Miranda Lichtenstein
Recent Photography
front gallery exhibition
13 December 1998 through Sunday 31 January 1999
The show presented a
selection of photographs from Lichtenstein's recent series of work
shot at dusk or night in rural and suburban Connecticut. Each photo
in the series depicts a single, gracious house in a fantastical,
almost haunted fashion. The effect is attained by enhancing the
natural lighting with unlikely artificial lighting from Lichtenstein's
automobile head and brake lights, which cast an especially odd and
eerie glow. This use of light dramatizes the architecture of the
the subject and creates a feeling of isolation and melodrama that
invites the viewer to devise a narrative for each scene. The artist
references staged images of Hollywood cinematic terror, and her
use of this aesthetic sets up interesting dichotomies, such as the
real and unreal and the natural and the artificial.
Lichtenstein's work
has been compared with Andy Warhol's Death and Disaster series,
which played on the notions of documentary photography. Lichtenstein's
photographs cause us to examine our own ideas of home, safety, and
the illusions that we create in our own minds.
Miranda Lichtenstein
earned her Master of Fine Art in Photography at California Institute
of the Arts in Valencia, California in 1993 and now resides in New
York, where she was raised. She has shown her work in New York and
California at various group exhibitions, and recently had a solo
exhibition at the Steffany Martz Gallery in New York.