Steve Lyons and Susan Lakin
Monitors

Gabrielle Moser
Gallery 44, Toronto
June 4–July 3, 2010
Steve LyonsLoch Ness, 2010.
Photo : courtesy Gallery 44, Toronto
Gallery 44, Toronto
June 4–July 3, 2010
What does an elaborately staged recreation of a 1960s photograph of the search for the Loch Ness monster have in common with a series of glossy, saturated images of couples, individuals and families reflected in their television screens? At first blush, very little. But Monitors, a two-person exhibition at Toronto’s Gallery 44, persuasively combines these two disparate projects, allowing them to speak to one another about the powerful effects of photographic screens on their viewers. Rather than focusing on the ghostly or phantasmagoric aspects of these screens, however, the works in Monitors foreground their materiality, privileging the “stuff” that constitutes and mediates the images we see. 

In Montreal-based Steve Lyons’ installation Loch Ness (2010), a messy, sprawling construction handmade out of found materials such as paper, plywood and masking tape is set up on the gallery floor in front of a video camera on a tripod. Despite its intricacy, Lyons’ site-specific assemblage fails to cohere into a recognizable form from almost every vantage point available to the viewer, and it quickly becomes clear that the sculpture is designed to be seen not by a pair of human eyes, but by the lens of the camera. Through a live feed, the camcorder transforms what it sees into a black and white still image on a nearby television screen, perfectly recreating a 1965 archival photograph of the headquarters of the Loch Ness Investigations Bureau: an observation station set up to attempt to photographically document the mythic sea monster. 

You must log in to read this text! It’s free and no purchase will ever be required. Create an account or log in:

My Account

Please note that Editorials, Digital Residencies, Videos, and Archives are always free to access.

Want more? Some content is available with a Digital or Premium subscription only (Features, Off-Features, Portfolios, Columns).

Subscribe (starting at $20)

This article also appears in the issue 70 - Miniature
Discover

Suggested Reading