Dominic Lippillo
Artist Statement
"During my childhood I lived in fifteen different houses in the Midwest - a part of the country that feels as placeless as the rental houses my family occupied. As a result, I have always felt like an outsider observing and wondering about the area I was inhabiting. Each time we moved I became fascinated and haunted by the residual essence of the former inhabitants that still lingered around the landscape of our home.
Throughout the series, 鈥淪tories We Tell Ourselves鈥, memory, landscape, and vernacular images, coalesce in a series of constructed photographs. Drawing influence from my experiences, American Scene painting, literature, and cinema; I seek out non-specific American landscapes to become settings that simultaneously feel familiar and unfamiliar. In doing so, I embellish the images by adding atmospheric conditions and appropriated figures that are alien to the melancholic landscapes.
I begin the process for this series by photographing unoccupied suburban and rural areas to serve as backdrops of the everyday. I then search through my collection of anonymous vernacular images 鈥 photographs with unknown internal and external contexts 鈥 that have been purchased in secondhand shops to find figures to inhabit the minimalistic scenes. In doing so, a pensive human presence appears as an 谤眉肠办别苍蹿颈驳耻谤 contemplating the landscape. I approach finding the locations to photograph, and choose the figures to appropriate, with an eye for ambiguity and an irrational attraction and fascination to unassuming details, thus allowing my mind to wander outside of the confines of my eye鈥檚 visual field.
In these re-contextualized photographic realities, the landscapes and figures share a symbiotic relationship, which allows them to transcend time, space, and experience due to their juxtaposition. Throughout the series I invite the viewer to impose new meanings and create their own re-telling鈥檚 of the stories intertwining the anonymous figures and unspecified locations."
For Sale
Inkjet print, 9" x 16", 2019
Clown and Balloons
Inkjet print, 9" x 16", 2019