Cosmos
Cosmos
In 2020 Collier Schorr began drawing from photographs she had made of the artist
Nicole Eisenman, a solitary practice that had its roots in her fascination with
the doppelganger and the possibility of seeing one's face in another. This
volume, sequenced in Schorr's unmistakable narrative style, brings together a
wide array of drawn portraits, selfies, and self-portraits, both staged and
candid, in recognizable spaces and emerging from the blank page. Other artists
and Eisenman's teenage daughter make appearances, setting up a sparsely occupied
world. In one image, the cover of a Susan Sontag biography floats like a
specter, uneasy in its proximity to the queer figures asserting themselves
between the pages. Schorr sees these drawings as works that think about
photography and escape it simultaneously. A photograph will always share
authorship between photographer and subject, while a drawing registers a
different form of physical attention and collaboration. It engages bodies and
space, and creates ambiguity where photography is conclusive – through a loss of
concrete setting, or an absence of age. The porous worlds of queer culture
operate much more closely than those of photography and painting. COSMOS
explores the way these two figures inhabit many orbits, existing as mortals as
as well as images in their work and their communities. With an essay by Jennifer
Higgie
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