Showing posts with label Ellie Davies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ellie Davies. Show all posts
Monday, June 1, 2015
BEAUTY: Photography--Ellie Davies
I previously posted Ellie Davies' work here in 2011 and she has been working last year and this year on a newer series of photographs called Stars 2014 - 2015. Her Artist Statement about the series says it best:
"Stars, 2014 explores my desire to find some balance between a relationship with the wild places of my youth, and a pervasive sense of disconnectedness with the natural world.
The Western landscape tradition embodies a pairing that James Elkins calls ‘the subject-object relationship’. Typified by the ‘scenic viewpoint’ or tourist panoramic overlook, we gaze, often through binoculars or telescopes, at wide vistas and dramatic seascapes, awed and overwhelmed. But this landscape experience often alienates the viewer from the scene and, just as the landscape itself becomes an object, a separation arises between them.
Today the majority of people live in urban or semi-urban environments, experiencing the landscape from a distanced position mediated through various media and technology. From this viewpoint the notion of the landscape in all its sensuous materiality, our being within it rather than outside it, seems beyond reach.
Stars, 2014 addresses this distancing by drawing the viewer right into the heart of a forest which still holds mystery, and offers the potential for discovery and exploration. The series considers the fragility of our relationship with the natural world, and the temporal and finite nature of landscape as a human construct.
Mature and ancient forest landscapes are interposed with images of the Milky Way, Omega Centauri, the Norma Galaxy and Embryonic stars in the Nebula NGC 346 captured by the Hubble Telescope. Each image links forest landscapes with the intangible and unknown universe creating a juxtaposition that reflects my personal experiences of the forest; its physicality and tactility set against a profound and fundamental otherness, an alienation that separates us from a truly immersive relationship with the natural world."
http://www.elliedavies.co.uk/
"Stars, 2014 explores my desire to find some balance between a relationship with the wild places of my youth, and a pervasive sense of disconnectedness with the natural world.
The Western landscape tradition embodies a pairing that James Elkins calls ‘the subject-object relationship’. Typified by the ‘scenic viewpoint’ or tourist panoramic overlook, we gaze, often through binoculars or telescopes, at wide vistas and dramatic seascapes, awed and overwhelmed. But this landscape experience often alienates the viewer from the scene and, just as the landscape itself becomes an object, a separation arises between them.
Today the majority of people live in urban or semi-urban environments, experiencing the landscape from a distanced position mediated through various media and technology. From this viewpoint the notion of the landscape in all its sensuous materiality, our being within it rather than outside it, seems beyond reach.
Stars, 2014 addresses this distancing by drawing the viewer right into the heart of a forest which still holds mystery, and offers the potential for discovery and exploration. The series considers the fragility of our relationship with the natural world, and the temporal and finite nature of landscape as a human construct.
Mature and ancient forest landscapes are interposed with images of the Milky Way, Omega Centauri, the Norma Galaxy and Embryonic stars in the Nebula NGC 346 captured by the Hubble Telescope. Each image links forest landscapes with the intangible and unknown universe creating a juxtaposition that reflects my personal experiences of the forest; its physicality and tactility set against a profound and fundamental otherness, an alienation that separates us from a truly immersive relationship with the natural world."
http://www.elliedavies.co.uk/
Labels:
art,
beauty: photography,
Ellie Davies,
forest,
Hubble telescope,
mystery,
NASA,
nature,
photograph,
photographer,
photography,
stars,
Stars 2014 - 2015
Monday, December 5, 2011
BEAUTY: Photography--Ellie Davies
British fine art photographer Ellie Davies has a penchant for capturing scenes that are steeped in a kind of eerie foreboding. Her Magic Realist photos are set at twilight (in fact, one of her photographic series is called "The Gloaming," an ancient word I adore) or in the dark of night. We see shots of nature, suspiciously empty clearings at the edge of impenetrable black, or people alone at night, being watched...
It all deliciously speaks to folk lore and fairy tales of getting lost in the woods at dusk, or urban folk lore where lone figures walk into a park or dark, abandoned building and never come out.







Top to bottom: After Dark 4; I Always Knew You'd Come Back 1; Silent, Dark, and Deep 2; The Gloaming 1; Vantage Point 1; Vantage Point 5; Vantage Point 8
http://www.elliedavies.co.uk/
It all deliciously speaks to folk lore and fairy tales of getting lost in the woods at dusk, or urban folk lore where lone figures walk into a park or dark, abandoned building and never come out.







Top to bottom: After Dark 4; I Always Knew You'd Come Back 1; Silent, Dark, and Deep 2; The Gloaming 1; Vantage Point 1; Vantage Point 5; Vantage Point 8
http://www.elliedavies.co.uk/
Labels:
art,
beauty: photography,
Ellie Davies,
magic realism,
photographer,
photography,
photos
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