White Wedding, My Playground of Others' Memories, 120mm color, Archival pigment print on FineArt cotton paper, 72 x 72 cm, Edition of 19
Toolbox, My Playground of Others' Memories, 120mm color, Archival pigment print on FineArt cotton paper, 72 x 72 cm, Edition of 19
Gathering, My Playground of Others' Memories, 120mm color, Archival pigment print on FineArt cotton paper, 72 x 72 cm, Edition of 19
White Wedding, My Playground of Others' Memories, 120mm color, Archival pigment print on FineArt cotton paper, 72 x 72 cm, Edition of 19
My Playground of Others' Memories
120mm color
Archival pigment print on FineArt cotton paper
72 x 72 cm
Edition of 19
2014 - 2017
A collaboration between Artist Les St. Leon and Photographer Sigal Ben-David.
This new body of work entitled ‘My Playground of Others’ Memories’ comprises seven color photographs shot in medium format. In this new series, created in 2014-2017, we continue to explore the use of narratives for the construction of past events and attribution of meaning, the role of memory in the interpretation and reconstruction of history, and their effect on personal identity, and the political landscape.
In creating this new body of work, we drew inspiration from ordinary objects people collect, such as artificial flowers, porcelain dolls, vintage tools, yarmulkes. Seeking to articulate the nuances of relations embedded in the relationship between the inanimate objects that surround us, that we collect and use in our daily lives and their role in forming our memories, while experimenting with texture, pattern, substance, and arrangements, through which we generate a dialogue between photography and FineArt, conceptual rigor and playfulness, representation and abstraction.
By composite, and manipulated images of trivial objects De-familiarized of their functional properties and removed from their larger schemes of meaning, we explore objects as containing a profusion of meanings, while confronting with the abstract aesthetic structures that underlie the natural and artificial environments. Rather than creating a traditional storyline or narrative, this work reveals intricate and enigmatic mise-en-scènes that prompt personal reflections on memories, and invite the viewers to construct their own narrative.