ARCHEOLOGY IN REVERSE
Early California Landscapes 1974–1979
FOR WAGNER, COMING OF AGE AS AN ARTIST IN CALIFORNIA MEANT FACING THE OVER-
whelming history of Western landscape photography. Interested in the landscape of her own time, she deviated from this traditional path, focusing instead on the tangible forces of change: the developing urban sprawl as it branched into, over, and through the land. Focusing on the formal qualities of the overlooked and the banal, Wagner drew upon the expressions of modulated light that abstract and inform space, opening these otherwise mundane views into a cause for reverie and contemplation.
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Salt Pile I, Hayward, CA
1979 Gelatin silver print 12.25 Ă— 17 in 23
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Marin Catholic High School
1976 Gelatin silver print 7.5 Ă— 11 in
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ARCHEOLOGY IN REVERSE
Moscone Site 1978–1981
CONSTRUCTION ON THE MOSCONE CENTER BEGAN IN 1978 AT THE SOUTHERN EDGE OF
San Francisco’s downtown border. Creating a cultural beacon in the industrial neighborhood of South of Market presented an opportunity to consider the shifting boundaries of public space. Photographing the development of the site in hyper-real clarity began an interest in future ruins, or archaeology in reverse. Wagner’s interest in the interstitial poetry of the photograph and what one can learn from the built environment is made clear in Moscone Site.
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Arch Construction IV
1981 Gelatin silver print 17.5 Ă— 22 in
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Construction Northeastern Wall
1980 Gelatin silver print 17.5 Ă— 22 in
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ARCHEOLOGY IN REVERSE
1275 Minnesota Street Project 2015–2016
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FOLLOWING LINES OF CULTURAL TRANSFORMATION, WAGNER WAS INVITED TO DO
encompassing galleries, artist studios, and related nonprofits. While in
some work in May 2015 by the founders of Minnesota Street Project in
residence, Wagner spent time renegotiating the materials and sites of
the industrial Dogpatch neighborhood of San Francisco. In spending
construction. 1275 Minnesota Street followed epistemological questions of
time amid the construction sites, she found opportunities to photograph
the photograph: What is a fabrication for the lens? What is a found object?
and make ephemeral sculptures in the former warehouse space dur-
Sawhorses, window frames, spray painted guides—even these act as build-
ing its renovation into a contemporary, community focused arts venue
ing blocks towards our understanding of archaeological human history.
1275 Minnesota Street I
2015 Archival pigment print 30 Ă— 40 in
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1275 Minnesota Street II
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2015 Diptych Archival pigment prints 43 Ă— 114.5 in
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INVESTIGATION OF PLACE
Louisiana World Exposition 1984
INVITED TO THE LOUISIANA WORLD EXPOSITION IN 1984, WAGNER PHOTOGRAPHED
the intimate details of a space built for escape from one’s surroundings
synchronized swimmers without thinking about the city outside. Focusing
into an exploration of the ephemeral comings together of people. This
on columns, wire-framed alligators, food stands, lighting rigs, and all of
methodical approach to image making allowed for a slowed vision that
the temporary aspects of the exposition, Wagner revealed the curious arti-
scanned the perimeters and questioned how the environment came to be.
ďŹ ce of ephemeral spectacle.
The behind moments and theatrics of the exposition became as important
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as the experience of letting loose inhibitions in order to view the dance of
Vista from Monorail, Wonderwall, Louisiana World Exposition, New Orleans, LA
1984 Gelatin silver print 17.5 Ă— 22 in
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Louisiana Exhibit Under Construction, Louisiana World Exposition, New Orleans, LA
1984 Gelatin silver print 17.5 Ă— 22 in
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INVESTIGATION OF PLACE
Realism and Illusion Catherine Wagner Photographs the Disney Theme Parks 1995
THE ARCHITECTURE OF REASSURANCE WAS A PROJECT MADE IN COLLABORATION
with the Canadian Centre for Architecture (CCA). Initially commissioned
ing a quiet critique through the juxtaposition of escapist environments
by CCA to work with the archives of all four international Disney sites,
with the outside world. Miniature constructed landscapes bristle against
Wagner’s work grew to encompass a larger series of photographic percep-
backgrounds of real traffic and pollution, while cartoonish interiors
tual shifts that focused on complicating the narrative of assurance built
become claustrophobic due to the attening of the picture plane.
