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Gregory Crewdson Sanctuary White Cube Mason’s Yard Private View Tuesday 23 November 2010

Image:Gregory Crewdson Untitled (2) 2009 Pigmented inkjet print
© the artist Courtesy White Cube

24 November 2010 – 8 January 2011
White Cube Mason’s Yard is pleased to announce the exhibition of ‘Sanctuary’, a new series of 41 black-and-white photographs by Gregory Crewdson. Known for capturing the alienation and anxiety of small-town America in series such as ‘Beneath the Roses’ (2003-07), Crewdson photographed ‘Sanctuary’ at the Cinecittà studios, Rome, producing a body of work outside of the US for the first time.

When Crewdson first visited Cinecittà he found the labyrinthine lots of the legendary studio devoid of human presence, in a state suspended between grandeur and ruin. The site was haunted by the architectural ghosts of ancient Rome, historical New York, and medieval Italy, among other settings and places, all remnants of past productions. Abandoned by the actors and crews that brought the sets to life, each building and street was eerily quiet, a network of ephemeral façades and dead ends that was so evocative it scarcely needed the artist’s intervention. ‘In these pictures’, comments Crewdson, ‘I draw upon the inherent quietness and uncanny aspects of the empty sets.’

Crewdson has in previous series used locations and characters in order to create pictures charged with narrative portent, but for ‘Sanctuary’ Crewdson decided to make the film sets themselves the subject of the photographs. Despite this change of direction, the artist’s vision persists: ‘As with much of my work’, suggests Crewdson, ‘I looked at the blurred lines between reality and fiction, nature and artifice, and beauty and decay.’ A photograph might depict what appears to be the corner of a Roman structure, topped by the statue of a proud emperor, and yet a network of scaffolding supports this supposedly timeless ruin. In another picture, a series of large wooden buildings stretches across the horizon like the background to a cartoon western, yet they are all marked by gaping holes, as if an entire townscape were about to collapse. Nature seems to overcome the sets in some pictures, with trees, vines and weeds engulfing the majestic vistas and brittle buildings. The cool monochrome and intimate scale of the prints lend the pictures an ageless and elegiac intensity, and yet in these empty studio lots Crewdson has found a poignant symbol of our persistent longing for permanence.

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