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This body of work includes photographs from
the Fresh Kills landfill shortly before it closed in
March 2001. The site reopened temporarily as
a sorting ground for the rubble and refuse from
the World Trade Center which Wides photographed
at a salvage yard nearby. Once the largest
landfill in the world, Fresh Kills is located on
Staten Island at the edge of New York City.
The pictures explore the city’s polarities:
the brand names visible among the detritus
testify to the allure of their origin. Through
focal manipulations of light, Wides seeks to intensify
the visualization of these extremes, and to
dissolve it—debris turning to earth, evidence
of consumerism transforming into a version
of nature. As objects transition in and out of
recognition, questions surface about what is
real and what is invented.
While working, Wides was struck by the words of the
poet A.R. Ammons from his book, Garbage:
“garbage has to be the poem of our time
because garbage is spiritual, believable enough
to get our attention, getting in the way … what
else deflects us from the error of our illusionary
ways...”
the Fresh Kills landfill shortly before it closed in
March 2001. The site reopened temporarily as
a sorting ground for the rubble and refuse from
the World Trade Center which Wides photographed
at a salvage yard nearby. Once the largest
landfill in the world, Fresh Kills is located on
Staten Island at the edge of New York City.
The pictures explore the city’s polarities:
the brand names visible among the detritus
testify to the allure of their origin. Through
focal manipulations of light, Wides seeks to intensify
the visualization of these extremes, and to
dissolve it—debris turning to earth, evidence
of consumerism transforming into a version
of nature. As objects transition in and out of
recognition, questions surface about what is
real and what is invented.
While working, Wides was struck by the words of the
poet A.R. Ammons from his book, Garbage:
“garbage has to be the poem of our time
because garbage is spiritual, believable enough
to get our attention, getting in the way … what
else deflects us from the error of our illusionary
ways...”
Sitio web del autor
Características y detalles
- Categoría principal: Libros de arte y fotografía
-
Características: Cuadrado grande, 30×30 cm
N.º de páginas: 44 - Fecha de publicación: feb. 08, 2017
- Idioma English
- Palabras clave color photography, fresh kills landfill, landscape photography, garbage, landfill
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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.