Friday, 12 April 2013

I Wander Weather - coming soon to anywhere near you


Pieces of fabric and paper hang at intervals between the projector beams to act as ‘instigators of history and future’ – people, as we wander through time and space the light falls on us and we know we are treading our own path and having an impact. If the exhibit is set up on a large scale viewers can walk through the installation, themselves becoming part of the time and space.
The footage shown on the projectors is in fact films of photographs.
The photographs were taken in St Leonard’s Forest in Sussex; a forest both my parents used to play in as children before they ever met. I took the shots on a trip with my father and sister. The situation and location suggest the millions of interlinking social histories and traces that cross any one point in the planet.
The reason I filmed static photographs was to bring back to life the ‘frozen moment’ in the photograph; to mobilise perception and iterate that nature (the forest) constantly changes. It also presents a slightly odd visual, which requires the viewer to address their initial perception of it as a film, to look deepers.
A slide projector shows typewritten quotes from various texts about human presence in landscape. It offers a recognition of the sequential narrative of paths that run through the land, and makes audible (with the steady click of the slides moving on) the idea of the rhythmic footfall enjoyed in walking
The slides’ imagery itself highlights the inability of language's to fully communicate the natural world, because language is a fixed, immaterial system that cannot appeal to the intuition of our senses – language is absolute where the planet is in constant relative flux.





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