MAGALI
NOUGARÈDE (b.1969, France) Magali Nougarède is an inspired
observer of personal details. The slightly worn thread on a grey sweater,
a crisp gold-edged insignia on the corner of a tweed lapel, soft pink flesh
radiating underneath a thin pink t-shirt, the wary gaze and steely angle
of a young girl’s chin, all these details, captured with extraordinary
precision, tell us volumes about the curious, precarious condition known
as being alive.
Born in France and now based in England, Ms. Nougarède has concentrated
on investigating residents of her new home turf. Her two most recent series’,
“Toeing the Line” and “Crossing the Line” involve the
re-viewing of the familiars of two East Sussex coastal communities through
the artist’s ‘foreigner’s’ eyes. Despite the luminescence
of the seaside light, utilized to dazzling effect in all her images, Nougarède
is not recording the picaresque. She is most concerned with the lifetime’s
worth of choices her lens is transcribing. Each image tells us specific stories
about class, gender and luck. In a particularly poignant image, two aged friends,
silhouetted against a bright blue sky, lean steadily into a hard wind. Brave
as their determined stroll seems, the image is comprised primarily of sky.
Tufts of cotton ball clouds float with unobstructed grace above the hard-working
figures below. Though the light and the colors are ball-gown beautiful, this
life does not look easy. In image after image, Nougarède offers a humanist’s
photo essay on the nature of courage, resolve, delight and difficulty; the
blessed injustice of simply being.
The artist’s work has been exhibited nationally and internationally. She
combines her art practice with occasional editorial and commercial work, commissions
and teaching. She lectures regularly on editorial photography. Her work has been
published in numerous publications including Art Review, Art in America, Photo
District News, British Journal of Photography, Fotogallery and Photoworks.
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