MATTHEW PORTER – SUNCLIPSE
2016-11-28Designed jointly by Le Corbusier and Oscar Niemeyer, the UN building is a looming monolith. The structure was captured by Porter at sunset in what feels like the twilight of the midcentury optimism that gave rise to the eponymous organization and its home. “Sunclipse,” the title of the show, takes its name from a neologism for “sunset,” and is meant to remind us that the earth is not the center of the universe but merely a lucky satellite, and was coined by the visionary Buckminster Fuller–a quixotic futurist whose utopian projects and schemes are often regarded as historical curiosities if not abject failures. Fuller himself embraced failure–celebrated it, even, as a sign of creativity and free-thinking. “There is no such thing as a failed experiment, only an experiment with unexpected outcomes.”
The photographs that make up the exhibition are marked, as always with Porter, by exquisite technical control, and yet they also demonstrate the dark romanticism of once-glowing visions of the future gone slightly dim. The exhibition is organized around images of a dome house built in Cape Romano, Florida. Conceived and constructed by oil baron Bob Lee in 1980, the complex was not designed to be an experiment in utopian living but simply an extravagant vacation home that partook of the aesthetic vanguard developed by dreamers like Fuller (a familiar legacy, from radicalism to luxury architecture). And yet, pummeled by one hurricane after another throughout the 1980s and 1990s, it became a climate-battered ruin as surely as any semi-colonialist effort to build modern (and modernist) utopias in and around the world’s deserts and jungles (as in Henry Ford’s Brazilian Fordlandia or Paolo Soleri’s Palm Springs Arcosanti). It’s an act of hubris, to present a sandy shoulder against the ocean’s bite. The former is always in retreat against the latter.
Opposite – Cape Romano #1, 2016
Exhibition runs through to December 18th, 2016
INVISIBLE-EXPORTS
89 Eldridge Street
New York
NY 10002