into the very structures of Disneyland. Where architecture was used to
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provide comfort through whimsy and fantasy, Wagner focused on unveil-
Untitled
1995 Chromogenic print 17.33 Ă— 22 in
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Autopia; Tomorrowland, Disneyland, Anaheim, CA
1995 Chromogenic print 17.33 Ă— 22 in
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INVESTIGATION OF PLACE
American Classroom 1983–1987
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AFTER RECEIVING A GUGGENHEIM FELLOWSHIP IN 1987, WAGNER FOCUSED HER ATTEN-
intervention. In science classrooms, apple skins are labeled “pricked” or
tion on various educational institutions of the United States. Casting a
“unpricked” so students may observe their preservation or decay. A desk
broad net, she traveled between states to find institutions of learning rang-
is scrawled with unknowable years of marks and carvings. And on a
ing from primary schools to military bases, police academies to private
chalkboard in one classroom the traces of a student are seen: large letters
and public universities. These images evoke philosophical inquiry into
shout with all their might an equally frustrating and exciting catalyst of
what we teach, how we learn, and what kinds of spaces are erected around
inquisition, declaring “I DON’T KNOW!” This not-knowing began a lifelong,
what kinds of information. Though devoid of people, traces allude to their
fundamental interest in the transference of knowledge in Wagner’s work.
Moss Landing Elementary School, Seventh and Eighth Grade Science Classroom, Moss Landing, California
1984 Gelatin silver print 17.5 × 22 in
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Defense Foreign Language Institute, Language Laboratory, Monterey, California
1983 Gelatin silver print 17.5 Ă— 22 in
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INVESTIGATION OF PLACE
Home and Other Stories 1989–1992
MOVING INTO THE HOME PROVIDED A NEWLY INTIMATE CONTEXT FOR WAGNER’S
the figurines, the groceries we buy—point to a private identity made public
work. Using the camera to capture what could be considered evidential
through the choice to let others in. Here, Wagner offers vignettes by pull-
material of a person’s life, Home and Other Stories crafted a catalogue of
ing back the veil of anonymity built behind our walls. The home as a model
existence. Our homes become our refuge, our sanctuary, and in them we
to explore issues revolving around family, domesticity, isolation, privacy,
formulate our own versions of shrines. Displaying many of the images
comfort and refuge, as well as recurring themes of memory are all part of
from the series as triptychs, a narrative of personhood is explored between
this venture.
objects. What we choose to surround ourselves with—the tables and chairs,
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Christine T., San Francisco, CA
1990 Single panel of triptych Gelatin silver print 14.25 Ă— 18.25 in 131
Christine T., San Francisco, CA
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1990 Triptych Gelatin silver prints 14.25 Ă— 54.75 in
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RE-CLASSIFYING HISTORY
Museum Pieces 1999
THE MUSEUM-CUM-ARCHIVE BECOMES THE SUBJECT IN MUSEUM PIECES. ALWAYS
Transforming what is obvious to the person who uses it for their work into
interested in the tools that we craft in order to catalogue our surround-
a series of lines, colors, and shapes serve to abstract their meaning and
ings, Wagner turned her eye to the ways in which museum handlers and
strip them to their base elements. Similarly, the ledgers become artifacts
archivists systematize their work. By isolating these tools and ledgers,
whose use lies in code, lost to the memory of their creator. Highlighting
the creative gesture and ideals of museum viewership are upended. What
what would otherwise remain unseen, Wagner offers new contexts of
may be a device for holding still fragile objects becomes a quixotic shape.
understanding for institutional structures of support.
