Een abstract portret met felle kleuren en vervormingen doordat het glasnegatief is geweekt in energie drank.

Stephen Gill

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Created by Stephen Gill. The artwork is a pigment print on Canson Platine Fiber Rag and displayed at 78,6 x 60,8 cm.

In analogue photography, a ‘negative’ image (in which the colours are inverted) is converted in the dark room into a so-called positive image, which is the resulting photograph. This is a technical procedure that requires a series of steps. Artist Stephen Gill likes to play with this process by introducing different steps. For his series Best Before End, he does so by submerging the negative in energy drink. This not only causes a beautiful colour palette to emerge on the photo-negative, but also allows Gill to distort the photo. The sweet drink causes the light-sensitive layer of the photo film to let go, after which Gill can manipulate it with a fine brush. In this case, the process has resulted in an almost spooky portrait with unique colours and a fascinating texture. The final image is a photograph of the manipulated negative.

The series Best Before End was introduced to the public during Foam’s first major retrospective devoted to the English photographer Stephen Gill. In addition to Best Before End, the exhibition showed work from his series Talking to Ants, Buried, and Hackney Flowers.

© Stephen Gill, courtesy of the Foam Collection

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thumbnail Untitled 2 from the series Best Before End

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