- Artist
- Keith Arnatt 1930–2008
- Medium
- Photograph, c-print on paper
- Dimensions
- Support: 915 × 915 mm
- Collection
- Tate
- Acquisition
- Presented by the artist 2000
- Reference
- T07647
Summary
In October 1969, over an eight-day period, Keith Arnatt’s Self-Burial (Television Interference Project) (Tate T01747), was broadcast by the German television channel Westdeutsches Fernsehen: each of a series of nine photographs was shown for about two seconds, interrupting the usual flow of programmes. Originally called the ‘Disappearance of the artist’, the photographs reveal the progressive disappearance of the artist into the earth. Arnatt expanded an interest in the nature of the art object with an investigation into and satire of the activities around the production of art itself. He stated: ‘the continual reference to the disappearance of the art object suggested to me the eventual disappearance of the artist himself … my work then was an oblique examining of my own position as an artist as well as that of others’. (Quoted in 1965-1972 When Attitudes Became Form, exhibition catalogue, Kettle’s Yard Gallery, Cambridge and Fruitmarket Gallery, Edinburgh 1984, p.29.)
In Portrait of the Artist as a Shadow of his Former Self Arnatt mocks the manner in which much avant-garde art of the time incorporated the image of the artist as subject, object and creator of the work, again within the context of disappearance. He stood on the pavement at the door to the Newport College Art department while a colleague drew a chalk line around his shadow cast on the pavement and the wall behind. The silhouette was filled in with semi-transparent grey-brown paint and the scene was photographed. The resulting image depicts a seemingly distorted figure positioned as though it is standing on the pavement. Because it is derived from a real body it appears natural, but at the same time it is clearly not. The feet are disproportionately large and the head is disproportionately small, while the height is that of a young child. Actual shadows on the left of the image and to the side of the drainpipe running up the wall heighten the confusion created about what is real and what is art. The white chalk line around the artist’s silhouette echoes the lines of white mortar between the bricks in the wall and a white line and arrow crudely drawn onto the bricks above the artist’s head. Pointing in the same direction as his feet, towards the drainpipe, the arrow adds a sense of purpose to the standing figure. Like the daubs of white paint on the wall on the other side of the drainpipe, the line and arrow were fortuitous discoveries – traces of anonymous urban graffiti that Arnatt incorporated into his work.
In an earlier related work, Invisible Hole Revealed by Shadow of the Artist 1968, Arnatt lined a square hole he had cut in an area of grass with mirrors, thereby creating an invisible hole; itt was only when the artist’s shadow was cast over the hole that its presence was revealed. Like his creation of the invisible hole in this work, and his self-burial the following year, Arnatt’s use of photography in his self-portraits became a means to undermine confidence in the veracity of photographic documentary reportage. He has commented: ‘I was beginning to become aware of the unreliability of photographic evidence and began to play with that feature. I felt that what a photograph could not tell or show might be just as significant as what it could.’ (Quoted in Roberts, p.47.)
This particular colour print was made in 2000 for inclusion in the exhibition Live in Your Head: Concept and Experiment in Britain 1965–75 at the Whitechapel Gallery, London. It is a larger print, cropped differently to the black and white version of the work, Portrait of the Artists as Shadow of his Former Self 1969–72 (Tate P13143) that is one of a group of existing materials that was exhibited as one element of Arnatt’s participation in Seven Exhibitions at the Tate Gallery, London in 1972.
Further reading:
David Alan Mellor, Chemical Traces: Photography and Conceptual Art, 1968-1998, exhibition catalogue, Ferens Art Gallery, Kingston upon Hull 1998, pp.4–7, 43 and 69, reproduced front cover in colour.
John Roberts, The Impossible Document: Photography and Conceptual Art in Britain 1966-1976, London 1997, pp.46-52, reproduced p.46.
Live in Your Head: Concept and Experiment in Britain 1965-75, exhibition catalogue, Whitechapel Gallery, London 2000, pp.2 and 38-9, reproduced p.38.
Elizabeth Manchester
April 2004
Revised by Andrew Wilson
February and July 2019, December 2020
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