
The Flooded Grave
<p>Jeff Wall uses state-of-the-art photographic and computer technology to create images that evoke the composition, scale, and ambitions of the grandest history paintings. His works frequently have the formal clarity of documentary photography or photojournalism, but he often relies on staged or constructed artifices. This image is the result of two years of work, during which the artist fused countless photographs of both documentary and fabricated scenes into a single, surreal whole. After taking pictures in two Vancouver cemeteries over the course of several months, Wall built an aquatic system in his studio, crafting the tank from a plaster cast of an actual grave. With the aid of marine-life specialists, the artist cultivated a living, underwater ecosystem identical to one found off the coast of Vancouver. In the finished product, the two worlds are married through a technical process that presents the illusion of a water-filled grave. <em>The Flooded Grave</em> therefore challenges the notion of the photograph as the record of a single moment in time; instead, it is an elaborate fantasy on the subconscious life of the image it projects.</p>
Catalogue
- Year
- 1998
- Dimensions
- 228.6 × 282 cm (90 × 111 in.)
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Artist
- Jeff Wall
Artist

Photography
Contemporary Canadian artist Jeff Wall is best known for his large-scale photographs and academic art historical writing. His works incorporate the backlighting made popular in advertisements and film, presenting a stylized and polished depiction of his subject matter. Many of his works depict mundane, everyday scenes, providing cutting social commentary, homages to works from the canon of western art history and references to contemporary literature.
Full artist profile →More
More by Jeff Wall
A View from an Apartment
2004 · Transparency on lightbox
Rainfilled suitcase
2001 · Silver dye bleach transparency; aluminum light box
A Sapling Held by a Post
2000 · Photograph, colour, Chromogenic print, on paper
Diagonal Composition
1993 · Transparency on lightbox
A Sudden Gust of Wind (after Hokusai)
1993 · Transparency on lightbox
Study for ‘A Sudden Gust of Wind (After Hokusai)’
1993 · Transparency on lightbox
Record
Verified by WattsOSSource
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Source
- aic
- Reference
- View at source
- Status
- verified





