
The
Wizard of Id
In Charlie White's surreal world, life is just like the movies - a creep show full of killer special effects.
By Jenn Shreve
Charlie White doesn't take photographs. He constructs them. Like a Hollywood director, he orchestrates scenes, commissions sets, hires actors, and employs a visual effects team. Then he oversees a grueling postproduction process in which each element of the shoot is digitized, scrutinized, and perfected down to the pixel. In essence, he captures an entire f/x film in one frame.
![]() Photo by Fredrik Nilsen |
White is a member of the Post-Photography School of Photography, where the hyperreal reigns and the idea of an unadulterated image seems quaint. "A picture is just a million questions now," says White. "Did it really happen? Do I believe it? The picture doesn't lie. It is a lie." His work has appeared in major museums, but he rejects the mainstream photojournalistic approach. Like Post pioneer Cindy Sherman, White favors cinematic staging and elaborate makeup. He isn't afraid to borrow Tinseltown's props or Silicon Valley's computing power.
For White, 31, software is just a tool, like a paintbrush or a camera. A sci-fi fan who fondly remembers seeing Blade Runner when he was 10 and playing Zaxxon on ColecoVision, he says he wasn't much of a techie growing up because his family couldn't afford a computer. That all changed in 1991 when he entered New York's School of Visual Arts and began exploring digital techniques. "Things that were previously not accessible, attainable, executable, were becoming so," he recalls.
![]() Artwork Courtesy of Charlie White |
Going into graduate school, White's plan was to make pornography into fine art. "I was so into it," he says. Fortunately for him, it was a time when the art community was heaping attention on smut. White's first major photographic project, Femalien (inset above), depicted a half-alien, half-human, all-naked woman in an elaborately constructed spaceship. The series appeared in the porn magazine Cheri but had wider appeal; the Andrea Rosen Gallery in Manhattan later exhibited the issue.
White has since moved on to less prurient subject matter, but he insists the visual language of porn persists even in his newest work. He points to the shallow sets, the comely blondes, and the unnerving flatness. Evident in all his photographs is a seamless juxtaposition of the strange and the familiar - a monster takes to the Los Angeles streets, a troll sits on the toilet. It's a tribute to the power of his finished prints that how he achieves this look is rarely discussed. But when it comes to White's particular blend of painting, sculpture, cinema, and digital imaging, the how is just as important as the what.
HER PLACE
![]() Artwork Courtesy of Charlie White |
The Pitch:
E.T. Leaving Las Vegas. This portrait of post-coital depression is seen through the eyes of Joshua, a creature White presents as proxy for a real man.
The Interloper
![]() Artwork Courtesy of Charlie White |
The Pitch:
The Last Temptation of Sesame Street. Call it a wide-eyed meditation on Christian imagery.
Fleming House
![]() Artwork Courtesy of Charlie White |
The Pitch:
Invasion of the Student Body Snatchers."Understanding Joshua" Gallery
Taken from Wired Magazine http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/12.02/white.html