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Casey Kaplan

Jeff Burton, Untitled (girl with black curtain), 2020. Image courtesy the artist, Peter Saville and Sacho GmbH, Nuremberg

Jeff Burton shares images from a recent collaboration with British art director and graphic designer, Peter Saville. The photographs, commissioned by textile and design company Sacho in anticipation of their 200th anniversary, were shot in a set-like villa in the Palisades of California. Rife with dramaturgy, the photographs reveal glimpses of bodies, furniture and fabrics that meld together in each sensual and tactile composition.

Jeff Burton, Untitled (pink sofa, chess set), 2020. Image courtesy the artist, Peter Saville and Sacho GmbH, Nuremberg

Jeff Burton, Untitled (yellow pillow), 2020. Image courtesy the artist, Peter Saville and Sacho GmbH, Nuremberg

Crafting images that tell us more by showing us less, Burton adopts the architecture and decor of the Villa as vital protagonists within an elegantly reconstructed narrative of desire. Executed with a precise attention to detail and masterful use of light that has defined Burton’s practice, the interior images invoke an atmosphere of isolation and ennui that speaks to our current moment.

Jeff Burton, Untitled (couple with blue chair), 2020. Image courtesy the artist, Peter Saville and Sacho GmbH, Nuremberg.

Jeff Burton, Untitled (Blonde Brocade), 2020. Image courtesy the artist, Peter Saville and Sacho GmbH, Nuremberg

For over three decades, Burton has utilized photography as a way to understand and commune his physical and psychological environment, creating images that prompt the viewer to examine the complex possibilities that may lay dormant within their own inner and outer worlds. His imagery travels fluidly between different stylistic and genre referents; photojournalism, still life, portraiture, fashion and architectural photography. Additionally, Burton's photographs incorporate painterly formal elements, including but not limited to abstraction and minimalism, and a measured handling of light reminiscent of Dutch still life painting. The composition of each image is carefully crafted to seduce the viewer into an illusion of aspirational decadence that has defined American culture, particularly as observed by the artist in Southern California.

Jeff Burton, Untitled #115 (measuring tape), 2000, cibachrome print, 16.5 x 24''

Jeff Burton, Untitled #170 (oranges), 2000, cibachrome print, 26.5 x 40''

Burton's earliest works are informed by his experience working in the adult film industry. Embracing a role as both insider and outsider, Burton’s redirected lens captures poignant and quiet observations on film sets that might otherwise go unnoticed. Neutral in his approach, these fleeting and ambiguous moments are stripped of didactics or moralism. Instead, his unique images oscillate between the explicit and implicit, erotic and neutered - often within a single photograph. Acutely aware of the classist and puritanical judgements projected onto the pornographic environment, Burton ultimately provides a more challenging depiction of a world more complex than its packaging allows.

Burton’s unique methodology eludes traditional categorical distinction, existing in a space between fantasy and reality. His photographs reveal both the potential and dangers of censorship, while scrutinizing the contradictory nature of collective moralism. In Burton's imagery, absence and presence are equally impactful. Through his distinct visual language, Burton empathetically explores the biases and motivations that inform human behavior, utilizing image-making to engage elemental notions such as desire, affluence, beauty, ambition, love, abjection and the performative nature of identity.

Jeff Burton, Bob Mackie's Pool, 2012, coated pigment print, 40 x 60''

Jeff Burton, Untitled (young man on television), 1997

Jeff Burton, Untitled #45 (equipment), 1997, C-print, 30 x 40”

Jeff Burton, Eniko Mihalik, 2012, Hand-coated pigment print, 40 x 30.5"