highlike

Holger Kilumets

Study of a Female Nude II

Holger Kilumets

source: worksio
Maps & Territories is an elaborate exploration of the meaning of representation through a series of slightly disparate images, designed to relate to each other through the notion of free association. Borrowing elements from the history of art, photographic practice and advertising imagery, the series attempts to reveal the fragility of the mechanisms that sustain representations and raise questions about photography’s role as a representational device. Representation, by its very definition, can’t be the thing it represents. Representations don’t merely recreate existing objects or elements of the phenomenal world; they beautify, improve upon, and universalise them. As a result, things get caught up in simulacrum, spectacle and fetish, creating a fictional world, a plastic postmodernity of illusions, appearances and images in which there is no capacity for a non-mediated relationship to reality. In the contemporary world more and more things first become visible to us via the images we see of them. There is a shift towards the process of the replacement of an object by its image and representations in the form of photographs have become the main devices through which we perceive and interpret the world around us. Because of this it seems vital to face the fundamental questions about the act of representation, its influence on our perception and understanding of reality and the habitus, modalities and the productive capacity of it.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
source: holgerkilumets
Holger Kilumets is a London based visual artist working with photography. He graduated with First-class Honours from BA Photography and Video Art at University of Bedfordshire in 2014.

Kilumets’s practice is an investigation of photography as a medium and, in particular, it’s role as a representational device. His ongoing research is concerned with questions such as what are the underlying mechanisms of photographic representation and how do photographic images influence our perception and understanding of the world.

Kilumets’s work has been shown in solo and group exhibitions in the United Kingdom. He was shortlisted for the Source-Cord Prize in 2014. In 2015 Kilumets was selected for The Catlin Guide as one of the UK’s most promising young artists.