Pedro Almodóvar
“Waiting For The Light”
New York, 40 West 57th Street
Waiting For The Light, the first show in New York of the photographic work of two-time Oscar winning film director, Pedro Almodóvar.
Waiting For The Light presents the artist’s most recent group of photographic still lifes. As in his films, which are dotted with erudite quotes and historical allusions, his work as a photographer references the realist painters in Madrid, especially Antonio López García and Isabel Quintanilla, and the manner of focusing on the quotidian in a way that makes the objects visually transcendent. The photographs in the exhibition also bear relation to his films, with the Pop touches, sense of domesticity and innovative use of color. All the images have an unmistakable Almodóvarian flavor.
The title refers to Almodóvar’s creative process as an artist, he feels that his most important task as a photographer is to wait for the ideal light. All the photographs are shot in his home’s interior using sunlight through the windows, and the precise light might only last a few precious minutes.
The artist works in his everyday quarters with the objects around him. In the past he has placed fruits and glassware, the “protagonists” of the images on this occasion are vases and withering flowers. In the words of the artist:
Almodóvar’s approach to the tradition of the still life presents beauty in the forlorn, as his compositions decompose before our eyes. The striking colors behind and beneath the objects on display make their collective presence—the ”star quality”—even bolder, the overall experience more intensely poetic.