Edgar Martins: Topologies

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I met up with Edgar Martins yesterday for some cappuccino and chamomile not hours after he'd arrived in New York in preparation for his talk tonight at Aperture. I didn't know what to expect; his new book Topologies is filled with quietly beautiful minimalist landscapes, with, at times, a slightly sinister undercurrent. The book culls work from many of Martins' series, so we see imagery that ranges from nighttime beaches, creeping forest fires, airport runways, bright highway barriers, and the forbidding terrain of Iceland.

I thought Martins might be similarly quiet and not divulge much about the work, but it was quite the opposite; we went page-by-page through the images, and it was really amazing to hear him speak about his intentions. Sometimes photographers are cagey and secretive about their work, but Martins clearly loves photography, and lives it, and it shows. Martins was born in Portugal, but grew up in Macao, China, which is not far from Hong Kong. He went to London for both his undergraduate and graduate degrees; his MA is from the Royal College of Arts. I asked Martins the obvious question about who his influences were, and he sort of grimaced; I got the sense that he's informed by many working artists, but not particularly consciously, with the exception of Bill Viola.

All of his work is created painstakingly, and over many years. He's interested in "non-place" spaces, and ambiguity, which is a theme I'm hearing a lot lately. I was most struck by his nighttime beachscapes, called The Accidental Theorist and his forest fire images, from The Rehearsal of Space. The Accidental Theorist work feels at first very controlled and austere-- at least, that was my impression, but it turns out to be more paradoxical; Martins took long exposures on this same Portuguese stretch of beach over a period of two years. The exposures range from three seconds to two hours, so in essence, he was really letting go of a lot of control. He often didn't know how an image would turn out.


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Untitled, from the series The Accidental Theorist, 2005

In the book, this image is compared in John Beardsley's introduction to Richard Serra's Spin Out, for Robert Smithson, 1973. Martins didn't consciously make that connection, but says "You can be in touch with Modernity without directly referencing it. This is all found imagery, I'm not consciously referencing anything."

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Untitled, from the series The Accidental Theorist, 2005

This is actually a found scenario; I'm sworn to secrecy about what that scenario was, but Martins originally struggled with whether to include it at all. He finally decided to, because "its ambiguity helps the rest of the work."

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Untitled, from the series The Accidental Theorist, 2005



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Untitled, from the series The Rehearsal of Space, 2006

The forest fires, from The Rehearsal of Space are all shots of real fires in Portugal. Martins initially tried to live with a fire brigade, but after a week, he hadn't found himself at any fires. Instead, he was able to hook himself up with a morning report every day at 7am, and he'd drive himself to a fire. This was not easy work: he was seriously burned on several occasions and suffered from smoke inhalation. The fogging you see in the image above (the yellowed sky) was because the negative was so close to the heat. Martins later used this technique purposefully to burn in his Icelandic skies.

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Untitled, from the series The Rehearsal of Space, 2006

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Untitled, from the series The Rehearsal of Space, 2006

The images below are from the series Approaches, which resulted from an artistic commission which afforded Martins unlimited access to all the airports in Portugal (best.commission.ever)... In any case, Martins has always traveled a lot, and considers and airport a safe space, the ultimate "non-place space".

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Untitled, from the series Approaches, 2006

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Untitled, from the series Approaches, 2006



Hear Edgar speak more about his work, and have a book signed tonight at Aperture at 6:30pm.

Aperture Foundation
547 W. 27th St., Fl. 4
New York, NY 10001
(212) 946-7108


Edgar Martins is represented in the U.S. by Betty Cunningham Gallery and Paul Kopeiken Gallery.




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1 Comments

I remember first coming upon the airport shots at an art fair and being very, very jealous of the access.

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