Despues |
First the bodies, the flesh, the humours. Then the track, the sign, the imprint. Después, in Spanish, means after. These portraits start from a very precise instant of time and from a defined place: the protagonists are couples right after sex and the room as a witness. The fulcrum of the work is not sharing intercourse, nor a morbid curiosity about the life of the subjects, but the search for the track, the one capable of telling about intimacy, through a glance or a gesture. Despues rotates around the waiting. Waiting for physical love to be consumed in order to leave space immediately afterwards for the encounter with the photographer. Waiting for something unique and unrepeatable to appear in front of the lens. A glimpse of ecstatic rapture capable of suggesting that those bodies, now two, were completely joined in unity a moment before. A cigarette and it smoke rings to tell about the solitary rite of separation. Or a hand still searching for contact and an aftermath of tenderness. Could cinema and literature survive without sex? Could the most captivating spot succeed in entering our minds without a cry, even imperceptible, for sex? Would magazines, both for women and men, sell as many copies without continuous articles, files and surveys about sex? We are surrounded, bombarded, super-stimulated towards an almost obsessive search for physical pleasure. But beyond the number of illustrated magazines, scientific surveys, artistic inspiration or marketing rules, sex remains a private affair: litmus paper capable of digging into the identity of an individual and a relationship to reveal its union or detachment, loss of control or inhibition, serenity appeased or solitary malaise. |