INSTITUTE Stories

INSTITUTE for Artist Management


BREACH // Richard Mosse

Summary: These extraordinary images show the imperial palaces of Saddam Hussein converted into temporary housing for the U.S military. Vast, self-indulgent halls of columned marble and extravagant chandeliers, surrounded by pools, walls, moats, and, beyond that, empty desert, suddenly look more like college dormitories. Weight sets, flags, partition walls, sofas, basketball hoops, and even posters of bikini'd women have been imported to fill Saddam's spatial residuum. The effect is oddly decorative, as if someone has simply moved in for a long weekend, unpacking an assortment of mundane possessions. The effect is like an ironic form of camouflage, making the perilously foreign seem all the more familiar and habitable—a kind of military twist on postmodern interior design.

IAM_00021783

IAM_00021785 IAM_00021790

Of course, then you notice, in the corner of the image, a stray pair of combat boots or an abandoned barbecue or a machine gun leaned up against a marble wall partially shattered by recent bomb damage—amidst the dust of collapsed ceilings and ruined tiles—and this architecture, and the people who now go to sleep there every night, suddenly takes on a whole new, tragic narrative. Text by Geoff Manaugh, BLDG BLOG

IAM_00021881 IAM_00021786
IAM_00021900

Links

Entire set in the archive
Richard Mosse's Bio
Richard Mosse's Features
Richard Mosse in the News
INSTITUTE FeaturesIf you are interested in this feature or to commission New York based Richard please do not hesitate to contact Matt Shonfeld - matt@instituteartistmanagement.com Tel: +44 1225-462-968

Click to view in a browser.