Camera Obscura Image of Building Facade on Wall With Photograph, LaSalle Bank, Chicago

Camera Obscura Image of Building Facade on Wall With Photograph, LaSalle Bank, Chicago

Abelardo MorellWW-2005-037214
2005·Gelatin silver print·Image: 57.1 × 46.1 cm (22 1/2 × 18 3/16 in.); Paper: 60.9 × 51 cm (24 × 20 1/8 in.)

<p>The principle of the camera obscura (Latin for “dark room”) has been known since ancient Greek and Roman times: light passing through a small aperture in a dark chamber will project an upside-down, reversed image of the scene outside. The basis for all lens-based images, the camera obscura can be a room or a small, hand-held box—today’s camera.</p> <p><a href="http://www.artic.edu/artists/44717/abelardo-morell">Abelardo Morell</a> used the camera obscura in his teaching, and in 1991 he began photographing the strange juxtapositions that occurred when the outside world was projected onto a domestic interior. He covered the windows of the chosen room with black plastic and poked a 3/8-inch hole in the material, placing a view camera inside to document the image that came through. The exposure took six to eight hours, eliminating all moving things from the scene and rendered objects that moved even slightly as a blur. In addition to making a number of choices to shape the relationship between interior and exterior—selecting the room, the view, and the position of the pinhole—Morell also often rearranges furniture and smaller objects in a given scene, so these seemingly natural photographs are in fact highly constructed.</p>

Catalogue

Year
2005
Dimensions
Image: 57.1 × 46.1 cm (22 1/2 × 18 3/16 in.); Paper: 60.9 × 51 cm (24 × 20 1/8 in.)

Artist

Abelardo Morell
Abelardo Morell

Printmaking

Abelardo Morell is a Cuban-born photographer best known for large-format camera obscura images that transform domestic interiors and architectural spaces into inverted, dreamlike compositions. Working primarily in black and white, he constructs elaborate setups using a modified camera obscura technique, projecting exterior light through a small aperture onto interior walls to create ethereal, spatially disorienting photographs. His practice sits at the intersection of analog photography, architectural intervention, and perceptual inquiry, examining how light and optics reshape our experience of familiar environments.

Havana, Cuba

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Camera Obscura Image of Building Cluster in Office, LaSalle Bank, Chicago

Camera Obscura Image of Building Cluster in Office, LaSalle Bank, Chicago

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Motion Study of Hammer on Lead

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Record

Verified by WattsOS
Year
2005
Dimensions
Image: 57.1 × 46.1 cm (22 1/2 × 18 3/16 in.); Paper: 60.9 × 51 cm (24 × 20 1/8 in.)
Watts ID
WW-2005-037214

Source

Source
aic
Status
verified

Artist

Abelardo Morell

Abelardo Morell

Printmaking

View artist profile →