barney.jpg

Tina Barney, image from the movie and the book Family Portraits, onestar press 2001

T.jpgina Barney’s tips for making up with the family The docu-drama is everywhere these days. In the cinema (Gus Van Sant’s “Elephant”), on television (countless ‘realcase’ cop shows), and on gallery and museum walls. In the art/photography world, Tina Barney, (along with Jeff Wall), got there first. In the early 90’s Barney shifted her interest from photographing the seasonal rituals of her privileged, but complex,
family to the production of constructs - family dramas where an individual’s behavior in front of the camera was subtly tweaked by Barney’s mild direction. The resulting tableaux make visible the underlying anxieties and conflicts of every family ever photographed; happy or sad, rich or poor. In Family Portraits, her deceptively modest collaboration with Dianna Ilk, Barney steps away from her technically flawless and lavishly scaled cibachrome prints to produce both a DVD and book, available through OSP. Intimate and truly mysterious, Barney has assembled from early home movies and recent (home?) videos a work
that, while visiting some familiar territory (aging, intergenerational groupings, organized outdoor fun, etc.) also opens the door on several conditions in her work that have been left unaddressed.

Read entire article