biography
Tanya's CV
(download PDF)
Tanya Marcuse received her B.A. in art history and studio
art from Oberlin College and later obtained her M.F.A. in photography
at Yale University. In her work, Marcuse explores the relationship
between the animate and inanimate, past and present, and the
desire to make representations of things that cannot last.
She uses shifting visual strategies, ranging from small exquisite
platinum prints in Undergarments and Armor to lush color pigmented
prints in Wax Bodies, Bountiful and Fallen.
Marcuse won a Guggenheim Fellowship in 2002-2003 to pursue
her project Undergarments and Armor, in which she photographed
corsets, helmets, cage crinolines, and breastplates, in archives
in the U.S. and in England. She views these objects as sculptures
of the body that once contained a living person. Nazraeli Press
published the project as a lavish, three-volume set, highlighting
the project's conceptual underpinnings. The series was featured
in Dress Codes: The Third Triennial of Photography and Video
at ICP. Marcuse turned to color photography in her next project
entitled Wax Bodies, a series that featured photographs of
18th century Italian anatomical models. The photographs become
Baroque and expressive; languid wax women stretch out before
the viewer. Their faces are filled with longing, yet their
bodies are opened, revealing the secrets of their anatomy.
In her recent series, Bountiful, Marcuse discovered a little
known collection of wax models of agricultural specimens commissioned
by Cornell about 100 years ago. The models were made almost
entirely by one man, James Lawson. He even included his own
body hair in the models, for the fibers of carrots and radishes.
The Bountiful project is partly about Americana. Marcuse says
of the project: "I love the humble ambitions of the models
-to teach about agriculture and have three-dimensional, life-like
models to use year round. But the names of the varieties inscribed
on the original matte supports: Refugee, 100% Profit, Bountiful,
Perfection, somehow pull them to another place and become lyrical
or ironic accompaniments to the objects."
Throughout working on these more conceptually driven projects,
Marcuse's ongoing project Fruitless continues to grow and change.
A small publication by Nazraeli Press, Fruitless, (One Picture
Book, Nº 42) accompanied the show she had at Julie Saul
Gallery. Marcuse photographs fruit trees in northern Dutchess
and southern Columbia Counties in New York State, near where
she lives. Fruitless records orchards as they change with the
seasons, and unfortunately, with the times. Sharon Bates notes, "The
platinum prints document the vanishing visual, economic and
cultural presence of orchards in the Hudson Valley region." With
striking intimacy, Marcuse captures the visual complexity of
intertwined branches, while bringing to the viewer's attention
that perhaps in a year, or a decade, these trees will be gone
and only the photographs will remain.
She teaches Photography at Bard College at Simon’s Rock,
where she first began making photographs as a student in the
early 1980’s. She is working on a book of Wax Bodies,
with Nazraeli Press and engaged in a new project called Fallen.
Representation:
Julie Saul Gallery
535 West 22 Street
6th Floor
New York, NY 10011
Phone: 212 627-2410
Fax: 212 627-2411
juliem@saulgallery.com
www.saulgallery.com
HEMPHILL
1515 14th Street NW
3rd Floor
Washington DC 20005
tel. (202) 234-5601
fax. (202) 234-5607
gallery@hemphillfinearts.com
www.hemphillfinearts.com
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