20110316

Flying pictures by Daniel gordon







 "It is the idea that a picture can simuntaneously achieve the impossible, and fail at doing so, that keeps me coming back for more. Making pictures for me is about what is real and what I want to be real, and the lengths that I will let myself go to accomplish these desires."

Daniel Gordon (born 1980 in Boston, Mass.) is an American artist who lives and works in Brooklyn, New York.

Between 2001 and 2004, on the snowy fields in New York's Hudson Valley and the rocky coasts of the Bay Area in Northern California, photographer Daniel Gordon learned to fly--if only for 1/125 of a second. Using a camera mounted on a tripod, Gordon frames his picture. He then runs out onto the landscape and launches himself into the air, while an assistant snaps the shutter. The images in 
Flying Pictures are at once pastoral landscapes and documents of a performance. Only after considering them for a while, does the thought occur that their fleeting bliss was swiftly met with physical doom--a crash back to Earth. Such a journey requires great humility as well as hubris, and a will to achieve the impossible if only for a moment. The project began at a time when digital technology was changing the role that truth has historically played in the media of film and photography. The ease with which one could now alter an image with Photoshop created a new sense of paranoia concerning 
the veracity of photographs. Flying Pictures unbelievable, unaltered images reveal that there never was just one truth in photography.

by Daniel Gordon (Photographer), Gregory Crewdson (Introduction) 
Published by powerHouse, 2009

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