‘1001 Images’ brings viewers into the world of guitarist Nick Zinner

Nick Zinner’s “1001 Images,” at Public Works’ Roll Up Gallery, opened a window into the world of the Yeah Yeah Yeahs’ guitarist, a candid look at the life of a successful touring musician that maintains intrigue.

By Atticus Morris
The Guardsman

Nick  Zinner’s “1001 Images,” at Public Works’ Roll Up Gallery, opened a  window into the world of the Yeah Yeah Yeahs’ guitarist, a candid look  at the life of a successful touring musician that maintains intrigue.

The   exhibit, which showed ten years of Zinner’s photography, ran from Feb.  25 to March 6 as part of the 19th annual Noise Pop festival.

The  Roll Up Gallery was full of people typically associated with these  sorts of events — tattooed scenesters who sipped wine from plastic cups  as they snapped pictures with smart phones.

The  space itself is a crooked hallway and the exhibit was presented in odd  angles. The 1001 pieces were arranged to guide the viewer’s eyes to  particular points — toward flashy images that were for sale.

Among  them, a blown-up picture of an empty red theater resembling a David  Lynch movie and a portrait of band mate Karen O wielding a gun and  wearing a black kimono, fishnets and Converse sneakers.

The  exhibit had a compelling, almost fractal-like aspect, whereby attention  was consistently drawn further in from the larger grandiose to the  smaller everyday; from the most ostentatious moments of rock stardom  down to the tiniest details of the guitarist’s personal life.

A  cursory glance at Zinner’s work confirmed he has traversed the globe.  This makes the breadth of his work much greater than the average  photographer’s. He is clearly more than just a rock star with a camera,  and doesn’t hide behind exotic or exclusive subject matter.

Sure,  there were plenty of pictures taken from the stages of shows. Sold out  arenas crammed with legions of sweaty fans, faces twisted into masks of  intense euphoria, make for memorable, if megalomanical, images.

But  a much more telling and — judging by their sheer numbers — accurate  portrayal of rock-star life was a series of images of unmade beds. Hotel  beds, guest rooms and couches, probably several hundred pictures,  occupied an entire wall of the exhibit.

Images  featured musical peers, such as TV On The Radio’s Kip Malone  deadpanning with a glass of scotch, and Deerhunter’s Bradford Cox  camping in one of those over-sized Tupac shirts, where the dead rapper’s  face occupies the entirety of the garment. But there were also ordinary  slice-of-life pieces — pictures of skinned knees, middle-aged women and  bathrooms.

Some  of the most interesting pieces were those that broke the classic rules  of photography but worked anyway, like the image depicting a woman in a  hijab shopping in a crowded bazaar.

The  lower part of the photo was obscured by some dark, blurry object, but  this gave the image a sense of intimacy, an almost voyeuristic look into  this woman’s life. Another picture taken of an outdoor concert was  washed out and backlit by the sun, yet the haziness conveyed the late  afternoon atmosphere perfectly.

“1001  Images” was part of the Noise Pop’s Culture Club, a two-day celebration  of independent art and culture that featured panels, workshops and  performances. This year’s Culture Club and The Pop Up Shop, a month-long  installation put on in conjunction with Upper Playground, were firsts  for Noise Pop.

Both  are the culmination of the festival’s evolution from a one-night  concert, to a week-long, multimedia extravaganza spread out across some  of the best venues in San Francisco, Noise Pop Industries Producer  Stacey Horne said.

Email:
amorris@theguardsman.com