Northern noir · Kourtney Roy

Kourtney Roy :: Northern noir, 2015 | src Kourtney Roy
Kourtney Roy :: Northern noir, 2015 | src Kourtney Roy
Kourtney Roy :: Northern noir, 2015 | src Kourtney Roy

Northern noir

The world has a secret potential to transform itself at any moment into a film set.

Northern Noir was photographed during the summer and winter of 2015 in Northern Ontario and British Columbia, Canada. My intent was to create a series of film stills taken from an unknown and fictional film, more precisely, a crime film. I wanted to photograph the non-events that encircle the places where transgressive acts may have taken place. The banality of the scenes photographed both hides and yet hints at the presence of shady and malevolent happenings. These fragments capture unintentional and marginal details. Their mundane and anecdotal qualities are fetishized and magnified, adding a sense of dread to the otherwise indifferent and un-extraordinary decors. The series was realised over several road trips through the wilderness and towns of my youth. The facet of memory, my memory, real or imagined, links itself to the screen memories of the film still. The road is not only a physical space but also a space of the imagination, a state of mind where the past and present convene. These stills of a nameless film intertwine with the aura of a specific place and time, melding the impervious with the personal.

quoted from artist’s website

Kourtney Roy :: Northern noir, 2015 | src Kourtney Roy
Kourtney Roy :: Northern noir, 2015 | src Kourtney Roy

Roy has produced several series which all share the artist’s bold and cinematic aesthetic. Staged in laundrettes, motels, supermarkets and various other banal locations Roy creates hyper-realistic images that resemble film stills. Throughout her work Roy plays with ideas of the bizarre and the uncanny, whether it be a lone female figure walking along a deserted road in a vast landscape or a woman photographed through the wing mirror of a car, Roy’s photographs are permeated with an unsettling air. In her work Roy creates familiar still images of stereotyped heroines, using herself as the model Roy invents numerous characters for herself. This is a crucial element to her work, Roy has stated “It’s usually the male gaze, and the woman is the object to be looked at. So the idea was becoming the person who objectifies, but also objectifying myself. I just thought it was interesting to play the dual role.” quoted from Huxleyparlour Gallery

Kourtney Roy’s work is bound up in an ambiguous and cinematic image-making that borders the real and the fantastic. Her approach to photography provokes contemplation and reconfiguration of common place subjects via playful revelation of the bizarre and the uncanny. She is fascinated with exploring the boundaries of liminal spaces; whether spatial, temporal or psychological. By using herself as the principal subject in her work, the artist creates a compelling, intimate universe inhabited by a multitude of diverse characters that explore these enigmatic themes. (quoted from Kourtney Roy)

Soul of the Dance, 1933

Harold F. Kells :: Soul of the Dance, 1933, gelatin silver print toned, heightened with crayon (?). | src National Gallery of Canada

Niagara falls, ca. 1860

George Barker :: Hanging Rock, Niagara Falls, ca. 1860. Albumen silver print. | src MFAH ~ Museum of Fine Arts, Houston
George Barker :: Hanging Rock, Niagara Falls, ca. 1860. Albumen silver print. | src MFAH ~ Museum of Fine Arts, Houston
George Barker :: Niagara – Winter view; ca. 1860. Albumen silver print. | src MFAH ~ Museum of Fine Arts, Houston
George Barker :: Niagara – Winter view; ca. 1860. Albumen silver print. | src MFAH ~ Museum of Fine Arts, Houston
George Barker :: The rapids above Niagara Falls, ca. 1860. Albumen silver print. | src MFAH ~ Museum of Fine Arts, Houston

Eastern Beauty, ca. 1933

Violet Keene Perinchief (1893-1967) :: Eastern Beauty. A portrait of a Chinese Lady, silver gelatin print mounted on exhibition board, Toronto, ca. 1933. [Original photograph signed lower left in pencil: Violet Keene] | src Bonhams
Violet Keene Perinchief (1893-1967) :: Eastern Beauty. A portrait of a Chinese Lady, silver gelatin print mounted on exhibition board, Toronto, ca. 1933. [Original photograph signed lower left in pencil: Violet Keene] | src Bonhams
Violet Keene Perinchief (1893-1967) :: Eastern Beauty. A portrait of a Chinese Lady, silver gelatin print mounted on exhibition board, Toronto, ca. 1933. [Original photograph signed lower left in pencil: Violet Keene] | src Bonhams
Violet Keene Perinchief (1893-1967) :: Eastern Beauty. A portrait of a Chinese Lady, silver gelatin print mounted on exhibition board, Toronto, ca. 1933. [Original photograph signed lower left in pencil: Violet Keene] | src Bonhams

This portrait is an example of one of the many that Violet Keene became famous for. She established and ran a studio in Toronto for her mother’s work from 1933, and later a studio for her own photography. She studied photography under her mother’s guidance from an early age, and this portrait has many of the classic Minna Keene attributes of her portraits taken in Cape Town around 1910, notably the floral background and position of the face looking away from the camera. Violet exhibited her work around the world and had a loyal following. [quoted from source]

An Austrian Gypsy, ca. 1895

Minna Keene :: An Austrian Gypsy, circa 1895. Signed, in pencil, au mount recto. Titled, in pencil, au mount verso. Carbon print. | src Stephen Bulger Gallery

Portrait · Verna Skelton · 1923

Margaret Watkins ~ Portrait Study (Verna Skelton), 1923. Joseph Mulholland Collection (Glasgow) | src The Guardian

This portrait of Verna Skelton is emblematic of Watkins’ portraits. We see the immediate reference to the Dutch painters, and her extraordinary ability to illuminate her subjects.

A fresh angle: The revolutionary gaze of Margaret Watkins – in pictures: Canadian photographer Margaret Watkins rejected traditional gender roles to become a pioneering modernist photographer with Renaissance flair (The Guardian)

Margaret Watkins ~ Portrait Study (Verna Skelton), 1923 | src ODLP ~ l’œil de la photographie

Frozen American Niagara Falls

George Barker :: People on snow-covered ice at the base of the frozen American Niagara Falls, ca. 1883 [detail]
George Barker :: People on snow-covered ice at the base of the frozen American Niagara Falls, New York, ca. 1883 | src Library of Congress