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REVIEW: SARAH HOBBS
'Problems in Living' engagingly shown
by Jerry Cullum
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
March 7, 2003
Sarah Hobbs didn't go to Yale; her work just looks as if she did, rather
than the University of Georgia. The large-scale photographs by this
emerging Atlanta artist share the intelligence and incisive wit of the
theatricalized color images associated with the Yale photography program.
In other words, her stuff's funny, smart and about serious subjects. The
seven works in this show deal in an exquisitely beautiful way with
psychological topics that could be the subject of heavy-handed
picture-making. Instead, Hobbs gives us something like elaborately set up
one-liners that linger in the mind because they contain more than simple
jokiness.
Perfectionist is the easiest. An old-fashioned desk, a ball point pen next
to a neat stack of sheets of paper, and a huge pile of wadded-up balls of
the same material convey a crisply humorous allegory of a commonplace
condition. The careful placement of these few elements, and the meticulous
attention to details of light, makes an arresting and lasting work of art
out of an idea that easily could have been a glib cartoon.
The other photos in the series range from amusing to unnerving.
Indecisiveness is another formalist joke, a chair set in an alcove in which
the walls are completely papered with a rainbow of colors from paint sample
books. Obsessiveness is the flip side of that idea, a room in which the
walls have been painted with melted chocolate, with the discarded wrappers
of hundreds of chocolate bars piled on the dropcloth.
Memory Loss is a little scarier: a bedroom filled with cloudy-looking
cotton or wool in which random names and objects are enveloped, barely
visible in the engulfing murk. The remaining photographs in the series
likewise deal with characteristics ranging from Vanity to Low Self-Esteem
with varying degrees of success. All are imaginative and well-composed;
some are simply more obvious than others.
Hobbs hasn't completely hit her stride; some of these works seem a bit
forced, but the overall effect is spectacularly impressive. This is someone
from whom much more will be expected, and one hopes she can keep up the pace
without losing the lightness of touch that makes this work successful. It's
all too easy to fall prey to ponderousness, but Hobbs seems capable of
continuing to deal with potentially distressing themes in a style that makes
them palatable.
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