Dutch photographer Erwin Olaf’s first exhibition in Korea features his latest series ‘The Keyhole’ and ‘Dawn & Dusk’
Whether through a window or through Facebook, everyone has his share of experiences peeking into others’ lives.
Dutch photographer Erwin Olaf captured a boy sitting on a table and peering through a keyhole to portray the urge to peek and the curious state of the mind.
The photo is part of his latest “The Keyhole” series completed in 2011. Subjects in the series are all turned away from the camera as if they are looking at something secretly.
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“The Keyhole” installation. (Erwin Olaf/Gallery Kong) |
The award-winning photographer, who enjoyed a successful career as a commercial photographer, also made a successful debut in fine art photography with his “Chessmen” series in 1988.
“It’s rare for a commercial photographer to succeed in fine art photography. But Olaf keeps in mind how to appeal to the public from his experience as a commercial photographer and creates his own distinctive style,” said Hong So-hee, the curator of Gallery Kong which is holding Olaf’s first solo exhibition in Korea.
Olaf’s advertising campaigns for Diesel Jeans and Heineken won him the Silver Lion award at the Cannes Lions Festival for Advertising. He recently headed the fashion brand Bottega Veneta’s 2012-13 fall and winter ad campaign.
In “The Keyhole” series, Olaf presents an installation, photographs and films all at the same time to maximize the viewing experience and to convey his message effectively.
The installation lets viewers engage in an act of voyeurism. Viewers can sit on a chair, wear headphones and look through a keyhole.
They start to feel as if they’re spying on other people’s daily lives, watching scenes in which a middle-aged man is sitting on a bed or a mother is cuddling her son. The mumbling voice heard on the headphones intensifies the experience.
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Dutch photographer Erwin Olaf films during a photo shoot. (Erwin Olaf/Gallery Kong) |
“Olaf is inviting the viewer to become a voyeur by suggesting the one-way relationship,” said Hong. “It also portrays the invasion of privacy on the Internet that people commit whether they intend to or not.”
“Olaf also said he intended to share his experience as a photographer who always spies on other people through his viewfinder,” said Hong. Olaf briefly visited Korea when the exhibition opened on Sep. 27 and held a lecture for university students at Hongik University.
Olaf also introduces a beautiful photography series “Dawn and Dusk” released in 2009 and 2010.
He shot two different photos which have the same setting, but in different colors -― “Dusk” in shades of black and “Dawn” filled with white. Women in each of the photos sit expressionless, giving off an awkward atmosphere in a beautifully decorated room and costumes.
“Olaf tried to talk about the social problems people thought were solved but still remain today by using the 19th-century-style setting and clothes,” said Hong. “He explores social issues and taboos through highly stylized images, which makes him a distinguished photographer,” Hong added.
The exhibition runs through Oct. 21 at Gallery Kong in Samcheong-dong, Seoul.
For more information, visit www.gallerykong.com or call (02) 738-7776.
By Lee Woo-young (
wylee@heraldcorp.com)