Lisa Oppenheim: Spine

Edited by Karen Archey, featuring texts by Andria Hickey, Maika Pollack, Laura Solomon and Karen Archey., 2017
paperback

Publisher: MOCA Cleveland.

Texts by Andria Hickey, MOCA Cleveland Senior Curator, Maika Pollack, art historian, and Laura Solomon, poet; interview by Karen Archey, art critic and curator with Lisa Oppenheim.

This catalog was produced following Lisa Oppenheim: Spine, the artist’s first solo museum exhibition in the United States. Bringing together three bodies of work, the exhibition took poetic inspiration from the notion of the spine and its relationship to the natural world, the body, and labor. 

 

Central to the exhibition was a series of early 20th century photographs by Lewis Hine that Oppenheim repurposed. A documentary photographer and sociologist, Hine is well-known for his photographs that document the conditions of immigrant and child labor in American mills and factories. Appropriated from the Library of Congress’ photographic archive, the images depict adolescent textile workers—primarily young women with physically misshapen backs—that Hine photographed to illustrate the damaging effects of textile manufacturing on the spine. With her singular approach to re-processing photography, for the exhibition Oppenheim printed life-sized images and bisected each image at the vertical points of each figure’s spine, creating an intimacy between the subject and the photograph itself. 

 

Oppenheim's repurposed Lewis Hine portraits were accompanied by a series of new jacquard loom woven textiles derived from jpegs of Pre-Colombian textiles found in the permanent collection of the Cleveland Museum of Art. Together these works explore the poetic relationship between labor, the evolution of industrial textile production, and analog to digital processes. Echoing the spine's strength and density, the exhibition is anchored by a series of new Landscape Portraits. In this body of work, Oppenheim makes photograms from paper-thin slices of wood, using the same arboreal species to frame the images. 

This catalog includes reproductions of the repurposed Lewis Hine photographs and Landscape Portrait photograms juxtaposed with poetry, an essay, and an interview with the artist.