
Anne Collier b. 1970
Filter #1 (Green), 2019
C-print, Three parts
Framed Dimensions (each):
36 3/4 x 30 x 1 5/8 inches
(93.3 x 76.2 x 4.1 cm)
36 3/4 x 30 x 1 5/8 inches
(93.3 x 76.2 x 4.1 cm)
Edition of 5
In 'Filter #1 (Green)', Collier refers to the science and the art of photographic printing; the technical aspects of the analog process and the emotional impact of color. This is an example from...
In "Filter #1 (Green)", Collier refers to the science and the art of photographic printing; the technical aspects of the analog process and the emotional impact of color.
This is an example from the artist's new "Filter" triptych series, which depict Vintage Kodak color printing viewing filters overlaid on a test print, demonstrating the process a photographer would use in order to adjust the color balance on a print for their desired result. Here, a green filter with 3 different densities is overlaid on a comic book image featuring a woman in distress.
This new series expands upon her ongoing series Woman Crying (Comic) and Tear (Comic): each based on imagery sourced from American romance comic books published between the 1950s and the 1980s. Exclusively marketed to an adolescent female readership, the comic books’ cliched narratives reinforced the notion of a subservient and eternally suffering female subject.
This is an example from the artist's new "Filter" triptych series, which depict Vintage Kodak color printing viewing filters overlaid on a test print, demonstrating the process a photographer would use in order to adjust the color balance on a print for their desired result. Here, a green filter with 3 different densities is overlaid on a comic book image featuring a woman in distress.
This new series expands upon her ongoing series Woman Crying (Comic) and Tear (Comic): each based on imagery sourced from American romance comic books published between the 1950s and the 1980s. Exclusively marketed to an adolescent female readership, the comic books’ cliched narratives reinforced the notion of a subservient and eternally suffering female subject.