calla lily displacement
Here’s a recently reworked piece, Calla Lily Displacement, from the Destructive Testing photo series I started ten years ago:
Believe it or not this work sprang from a discomfort I had with the documentary photo tradition, where the photographer is often considered an invisible presence, and where photography is a neutral and even benign tool with which to view of the world.
Destructive Testing is a group of still life images documenting various gently destructive acts against botanical material. In these actions, I was interested in questioning that neutrality by pointing out the presence of the photographer. At the same time I wanted the image to still be a beautiful one, something that balanced the destructiveness with qualities we expect from images we want to have around us.
(And yes, I wanted to do a calla lily picture that wasn’t like the tens of thousands of them that have already been done…)
April 24 2008 08:29 pm | Categories: art • photography | Tags: calla lilies • Destructive Testing • documentary photography • James SOE NYUN • Zantedeschia aethiopica



[ Lost in the Landscape ] » extreme “bonsai” on 15 May 2008 at 8:12 pm #
[…] I see this closely related to my Destructive Testing photographs, one of which I’ve posted here. And just as the photographs obsess a bit about the human-culture dynamic and issues of control, I […]