GENERAL DESCRIPTION
Hailing from Dallas, Texas, Nic Nicosia's practice emerged alongside a generation of 1970s photographers for which staged photography was a tool to demonstrate and interrogate the constructed nature of photographic "truth." Nicosia's staged photographs focus on the conservative middle-class domesticity of the Dallas suburbs as the subject, questioning the mythos of a manicured, suburban American dream and exposing moments of violence, humor, and perversion. In the Real Pictures series, Nicosia turned to black and white film to create a sense of photojournalistic documentation, eliminating color from his photographs to destroy the fantasy.
In Real Pictures #11, three children stand with their backs to us, having just set flame to a sapling, its branches ablaze in the moments before collapse. The middle child looks back over her shoulder, eyes wide with what the fear, guilt, mesmerization, and delight of a child who has just discovered the power of fire. The dramatic and psychologically charged photograph sits intriguingly and uncomfortably in the space between violence and play, childhood and adolescence, innocent and deviance, reality and artifice.
Adapted from
Anna Katherine Brodbeck, ed., TWO X TWO X TWENTY: Two Decades Supporting Contemporary Art at the Dallas Museum of Art (Dallas: Dallas Museum of Art), 2018, 89.
NOTES
updated provenance and geo x refs
added general description as a text entry
Catalogue essays
Artist/designers
Cultures
Geography
Process/materials
Historical periods
Individuals
Subject terms
RELATED OBJECTS
PROVENANCE
Until 2005: Dunn and Brown Contemporary, Dallas, TX [1]
From 2005: Dallas Museum of Art, purchased from above
[1] See copy of check #12208 in Collections Records Object File 2005.100
AUDIO ASSETS
VIDEO ASSETS
IMAGE ASSETS
WEB RESOURCES
- PBS~Watch a short video about the works of Nic Nicosia, where he "makes a picture instead of takes a picture."
- YouTube~Watch Nic Nicosia's staged video, "Middletown," which was filmed entirely on a suburban street in North Dallas in 1997.
ARCHIVAL RESOURCES
FUN FACTS
TEACHING IDEAS
RULES
Apply to objects where number equals 2005.100
Category
rules_operator
AND
General Description
Hailing from Dallas, Texas, Nic Nicosia's practice emerged alongside a generation of 1970s photographers for which staged photography was a tool to demonstrate and interrogate the constructed nature of photographic "truth." Nicosia's staged photographs focus on the conservative middle-class domesticity of the Dallas suburbs as the subject, questioning the mythos of a manicured, suburban American dream and exposing moments of violence, humor, and perversion. In the Real Pictures series, Nicosia turned to black and white film to create a sense of photojournalistic documentation, eliminating color from his photographs to destroy the fantasy.
In Real Pictures #11, three children stand with their backs to us, having just set flame to a sapling, its branches ablaze in the moments before collapse. The middle child looks back over her shoulder, eyes wide with what the fear, guilt, mesmerization, and delight of a child who has just discovered the power of fire. The dramatic and psychologically charged photograph sits intriguingly and uncomfortably in the space between violence and play, childhood and adolescence, innocent and deviance, reality and artifice.
Adapted from
Anna Katherine Brodbeck, ed., TWO X TWO X TWENTY: Two Decades Supporting Contemporary Art at the Dallas Museum of Art (Dallas: Dallas Museum of Art), 2018, 89.
Fun Facts
Archival Resources
Web Resources
Notes
updated provenance and geo x refs
added general description as a text entry
Catalogue essays
Artist/designers
Cultures
Geography
Process/materials
Historical periods
Individuals
Subject terms
RELATED OBJECTS
PROVENANCE
Until 2005: Dunn and Brown Contemporary, Dallas, TX [1]
From 2005: Dallas Museum of Art, purchased from above
[1] See copy of check #12208 in Collections Records Object File 2005.100
AUDIO ASSETS
VIDEO ASSETS
rules
Apply To
Objects
number
Equals
2005.100
source file
object_notes_2_a-0226.xml.nores