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DOMOBAAL: SIAN PILE - 8 Feb 2008 to 15 Mar 2008

Current Exhibition


8 Feb 2008 to 15 Mar 2008
THURS > SAT 12 > 6 PM
OPENING THURSDAY 7 FEBRUARY 6 - 9 PM
DOMOBAAL
3 John Street
London
WC1N 2ES
United Kingdom
Europe
p: 0044 2072429604
m: 0044 7801703871
f: 0044 2078310122
w: www.domobaal.com











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Domo Baal
Haris Epaminonda
Miho Sato

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Artists in this exhibition: SIAN PILE


SI�N PILE

'The camera does lie, all the time. It has to.'

(John Updike 'The Day of the Dying Rabbit' on p 216 of 'The Short Story and Photography 1880's-1980's')

DOMOBAAL gallery is delighted to introduce the work of Si�n Pile. This is her first solo exhibition, offering a glimpse into her practice.

Si�n Pile conjures a world that is half dreamt, images based on the notion of interior landscapes. The work describes moments that emanate outside the regular
flow of time, a sort of no-man's land. A place where time stops and images occur, in the gaps between the known and the unknown. Everyday occurrences, personal life become the basis for an exploration into the relationship between the act of seeing and memory.

Photographs have a particular power over reality, enacting rather than acting for experience or memory, creating such a convincing mirror of actuality that can often supplant real life. The photograph exists because something was there - it authenticates experience becoming a metaphor for veracity. There persists in this process the sense of photography�s ability to be so undeniable that language cannot negotiate with it, cannot belittle its evidence.

This exhibition will focus on a selection of photographs from 3 ongoing series:

The Playground, The Beach, The Walk, The Sand Dunes (2006) are a series of images that operate in the half open space between the private and the public: observations of the mysterious undercurrents of personal life. Si�n Pile plays
with the tradition of family photographs as being evidence of what once was, recording sites where familial events took place - the scene of an argument perhaps, of anxiety or grief. The result is a study of absence, of landscape as
memory. They operate like dreams, editing and replacing actual experience. There is a gap in the narrative, something remains undisclosed.

In The Glass House (2005-7) the viewer is enclosed within constricting boundaries, in this case glass. The absence of any horizon introduces an abstract quality. There is an underlying sense of decay and corruption, which sits uneasily alongside the ephemeral beauty of the butterflies and the lush vegetation.

The Undergrowth (2007) presents a series of images depicting a bleak world devoid of colour, a monochromatic loss of self. The magical alchemy of the early platinum
process facilitates a sensuous description and detail, allowing for history and memory to seep into the images. It stubbornly disallows the modern, returns the image to a period before colour. Depicting a landscape embedded with personal resonance that is anonymous to the viewer. The Undergrowth series sets up a spatial ambiguity - there are no markers or pathways through, no horizon, no view.

Si�n Pile taken her BA at Goldsmiths in the 1980s, and has been taking photographs continually since then. In 2006 she graduated with an MA in Photography at London
College of Communication. Si�n Pile lives and works in London. With many thanks to: Mark Darbyshire, Sarah James, Ian Austin of Halliwells, Max & Paul Caffell of 31 Studio, Stroud, Gloucestershire and Stephen Pile.

An essay by Sarah James on Si�n Pile�s work has been written for this exhibition.

Enquiries: Louise O�Hare, [email protected]

NEXT:
10.04.08 � 17.05.08: MHAIRI VARI + DAVID CHEESEMAN: ANALOGUE
24 � 28.04.08: NEXT ART FAIR, CHICAGO
29.05.08 - 12.07.08: HARIS EPAMINONDA


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