The Desert Light September/October 2018 | Page 18

E merging G old Review of Amir Moshfegh’s Artist in Residence Exhibit - “Essence of the Dunes” By Bob Killen Amir Moshfegh decided to become a National Park Service Artist in Residence more than three years ago, a lofty goal for someone entering the field of art photography. As his exhibit, “Essence of the Dunes” draws to a close we can say unequivocally that his impressions of the Kelso Dunes are a personal achievement that brought a new visual voice to the Mojave National Preserve. The number of photographs of the Kelso Dunes on the web and in postcard-like print images must number in the many thousands (or more), but the number of images that one can consider as an agent of meaning are few, too few perhaps. Moshfegh’ s approach to capturing the Dunes as powerful geometric forms exceed images as primary objects or visual records. In this body of work, we see art photography as an evocation of feelings, suggested by a mind at work upon objects in visual space and backrolling time. Amir’s art depicts the ‘Dunes’ beyond form with images that possess their own behavior spontaneity. Far from producing an inventory of interesting landscape sights and fluffy cloud gestures we have a series of prints with a socialized relationship. To be abstract is to deal with ideas rather than things, to be free from representation, art’s age-old purpose. However, with impressionist work, we know the thing or place and see it anew through the artist’s eye. For technique, Amir uses photographic cuts and pieces of the Kelso Dunes to shape our view of this national landmark. His skies in “Two Faces of Blue Hour” (left) and “Melody” (left) are blank, dark and suggestive of a vast scale that is beyond human comprehension. “The Wave” (right) and “The Float” (right) have skies loaded with romantic connotation and celestial symbolism. Moshfegh seems to place his highest aspiration in these images which are concentrated with soft nocturnal clouds. These and other images are not allusions, they are grounded in the ordinary, and as viewers, we are fascinated by how delicately and simply this artist treats the commonplace sands. Two Faces Blue Hour In “The Mirage” and “Drifted” Amir foregrounds photography’s key role in the development of Melody 18 THE DESERT LIGHT | Sept/Oct 2018