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In the Landscape
In the Landscape
How do people identify with the
landscape? In the past, I have made pictures of the natural world that has been
altered by man in some way or another – from subtle incursions to a near
annihilation of it. While people were present in some of my previous work, I
was concerned more with the evidence of their intervention. They were there in
spirit but not in actuality. In this new body of work where people are the
focus of my photographs, I investigate how they relate to, interact with, and
experience the landscape.
Yet I have intentionally photographed
people from behind, in shadow or at a scale where it is difficult to obtain a
clear read of their faces. These “anti-portraits” are not about the individual
identities of the people being portrayed but about how people “fit into” (or
not) the landscapes that I have captured.
For this series, I was inspired by the paintings of the 19th
century German romantic landscape painter Casper David Friederich, who painted
people from behind in an effort to allow the viewer to project him/herself into
the scene before him/her and experience the landscape vicariously. By obscuring
the identities of the people in my photographs, I am hoping to give the viewer a
similar experience. I hope that
viewers can recognize and explore the sometimes overwhelming, calming,
mysterious, peculiar, mundane, social or lonely nature of the landscape. Each
of us experiences the landscape in ways unique to us, and these experiences
shape who we are and how we see the world around us.
This project began in 2009
and is ongoing. None of the
photographs in this series were staged.
I am not acquainted with any of the people represented, and I did not speak
to or interact with any of them during the shooting process.
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