— Rebecca Solnit (A Field Guide to Getting Lost)
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For my site-specific project I have a series of photographs of my grandmother’s childhood home taken from an image I discovered on GoogleMaps. (This is probably a violation of copy write laws.)
What I did was conceptually simple. I took a picture of her house on my computer screen, uploaded that image on to a computer, then photographed that image from the monitor, and uploaded that image on to the computer and repeated the process several times.
I was interested in the effect of camera lens on monitor, in the distortion that occurs in an image when these two media meet; how in the process of viewing, capturing, then reviewing and re-capturing the image changes- morphs from a nostalgic sunny day into a sort of digital nightmare.
For me, the pattern that emerges almost reads like a finger-print, evoking the idea of a crime scene investigation, like looking for clues somewhere after the fact. Also it reminds me of the patterns you find in wood that indicate that tree's age, or the ripples that occur when one body of water enters anohter.
Key Themes: Memory, Ownership, Longing, Nostalgia, Copy Write

Reminds me of Allan McCollum's series of 'surrogates'. He took stills from old television shows that had pictures in the background, and then zoomed in and took a still of those pictures. Confusing explanation? Yes.
ReplyDeleteSee for more: http://homepage.mac.com/studioarchives/amcnet2/album/perpetualphotos1.html