Carlos Vega
Eric Elliott



Tania Kitchell
Richard Rezac


Squeak Carnwath
Maki Tamura

Margot Quan Knight
Gary Hill
Message In A Bottle
Adam Sorensen
Claire Cowie
Bing Wright
Roy McMakin
Katrina Moorhead
Claudette Schreuders
Marcelino Goncalves
room X room
Rashid Johnson
Scott Foldesi
Shaun O'Dell
Claude Zervas
Amir Zaki
Glenn Rudolph
Angela Fraleigh
Jeffry Mitchell
Steve Davis
Mary Ann Peters
Mark Mumford
Roy McMakin
Geoffrey Chadsey
Patrick Holderfield
Junctions
Todd Simeone
Claire Cowie
Laura Letinsky
Keith Tilford
Mary Ann Peters
Jeffry Mitchell
Richard Rezac
Stephanie Syjuco
Claude Zervas
Squeak Carnwath
Marcelino Gonçalves
Peter Schuyff
Tom Baldwin
Tania Kitchell
Jeffry Mitchell

Shaun O'Dell

Mark Mumford

Efrain Almeida

Keith Tilford
Glenn Rudolph
Claire Cowie
Patrick Holderfield

Ramona Trent
Roy McMakin
Yunhee Min

Claude Zervas

Casey Keeler

Henry Turmon
Lisa Liedgren
Laurie Reid
Amir Zaki
Adam Ross
Richard Rezac
Geoffrey Chadsey
Claire Cowie
Michelle Fierro

Previous Exhibition

James Harris Gallery
Presents

Amir Zaki

May 3rd - June 2nd
Reception: Thursday, May 3rd, 6:00-8:00 PM

 

Amir Zaki, Untitled, Ultrachrome Archival Photograph, Ed. of 5, 45" x 56"


James Harris gallery is pleased to present Amir Zaki’s newest series At What Point is the Wax no Longer Wax? With this group of photographs Zaki continues his exploration of the landscape in Southern California, but in this series the focus of the investigation turns away from the architectural elements of the built environment to the natural. In each image desolate shrubbery, like dying trees and tangled bushes, are boldly isolated against darkened landscapes.

This shift however is in keeping with Zaki’s previous bodies of work because the “natural” elements in the photographs evoke artifice. Each tree or stump was chosen specifically because of its odd, ironically ‘artificial’ and inconsistent presence. In some images, the trees take on an anthropomorphic character: a spindly, silver tree reaches out into a black sky. At its roots, a pile of chopped up timber forebodes its fate. In others, it’s not clear whether the photographs are of natural things at all; a traffic cone rests atop a short stump. The grass in which the tree is rooted ends abruptly where the yard meets the street. In an image like this, it’s not clear if the landscape we’re looking at is real, or a digitally altered image of movie props.

This ambiguity is a fundamental aspect of At What Point is the Wax no Longer Wax? Using Descartes’ famous Meditation #2 as a point of departure, Zaki is photographing how malleable our understanding of an object is. Like a piece of wax, the trees and stumps in this series are not stable or iconic. They are recorded and depicted in between stasis, in a kind of mutant state, between solid and liquid, between natural and artificial, between ugly and beautiful, between tree and stump, and of course, ultimately between life and death.

Amir Zaki was recently included in the 2006 California Biennial and also featured in Phaidon Press’ acclaimed book Vitamin Ph: New Perspectives in Photography.

 

 

Amir Zaki
Untitled, 2007
Ultrachrome Archival Photograph
Ed. of 5
17" x 40"
Amir Zaki
Untitled, 2007
Ultrachrome Archival Photograph
Ed. of 5
17" x 40"
 


 

Amir Zaki
Untitled, 2007
Ultrachrome Archival Photograph
Ed. of 5
22.5" x 22.5"

 
Amir Zaki
Untitled, 2007
Ultrachrome Archival Photograph
Ed. of 5
22.5" x 22.5"

 

 

 
 
Amir Zaki
Untitled, 2007
Ultrachrome Archival Photograph
Ed. of 5
40" x 45"
 


 
Amir Zaki
Untitled, 2007
Ultrachrome Archival Photograph
Ed. of 5
22.5 x 22.5
 
 

 
Amir Zaki
Untitled, 2007
Ultrachrome Archival Photograph Ed. of 5
22.5 x 22.5

 
 

Amir Zaki
Untitled, 2007
Ultrachrome Archival Photograph
Ed. of 5
22.5 x 22.5

 
 
Amir Zaki
Untitled, 2007
Ultrachrome Archival Photograph
Ed. of 5
22.5 x 22.5

   
   
 
 
Amir Zaki
Untitled, 2007
Ultrachrome Archival Photograph
Ed. of 5
12” x 15"

 
 
Amir Zaki
Untitled, 2007
Ultrachrome Archival Photograph
Ed. of 5
12” x 15"
 

 
Amir Zaki
Untitled, 2007
Ultrachrome Archival Photograph
Ed. of 5
12.5” x 12.5”