Wednesday, March 26, 2008

JEM SOUTHAM

Upton Pyne

Davis Museum and Cultural Center
Wellesley College, Massachusetts
March 19 to June 8, 2008
















The Pond at Upton Pyne, March 1999


One of the most significant photographers working in Britain today, Jem Southam creates photographic narratives of landscape transformed by time and humans. Upton Pyne chronicles the evolution of a small pond, the result of industrial waste on the site of a former manganese mine near his home in Cornwall, England. The artist describes the series as a “collection of histories,” which he gathered during regular visits to the pond during 1996-2003. The photographs detail a very particular place and the passing of time. They also address broader concerns about the relationship between humans and the natural world, from questions about the environment to debates on urbanization. Fundamentally, Southam’s work meditates on the human longing for an Arcadian past. (Excerpts from press release)