ROCKY MCCORKLE
**Fyi, Please call Rocky at (240) 257-6259 upon arrival, so that I can let you into the Warrington Building.
Come see for yourself! The untouched movie set for Rocky McCorkle's You & Me On A Sunny Day. Enter the never-before-seen fictional setting and experience Rocky's art making process, set intricacies, and sharper-than-real-life photographs!
Rocky McCorkle's Movie & Marathon is in the permanent collection at the Berkeley Art Museum (BAM/PFA) and on display in their current exhibition "At The Edge: Recent Acquisitions."
Rocky McCorkle’s You & Me On A Sunny Day is a feature length non-motion picture comprised of 135 large scale photographic stills. A five year project started in 2007, McCorkle’s sequential series follows the life of 84 year-old widow Millie Holden as her everyday routine gets run off course by a reminiscent 1950’s movie marathon. From the deepest folds of memory, flashbacks of her late husband propel her into a vivid narrative that gets stranger and more claustrophobic with each turn. Based on Millie’s own experience of an event centered elsewhere, You & Me is a psychological thriller about the malleability of memory and the impact that fictional media has on her way of life.
Echoing the big screen, the exhibition prints are 40” x 80". Each photograph’s rich color and clarity reveal a technical prowess hidden behind McCorkle’s compelling aesthetic. The entire body of work was shot with a Cambo 8 x 10 camera using a specific combination of chrome and negative film. Shooting and scanning thousands of sheets of film, McCorkle digitally assembled the high resolution images—upwards of 22 in a single still—into unique full focus photomontages. With You & Me On A Sunny Day, McCorkle has created an emotionally charged counterpoint to modern day cinema.