David Parker
“Sirens”
« Alors, le vent tomba et le calme se fît sur la mer, comme une sorte de pouvoir apaisant la houle »
Homère – L’Odysée.A la manière des photographes
pictorialistes du 19 ème siècle, le travail de David Parker est
un hommage à la Nature, c’est dans cette démarche que l’artiste
explore le symbolisme de ces roches émergeant des eaux
Utilisant un appareil photographique panoramique personnalisé, David
Parker nous livre ses portraits de Sirènes, dont le chant est un appel
à la contemplation mais également au mystère d’un
monde abstrait
Ces roches isolées enchantent le voyageur, et, tout comme les Sirènes
de la mythologie rencontrées dans l’Odysée, elles nous projettent
hors du temps et de l’espace.
Enigmatiques et évanescentes, les Sirènes de David Parker ouvrent
une fenêtre entre notre monde et celui des rêves.
"Then all at once the wind fell, and a calm came over all
of the sea, as though some power lulled the swell".
Homer. The Odyssey, Book 12
When Odysseus instructed his crew to lash him to the mast of their ship, he
was preparing himself to hear the sirens song, 'the song of the universe'. Their
sweet singing, claims of omniscience and power to calm the waters infallibly
lured sailors off course to their destruction. Odysseus plugged his crews' ears
with beeswax, so that he alone could savour the seductive laments of the sirens
and experience a mystical encounter with the sublime.
Dreams and the sea are the closest we come to other worlds, and the solitary
sea-stacks featured in these photographs, or sirens as they appear to me, stand
as guardians on the threshold of both worlds. For me the sirens song is a call
to contemplation, not action, and these images chart my own fascinated encounters
with an enchanted world of forgotten archetypes.
My pictures are intended to siren-like, allure viewers
into a mysterious abstract world, both concrete and ineffable, attuning them
to mythological and metaphorical themes by removing all references to time and
place.
Sea-stacks are all that remain of cliffs that eroded many hundreds and thousands
of years ago. These solitary pillars would have evolved from collapsed arches
and will one day be surrendered back to the sea that carved them. I feel that
in their slowly achieved individuation these sea-stacks reflect our own existential
isolation, putting us in mind at once of our own mortality and of life's worth
and beauty, and perhaps reconciling us to the paradox.
Myths and legends have often been shaped and inspired by geologic landforms
and similarly, I use the natural world as an arena for the exploration of symbolic
and metaphoric motifs, a theme that I previously explored in 'The Phenomenal
World'. My images therefore carry no identifying names or locations because
I want their reference to be the individual spectators' psyche rather than a
set of geographical co-ordinates. Naming something is a way of knowing and measuring
it, and thereby removing from it something of its mystery. These images with
their anonymity are intended to function, not as documents, but as triggers
to memory that point past themselves to worlds within the viewers' imagination.
The sirens’ song with its promise of ultimate knowledge also suggests
an infinite realm that opens a window onto ideas of the sublime. To my mind,
it is also the song of art, which charms and fascinates us into the ego-diminishing
state of aesthetic enchantment, the goal and consolation of all art.
David Parker was born in 1949 in Stafford, England. He
originally trained as an engineer, and then as a commercial illustrator. An
early interest in photography developed from a hobby into a fulltime occupation.
His book, "The Phenomenal World" was conceived in 1992 and continues
to explore the symbolic potential of particular geological landforms, especially
natural arches. Variously seen by different mythological and cultural traditions
as bridges between worlds, portals of discovery, thresholds and even stone rainbows,
these arches become metaphors of transition between the temporal and eternal,
the material and transcendent.The Phenomenal World was conceived as a large-scale
gallery presentation, and required an extensive period of experimentation with
two especially built panoramic cameras and military reconnaissance film stock.
David Parker’s work is housed in many important corporate art collections
such as Citibank, N.M.Rothschild & Sons, Goldman Sachs. NY, The Syz Collection
Geneva, Lombard Odier & Cie, Zurich, Coutts Bank, AIG Private Bank and also
in many important private collections. David Parker has held exhibitions in
the United States, London and Zurich.