Dozens of tools hang in space with illegible tags draped down their spines.
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Untitled II
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1999 Chromogenic print 40 Ă— 30 in
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Ship II
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1999 Chromogenic print 40 × 70 in
RE-CLASSIFYING HISTORY
Re-Classifying History 2004–2005
TO INAUGURATE THE OPENING OF THE REMODELED DE YOUNG MUSEUM BY HERZOG
and de Meuron, Wagner was asked to create a body of work from the col-
unto themselves waiting to be unveiled. Even chairs by famous designers
lection that remained in storage during construction. Isolating her sub-
or craftsmen that have risen to the level of being institutionally preserved
jects in the midst of a black expanse, she created tableaux that subvert
invoke questions of tiered society when arranged in conversation with one
traditional notions of history. By maintaining the structures of support
another. Some of our most basic tenets rise to the fore when a museum’s
built around statuary for shipment and containment she challenges the
collection is examined from an unusual angle.
creation of a canonical history through her use of fictive narrative. Figures
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of antiquity shed their patina of accepted truth and become objects, myths
Columbus, Penelope, Delilah
2005 Lambda print 49.5 Ă— 68 in
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Four Perspectives on Christopher Columbus
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2005 Lambda print 49.5 Ă— 100 in
RE-CLASSIFYING HISTORY
Rome Works 2013–2014
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WHILE SPENDING A YEAR AT THE AMERICAN ACADEMY IN ROME AS A ROME PRIZE FEL-
depicted by name—women were given generic titles based on their sex.
low from 2013 –2014, Wagner furthered her excavation of Western history
Interventions in the systems of display, repair, or transportation also
through the institutions of Italy. At times built from grand displays of
provide reimagined contexts: A blue support structure wrapped around
nobility, and at others from the extrapolation of fragmentary remains, the
a cast of Artemis pulls her from antiquity into a contemporary sphere.
draw of ancient Rome is undeniable. Concentrating on objects in transi-
Bernini’s angel develops altogether new mystery in its boxed, preserved,
tion, new questions were asked by stripping objects and portraits of their
and secured state. In conversation with the classical, the preservation of
didactic meanings. Crops of marble busts become abstracted landscapes
Rome renegotiated through the contemporary lens offers a confluence of
of stone, but when titles are reintroduced we find that only the men were
time aligned with the most fundamental of Wagner’s questions.
Artemis/Diana
2014 Archival pigment print 37.5 Ă— 50 in
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Angel Encased (Bernini)
2014 Archival pigment print 37.5 Ă— 50 in
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NEAR ABSTRACTION
Greenhouse Abstractions 1976
ONE OF WAGNER’S FIRST PHOTOGRAPHIC DISCOVERIES CAME IN THE FORM OF A MEDI-
tation on abstraction. Focusing on the details of a greenhouse alight with the brilliant Californian sun, her lens compressed overlapping plastic sheets and netting into glowing fields of light and shadow. This early foray began an investigation into the complexities of contractive and expansive sight through the photographic lens.
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Greenhouse Abstractions I
1976 Gelatin silver print 6.5 Ă— 9.75 in
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Greenhouse Abstractions II
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1976 Gelatin silver print 6.5 Ă— 9.75 in
Greenhouse Abstractions IV
1976 Gelatin silver print 6.5 Ă— 9.75 in
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NEAR ABSTRACTION
Flux Density 2005
PRESENTED WITH A NEW OPPORTUNITY IN 2005 TO WORK WITHIN THE CONFLUENCE
of art and science, Wagner created a 35 -foot-long light box that blurred the lines of representation and abstraction. While Flux Density is composed of images from the simplest phenomenon—bubbles of air rising up through carbonated liquid—curiosity and wonder are invoked through the tension between clarity and abstraction. Using translucent layers to modulate light as it passes through the liquid, fields of space are collapsed into a singular visual plane creating a sense of the infinite.
