'IN-LAND OUT-CAST'
Olivier Pin-Fat
Bangkok, October 2009


Of broken men, city, self. 
Of transsexuals - women in men, men in women - of the homeless and insane, of the city within, of inner terrains being outcast, of being on the outside - outcast. 
About becoming. About emergence. 
About city haunts. 

Photographed in Bangkok, using Kodak colour and black and white film. Hand printed on Ilford and Fuji papers. October, 2010.

In-land-out-cast -A photographic exhibition by Olivier Pin-Fat

Bangkok, October 2009 Exhibit : 3 April – 30 May 2010
Olivier Pin-Fat

In-Land Out-Cast - A photographic exhibition by Olivier Pin-Fat

Kathmandu Photo Gallery
3 April – 30 May 2010
[Opening party on Sat 3 Apr from 6.30 - 9 pm]]

Possessed by Bangkok as by a witch's familiar, the electrifying cult photo-artist Olivier Pin-Fat takes feverish forays into "a living necropolis, a derelict interior--phantasmal, emblematic, broken and concrete-entombed"; a film noir whose cast are the city's spirits - "its detritus, its insane, hungry, homeless, ostracised, unsure if they're male or female, alive or dead, unformed and undefined."

Out-Cast: exorcised, thrown outwards, expressed, banished, ostracized, unable to return, excluded, & thrown away.


This series isn’t about anything in particular other than a way of seeing. There’s no point to it, no grandiose issue extolled in it, it’s not ‘complete’, finished, concluded – it’s still ‘proto’ which is perhaps its point, or at least a point to it I personally like. 
It’s simply a non-linear, circuitous meandering that follows some of my commonplace, everyday footsteps in and around Bangkok. These images, like rough sketches or scribbled notes, are just a few ideas of mine that have been rattling around unnoticed in my mind for some time. Assembling them together like this gives them ‘form’ or ‘body’, in the way a ghost would acquire physical shape if it were to wear a jacket. Inside the jacket - at least to our eyes - is thin air, a ‘nothing’ (except perhaps the energy we can’t see).

‘In-Land Out-Cast’ explores the city as metaphor, as a subjective, an idea, a perception of seeing, a vision, a blindness.



Photographed in October 2009, this is a work in progress using 135mm and 120mm film. On many levels it’s an extension of previous work, particularly ‘ya ba’ (2004) where I began to perceive the city as allegory, as film-noir or fable. At that time vandalizing my 120 film became a highly charged visual imperative that paralleled a frayed state of mind, it relied only on ‘chance’ and a complete loss of control. The metaphors in this series are very different.

There’s no space for composition using this ‘technique’ – the leaked light, the film burn, like bars on a dungeon door - dictate all. There’s no (pre) conceived direction, no surety in anything other than the chance encounter, the photographed moment, the emotive. This modus is as much about seeing as it is about not seeing. Most of what I photograph is unprintable due to an excess of resultant film fog on my negatives. It’s all blindly unpredictable. 

I print what ‘the city’ permits me to, what ‘chance’ salvages for me from the wreckage. 



‘In-Land Out-Cast’ is a type of ‘psychological thriller’, a cinematic journey into a living necropolis, a derelict interior - phantasmal, emblematic, broken and concrete-entombed. It transverses a city of ‘real-fiction’, looped in repetition, inhabited by weighty yet invisible presences, pregnant yet impregnable shadows. Its cast are light torn people, those who are dissipating, those unsure if they’re male or female, alive or dead, the city’s ‘spirits’ - its detritus, its insane, hungry, homeless, ostracized, undefined & unformed - close ones, unknown ones, ones who come at you again and again. 



It follows the haunted and the haunting, the dream-busted, the smashed and forlorn through a city built on the blur between this world and the next. A city we possibly die into. Are possibly born out of.

Kathmandu Photo Gallery
87 Pan road (near Indian Temple), Silom, Bangkok 10500

[Five minutes’ walk from Surasak BTS]
Tel : 02-234-6700, Fax : 02-661-4413
kathmandu.bkk@gmail.com
www.kathmandu-bkk.com
Open daily except Monday, from 11 AM to 7 PM


Olivier Pin-Fat was born in England in 1969.

His work has been exhibited internationally, including Gallery VU (Paris), Noordelicht (Holland), Photo Espana 2001 (Madrid), Paris Photo (2000, 2005 & 2007), Foto Biennale of Rotterdam (Nederlands Foto Instituut, 2000), Pingyao and Lianzhou International Photo Festivals 2001 & 2006 (China), Agnes B (London), The Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography, Recontres Internationales de Photographie (Arles, France), Le Centre d’Art Contemporain de Basse-Normandie (France), Le Centre National des Arts Plastiques (Paris, 2008), ‘(About) Photography Gallery’ (1996, Bangkok), ‘(About) Studio’ (Bangkok, 1998), Khatmandu Gallery (2007, Bangkok) - to mention a few.

