Kalliope Amorphous

Last updated

Kalliope Amorphous
Born1978 (age 4546)
Providence, Rhode Island, United States
Occupation(s)Artist, photographer
Website kalliopeamorphous.com

Kalliope Amorphous (born 1978) [1] is an American interdisciplinary artist who works in a variety of media, including photography, poetry, performance art, and olfactory art. She is primarily known for her conceptual self portraits. She lives and works in New York City. [2]

Contents

Style

Amorphous uses in-camera effects, modified lenses, mirrors, and handmade camera attachments. Her style, as she describes it, is conceptual photography with an emphasis on pictorialism and surrealism. [3] Acting as her own model, she explores the meaning of identity by assuming different roles. [4] Amorphous has stated that the "study of consciousness" [5] and the concept of duende [6] are primary influences in her work. She has also cited butoh as an influence. [7]

Overview

Born in Providence, Rhode Island, Amorphous attended high school in Rehoboth, Massachusetts. Upon graduating, she moved to New York City, where she experimented with modeling, acting, and performance poetry. In a 2008 interview with art critic Brian Sherwin, she cited her early social involvement in the New York City theater and cabaret scenes as influences in her early photographic work. [8]

A self-taught photographer, Amorphous began working exclusively with self-portrait photography while living in Rhode Island in 2007. Her early self-portraits focused on character studies, costuming, and makeup. [5]

Amorphous' 2009 Resurrecting Ophelia series of self-portraits cast her as the fictional character Ophelia. Like much of her later work, the series relied on in-camera effect with Amorphous positioned behind glass, acrylic, and textiles. [9] The series was exhibited in Amorphous' hometown in a solo exhibition at the Community College of Rhode Island [ citation needed ] and appeared in print in the premier issues of Dark Beauty magazine [10] and The Omen Magazine. [11]

In 2011, Amorphous was named in GLAAD's annual Top 100 Artists. [1] She received honorable mention for the Julia Margaret Cameron Award in the category of street photography from The Worldwide Photography Gala Awards. [12]

Amorphous's recent projects use distortion mirror boards created with reflective material. In her series Glass Houses, she appears in a series of surreal and distorted self-portraits which look as if they were submerged in water. [13] Of the series, Lancia Trendvisions wrote: "The mirror is just a surface. Exactly like the photographs that portray it. They cannot depict what is hidden under their patina: the distortions of our fears, the destructuring push of our desires. But photographer Kalliope Amorphous searches for just that impalpable spirit." [14] In her distorted self-portraits, Amorphous explores what she calls "the fluid nature of identity". [15]

In addition to self-portraits, Amorphous began working with glitch art in 2013. In 2014, she completed a series of experimental photographs of performance artist Marina Abramović. [16] Amorphous appears opposite Matthew Avedon in the music video Savage Way to Live for the Brooklyn-based band Relations. [17]

In 2015, her short film Contrast And Time was included in the Forever Now Project exhibited at Mona Foma. [18] Forever Now was an international project in response to the Voyager records of 1977, and culminated in a golden record containing 44 artists. [19] [20]

Since 2016, Amorphous has been documenting the people and landmarks in her neighborhood on the Upper West Side of Manhattan in New York City in a series of street photographs. She is one of few female street photographers working in the genre. [21] [22] [23] [24]

During the 2016 Presidential election, Amorphous endorsed candidate Hillary Clinton and completed a series of fine art photographs of Clinton on the campaign trail. [25] [26]

In 2019, a 3D Virtual Exhibition of some of her works from her series Glass Houses was published as part of the permanent exhibitions in the TOROSIETE Museum of Contemporary Art. [27]

Perfume brand

Amorphous is the founder and perfumer behind the indie perfume house Black Baccara. [28] [29] She founded the brand in 2010. [30] The house specializes in artisan perfume oils and Eau de Parfums [31] with themes similar to those Amorphous works with in her visual art. [32]

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Man Ray</span> American visual artist and photographer (1890–1976)

