Phil Hill: Rehabilitation Client no.3, 2023

£90£120

From Rehabilitation Client

12×10 inch
Darkroom c-type print
Time-limited edition
[Available until 1 January 2024]
Accompanied a signed certificate of authenticity from the gallery and by signed artist label.

Shipping worldwide
For Christmas deliveries order by 16 December, 2022

Enquiries: tom@opendoors.gallery

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Description

OD Photo Prize 2023 | Shortlisted Artist

Phil Hill [b. 1983] is a photographic artist, writer, and researcher based in the UK whose practice is concerned with narrative interpretation, family, and memory. Phil aims to examine these concepts by also drawing attention to processes of photography and its qualities, questioning the way we place value on them. Phil’s focus is on long-term socially engaged projects, writing, and teaching. Phil’s project ‘Unreliable Narrator’ considers the stories we tell each other, to ourselves, and how this is constructed using the personal and family archive.


Artist Statement | “The Farm security Administration (FSA) Photo File was created at a point in time where photography ‘was emerging fast as mass tool of mass communication’ (Tagg, 1988, p. 181). We are at that point again; where technology will create a phase shift in the way that we communicate and consume mass media, calling into question ideas of ‘truth.’

The FSA project can be compared to the rapid arrival of Artificial Intelligence (AI). As John Tagg notes: ‘the “truth” of these individual [FSA] photographs may be said to be a function of several intersecting discourses: that of government departments, that of journalism, more especially documentarism, and that of aesthetics […] a composite picture of rural America in the late 1930s and early 1940s, conceived by apparently one man but called into being, administered and employed by specific government agencies’ (1988, p. 173).

FSA was a heavily subjective documentary project, strictly controlled by its editor Roy Stryker who ‘Killed’ negatives if they did not suit the narrative, with a hole punch.

I used AI to ‘restore’ the photograph, creating a series of ‘generations’ that retouch the image drawing from a ‘composite’ of what the AI believes the photograph should look like based on my input. Each generation is imposed on the archive image subtly, and others not so subtle but each different from the next.

Through my use of AI, I highlight the ways in which this technology can be both a tool for creativity and a potential threat to authenticity in photography. This work speaks to larger issues around representation, manipulation, and the ethics of image-making in the 21st century. As we continue to grapple with the impact of technology on our lives and our art, this series is part of a conversation in new ways of thinking about the power of photography to shape our perceptions of reality.” — Phil Hill

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All print enquiries:
tom@opendoors.gallery
+44 (0)7769922824

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Additional information

Weight 1 kg
Dimensions 35 × 25 × 4 cm
Choose your print option

12×10" print, 12×10" print [FRAMED]

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