It has appeared in leading international publications and is in numerous private collections.

From 1998 until 2008, he was a member of ‘Gallery VU’ and ‘Agence VU’ in Paris.
In 2009 he joined 'prospekt' in Milan, Italy.

His work is “founded on a great visual freedom, a sense of urgency” - images from the ‘real’ which have “a sensitive, astonishing, fictional and lyrical dimension.”
“Unceasingly seeking to repudiate the limits of direct representation to favour impressionism, questioning an unstable universe, his images are unclassifiable."
Christian Caujolle.

In May 2009, his book "DEAD LIGHT, BONE DRY" was shortlisted for "The European Publishers Award for Photography" and will be published in 2010.
He is based in Bangkok.
available asking to the staff

In-land-out-cast - exhibition by Olivier Pin-Fat

Bangkok,ottobre 2009 - Exhibit 3 April – 30 May 2010
Olivier Pin-Fat

In-Land Out-Cast - A photographic exhibition by Olivier Pin-Fat

Kathmandu Photo Gallery
3 April – 30 May 2010
[Opening party on Sat 3 Apr from 6.30 - 9 pm]


Possessed by Bangkok as by a witch's familiar, the electrifying cult photo-artist Olivier Pin-Fat takes feverish forays into "a living necropolis, a derelict interior--phantasmal, emblematic, broken and concrete-entombed"; a film noir whose cast are the city's spirits - "its detritus, its insane, hungry, homeless, ostracised, unsure if they're male or female, alive or dead, unformed and undefined."

Out-Cast: exorcised, thrown outwards, expressed, banished, ostracized, unable to return, excluded, & thrown away.


This series isn’t about anything in particular other than a way of seeing. There’s no point to it, no grandiose issue extolled in it, it’s not ‘complete’, finished, concluded – it’s still ‘proto’ which is perhaps its point, or at least a point to it I personally like. 
It’s simply a non-linear, circuitous meandering that follows some of my commonplace, everyday footsteps in and around Bangkok. These images, like rough sketches or scribbled notes, are just a few ideas of mine that have been rattling around unnoticed in my mind for some time. Assembling them together like this gives them ‘form’ or ‘body’, in the way a ghost would acquire physical shape if it were to wear a jacket. Inside the jacket - at least to our eyes - is thin air, a ‘nothing’ (except perhaps the energy we can’t see).

‘In-Land Out-Cast’ explores the city as metaphor, as a subjective, an idea, a perception of seeing, a vision, a blindness.



Photographed in October 2009, this is a work in progress using 135mm and 120mm film. On many levels it’s an extension of previous work, particularly ‘ya ba’ (2004) where I began to perceive the city as allegory, as film-noir or fable. At that time vandalizing my 120 film became a highly charged visual imperative that paralleled a frayed state of mind, it relied only on ‘chance’ and a complete loss of control. The metaphors in this series are very different.

There’s no space for composition using this ‘technique’ – the leaked light, the film burn, like bars on a dungeon door - dictate all. There’s no (pre) conceived direction, no surety in anything other than the chance encounter, the photographed moment, the emotive. This modus is as much about seeing as it is about not seeing. Most of what I photograph is unprintable due to an excess of resultant film fog on my negatives. It’s all blindly unpredictable. 

I print what ‘the city’ permits me to, what ‘chance’ salvages for me from the wreckage. 



‘In-Land Out-Cast’ is a type of ‘psychological thriller’, a cinematic journey into a living necropolis, a derelict interior - phantasmal, emblematic, broken and concrete-entombed. It transverses a city of ‘real-fiction’, looped in repetition, inhabited by weighty yet invisible presences, pregnant yet impregnable shadows. Its cast are light torn people, those who are dissipating, those unsure if they’re male or female, alive or dead, the city’s ‘spirits’ - its detritus, its insane, hungry, homeless, ostracized, undefined & unformed - close ones, unknown ones, ones who come at you again and again. 



It follows the haunted and the haunting, the dream-busted, the smashed and forlorn through a city built on the blur between this world and the next. A city we possibly die into. Are possibly born out of.


Kathmandu Photo Gallery
87 Pan road (near Indian Temple), Silom, Bangkok 10500

[Five minutes’ walk from Surasak BTS]
Tel : 02-234-6700, Fax : 02-661-4413
kathmandu.bkk@gmail.com
www.kathmandu-bkk.com
Open daily except Monday, from 11 AM to 7 PM
available asking to the staff