Kodak, 1974 & Untitled (Smile)

Two sculptures playing with the materiality of digital media

Two works translating family photographs into physical materials, shown together at The Lab in San Francisco.

Kodak, 1974 (1998, sugar and coffee, approx. 95″ × 57″) A photograph of a girl taken in 1974 is rendered as a bitmapped digital image, then reconstructed from sugar cubes — some dipped in coffee. Memory is evoked simultaneously as image and sensory experience.

Untitled (Smile) (1998, wood, approx. 6.5′ × 2.5′ × 6′) A stack of 2×2s with ends selectively painted to mimic ready-to-build lumber constructs the image of a smile cropped from a 1972 photograph — pixels with mass, length, and depth.

Both works were featured in Geoffrey Batchen’s essay “Post-Photography” in Each Wild Idea:

“Memory is painstakingly evoked as image (digital, and therefore simultaneously material and immaterial) and sensory experience (a smell so pungent one can taste it).” — on Kodak, 1974

“These are pixels that have mass as well as length and depth… her photogenic ‘wooden smile’ masquerades as a form of neominimal sculpture, recalling the stacking sculpture of Carl Andre and others.” — on Untitled (Smile)

Kenneth Baker also noted the work in the San Francisco Examiner.