Sacha-project proposal
During the pandemic of 2020, I started working in the studio to make self-constructed landscapes. I wanted to escape the reality I inhabited. Missing the possibility to go places, at first I wanted to make landscapes that look like Earth. When I was forced to cancel my trip to the Alps I started to built my own snowy mountains. Later I became interested in traveling even further and became inspired by distant expeditions and images from other planets. I started to incorporate the alien aspect in these self-constructed landscapes. Some of the images evoke uncanniness that speaks of alien landscapes, dreams of the ‘otherworldly’ and science fiction cinema.
Through my miniaturisation of landscape photography, I have been able to focus on photography as image making rather than recording. I developed interesting methods within this project to explore themes of escapism and traveling within strict limitations. The works deceives the viewer, creating a sublime landscape from otherwise prosaic materials. This way I want to challenge the notion of the imagined sublime and our willingness to believe in it.
In 2021, the borders were opened again and I started traveling. I made a series of photographs of real mountains in Switzerland. This year, I want to make a body of work wherein the experience of landscape takes a central place. This includes finishing the current project I am working on. Going through the 90 images I made of the Swiss mountains and make a selection out of these images that I want to turn into a presentation. The possible outcomes are numerous, including a book, or an installation consisting of projections or another form. [Part of the research will be into finding an appropriate vehicle for the material.]
While photographing outside again, I've noticed that my gaze had changed. Whereas I normally pack a lot of materials and equipment, I now made this series with one camera and lens. I didn’t take ‘props’ but only focused on the mountains themselves. I was more focused on getting close instead of capture the vastness of the landscape. The textures and tactile-ness in this work made me want to create mountains out of other materials myself again. I'm going to build landscapes out of natural materials but also very human-made materials such as 3D prints. I'm going to make diptychs which allow the real world and the constructed world communicate with each other. I plan to travel to different places and produce landscape images and then respond to those images with a constructed iteration. I want to maintain a flexible approach to these experiments and produce a number of outcomes. In wintertime I’m going back to the mountains to make new work and here I want to also continue the experiments moving images I began last year.
4 Why do you want to make it?
I am fascinated about how we live in and are influenced by our environment and how we can use our imagination to create a new one. The power of nature dominates us, but I have dominion over the constructed landscape that fits in my hand. This power dynamic between humans and nature is something I'm going to explore more in my upcoming projects. Due to the contrast of the grand and the small, it is important that I also experiment with scale in the final presentation. For a long time, I wanted my work not only to be about my own experience but also about making this experience accessible for the spectator. So one of the important things to focus on this year would be to create an immersive experience for the spectator. Therefore, I’d like to experiment to present with different materials. This includes different kind of papers to deepen the texture aspect. But also working with (slide) projections, light(panels), video installations, stereo viewers, spaces and soundscapes.
My tutors will help me this year by continuing the conversation about my work and reflecting on it. Also, we have the opportunity to invite a guest ‘mentor’. I'm very interested in the work of Bethany de Forest who makes huge diorama's which she photographs. She also has experience in filmmaking and stereo-photography. I’d like to investigate a bit more who I want to invite. Other than that, I’d like to take workshops in the wood station and ceramics station to see how I can build things myself. I can use these skills to put together an installation.
6 Relation to previous practice
I’ve always been fascinated about landscape and nature, so this is a central subject in my work. I am taking on different approaches within this subject and I try to deepen this more. Instead of using the landscape just as a ‘decor’ for my work, as I did before, I am now trying to incorporate different views (anthropological, ethnographic, geological, geographical, cultural, environmental, aesthetic). Although the landscape still takes a central place in my work
7 Relation to a larger context
There’s a relationship with my work with the following themes: Romanticism, The Sublime experience, Escapism.
Timetable
Form November until December I will work on my constructed landscapes and finish the diptychs I've been working on. In December I'm traveling to the mountains again and making a new series of work. I'll be selecting the images I made from this trip in the months January and February. From this period of time I'll be also making constructed iterations on the work.
8 References/bibliography
Conversations with landscape – Karl Benediktsson, Katrin Anna Lund
Conversations With Landscape moves beyond the conventional dualisms associated with landscape, exploring notions of landscape and its relation with humans through the metaphor of conversation. With contributions drawn from a variety of disciplines, including anthropology, geography, archaeology, philosophy, literature and the visual arts, this book explores the affects and emotions engendered in the conversations between landscape and humans.
Examples: the making of 40 photographs - Ansel Adams
Ansel Adams talks about the situations around the making of his photos and the methods he used to realize them. Each image is accompanied by a text that studies the technical and aesthetic conditions of the subject and contains memories of the places and people involved.
Space is the place – Lukas Feireiss
Together with artists, designers, architects, curators, historians, theoreticians and philosophers, it questions the experience, imagination and design of spaces and places in theory and practice. The publication looks at contemporary artistic practices that turn spaces into places. Space and place are explored as topics and mediums of playful investigation and serious reflection.
Landscape and power – W.J.T. Mitchell
A studie on landscape by considering landscape not simply as an object to be seen or a text to be read, but as an instrument of cultural force, a central tool in the creation of national and social identities
[this will be very important: how are you going to plan these trips and make sure you can process the material you gather, you need to propose a method for how to do this]
[Steve's new notes: This is a great improvement. It reads very well and looks great too!)
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