Foto Relevance present Margeaux Walter for "Believe Me," the Brooklyn-based artist’s second exhibition at the gallery.
Engaged with a burgeoning world of surveillance cameras, drones, social media, smart phones, and facial recognition software, "Believe Me" — titled after a phrase frequently deployed by President Trump — documents staged, site-specific installations in the environment. Resembling Google Earth images, Walter’s aerial-perspective works toe the line between what is real and what is constructed and sensationalized, echoing a similar dissonance found in our current political and social landscape.
Following the opening reception, the exhibit will be on display until January 17, 2020.
Foto Relevance present Margeaux Walter for "Believe Me," the Brooklyn-based artist’s second exhibition at the gallery.
Engaged with a burgeoning world of surveillance cameras, drones, social media, smart phones, and facial recognition software, "Believe Me" — titled after a phrase frequently deployed by President Trump — documents staged, site-specific installations in the environment. Resembling Google Earth images, Walter’s aerial-perspective works toe the line between what is real and what is constructed and sensationalized, echoing a similar dissonance found in our current political and social landscape.
Following the opening reception, the exhibit will be on display until January 17, 2020.
Foto Relevance present Margeaux Walter for "Believe Me," the Brooklyn-based artist’s second exhibition at the gallery.
Engaged with a burgeoning world of surveillance cameras, drones, social media, smart phones, and facial recognition software, "Believe Me" — titled after a phrase frequently deployed by President Trump — documents staged, site-specific installations in the environment. Resembling Google Earth images, Walter’s aerial-perspective works toe the line between what is real and what is constructed and sensationalized, echoing a similar dissonance found in our current political and social landscape.
Following the opening reception, the exhibit will be on display until January 17, 2020.