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Flux Density I
2003 Archival pigment print 30 Ă— 40 in 207
Flux Density II
208 2003 Archival pigment print 30 Ă— 40 in
Flux Density III
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2003 Archival pigment print 30 Ă— 40 in
NEAR ABSTRACTION
Cross Sections 1998–2001
IN 2000 WAGNER WAS AWARDED AN INAUGURAL FELLOWSHIP FROM THE SAN JOSE
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the differences of image capture from a molecular perspective. Whereas
Museum of Art for an artist to work with technology. Wagner chose to
cameras typically describe the world from its external lines and curves,
work with imaging devices, such as a magnetic resonance image (MRI)
these imaging machines craft their subjects from the inside out compiling
machine and scanning electron microscope (SEM), in order to process
stitched-together cross sections. As scientific imagery grew into cultural
organic materials in a way that upends traditional notions of photography.
vernacular, Wagner initiated a philosophical exploration into the inter-
This alternative approach questions both our expected ways of seeing and
change of art, science, and the visual language of society.
Pomegranate Wall
2001 Lambda Duratrans and ten free-standing curved arc lightboxes 96 × 480 in
San Jose Museum of Art 2001
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214 Pomegranate Wall
2001 Detail of single panel Lambda Duratrans 96 Ă— 48 in
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ART & SCIENCE: INVESTIGATING MATTER
Art & Science: Investigating Matter 1993–1995
TRAVELING THE UNITED STATES WORKING ON AMERICAN CLASSROOM SPARKED
clear, perspiring jug with letters written on tape that warn, “Definitely not
Wagner’s interest in the transfer and creation of knowledge. She turned
sterile.” -86° F freezers, opened and covered in ice, contain specimens from
her attention to creating Art & Science: Investigating Matter after reading
some of the most concerning afflictions from HIV to breast cancer and
about the Human Genome Project. The methods and effects of scientific
Alzheimer’s. Beakers, fossils, soil, tubes, wires, cabinets: the architecture
research became her tools for this project, and with them she furthered
of scientific research becomes a model for understanding who we are and
early thoughts on the anthropological nature of laboratory study. The
who we will become.
sterile research environment contains oddities that refute its nature: A
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Definitely Not Sterile
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1995 Gelatin silver print 40 Ă— 30 in
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Drosophila Morgue
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1994 Gelatin silver print 24 Ă— 20 in
ART & SCIENCE: INVESTIGATING MATTER
History of Science 2003
TURNING HER ATTENTION BACK TOWARDS THE CREATION AND TRANSFER OF KNOWL-
an accelerated timeline wherein the rate of visual growth and representa-
edge, Wagner sought out tools that were used in the education of scientific
tion cannot match the precision of scientific discovery. These images work
material. Finding cabinets of chemical models and magnified sculptures
to bridge the gap between an abstracted public consciousness of the his-
of demonstrative, observable compounds, she explored the anachronism
tory of science and the rapidity of change intrinsic in its pursuit.
inherent in educational evolution. The cutting edge becomes the archaic in
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Unicorn Center for Art
Beijing, China 2016 Photograph by Phil Bond
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History of Science II
252 2003 Chromogenic print 60 Ă— 43 in
History of Science III
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2003 Chromogenic print 60 Ă— 43 in
ART & SCIENCE: INVESTIGATING MATTER
Frankenstein 2003
FRANKENSTEIN’S MONSTER WAS CREATED BY A HUMAN YET BORN INTO A WORLD
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electron accelerators and related experiments in high-energy physics and
that unequivocally rejected him. This fantastical beast, thrust into a suf-
synchrotron radiation research. Anthropomorphic in appearance, these
focating reality without will or agency, continually mirrors our own issues
foil-wrapped machines take on monstrous, sympathetic definition when
of social alienation. As Mary Shelley’s novel entered its second century,
isolated from their functional context. As observed by David Bonetti
Wagner examined this paradox of acceptance and rejection through a con-
when considering the ideas brought forth by both Wagner and Shelley,
temporary lens. Finding a visual counterpart in the scientific labs of the
“Frankenstein endures not only because of its infamous horrors, but for the
Stanford Linear Accelerator, Wagner photographed ultra-high vacuum
richness of the ideas it asks us to confront: human accountability, social
chambers used in designing, construction, and operating state-of-the-art
alienation, and the nature of life itself.”
