Before taking his photographs, Gonzo makes detailed sketches to determine the color relationships, costumes, and settings of the compositions. He then meticulously stages each scene, casting models and performers to play the characters within his handmade sets. The results depict relatable, yet unrealistic images of everyday life. They typically focus on a suspenseful moment immediately before or after a dramatic misadventure.
“Gonzo has a unique ability to transport viewers to an alternate realm,” says Crocker Curator Francesca Wilmott. “Though his images are based in reality, their unexpected details, materials, and color combinations are delightfully off-kilter. Gonzo's staged photographs reveal the artifice of suburbia and conventional notions of beauty.”
In Big Gulp Through the Window (2015), an open window frames a woman frozen in mid-run. Gonzo modeled her pose after Cary Grant’s iconic running scene in Hitchcock’s 1959 film North by Northwest. Though the photo’s protagonist has escaped the towering greenhouse behind her—which Gonzo adapted from Tim Burton’s Beetlejuice (1988)—she is clearly not safe from peril. On the other side of the window, an ominous red room awaits her. The empty picture frames and television set with static on the screen contribute to the photograph’s foreboding mood.
Throughout his work, Gonzo uses a retrofuturist aesthetic. He recalls that as a child in the 1980s, his school textbooks and the commercial advertisements he watched projected a pseudo 1950s version of the future that never came to fruition. Gonzo’s photographs presents a compelling dichotomy, asking the viewer to embrace surface-level color and composition while questioning how American culture can be critiqued and reimagined through the smallest of details.
“Color Madness started as an experiment,” explains Gonzo. “I had only intended on shooting three concepts and then moving on. After shooting those three, I fell in love and decided to continue shooting these quirky images until I ran out of ideas or got tired of the aesthetic. Ten years later, I’ve shot over a hundred concepts and still have many more yet to be made. My work embodies humor, like a joke, it’s a moment of relief. I love photography because it speaks without a language.”
Before taking his photographs, Gonzo makes detailed sketches to determine the color relationships, costumes, and settings of the compositions. He then meticulously stages each scene, casting models and performers to play the characters within his handmade sets. The results depict relatable, yet unrealistic images of everyday life. They typically focus on a suspenseful moment immediately before or after a dramatic misadventure.
“Gonzo has a unique ability to transport viewers to an alternate realm,” says Crocker Curator Francesca Wilmott. “Though his images are based in reality, their unexpected details, materials, and color combinations are delightfully off-kilter. Gonzo's staged photographs reveal the artifice of suburbia and conventional notions of beauty.”
In Big Gulp Through the Window (2015), an open window frames a woman frozen in mid-run. Gonzo modeled her pose after Cary Grant’s iconic running scene in Hitchcock’s 1959 film North by Northwest. Though the photo’s protagonist has escaped the towering greenhouse behind her—which Gonzo adapted from Tim Burton’s Beetlejuice (1988)—she is clearly not safe from peril. On the other side of the window, an ominous red room awaits her. The empty picture frames and television set with static on the screen contribute to the photograph’s foreboding mood.
Throughout his work, Gonzo uses a retrofuturist aesthetic. He recalls that as a child in the 1980s, his school textbooks and the commercial advertisements he watched projected a pseudo 1950s version of the future that never came to fruition. Gonzo’s photographs presents a compelling dichotomy, asking the viewer to embrace surface-level color and composition while questioning how American culture can be critiqued and reimagined through the smallest of details.
“Color Madness started as an experiment,” explains Gonzo. “I had only intended on shooting three concepts and then moving on. After shooting those three, I fell in love and decided to continue shooting these quirky images until I ran out of ideas or got tired of the aesthetic. Ten years later, I’ve shot over a hundred concepts and still have many more yet to be made. My work embodies humor, like a joke, it’s a moment of relief. I love photography because it speaks without a language.”
Before taking his photographs, Gonzo makes detailed sketches to determine the color relationships, costumes, and settings of the compositions. He then meticulously stages each scene, casting models and performers to play the characters within his handmade sets. The results depict relatable, yet unrealistic images of everyday life. They typically focus on a suspenseful moment immediately before or after a dramatic misadventure.
“Gonzo has a unique ability to transport viewers to an alternate realm,” says Crocker Curator Francesca Wilmott. “Though his images are based in reality, their unexpected details, materials, and color combinations are delightfully off-kilter. Gonzo's staged photographs reveal the artifice of suburbia and conventional notions of beauty.”
In Big Gulp Through the Window (2015), an open window frames a woman frozen in mid-run. Gonzo modeled her pose after Cary Grant’s iconic running scene in Hitchcock’s 1959 film North by Northwest. Though the photo’s protagonist has escaped the towering greenhouse behind her—which Gonzo adapted from Tim Burton’s Beetlejuice (1988)—she is clearly not safe from peril. On the other side of the window, an ominous red room awaits her. The empty picture frames and television set with static on the screen contribute to the photograph’s foreboding mood.
Throughout his work, Gonzo uses a retrofuturist aesthetic. He recalls that as a child in the 1980s, his school textbooks and the commercial advertisements he watched projected a pseudo 1950s version of the future that never came to fruition. Gonzo’s photographs presents a compelling dichotomy, asking the viewer to embrace surface-level color and composition while questioning how American culture can be critiqued and reimagined through the smallest of details.
“Color Madness started as an experiment,” explains Gonzo. “I had only intended on shooting three concepts and then moving on. After shooting those three, I fell in love and decided to continue shooting these quirky images until I ran out of ideas or got tired of the aesthetic. Ten years later, I’ve shot over a hundred concepts and still have many more yet to be made. My work embodies humor, like a joke, it’s a moment of relief. I love photography because it speaks without a language.”