Fine Art Society - Contemporary Art
Fine Art Society Contemporary Art
Home
Exhibitions
Artists
News
Join Mailing List
About Us
Search
My Gallery

News


Jo Broughton: Empty Porn Sets

News
Archive

Dealers Since 1876
148 New Bond Street, London W1S 2JT
[T] +44(0)20 7629 5116
[E] art@faslondon.com
Jo Broughton:
Empty Porn Sets
16 April - 1 May 2008

Jo Broughton’s Empty Porn Sets are a typical example of circumstance and serendipity influencing an artist’s output.
She grew up in Essex “in a semi-detached house, with detached parents and disaffected siblings”. Then, at a young age, she ran away “to live with white witches”, applying through Thurrock College for work experience as a photographer’s assistant. Little did she know it was at a porn studio and the man who ran it was to become her mentor, tutor and—in effect—guardian, providing her with a place to stay, a job, training in photography and the content of this exhibition.
Jo started making these images in 2001, whilst at the Royal College of Art, funding the work and her education by employment as a cleaner at the porn studio. When all was quiet and the bodies had gone home she would photograph the aftermath of the day’s shoots. The resulting works have a stillness to them in complete contrast to the frenetic industry of which they are the traces.
These are playgrounds of cheapish fantasy which are left like historical documents to the sex act. At first they have the appearance of a show-home in questionable taste. The colours are vivid and the structure at once basic and commercial looking. Then you look again and see the clues... a bottle of lubricant, a dildo, lights at the edge of the frame, glimpses of the studio beyond. It slowly becomes apparent that these are fantasy landscapes, rude pictures without the nudity.
Jo took her environment and used it as inspiration and subject for her work.


“ This studio has been the only home I have ever known—a place of safety, sanctuary, warmth and most importantly acceptance.
“ At times I struggled with what went on in the space, about the objectification of women... I hid my association with the porn industry like a guilty secret but without it I may not have been able to realise my ambitions. To this day I cannot say I am comfortable with the porn industry, but I do now realise that there are two sides to every coin, light and dark.
“ My work always contains a documentary element. It has to be real porn sets, real Virgins (a series recently exhibited in the Haugar Museum), real Ex-Boyfriends, Girlfriends...
“ As a cleaner I saw the sets in the cold light of day and picking up and cleaning the mess, was a bit like dealing with a crime scene. Dealing with the inevitable bodily fluids made me feel my own humanity and then the vunerability of the models who had performed for the camera that day. In the end, though, I was learning my craft, trying to understand light and how to photograph really well.”




 




 


click here to view images in the show
 

Read a review of the exhibition on Kultureflash

Click here to download the exhibition PDF



adobe acrobat pdfDownload
Acrobat
Reader