Paintings

“Paintings” by Harley Weir, published by Loose Joints in 2017, features 152 pages of artistic photography that diverges from the artist’s established photographic practice. This edition presents a collection of images that explore themes of trust, power, and permission, while aiming to create a ‘pure’ image. Weir’s work is characterized by an intimate and striking approach to portraiture, and the photographs are arranged in short, rhythmical sequences that connect rhythm, color, and form.
Readers will find that “Paintings” invites contemplation of the photographic composition beyond traditional contexts. The images reflect Weir’s exploration of the relationship between the camera and its subjects, emphasizing the tension inherent in the act of image-making. Each photograph adheres to a specific set of rules, allowing Weir to engage with photography as an immediate and indulgent process. This collection serves as both a departure from and a reflection of her broader work in fashion, editorial, and portrait photography.
Official synopsis Publisher
“Paintings by Harley Weir presents images made as a form of digression from the artist’s traditional photographic practice. Known for her intimate and striking approach to portraiture, the images in Paintings attempt to erase from the frame her concerns with trust, power and permission that weigh upon the act of photographing others. Presented as short, rhythmical sequences, Paintings moves across the page like a melody, linking rhythm, colour and form through surface studies made consistently throughout the last three years. Intended to be considered outside of the constraints of context and place, the images in Paintings attempt to exist at the threshold of photographic composition, while forming part of Weir’s search for a ‘pure’ image. With each picture made according to a specific set of rules and criteria, Weir attempts to expunge herself from the act of image-making, and encounter photography as a immediate, indulging process. These images are nevertheless underscored by a tension palpable throughout Weir’s output – the transgressing of surfaces and boundaries, the uneasy relationship between camera and subject, and the inevitable constraints of choice and power that hover around the frame of a photograph. In this sense, these images can be thought of as both a liberation from and a mirror to Weir’s diverse output in fashion, editorial and portraiture photography.”–
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