Louisville, Kentucky, 2012, photographic print on fiber paper, 50 x 60 cm

There is another world, but it is inside this one.
~Paul Éluard

From August 11 to 30, 2017, GALLERY 46 in London will present the debut solo exhibition of American artist Emma Elizabeth Tillman. Titled Disco Ball Soul, the show comprises more than 90 small-scale collages created during a 10-year period. The collages are constructed from photographs taken by Tillman and feature fragments from her personal diaries written in ink onto masking tape. The presentation also includes 14 large-scale photographs.

Tillman began this body of work in 2007 while visiting her then-boyfriend Rick, who lived in a crumbling adobe house in the majestic desolation of the Arizona desert. When the couple temporarily moved to France, the camera and the diary came along, aiding Tillman in her quest to capture time and gain repeated access to the past.

Living in a cottage in rural Brittany, with no running water or electricity and only a fireplace for heat, she meticulously recorded her experiences on camera and in her diaries. From this period, Tillman’s recollections include stealing potatoes and beetroot from the local fields, scavenging for firewood on the beach and attempting to maintain her then-relationship amid the challenges of language, isolation, weather and limited financial resources. From Arizona and France came a road trip to Spain in an ailing Peugeot coupe and later a solo trip to Iceland.

With each entry in her diary, Tillman was able to save the memory, to mark the passing of time and make sense of her thoughts. By living each day twice, first through its experience and then by photographing and writing it down, Tillman sought to create her own world – one that varied from the one outside her mind. The title of the exhibition, Disco Ball Soul, refers to Tillman’s ability to hide herself behind the images, allowing the stories and experiences she depicts to be reflected outward.

Tillman’s creative output intensified in 2011 when she met her husband, Josh. From nearly their first meeting she brought her camera and began documenting their life together as it took shape. From early days at his house in Los Angeles, mushroom trips in the Joshua Tree desert and across the world from Norway to Mexico, Tillman has traveled with Josh and recorded nearly every day the couple has spent together since.

The need to arrest time and hold it still is a key thread throughout artist Emma Elizabeth Tillman’s large-scale photographs. Memory and mystery play an important role, allowing the moment fixed in film to resonate far beyond its initial occurrence. For Tillman, the creation of the work itself – shooting on film, writing a diary by hand, printing photographs and making collages on paper – each is an act of defiance of convenience and ease. The works are labor intensive and the results are not immediate; they unfurl only gradually to the viewer, inviting them to immerse themselves inside Tillman’s world.

Don’t miss this intriguing exhibit at Gallery 46 in London!

 

By Andrea Hammer

Andrea Karen Hammer is the founder, director and owner of Artsphoria Publishing, Media Group & Shop (https://www.artsphoria.org): Artsphoria International Magazine (https://www.artsphoria.com); Artsphoria Movie Reviews & Film Forum (https://www.artsphoria.us); Artsphoria: Arts, Business & Technology Center (https://www.artsphoria.biz); Artsphoria Event Advertising & Reporting (https://www.artsphoria.info); Artsphoria: Food for the Soul (https://artsphoria.live); Artsphoria Animation & Imagination World (https://www.artsphoria.net) and Artsphoria Shop (https://www.artsphoriashop.com). She is a freelance writer who has published articles in international publications.

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