Man Ray was an American visual artist who spent most of his career in Paris. He was a significant contributor to the Dada and Surrealist movements, although his ties to each were informal. He produced major works in a variety of media but considered himself a painter above all. He was best known for his pioneering photography, and was a renowned fashion and portrait photographer. He is also noted for his work with photograms, which he called "rayographs" in reference to himself.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Sally Mann</span> American photographer

Sally Mann HonFRPS is an American photographer known for making large format black and white photographs of people and places in her immediate surroundings: her children, husband, and rural landscapes, as well as self-portraits.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Catherine Opie</span> American fine-art photographer (born 1961)

Catherine Sue Opie is an American fine-art photographer and educator. She lives and works in Los Angeles, as a professor of photography at University of California at Los Angeles.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Cindy Sherman</span> American photographer

Cynthia Morris Sherman is an American artist whose work consists primarily of photographic self-portraits, depicting herself in many different contexts and as various imagined characters.

Joyce Tenneson is an American fine art photographer known for her distinctive style of photography, which often involves nude or semi-nude women.

Mark Alan Seliger is an American photographer noted for his portraiture. From 1992 to 2002, he was Chief Photographer for Rolling Stone, during which time he shot over 188 covers for the magazine. From 2002 to 2012 he was under contract with Condé Nast Publications for GQ and Vanity Fair and has shot for numerous other magazines. Seliger has published a number of books, including When They Came to Take My Father: Voices of the Holocaust, Physiognomy, and On Christopher Street: Transgender Stories, and his photographs are included in the permanent collections of the National Portrait Gallery at the Smithsonian Institution, the Museum of Fine Arts in Houston, and the National Portrait Gallery in London. He has done advertising work for Adidas, Amazon, Anheuser-Busch, Apple, Dom Pérignon, Fila, Gap, HBO, Hourglass Cosmetics, Hulu, KITH, Lee Jeans, Levi's, McDonald's, Netflix, Ralph Lauren, Ray-Ban, Rolex, Showtime, Sony, Universal and Viacom, among others. He is also the lead singer of the country band Rusty Truck.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Jill Greenberg</span> Canadian-American photographer

Jill Greenberg is a Canadian-born American photographer and Pop artist. She is known for her portraits and fine art work that often features anthropomorphized animals that have been digitally manipulated with painterly effects. Her photography of animals is regarded for its capability to show a wide range of expressions and feelings that are comparable to that of a seasoned actor or actress. Some of the primates she has captured on film are actually celebrates in their own right, having been featured in different TV shows or movies. She is also highly recognized for her distinct, and stylized photography of celebrities including well known performers such as Gwen Stefani, Arnold Schwarzenegger and Clint Eastwood. She is also known for inserting her own strong opinions into her work. In reference to her work Greenberg states "They're portraits and they're personal but there's a little twist going on. An edge."

Lynn Goldsmith is an American recording artist, film director, celebrity portrait photographer, and rock and roll photographer. She has also made fine art photography with conceptual images and with her painting. Books of her work have been published by Taschen, Rizzoli, and Abrams. In 1985, she received a World Press Photo award. In the 1980s, she wrote songs and performed as Will Powers. In 2023, she was part of a U.S. Supreme Court case dealing with the limits of fair use concerning a series of Andy Warhol silkscreen portraits based on a Goldsmith photo of the musician Prince.

Judith Rose Dater is an American photographer and feminist. She is celebrated for her 1974 photograph, Imogen and Twinka at Yosemite, featuring an elderly Imogen Cunningham, one of America's first woman photographers, encountering a nymph in the woods of Yosemite. The nymph is the model Twinka Thiebaud. The photo was published in Life magazine in its 1976 issue about the first 200 years of American women. Her photographs, such as her Self-Portraiture sequence, were also exhibited in the Getty Museum.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Vivian Maier</span> American photographer

Vivian Dorothy Maier was an American street photographer whose work was discovered and recognized after her death. She took more than 150,000 photographs during her lifetime, primarily of the people and architecture of Chicago, New York City, and Los Angeles, although she also traveled and photographed around the world.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Women photographers</span> Women working as photographers

