Über das Buch
After Wides made the image of a car graveyard Near
Catskill Creek in 2004, she learned Thomas Cole
had painted Catskill Creek in an adjacent spot
in 1845. This coincidence inspired the series
I, Kaaterskill, weaving a dialogue between an
American wilderness idealized by mid-19th
century painters and the imperiled environment
we live in today. When Wides first showed these
early photographs, she paired them with
reproductions of Hudson River School paintings
made in the same vicinity.
This inquiry into the forces that animate a
place is a through-line in much of my work. Wides is
inspired not only by the historic and cultural
influences that vibrate in a setting, but how
we gather up these bits of data to form an
idea of a landscape—or as Merleau-Ponty
writes of Cezanne, to depict “an object in
the act of appearing, organizing itself before
our eyes.” These words articulate Wides' desire
to capture the immersive act of beholding:
through manipulations of light and space in her
photographs, Wides seeks to slow down the moment
of observing so we can see deeply into the
meaning of a landscape and contemplate
where we are.
Catskill Creek in 2004, she learned Thomas Cole
had painted Catskill Creek in an adjacent spot
in 1845. This coincidence inspired the series
I, Kaaterskill, weaving a dialogue between an
American wilderness idealized by mid-19th
century painters and the imperiled environment
we live in today. When Wides first showed these
early photographs, she paired them with
reproductions of Hudson River School paintings
made in the same vicinity.
This inquiry into the forces that animate a
place is a through-line in much of my work. Wides is
inspired not only by the historic and cultural
influences that vibrate in a setting, but how
we gather up these bits of data to form an
idea of a landscape—or as Merleau-Ponty
writes of Cezanne, to depict “an object in
the act of appearing, organizing itself before
our eyes.” These words articulate Wides' desire
to capture the immersive act of beholding:
through manipulations of light and space in her
photographs, Wides seeks to slow down the moment
of observing so we can see deeply into the
meaning of a landscape and contemplate
where we are.
Autorenwebsite
Eigenschaften und Details
- Hauptkategorie: Kunst & Fotografie
-
Projektoption: Quadratisch groß, 30×30 cm
Seitenanzahl: 42 - Veröffentlichungsdatum: Dez. 29, 2016
- Sprache English
- Schlüsselwörter color photography, landscapes, Hudson River School, Hudson Valley landscapes, Catskill
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Über den Autor
Susan Wides (born in Cincinnati, 1955) is a New York City-based camera artist. Her work is in the permanent collections of The Brooklyn Museum, NY; The International Center of Photography, NY; The Art Museum of Princeton University, NJ; la Bibliotheque Nationale, Paris, FR; The Center for Creative Photography, AZ; Frances Lehman Loeb Art Museum, NY, among many others. Wides has mounted more than 20 one-person exhibitions and participated in over 70 group exhibitions in museums and galleries the US and abroad. Her work has been widely collected and published. Wides is represented by Kim Foster Gallery in New York City.