Arbor
From a set of photographs found in a thrift store, Geiser creates a liminal space between representation and abstraction, figure and landscape, fiction and memory. ARBOR suggests the fragility and ephemerality of memory and its artifacts through subtle manipulations of the photographs: reframings, layerings, inversions, and the introduction of natural elements, including flowers and leaves. The photographs’ subjects rarely engage the camera; they are glimpsed, rather than seen. They look elsewhere, and wait for something inevitable. Gathering on a hillside, lounging on the grass beyond now-lost trees, the inhabitants of ARBOR cycle through their one elusive afternoon, gradually succumbing to time or dissolving into landscape, reserving for themselves what we can’t know---and becoming shadows in their own stories.
Arbor
Fluffy McCloud
Luna
Don't Drink the Water
BASIUM
Junk Space
Two Under the Grayish Sky
Opresores oprimidos
La Colombe
Meet the Math Facts - Multiplication & Division Level 2
The Obscurity of Anne
Mamoon
After All
Filthy But Fine
Il traguardo di Patrizia
Unlaced
There Were Four of Us
Year
Dare