The Selected

Before you - an album of Lithuanian art, differing in its content to the traditional. We are used to leafing through albums as representational kaleidoscopes of visual artworks; however, this one is different. Its pages contain not art, but selected portraits of those who create the art that fills and provides context to the national cultural field.

Lilija Valatkienė, the author of the album and exhibition "The selected", looks at the field of culture in her own distinctive way. As a photographer, she actualizes the image of the artist, highlights specific character traits of the exemplar, the reflection of the inner-self in their faces, and in each, looks for unique nature. In these photographs, for L. Valatkienė, art is as important as it is connected with the artist – his/her personality, character and manner. A work of art reveals layers of the creator's subconscious, and each work can be interpreted through the prism of the creator and its contextuality. However, the author often hides behind the work. At least they can hide, but - can you truly hide behind your face? L. Valatkienė believes that an unacted, natural expression is the most direct result of the personality of the person being portrayed. Therefore, with her photography, she tries to reveal psychological features in the artist's portrait.

Artists who don't like to talk like to say that "the work speaks for itself". However, the interpretation and perception of today's art is impossible without contextuality, without the presence or absence of the circumstances in which the work of art becomes and exists. Using modern media, L. Valatkienė unfolds and expands the viewer's field of vision, creates conditions to see the "other sides of the image", i.e. to look where the author is covered by the images created. With this project, the photographer invites you to get to know the essential mediator between the work of art and the viewer, with what often remains "behind the frame". Paradoxically, in this case, L. Valatkienė herself remains "on the other side of the portraits", which become research material to reveal her own personality.

The author dedicates "The selected" project to dates significant to Lithuanian art, - to commemorate the establishment in 1907 of the Lithuanian Art Society and the first art exhibition organized by them. In the album, there are no direct references to the establishment of this centre of culture during the period of tsarist Russian occupation, nor are there allusions to M. K. Čiurlionis, A. Žmuidzinavičiai, J. Vienožinskis or P. Rimša... The author of the project questions the very fact, appeals to the origins of the formation of Lithuanian art. In other words, it is a form of dedication to the past, the continuity of which crystalises current culture, reflecting the background of Lithuanian artists creating today.

L. Valatkienė's album presents nearly a hundred portrait photos of subjectively selected artists, art critics and other representatives of the cultural field. Each portrait has its own mood, each personality is presented from a different angle - not so much in form, but in terms of narrative. Portraits tell different stories, evoke different impulses. Surnames and short observations, credos or slogans are added to the photos, making each photo even more personal. No album art specific metrics or additional factual information. The gaze of the viewer meets only the person being portrayed, who often has no idea at the moment of capture - that he is being watched by "another", through the eye of a photo lens. Later, the portraits are combined into segmented-collages, and the works of the authors-presented are turned into "puzzles". Puzzles appear as a kind of game. You can assemble this mosaic and thus educate and teach, but you can also see the author's conscious or unconscious manipulation of roles - as if the viewer is already "directing the image" from the available pieces of the mosaic, creating a topographical art map. This also happens in the direct perception of a work of art - the visuality and philosophical thought of the work acquires meaning only for the viewer when picking up the visible puzzle segment-by-segment, by experiencing and perceiving the work.

The portraits of the artists presented in the album are very eloquent. L. Valatkienė akin a hunter, "hunts" "her chosen ones" with a camera in various situations, environments, spaces. The portraits are selected and assembled in an evocative way, and the images composed side by side in puzzles create a subjectively perceived visual screen. Looking at the portraits, you start to guess what the artist portrayed was thinking at that moment, what he was broadcasting. However, it is the same with the experience of a work of art - we see it in different circumstances, we experience its visuality in different ways - let alone its philosophical weight! And this once again substantiates the subjectivity of image perception, and L. Valatkienė does not hide this most important factor both in the perception of art and in the composition of the content of this album.

The dominant concept in "The selected" seems to inflect membership of an exclusive caste. However, as the author herself says, the portraits are the result of the photographer's long-term observations of the environment, her chosen "images". When looking at art and culture per se, we tend to see many different areas and types of art broadcast in various forms. But do we always know who is behind that artwork. What personality created one or another work? With this project, L. Valatkienė tries to bring the public closer to "art" as a phenomenon, to introduce the viewer to the personalities who create art. By choosing the format of fixation in a concentrated album, the author does not exhibit images of artworks, but the authors themselves, i.e. the origin of that art. Radically speaking, in this project Lithuanian artists themselves become the exhibits.

Thus, in this era of multifaceted mediated worldview, Lilija Valatkienė creates a kind of "mock book" of the genre of psychological portraiture, thereby questioning the semantic meanings of the image and broadcasting the symbolism of the artist as a "living picture" that says more with its expression than it can convey in the work.

Art critic Evelina Januškaitė (2017).

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