Archive for the ‘Environmental Culture’ Category

#467 – Time Lapse Photography

Wednesday, June 22nd, 2011

preserving decay: the photography of jessica rowe and suzy poling.

Both Jessica Rowe and Suzy Poling are curious about decay and renewal, whether of the natural kind (Poling’s mineral deposits, geysers, and algae blooms) or the human type (Rowe’s Remnant series) or when the human and natural collide (Poling’s two series, Dead Amusements and Wonderland of Decay; Rowe’s series, Temporary America).

But collide isn’t quite the correct word here. The more accurate word would be collapse—and slow collapse at that. For these are photographs about stagnation, torpor, and the possibility of regeneration at a snail’s pace. The more you watch these photographs, the more, no matter how lifeless and motionless they appear at first, they seethe, melt, fester, corrode, disintegrate, spoil, mildew, crumble, and perhaps regenerate.

Suzy Poling, Natural Phenomenon Series, 2010-2011

You would think that ghosts murmur and whisper among the leftover house foundations, boats left to rot, abandoned mental hospitals, former amusement parks, and other detritus in these photographs, that a retrospective quality in the images would encourage a kind of nostalgia for old things. But there is little longing for the past here. Much more present is a focus on the future. And the future looks a lot like what is present. Which is not about what is missing, but what is there, so stubbornly and irreparably there. These landscapes of architectural ruin and natural progression are neither really ruined nor truly progressing, they just are.

Jessica Rowe, Temporary America, Lower Ninth Ward, New Orleans, 2007

Suzy Poling, Dead Amusements, Abandoned Amusement Parks, 2007

Though these photographs owe something to the theories of entropy put forward by Robert Smithson—and though they create a certain kind of earthwork in the click of the camera lens—this isn’t the famous entropy that Smithson wrote about in his essay on the “new monuments” of Dan Flavin, Donald Judd, and others. Those works, Smithson argued, eliminated the sense of time’s decay and natural devolution by spatially focusing on the inorganic, the plastic, the non-carbonic materials of life. They were monuments that, Smithson wrote, “cause us to forget the future.”

Jessica Rowe, Temporary America, Trailer, N Drive, Michigan, 2007

Inside the spaces of Rowe’s and Poling’s photographs, there’s simply too much dust, goo, rot, muck, and bones to forget the future. History accelerates without brakes—or breaks. Time’s onslaught is not rendered inactive. But it is, like Smithson observed, perhaps on its way to an all-encompassing sameness. The images return repeatedly, endlessly, entropically, back to the ruins, the fragments, the wreckage, the disorder, from whence they came. Until, one imagines, there is nothing really left to return to or to return from. There is only what remains and what never ceases frozen vividly.

Suzy Poling, Wonderland of Decay, Abandoned Mental Hospitals and Shipwrecks, 2007-2008

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#252 – Unnaturally Natural

Tuesday, November 25th, 2008

an artist consumes nature.

The phenomena of cultural media — outdoor magazines, catalogs, and other consumer-based products — has created an ever-widening gap between opposing forces. Here, construction hinders growth, accumulation betrays worth, and success replaces integrity. This is the continuous plight that drives me. – Regin Igloria

Regin Igloria’s drawings explore the intersection of “nature” and “culture” in the Great Outdoors, Inc. His most playful and powerful works are of luxury commodities that pretend to be neither luxuries nor even commodities.

Instead, they pretend to be escapes from consumerism to “nature,” vehicles for the pure pastoral life. But Igloria’s work detects something sinister in this supposed escape. Safe-for-your-baby jogging strollers crash together as if in a ten-car pile up. A mountain bike contorts and twists around itself; seen one way, it looks like a terrible accident, seen another it starts to resemble the bird’s eye view of the never-ending circuit of freeways on which said accident occurred.

Even nature itself takes on weird associations and overlaps with the anti-environmental. For instance, Igloria titles a study of what looks to be an evergreen tree, “Study For Growth Pattern,” as if it were the blueprint plans for a new exurban subdivision.

Walking, 2008

What is refreshing about these drawings is their combination of meditative observation, wry irony, and shock value. They are not works of didactic political art meant to shock. Instead they strike a tone or mood: the conflicted emotions of a person’s  who longs for the enchantment that the commodities of the hiking store might deliver, but who also remains deeply suspicious of what these commodities claim to offer.

Commuter, Composite, Consideration, 2008

In Igloria’s drawings, the more one longs to escape into nature, to get away, the more trapped he or she becomes. The jogging strollers become virtual SUVs in a sidewalk clog. The mountain bike fragments and breaks apart into endless loops. One reaches the evergreen trees deep in the wilderness, but all they resemble is the very thing that led to their removal back in “civilization”: the street layout for a planned community of McMansions.

Study for Growth Pattern, 2008

Images: Regin Igloria/Zg Gallery