Brian Smeets

My work investigates travel destinations and their experiential qualities, intending to remove the tourist destination's spectacle. An alternative view of liminal spaces and travel destinations is presented through large scale abstracted photography and collections of images.

Wakayama Atlas

Wakayama Atlas, 2019 80 pearl archival pigment prints 17.78 x 17.78 cm panels, dimensions variable
Transcript

"My name is Brian Smeets. I am a photography and sound artist based in Hong Kong. I recently completed a large photo print-based work that I'd like to share with you. Here I am packing the prints to ship to Switzerland for a show this summer, though I’m not sure when it will open with the Covid-19 quarantine. The limitations on travel have in some ways made this work, Wakayama Atlas (2019), more poignant to me. The atlas consists of 80-100 images taken during a journey in the Wakayama Prefecture in Japan. The images are observations of the temporary spaces we move through as we travel to the goal of our trip. Likely, the postcard destination differs from the things that make us consider things outside our regular work and home habits. The images aim to show the walkways, benches, and surfaces that guide us through the liminal spaces on the way. Train stations, bus stops, and hiking paths are the main areas that are overlooked, often by their design. The prints and images emphasize texture and surface and obscure full views with shallow depth of field and other photographic techniques. These also create images that are pleasing abstractions. The work of Gerhard Richter is a significant influence on both the technique and the format of this work. Mainly, I would like to avoid recognition of a place and set the focus on the physical beauty of the destination. The work is pinned to the wall directly, at a level where the viewer can move between the images freely, taking in the information in an order determined by their visual field. Previously I had 80 pictures installed in 5 rows, allowing each image its own space while creating unity in the whole set. It is quite hard to see all the images at once, causing the image to pull across the area of the gallery, echoing the unfolding of the story. I hope to see the work in its new form in person. Hopefully, it will bring comfort and an appreciation for the travel we are missing during this strange time."

Wakayama Atlas Installation View, 2019 80 pearl archival pigment prints 17.78 x 17.78 cm panels, dimensions variable
Wakayama Atlas Installation Detail, 2019 80 pearl archival pigment prints 17.78 x 17.78 cm panels, dimensions variable
Wakayama Atlas Installation View, 2019 80 pearl archival pigment prints 17.78 x 17.78 cm panels, dimensions variable

Mindset Series

On my way to Eggplant Mountain on China Eastern, Xian, 2019 Matte archival pigment print 77 x 115 cm.jpg
View from Ramada Pudong Airport Shanghai, 2019 Matte archival pigment print 77 x 115 cm
Poolside lounger in Merlin Bay Phuket, 2019 Matte archival pigment print 77 x 115 cm
On a bus to the hotel by Ben Thanh Market in Ho Chi Minh City, 2019 Matte archival pigment print 77 x 115 cm
On a bus to the hotel by Ben Thanh Market in Ho Chi Minh City detail, 2019 Matte archival pigment print 77 x 115 cm
Light show at the painted hills of Zhangye national geopark, Danxia, 2019 Matte archival pigment print 77 x 115 cm

Navigating Liminality

Taiwan #2 from Navigating Liminality travelogue series, pp 12-13 2018. Perfect-bound book. 210 x 297 mm
Taiwan #3 from Navigating Liminality travelogue series, pp 12-13 2018. Perfect-bound book. 210 x 297 mm

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“I do not make a distinction between the artist and the other world, the ‘real’ so-called workaday world. I do not subscribe to the theory of the artist as a sort of separate aesthetic being sitting in the ivory tower suffering and talking about beauty. It is work, it is hard work and there’s a lot of it, and there’s a lot of it that needs to be done, but that’s exactly what it is. It is not sitting under willow trees and being inspired et cetera. …

“It has something to do with work. I am not sure that it’s better work, as a matter of fact, than any other kind of work. I’m not convinced that it is. I think it has been handled and received more elegantly, but I’m not sure that it’s better. I’m not sure that I wouldn’t be just as happy if I were capable, and I am not, of making one perfect chair that would hold a human body properly. And I approach my work the same way I expect chair-makers to approach theirs.”

―Tony Morrison, Portland State University’s Oregon Public Speakers Collection, 1975