“Tim Walker: Wonderful Things” on view at the Getty
by Bondo Wyszpolski
The title of this splashy and colorful exhibition was taken from the diary of Howard Carter, the archeologist who in 1922 uncovered the tomb of the 18th Dynasty Pharaoh Tutankhamun. Asked what he was seeing as he peered inside, he replied, “Wonderful things.” Or perhaps Tim Walker thought he said “Wonderland,” because this eye-opening show puts one in mind of Aubrey Beardsley, “Alice in Wonderland,” Cirque du Soleil on acid, and more.
The exhibition, in slightly altered form, is on display at the J. Paul Getty Museum through August 20.
“For me,” Walker says in the catalogue, published for the London show, “beauty is everything — that’s what I crave, that’s what I admire, the infinite variety of beauty.” And also, “The shoots that we’ve done for the exhibition and book are attempts to communicate my encounters with the sublime. They’re attempts to convey both surface beauty and the deeper emotional thing. It’s an attempt, but I don’t think I’m ever completely satisfied.”
Each photo shoot (“Illuminations,” “Pen & Ink,” “Cloud 9,” “The Land of Living Men,” etc) is represented by several images but prefaced by interviews, in the form of conversation, often between Walker and one or two of his key collaborators. Sometimes, though, they’re mostly patting one another on the back for a job seemingly well done.
Each session appears to be well thought-out in advance before giving way to serendipity and some degree of spontaneity. One criticism that I have is that, as mentioned, almost all of the models are quite young, and they tend to be stuck with that blank, runway model expression, which gets a little old hat. No, I’m not expecting smiles or grimaces, but the dead fish look runs its course fairly quickly.
From “Guo Pei: Art of the Couture” at the Bowers Museum. Photo by Bondo WyszpolskiAnd then there are the outfits, which often have a bohemian, thrown-together thrift store look, although much of it recalls the “flower child” garb of the late 1960s. I think to myself, what if they’d collaborated with someone along the lines of Guo Pei, whose “Art of Couture” exhibition which recently closed at the Bowers Museum featured the most elaborate gowns and dresses that one can possibly imagine.
The sets, like the outfits, often seem haphazard as well, but most of them are initially striking, such as “Pen & Ink,” which is inspired by a line block print by Aubrey Beardsley,” and “Lil’ Dragon,” which was inspired by an 18th century Chinese snuffbox. Regarding the latter, which utilized UV lighting, the effect is like that of being inside of a dimly lit nightclub with glowing colors, and reminiscent of some blacklight-heavy dark rides in an amusement park.
The models, Ling Ling and Xie Chaoyu, are enhanced by their dress and facial jewelry. To put it another way, this is Björk territory.
The catalyst for the shoot with Tilda Swinton was a display case where her jewelry had been, and so the absence of the objects thus allowed Walker’s imagination to fill in the empty space. However, in another instance of less is more, we are shown too many images of Swinton holding her hands close to her face, with enormous rings on her fingers. The rings (not her fingers) seem too big and too loud.