• X-ray Vision – Ophelia Chong

    Date posted: June 18, 2007 Author: jolanta
    My work is about seeing through the first layer. To explain this, I will first talk about the process of how I create my artwork. I have a library of over two thousand 35-millimeter slides. I layer two or more slides, or I cut them apart with an Exacto blade and create a collage. I then scan, but that is all that is done digitally. There is no Photoshop involved in this process. Doing these by hand is very important to me. When I put the slides together, there is no set plan. I move one over the other on a light table and, if it works, I put them into a slide cover. At times, it looks like a fast hand of Black Jack. I let the images flow with no forethought or plan. It is all a game of chance. Just like life.  Ophelia Chong, Think. Combination of photo of young girl with facial scars and Rubens’ Rape of the Daughters of Leucippus (1671), 35mm Kodachrome Slides, 1” x 1.375”.

    X-ray Vision – Ophelia Chong

    Image

    My work is about seeing through the first layer. To explain this, I will first talk about the process of how I create my artwork. I have a library of over two thousand 35-millimeter slides. I layer two or more slides, or I cut them apart with an Exacto blade and create a collage. I then scan, but that is all that is done digitally. There is no Photoshop involved in this process. Doing these by hand is very important to me. When I put the slides together, there is no set plan. I move one over the other on a light table and, if it works, I put them into a slide cover. At times, it looks like a fast hand of Black Jack. I let the images flow with no forethought or plan. It is all a game of chance. Just like life.

    Now on to the why. I grew up in a house that was built in 1890. One year, my parents decided to paint the dining room. As I helped steam off the wallpaper, I keep peeling off layer after layer of paper. Each layer told me a story—who sat here, who ate here, who lived here. That moment of discovery stayed with me. It laid the foundation for my future artwork.
    By combining images, I can bring the hidden into view.

    My portraits show the layers behind the face. Think was created with two images—a child with scars and a close up of Rubens’ Rape of the Daughters of Leucippus from 1671. The scars of her agony live below the surface. Tattoo U was created by layering Parmigianino’s The Madonna with the Long Neck from 1535 with a skull tattoo. Madonna has been tattooed by history.

    There is joy and pain behind every face. You just have to look behind all the layers.

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