ARTmonday: Soft Powers Photographs by Joseph Desler Costa Speaks to Consumer Culture

By Stylecarrot @StyleCarrot

Photographer Joseph Desler Costa's exhibition "Soft Power" is based on the concept of gently influencing ideas, subtly shaping human desire through appeal and attraction.

installation view

As a political concept and strategy, soft power reached its peak in the 1980s and 1990s during the Cold War. In the U.S. companies found new ways to influence behavior through sugary branding and corporate messaging driven by Coca-Cola, Hollywood, and other vehicles of consumer culture.

Layered laser cut dye sublimation prints on aluminum

In his series, photographer Joseph Desler Costa uses the language and symbols of advertising and propaganda from those two decades to reflect on the power of persuasion.

Three Fingers (2020), detail

Layered laser cut dye sublimation prints on aluminum

Costa combines multiple exposures, appropriation, and laser-cut, layered prints, to create images that look almost mass produced or machine made-as if they were rolling off of an assembly line.

installation view

Dye sublimation prints on aluminum

"I often re-photograph my own images and incorporate them into new pieces to further drive this feeling of sterile reproduction," the Brooklyn based artist says.

Layered laser cut dye sublimation prints on aluminum

The works are pastel-hued, product-like images that often incorporate recognizable logos, graphics, and album art laser-cut into the aluminum print surface.

Layered laser cut dye sublimation prints on aluminum

"Soft Power " replicates advertising's ability to create desire and manufacture beauty.

Layered laser cut dye sublimation prints on aluminum

installation view

"Soft Powers" by Joseph Delmar Costa through May 29 at ClampArt, 247 W 29th St., New York City, clampart. com

​All photos by Daniel Terna. Courtesy of the artist.

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