful flights of
fantasy. Her carefully constructed compositions instill a sense
of child-like wonder in the viewer, offer us a taste of the fantastical,
and tease us with the lure of the road. Ultimately, these photographs
invite the viewer to enter a new reality, one in which dinosaurs
coexist with traffic signals and anything is possible.
- Nate Larson |