LUXEMBOURG.- Over three decades Zoe Leonard (b. 1961, Liberty, New York) has gained critical acclaim for her work. Rooted in photography, Leonards practice extends to spatial installation and sculpture. Her art is above all the result of a finely honed observation, in which the documentary approach of photography combines with the physical and bodily act of looking. Migration and displacement, gender and sexuality, mourning and loss, cultural history and the tensions between the natural world and human-built environments are recurring themes in her work.
This exhibition premieres Al río / To the River, a large-scale photographic work begun in 2016 which takes the Rio Grande, as it is named in the United States, or Río Bravo, as it is named in Mexico, as its subject. Leonard photographed along the 2,000 kilometres where the river is used to demarcate the boundary between the United Mexican States and the United States of America, following the river from the border cities of Ciudad Juárez, Mexico and El Paso, Texas, to the Gulf of Mexico, where it flows into the Atlantic Ocean.
Epic in scale, Al río / To the River results from close observation of both the natural and built environments shaped by and surrounding the river; from desert and mountains to cities, towns and small villages where daily life unfolds in tandem with agriculture, commerce, industry, policing, and surveillance. Leonards photographs focus on the accumulation of infrastructure and other constructions built into and alongside the river to control the flow of water, the passage of goods, and the movement of people: dams, levees, roads, irrigation canals, bridges, pipelines, fences and checkpoints. The shifting nature of a river which floods periodically, changes course and carves new channels is at odds with the political task it is asked to perform, says Leonard.
Al río / To the River is structured in three parts, including a Prologue and a Coda. Each part engages with photographic language, moving fluidly from abstraction to documentary to digital surveillance imagery.
Working with a hand-held analogue camera, Leonard takes an embodied position in relation to the river. While always subjective, her view onto the river is not fixed. Crossing frequently back and forth from one side of the river to another (and thus, from one country to another), Leonard refuses a one-sided point of view and instead engages a series of shifting, changing vantage points.
The work takes shape in passages, sequences of photographs that impart a sense of movement and emphasise actions as they unfold through time. Rather than pointing to one decisive moment or one fixed meaning, these arrangements allow the viewer to create meaning through their own close looking.
The materiality of photographic process is foregrounded in Leonards prints. Each photograph is presented as a constructed image, taken from a certain point of view, and made material through processes of selection and printing.
In Al río / To the River, Leonard pushes back against reductive depictions of the border in mass media, and instead considers a multiplicity of powers and influences. These include commercial and industrial interests, cultural histories and familial connections that span the river, as well as the animals and plants of the region, increasingly under pressure from drought and climate change or the often contradictory human constructions of the river itself, designated as a wild and scenic waterway, a resource for water, and a political borderline.
Zoe Leonard (b. 1961, Liberty, New York) has held solo exhibitions at MOCA Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles (2018); Whitney Museum of American Art, New York (2018); Museum of Modern Art, New York (2015); Camden Arts Centre, London (2012); Dia:Beacon, New York (2008); Wexner Center for the Arts, Colombus (2007); Fotomuseum Winterthur, (2007) and Vienna Secession (1997). Her work has been presented within significant surveys including the Whitney Biennial, New York (2014, 1997, 1993), and documenta 12 (2007) and documenta IX (1992), Kassel. Leonard's work can be found in major public collections, including the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; Guggenheim Museum, New York; Centre Pompidou, Paris; and Philadelphia Museum of Art, Philadelphia. She has received numerous honours, including the Guggenheim Fellowship (2020), the Graham Foundation Grant (2020) and the Bucksbaum Award of the Whitney Museum of American Art (2014). She lives and works in New York and Marfa, Texas.