Artist Statement
Limbo, is an ongoing series of cyanotype prints of blemished, and irregular plants and leaves, inspired by the experience of sudden and irreversible change. The native plants I photograph are characters existing in ambiguous time and space, that interact with each other and respond to forces beyond their control. I use photographic processes such as motion blur and digital compositing to continue the transformation started by time, weather, and insects. Within each composition are juxtapositions intended to represent the precarious balance between opposing states of being and the attempt to achieve equilibrium.
Process Statement
My work diverges from traditional uses of cyanotype in several ways. Rather than representing ideal plant specimens for their scientific or aesthetic value I select my subject matter for their imperfections. Instead of pressing plant material flat against the paper to produce a photogram, I photograph still life arrangements that represent spatial relationships, time, and impermanence. Those images become digital negatives for making 15"x20" contact prints on hand coated paper that enable me to enlarge the plants and leaves several times larger than life size.
Rebecca Clark is a Professor of Art at the Community College of Rhode Island where she teaches introductory and intermediate level courses in both digital and film based photography. She studied art history and East Asian studies at Oberlin College where she earned her BA and holds a MFA in photography from the Rhode Island School of Design. Rebecca’s work, which has always involved some form of alternative process or manipulation of media and integration of appropriated imagery, has been exhibited in museums and galleries throughout New England and beyond.
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