Frederic Weber: Revenants, presented at Klompching Gallery from January 12, 2016 through March 31, 2026, brings newly revealed works from the artist’s archive into the present, offering a contemplative meditation on memory, materiality, and time. Long known for his meticulous table-top still lifes, Weber constructs intimate photographic worlds from fragments—ephemera drawn from magazines, journals, newspapers, and his own personal archive. These carefully assembled sets are then photographed full-frame on medium-format film, preserving a tactile richness that resists the speed and disposability of contemporary image culture.
At first glance, the photographs are visually seductive, defined by lush color, layered surfaces, and precise compositional balance. Yet beneath this formal beauty lies a deeper tension. The images feel suspended between documentation and invention, as if each object carries a second life shaped by context, memory, and displacement. By re-photographing photographs and printed matter, Weber collapses distinctions between original and reproduction, presence and trace, turning the still life into a site of quiet psychological inquiry.
The genesis of
Revenants emerged from an act of rediscovery. While searching his archive for a single negative, Weber encountered images long forgotten—photographs that resurfaced unexpectedly, carrying emotional weight that had gone unrecognized at the time of their making. Digitally scanning these analog negatives years later, he found them transformed by distance, both personal and temporal. They appeared like apparitions, familiar yet estranged, speaking not only of the past but of what remained unseen within it.
This body of work unfolds as an exploration of the unconscious, imagined as a darkened house filled with hidden rooms. Each photograph offers a brief illumination—an emotion, a longing, a fleeting thought—before receding again into shadow. Together, these images form a subtle dialogue between who the artist was and who he has become, between loss and recovery, forgetting and recognition.
Revenants ultimately invites viewers to reflect on their own archives of memory, and on the quiet power of images to return, transformed, when we least expect them.
Image:
Revenants, Untitled No. 6 (2025)
Archival Pigment Print on Canson Platine Fibre Rag © Frederic Weber