Frankenstein V
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2003 Archival pigment print 60 Ă— 48 in
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Frankenstein IV
2003 Archival pigment print 48 Ă— 60 in 263
RECONSIDERING THE ARCHIVE
A Narrative History of the Lightbulb 2006
A NARRATIVE HISTORY OF THE LIGHTBULB FOCUSES ON THE INVENTION AND HISTORY
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fabricated for the express purpose of being photographed, fantastical met-
of the lightbulb as a cultural indicator. This series, created while working
aphors arise out of visual relationships. By subverting our societal connec-
on-site in the collection warehouses of the Baltimore Museum of Industry,
tions to a ubiquitous object, narrative landscapes form through Wagner’s
embodies Wagner’s interest in recontextualizing the function of an archive.
selection and sociological categorization. While some groupings are based
In a temporary studio constructed on site, Wagner uncovered thousands
on scientific indexes, such as “The Lamps of 1900” or “Early Tungsten,”
of bulbs wrapped in newspaper, stored in shoeboxes. Through sculptural
others, such as “Utopia,” reference architectural history and the theoreti-
still lifes created from thematic groupings of lightbulbs that have been
cal notions of perfection.
Energy Efficient Experiment
2006 Lambda print 15 Ă— 24.25 in
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Utopia
2006 Lambda print 26.6 Ă— 62.9 in
RECONSIDERING THE ARCHIVE
Reparations 2008
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ONE CONSTANT RUNS THROUGH TRAGEDY, BE IT GLOBAL OR PERSONAL: THE NEED TO
matrices of modern devices made of plastics and metals. Bygone prosthet-
heal. Sparked by omnipresent images of war and its machinations that
ics for arms and legs become signals of rapid change and technological
drive our culture, Wagner sought out reparative devices that have been
decay, yet the powerful sentiment of rehabilitation remains. Working in
created over the decades. Radical developments in medical structures
concert these corporeal traces speak of larger metaphors of change. In
and the passage of time are emphasized in this project; individual images
Reparations we ďŹ nd the remarkable resilience of both our bodies and our
of crude wooden splints used to bind a broken hand give way to colorful
connected society.
Left Leg
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2008 LightJet print 40 × 30 in
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Metal Elbow
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2008 Pigment print 20 × 16 in
RECONSIDERING THE ARCHIVE
trans/literate 2012–2013
TRANS/LITERATE CONTINUES WAGNER’S INVESTIGATION OF CULTURAL ARCHIVES THAT
use unique systems to transfer knowledge. Each book is broken into macro-
alter the books’ physical dimensionality yet create a sculptural illusion
and micro-abstractions that illuminate the fetishized, tactile, and sensual
through the punched relief. To bring back the loss of the tactile, the title of
experience imbued into the very nature of the object. Viewed at a distance,
each book was punched in braille text, superimposed yet married with its
the diptychs are color fields, revealing only the color of the cover and
printed counterpart.
the white page of an open book printed in braille, which has remained a
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constant, unchanged language since its invention in 1834. The photographs
The Stranger, Albert Camus
2012 Diptych Archival pigment prints with braille 21.75 Ă— 49.13 in
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Beloved, Toni Morrison
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2012 Diptych Archival pigment prints with braille 21.75 Ă— 49.13 in
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