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Light Touch Adds Emotional Weight
A review in The Boston Globe, May 13, 2005
By Cate McQuaid
As the light mellows at the end of the day, Vivian
Pratt's digital prints on vellum at bf Annex are said to take on a kind of
glow. There are technical reasons for that: Vellum is translucent, for
one, and Pratt's beautiful images halo light with dark in a manner both
serene and triumphant, regardless of the time of day. There's a poetic
reason, as well: Pratt's subject is the dying of the light.
She photographs old, withering flowers and puckered
petals that have already been shed. Then she takes her images to the
computer, where she layers them, echoing leaf with leaf, stalk with stalk.
In a series of pictures of yellow blossoms (they're all untitled), these
can look like the layers of a gossamer skirt, floating on the breeze.
Pratt fills the central image with light, and lets the reverberations of
that image cushion the luminous center in soft shadow. The center, then,
takes on a surprising vitality, despite its nearly papery, aged texture.
Pratt offers a vital inner core that seems to burn even as the flesh dies
away around it.
In another series, the artist homes in on pink
petals, lying on a reflective surface. They, too, hold the light, cupping
upward like fragile little vessels. Pratt's work, while technologically
21st-century, harks back to Victorian-era photography with its sentiment
and almost gauzy appearance. Back then, soft focus denoted spirituality
and ideals of romance and heroism connected to the spiritual life. Pratt's
works are soft focus only in bits; they also have a shimmering clarity of
focus, where she seems to limn the lit core of her works. If the medium is
slightly different, the message of nobility in the face of struggle is the
same. |