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History
Sighs consists of twenty
still photographs and a two-channel video piece. This work addresses
how history
can (and can’t)
manifest itself within a place, exploring two sites with related historical
significance. The videos and photographs serve as important counterpoints
to one another: the videos operate as meditations, or broad strokes,
while the photographs function as grounded, detailed, empirical observations.
On one screen of the video piece, we see the sun set over the Arabian
Sea (titled, British Landing Site, Low Tide…), on the
second screen we see the sun rise over the Atlantic (titled Columbus
Landing Site, High Tide…). Both play simultaneously in real-time for twenty minutes,
linking the two places through the reflexive movement of the sun. The
always-moving, but ever-present sun serves as a poetic representation
of the idea of empire,
offering an infinite global time loop.
The photographs, on the other hand, remind us of the flipside of the
romantic notion of exploration. They examine the banal remains of commerce
and exploitation
through the landscape surrounding these two sites—specifically
the sugar industry. The photographs reveal details about the way in which
cane
farming shapes and demarcates the land. The prosaic nature of the photographs
draws reference to the places themselves, which grounds the more abstract
notion of history in the videos to something tangible and specific.
If early colonialism can be seen as a precursor to the economic “globalism” we
witness today (as indeed I think it can), this body of work looks for
clues of the roots of this collective impulse to conquer. History Sighs
suggests
the interconnectedness of people, places and events, and the cyclical
nature of human experience.
History Sighs will be
published as an artist's book, Winter, 2007, by A-Jump
Books.
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