Hargrave, Alice
American, b. 1962
The images in Found Stone/Gallstone extend Hargrave's explorations of the body's internal operations and the ways they are represented visually. Hargrave began collecting rocks as a child. As an adult, she began to consider the body’s ability to create rocks of its own, in the form of gallstones. She was also struck by how indistinguishable the body's gallstones are from rocks of geologic origins, a natural ambiguity that is underlined in her photographs. When she exhibited this work, Hargrave presented 25 gallstones intermingled with rocks from her childhood collection, creating an arrangement like a rock garden.
The series Home (movies) address a different set of concerns while still engaging with the nature of different visual imaging technologies. To create these works, Hargrave digitally captures frames from her family’s 8mm vacation films that had been transferred to video. In subjecting her chosen clips to several acts of translation—from film to video, then from video to a computer monitor, and finally from screen capture to a tangible pigment print—she creates a sense of temporal and psychological distance between the original scene and its final manifestation. The successive process of mediating these images, with a gradual loss in clarity, suggests the effects of time on memory.
Born in Chicago, Hargrave earned a BA from Tulane University, New Orleans (1984) and an MFA from University of Illinois, Chicago (1994). She has exhibited extensively in Illinois, and taught photography at Columbia College Chicago from 1994-2016.
http://alicehargrave.com/