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30 Apr 2010

Mistaken Identity at carriage trade, NY


Mistaken Identity / Dan Graham, Innocence Project, Carol Irving, John Schabel, 
Karen Yama, The Yes Men
carriage trade
http://carriagetrade.org

Info

May 7 - June 13, 2010 Wed – Sun, 2–7 pm

Contact

pscott@carriagetrade.org
Peter Scott / Director
1 212 343 2944

Address

http://carriagetrade.org
carriage trade
62 Walker Street
New York, NY 10013
USA

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Mistaken Identity / Dan Graham, Innocence Project, Carol Irving, John Schabel, Karen Yama, The Yes Men

While the genre of portraiture tends to feature clearly defined subjects, the portrait show Mistaken Identity focuses instead on the uncertainties of facial recognition and how misperception might affect behavior in everyday experience. Linking the concept of belief to what we can 'know' about an individual's face, the exhibition explores identification as a process influenced by the particular circumstances of any given encounter.

Commonly associated with detective stories and courtroom dramas, the need of proof of an individual's identity also has a utilitarian aspect, as our memories for faces plays a significant role in the most mundane of exchanges. In the somewhat rare case of people with prosopagnosia (face blindness), friends and family are indistinguishable from strangers, so that the 'context' of an individual (hair, clothing, the sound of a voice) often provides the only clues to their identity. For an eyewitness or victim of a crime, these same associations can prove misleading, as they may falsely trigger a link to an innocent person who has chance connections to a perpetrator's appearance.

The case of imposters provides yet another example of a loss of identity through context, but here the subject willingly foregoes recognition in favor of subterfuge. When exposed, the temporary forfeiture of an identity is often met with a great deal of hostility. Those fooled by the deception are now faced with the uncertainty of their convictions. This need for authentication in connection with facial identification runs deep, as it underlines the survival mechanisms that guide our perceptions of whom and what we can trust.

Approaching portraiture as a means to explore the complex relationship between perception and circumstance, the work in the exhibition Mistaken Identity presents a range of possibilities concerning the construction of belief in the process of fixing an individual's identity.