Rineke Dijkstra: A Retrospective
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View additional video including an interview with Almerisa, the subject of an ongoing series by Dijkstra.
June 29–October 8, 2012
Since the early 1990s, Rineke Dijkstra has
produced a complex body of photographic
and video work, offering a contemporary
take on the genre of portraiture. Her
large-scale color photographs of young,
typically adolescent subjects recall 17th-century
Dutch painting in their scale and
visual acuity. The minimal contextual details
present in her photographs and videos
encourage us to focus on the exchange between
photographer and subject and the
relationship between viewer and viewed. Rineke Dijkstra: A Retrospective brings together
more than 70 photographs and five
videos in a major mid-career survey, offering
the most comprehensive presentation
of the artist’s work to date.
Dijkstra works in series, creating groups
of photographs and videos around a specific
typology or theme. In 1992, she started
making portraits of adolescents posed
on beaches from Hilton Head, South
Carolina, to Poland and Ukraine. Shot
from a low perspective, the subjects of the Beach Portraits (1992–2002), poised on the
brink of adulthood, take on a monumental presence. In contemporaneous works,
including portraits of new mothers after
giving birth, and photographs of bullfighters
immediately after leaving the ring,
Dijkstra sought subjects whose physical
exhaustion diminished the likelihood of an
artificed pose.
Dijkstra has also photographed individuals
repeatedly over the course of several
months or years. Her ongoing Almerisa
series began in 1994 with a single photograph
of a young Bosnian girl at a Dutch
refugee center for asylum-seekers, and has
grown as Dijkstra continued to photograph
her regularly for more than a decade, as
she became a young woman with a child
of her own. The outward signals of her
transition into adulthood and her integration
into mainstream Dutch culture reveal
themselves incrementally over the course
of many years. Similarly, the Olivier series
(2000–03) follows a young man from his
enlistment with the French Foreign Legion
through the years of his service, showing
his development, both physically and psychologically,
into a soldier. Later, Dijkstra
took portraits of new initiates to the Israeli
army, photographing female soldiers in
their uniforms after induction and then again in their civilian dress, as well as male
soldiers directly after military exercises.
More recently, Dijkstra has built upon
her revelatory work in video from the mid-1990s. In The Buzz Club, Liverpool, UK/
Mystery World, Zaandam, NL (1996–97),
and The Krazyhouse (Megan, Simon,
Nicky, Philip, Dee), Liverpool, UK (2009),
Dijkstra filmed teenage habitués of local
clubs dancing to their favorite music.
Presented as multi-channel video installations,
these works showcase their
subjects’ teen personas and methods of
self-expression, revealed in how they
style themselves, and in the movements
of their bodies. Two video works made in
2009 at Tate Liverpool expand the artist’s
interest in the empathetic exchange between
photographer and subject to include
the affective response to artworks. In I See
A Woman Crying (Weeping Woman)
(2009), a group of school children engage
with art, discussing their perceptions and
reactions to a work by Pablo Picasso, while Ruth Drawing Picasso (2009) shows a girl
pensively sketching a masterwork.
—Jennifer Blessing, Senior Curator, Photography
Rineke Dijkstra: A Retrospective is organized by the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum
and the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art.
This exhibition is supported by the Mondriaan Fund, Amsterdam. The New York
presentation of the exhibition is supported in part by the William Talbott Hillman
Foundation, The Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation, the Netherlands Cultural Services,
and the Leadership Committee for the Guggenheim Museum’s 2012 Photography
Exhibitions: Marian Goodman Gallery, Henry Buhl, and Eugene Sadovoy, as well
as by Ann and Steven Ames, Lori and Alexandre Chemla, Cari and Michael J. Sacks,
John L. Thomson, and those who wish to remain anonymous.





