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August 19, 2017

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Turning everyday life into art

AT first sight, Daniel Lee Postaer appears more like a movie star than a photographer. Clad in a light blue linen shirt, Postaer is a muscular figure with good looks to match.

The man seemed a bit uncomfortable when surrounded with guests and visitors on the opening day of his exhibition in Shanghai last weekend. But when it came to his art, he immediately became passionate and lively.

Postaer’s solo exhibition — “Motherland” — features 33 works from his namesake series at the Longmen Art Project Shanghai (B1, 338 Nanjing Rd W.). It is running until September 16.

Daunting works, from distance, might perplex viewers as to whether they are real photos or oil paintings due to their tableau, texture and colors.

“The balance in colors and intricate details distinguish his photos from others,” comments Gu Chenlin, art director of Shanghai Photographers Association.

Born in Chicago in 1978 and raised in Los Angeles, Postaer inherited his deep fascination for China through his Shanghainese mother. Perhaps that’s why his Shanghai exhibition is titled “Motherland.”

A graduate of the San Francisco Art Institute, Postaer is keen to capture and narrate the truth and beauty hidden within everyday moments.

“The pictures I take as an observer, a modern-day flaneur with a camera, only begin to make sense of all this change,” he says, seriously. “I do believe if you look consistently and enough, daily life can become theatrical.”

His large-format photographic works come with a touch of humor.

“The people moving through the backdrop often remain unknown to me, some kind of fiction, and I do prefer it that way,” he says. “Because I will always wonder who they are, what they are doing, what they are thinking or feeling amidst the larger frame of our shared urban experience.”

Besides this solo exhibition, Postaer’s 12 additional representative works from his “Boomtown” series (photographs taken in San Francisco) will also be shown at Photofairs Shanghai through a curated exhibition “Insights” at the Shanghai Exhibition Center on September 8.

Q: What’s the most impressive photo you’ve ever taken?

A: The first memorable picture I made was in New York. I was running late to the office and took a taxi crosstown to work. On the car radio was Howard Stern and he said the World Trade Center got hit by an airplane. I thought he was joking. When I got to the office, a few of my colleagues were around the TV watching the news in shock. I grabbed one of the first generation Sony digital cameras and ran up to the Chelsea office rooftop.

The second tower was standing alone. In a sense, making that picture behind a viewfinder gave me some comfort, or control, behind what was happening which was utterly uncontrollable.

Q: Why have you been so fascinated with photography and chose it as your major at the university?

A: Photography, for me and many others, has been a way to both slow things down and organize our chaotic world. There’s a theatricality to the everyday existence if you look for it.

The urban moment is fiercely short-lived. Photographs intrinsically pause time like no other medium. A photographic print of a fleeting moment has the potential to live on beyond my own, our own, existence. I feel both power and relief in that.

I’m biased, but the San Francisco Art Institute’s photography program is one of the best in the world.

Ansel Adams started our “fine art” photography program in 1946. I was lucky to have studied under several guiding lights in this medium. And I was able to make pictures against the backdrop of San Francisco — a booming and beguiling urban environment.

Q: At a certain distance, the visual effects of your photos appear like canvas, how do you achieve that? Did you do a lot of processing with a computer?

A: One of my beliefs is that a photograph is not a photograph until it exists in print. An integral side of my studio practice is obsessive printing. I’m constantly making test strips, on different papers, to maximize the photograph. My core editing goal is to mimic how the real world looks — from my eyes — into the life of a print.

Some techniques I use are quite similar to traditional burning/dodging dark-room philosophies. I’m interested in the hyper-now — this time that we collectively live in. I hope to bring that high-definition, hyper-real effect to the surface through ink on paper.

Q: One of your impressive photos features different scenes in an office building in Shanghai. Was it originally like that or you collaged different photos afterward?

A: All of my photographic prints are single exposures of the world. I have never collaged or combined pictures.  Part of the joy of picture-making for me is the challenge of controlling one frame of the real world — through only one exposure.

Perhaps there’s an element of sport in that. That one micro-moment in time is never coming back, and I intend to stay true to that moment through my practice.

Q: You have stayed in Shanghai for more than a decade. What does this city attract you?

A: My mother, Lillian Lee, was born in Shanghai and left when she was 3 years old for Hong Kong. She never returned. Because of that, I grew up with wonder of what her life, or my life, would have been like if she stayed.

Shanghai is half of my blood. My curiosity continues to try to understand this land my grandparents fled and I hope that is manifested through my pictures.

Q: Can you use three words to describe Shanghai?

A: Seductive, restless and sublime.

Q: As the heir of a big group, you could have easily stepped into the business empire, but you chose a more difficult way to establish your career in art. Did your parents support your choice at the beginning?

A: I was never an “heir” (to my father’s advertising business) because my father didn’t believe in nepotism. He wanted me to find my own way. So my older brothers and I never worked for him.

After I left my China-based marketing and entertainment firm, I took some time to figure out what was next — and ultimately decided to go to pursue a master of fine arts.

My parents have been steadfastly and emotionally supportive through the oft insecure career of art. I’m incredibly fortunate and indebted to them for that.

Q: Who is your favorite photographer?

A: If I had to name a favorite, which is incredibly hard to do, it would be Joel Sternfeld. His body-of-work, “American Prospects,” remains a beacon for me in this medium.

Sternfeld’s photographs are poetic, often peculiar, technically immaculate and abundant with a strange kind of beauty from the natural world.  Through that, he lyrically records the larger moment in time (1980s America) — without didactically spoon-feeding us specific answers.

Q: As a professional photographer, what is your biggest challenge?

A: As a solo artist, I am largely alone in this pursuit. That presents both freedom ­— which I profoundly crave — and isolation.

Managing those feelings of isolation along this picture-making path is the biggest challenge for me.




 

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