Fatal Attraction: Piotr Ukla?ski Photographs at The Metropolitan Museum of Art will be the first survey of this provocative artist's photography. Known for working in a wide variety of media including installation, fiber art, resin paintings, and collage, Ukla?ski (born 1968) invests overlooked and exhausted styles with new meanings. This Polish-born, New York-based artist similarly explores clichéd or obsolete photographic languages. Nearly half of the works on display in the Metropolitan Museum's exhibition will be from The Joy of Photography (1997-2007), the artist's seminal yet under-known series, in which he adopted the hackneyed subjects and styles of Eastman Kodak's 1979 how-to book for amateur photographers to create a rapturous ode to the medium, both ironic and sincere.
Ukla?ski moved to the United States from Poland just after the fall of Communism, and found in Kodak's Joy of Photography a readymade compendium of American mass cultural taste and aspirations to which he enthusiastically submitted his photographs. Pitch-perfect mimicries of stock photography such as Untitled (Waterfall) from 2001 are important early examples of what would come to be known as "post-appropriation" in contemporary photography, and provide witty commentary-from a European perspective-on how Americans approach even their moments of pleasure as forms of work and self-improvement. For Untitled (Stockholm), Ukla?ski used a multiple-image lens to create a cartoon-vision of aesthetic rapture. The over-the-top sunset inUntitled (Yellow Sky) is as atavistic a subject of art as a waterfall, equally at home on giveaway calendars and great paintings of the past. (It is also the exact color of Kodak's trademark yellow.)Videos