| Matt
Siber: Pervasive Nature
Originally
exhibited in Safety-Kleen Gallery One,
Elgin Community Colllege, Elgin, Illinois
Co-curated with Ed Krantz
Accompanying essay by Nate Larson
Matt
Siber’s photographs are deceptively simple with profound cultural
implications. In The Untitled Project, Siber photographs
familiar urban scenes, ranging from department store makeup counters
to bustling expressways, and digitally removes all of the textual
elements from signs and advertisements. The removed textual elements
are then presented on a second panel, paired directly next to the
photographic image that has been stripped of text. Each resulting
artwork is a single photograph neatly divided into two components
– text and image.

Matt
Siber, Untitled #3, 2002
This
single manipulation reveals acute insights about our culture. Our
contemporary lives are heavily saturated by text in the form of
commercial signage, advertising, and governmental imperatives. This
is clearly evidenced by the quantity of removed text, which clusters
poetically in herds like small animals against an overwhelmingly
blank background. In a testament to the effectiveness of advertising,
the photographs are “naked” but color, design, and other
graphic elements still convey the branding. Hooters is still Hooters
even without explicit textual identification. We are so accustomed
to the industry visual language that a first look at the photographic
panel might not even reveal the manipulation without a closer look.
The visual appearance of branded elements is enough to penetrate
our consciousness and trigger the desired corporate Pavlovian response.

Matt
Siber, Untitled #35, 2002
Siber’s
photographs carry forward a long tradition of cultural analysis
in the field of photography. Untitled #25 depicts a man
bent over the wheel of a multicolored pickup truck in front of a
billboard for a sleek new SUV. The bed of the pickup is filled with
rough-hewn wood palates and there are stains and rust along the
flank. There is a disconnection between the ideal image in the advertisement
and the harsher reality of the patchwork truck. This disconnect
is reminiscent of a Walker Evans photograph from 1935 in which an
urban African-American man leans against a billboard advertisement
featuring an idealized white suburban couple. Evans’ photograph
pulls back the curtain from the advertised hyper-reality to show
us the actuality of class and race divisions. Like Evans, the compositional
relationships in Siber’s photograph also reveal this gap between
the advertised and the real. Through the removal of textual elements,
Siber pulls back a second curtain to further illuminate the artificiality
put forward by the advertising industry.

Matt
Siber, Untitled #25, 2004
The
European component of The Untitled Project expands on these themes
by placing familiar images in the context of another culture. Untitled
#35 presents a poster-covered wall in the French public transportation
system. Despite the language barrier, the advertisements contained
within spring directly from quintessentially American culture. A
triptych of Playboy magazine covers, made famous as a lifestyle
magazine by Hugh Hefner, appear with French language titles. Siber’s
photograph leads us to consider the homogenization of world culture
and the universal demand and common language shared by pornography.
Even in a foreign language, certain cultural commodities are ubiquitous
and use a universal visual language to speak to the intended audience.

Matt
Siber, Untitled #35, 2006
In
the Floating Logos series, Siber presents luminous corporate
logos, digitally disconnected from the moorings that anchor them
to the earth. The symbols of these massive corporations and franchises
tower above us as if to suggest a messianic return. The historical
deities are gone, replaced by new corporate demigods. The vantage
point of the camera in the photographs reflects the dominant presence
of these companies, continually hovering just above our awareness.
This series, as well as The Untitled Project, addresses the pervasive
nature of corporate presence.

Matt
Siber, McDonald's, 2003
Siber’s
strategic digital manipulations alter our perception of the familiar
and the commonplace. His photographs shatter the carefully manicured
facade of the advertising industry, make explicit the implicit and
shake us awake from our daily sleepwalk through the clutter of competing
corporate messages. We are ultimately asked to consider our complicity
in the creation of the hypnotic lullaby of this contemporary landscape.
- Nate Larson
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