The participation of women in photography goes back to the very origins of the process. Several of the earliest women photographers, most of whom were from Britain or France, were married to male pioneers or had close relationships with their families. It was above all in northern Europe that women first entered the business of photography, opening studios in Denmark, France, Germany, and Sweden from the 1840s, while it was in Britain that women from well-to-do families developed photography as an art in the late 1850s. Not until the 1890s, did the first studios run by women open in New York City.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Cristina Otero</span> Spanish photographer and artist (born 1995)

Cristina Otero is a Spanish photographer and artist best known for her self portraits.

Jun Ahn (안준) is a South Korean photographer, known primarily for her Self-Portrait series of photographs taken from atop high buildings. She has worked extensively in the United States, particularly in New York, as well as South Korea.

Brooke Shaden is an American fine art photographer.

Tomoko Sawada is a Japanese contemporary feminist photographer and performance artist. She has been included in numerous group shows in Japan, Europe and the US. Her first solo exhibition was in 1997 at Japan's Gallery Chat. In 2004 she was awarded the prestigious Kimura Ihei Memorial Photography Award for Young Japanese Photographer as well as the International Center of Photography Infinity Award in the category of Young Photographer.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">The Quin</span> Hotel in Manhattan, New York

The Quin is a luxury hotel in New York City. It is located on 57th Street and Sixth Avenue in Midtown Manhattan, two blocks south of Central Park.

April Hickox is a Canadian lens-based artist, photographer, teacher and curator whose practice includes various medias, from photography, film, video and installation.

Juno Calypso is a British photographer. Her self-portraits are personal works about feminism, isolation, loneliness and being self-sufficient. Working alone, Calypso has made highly stylised photographs of herself whilst dressed as a fictional alter-ego, "Joyce", in unusual surroundings. She also works as a commercial photographer.

Carla Borel is a French-British photographer. She has made portraits and black and white street photographs in Soho, London.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ellen Carey</span> American artist and photographer

Ellen Carey is an American artist known for conceptual photography exploring non-traditional approaches involving process, exposure, and paper. Her work has ranged from painted and multiple-exposure, Polaroid 20 x 24, Neo-Geo self-portraits beginning in the late 1970s to cameraless, abstract photograms and minimal Polaroid images from the 1990s onward, which critics often compare to color-field painting. Carey's sixty one-person exhibitions have been presented at museums, such as the Amon Carter Museum of American Art, International Center of Photography (ICP) and Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art, alternative spaces such as Hallwalls and Real Art Ways, and many commercial galleries. Her work is in numerous museum collections, including those of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Whitney Museum of American Art, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Centre Pompidou, and Smithsonian American Art Museum. In 2019, she was named one of the Royal Photographic Society (London) "Hundred Heroines", recognizing leading women photographers worldwide. Los Angeles Times critic Leah Ollman describes her photography as "inventive, physically involving, process-oriented work" and her recent photograms as "performative sculptures enacted in the gestational space of the darkroom" whose pure hues, shadows and color shifts deliver "optical buzz and conceptual bang". New York Times critic William Zimmer wrote that her work "aspires to be nothing less than a reinvention, or at least a reconsideration, of the roots or the essence of photography." In addition to her art career, Carey has also been a longtime educator at the Hartford Art School and a writer and researcher on the history of photography.

