Gallery Exhibit Opening - Cowboys: East Germany
Thursday January 12th, 2016 (6pm-8pm)
Texas Folklife Gallery
1708 Houston St
Austin, TX 78756
FREE Admission
Join us for the gallery exhibit opening of Cowboys: East Germany, a unique visual anthropology exhibit created and curated by Eric O’Connell (MA Visual Anthropology). O’Connell will make a presentation about his work and answer questions from the audience. Light refreshments will be served, courtesy of Frank, purveyors of artisan sausage.
This event is made possible in part by support from The German Texas Heritage Society, The Texas Commission on the Arts and the Cultural Arts Division of the City of Austin Economic Development Department. Exhibition is courtesy The Wittliff Collections, Texas State University.
Parking Information:
Parking for the event is available in Texas Folklife's gravel driveway, on street immediately in front of building, and Asterra Properties (located next door). Overflow parking available at Recycled Reads (5335 Burnet Rd). Please use spaces in the back or on the south side of the Recycled Reads building.
The exhibit will be on display at the Texas Folklife Gallery from January 12, 2017 - April 14, 2017. Texas Folklife Gallery hours are Mon-Fri 10am-6pm, and by appointment. Contact Texas Folklife at 512-441-9255 or email info@texasfolklife.org for more information.
About the Exhibit, by Eric O’Connell:
Cowboys: East Germany examines the constructed identities and practices of the American Western Cowboy and “cowboy lifestyle” as taken up and lived by the people of the former East Germany. From 1961 to 1989, The Wall, separates East Germany, the Deutsches Democratic Republic (DDR) from West Germany and on a global scale, physically demarcating the Cold War’s boundary separating the Communist East from the Capitalist West. Developing behind “The Wall,” the idea of Cowboy represents a type of freedom and individualism for East Germans, as imagined in the lifestyle of the cowboy. Emerging from the shadows of Communism, the adopted – and well-adapted – cowboy lifestyle re-imagines the cowboy ethos as agency to hold on to what is seen as good from Communism and eschew perceived ills of Capitalism. Values the East German cowboys wish to retain and “bring over” from their communist past – like helping one’s neighbor, a non-materialist rural life, family values, and attachment to the land and working with animals – are reinterpreted as “cowboy” values from an imagined American West.
In this series, which is part of a broader collection of portraits, documentary images and a documentary film, I began with an older view camera, 4x5, similar to cameras that have been used to document the American frontier. Later, in 2016, with digital resolutions matching that of 4x5 film, a digital camera was used. Both formats reveal the rich details, with which the cowboys authenticate and construct their identities. Documented as found, whether at a rodeo, other event, or at their homes, they present themselves as they are for the camera. Isolated from the environment, against black, the photo invites inspection and consideration of dress as part of constructed identity. In addition to a visual tool, the black background, isolating the subject, stands as a metaphor suggesting many of the subject’s experiences behind The Wall, and isolation from the West.
Eric O’Connell is an Assistant Professor of photography and photojournalism at Northern Arizona University, holds an MA in visual anthropology (USC, 2010), and has worked and lived in New York City and Los Angeles as a commercial photographer for nearly 20 years. Having grown up in a ranching family in New Mexico, he is not only uniquely positioned to look at this subculture, but invested in this subject matter, as a matter of personal, and fond experience.
Gallery Exhibit Press Coverage:
Cowboys & Indians Magazine
http://www.cowboysindians.com/2017/01/texas-folklife-presents-cowboys-east-germany-exhibition/
KUT's Texas Standard Time - Interview with Eric O'Connell
http://www.texasstandard.org/stories/east-germany-has-a-thriving-community-of-cowboys/
More information:
Eric O'Connell:
http://www.ericoconnell.com/cowboys-east-germany/
Wittliff Collections - Texas State University:
http://www.thewittliffcollections.txstate.edu/
German-Texan Heritage Society:
http://germantexans.org/