References

  1. 1 2 GLAAD (Gay & Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation) (November 15, 2011). "OUTAuction 2011 Catalog".{{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  2. "Is This What Your Dreams Look Like?". HuffPost UK. April 25, 2012. Retrieved November 22, 2018.
  3. "Kalliope Amorphous Photography: Conceptual Pictorial Self Portraits". Astrum People. Retrieved April 22, 2014
  4. "Kalliope Amorphous". Dazed, 2011. Retrieved April 22, 2014
  5. 1 2 Romero, Juan Carlos (February 2011), In her own light: Kalliope Amorphous, Nau Nua: Art Magazine, archived from the original on February 29, 2012
  6. Body Language (interview with Amorphous) (PDF), All the Thunder, retrieved May 7, 2019
  7. Emerging Artist Interviews: Kalliope Amorphous, Musée Magazine, February 6, 2013, retrieved May 7, 2019
  8. Sherwin, Brian (March 15, 2008). "Art Space Talk: Kalliope Amorphous". myartspace-blog.blogspot.com/. Archived from the original on August 6, 2020. Retrieved April 3, 2022.
  9. "Hauntingly Beautiful Self-Portraits: Resurrecting Ophelia". My Modern Met. Retrieved April 23, 2014
  10. Dark Beauty Magazine, Issue I, August 2010. Dark Beauty. Retrieved April 22, 2014
  11. The Omen Magazine, Issue 1, 2010. The Omen Magazine. Retrieved April 22, 2014
  12. "15th Julia Margaret Cameron Award's Professional Section". The Worldwide Photography Gala Awards. Retrieved April 3, 2022.
  13. "Submerged Self Portraits: 'Glass Houses' by Kalliope Amorphous Uses Distortion Mirrors To Mesmerize". TrendHunter. Retrieved April 23, 2014
  14. Beyond the Mirror, 'Glass Houses' by Kalliope Amorphous], Lancia TrendVisions, January 22, 2013, archived from the original on March 14, 2016
  15. Hosmer, Katie (September 2, 2013), Dreamy Self-Portraits Created by Using a Moving Mirror, My Modern Met, retrieved May 7, 2019
  16. Marina Abramovic Portrait by Kalliope Amorphous
  17. "Relations Band film Page" Relations. Retrieved April 23, 2014 Archived April 27, 2014, at the Wayback Machine
  18. "Artists - Forever now". July 11, 2015. Archived from the original on July 11, 2015. Retrieved May 4, 2022.
  19. Northover, Kylie (January 6, 2014). "Golden record to spin through outer space". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved May 4, 2022.
  20. "Forever Now | Bureau of Works". Bureau of Works | Just another WordPress site. October 1, 2014. Retrieved May 4, 2022.
  21. "The Urban Lens: Kalliope Amorphous captures the faces of the Upper West Side". 6sqft. Retrieved May 29, 2021.
  22. dodhomagazine (April 18, 2017). "Upper West Side Story: Street Photography By Kalliope Amorphous". Dodho. Retrieved May 29, 2021.
  23. "West Side Rag » THE STORY BEHIND THAT DEPRESSION SIGN ON 72ND STREET THAT SEEMED TO BE UP FOREVER". www.westsiderag.com. Retrieved May 29, 2021.
  24. "World Map Directory of Female Street Photographers, by Women in Street photography community". womeninstreet.com. Retrieved May 29, 2021.
  25. Jenkins, Mark (October 22, 2016). "In the galleries: Trump in poncho and sombrero, Clinton as a suffragette". Washington Post. ISSN   0190-8286 . Retrieved May 29, 2021.
  26. ""I'm With Her": These Hillary Clinton Portraits Were Taken On The Campaign Trail". designyoutrust.com. Retrieved May 29, 2021.
  27. ""TOROSIETE Museum of Contemporary Art, Kalliope Amorphous
  28. "How to avoid strong artificial scents when you travel". News Bytes Daily. April 20, 2022. Retrieved May 4, 2022.
  29. Barua, Meehika. "18 of the most iconic and popular perfumes to make your new signature scent". Insider. Retrieved May 4, 2022.
  30. "20 Queer-Owned Retailers and Brands to Support". Modest Rebels. June 3, 2021. Retrieved May 4, 2022.
  31. "5 Beauty Brands to Wow Your Holiday Gift-Giving". EDGE Media Network. Retrieved May 4, 2022.
  32. "An Interview with Fine Art Photographer Kalliope Amorphous". The Uncanny Archive. Retrieved May 29, 2021.