Sunday 29 April 2012

Preserving Life

Germany 49# (Catatonic Man) by American photographer Jack Burman. 
Description coming soon!

Saturday 3 March 2012

Too Much or Too Late?

Irish Traveller graves are often seen as ostentatious and a waste of money that would be better spent on the living rather than the dead. On the other hand they could symbolise a life worth remembering, as well as an effort to preserve a disappearing culture. What do you think?

Sunday 24 July 2011

Head On by Cai Guo Qiang

Rest a Little on the Lap of Life

I really enjoy the work of Polly Morgan and it was lovely to see this piece up close in the Pallant House Gallery in Chichester earlier this year. I think she would be a great artist to include in my dissertation. Using creatures that she finds dead on the road, and given by friends, she breaths "new life" and creates something beautiful that would normally have withered and rotted into the ground, therefore being forgotten or unobserved forevermore.

Friday 22 July 2011

Uncle Colin by Tracey Emin

This piece by Tracey Emin is low-key and more subtle than her more well known works, such as My Bed. I learnt about this touching tribute to her dead uncle by reading Art & Death by Chris Townsend. She never knew her Uncle as he was killed in a car accident before she was born. Saying this, she still felt the need to document the tragedy, as it would be quickly forgotten once immediate family died, therefore immortilzing him through her artistic status. A seagull features in one of the frames; returning to the idea of a spirit passing from this world to the next.

Early American Epitaph

I came across this thought provoking epitaph in Jay Ruby's book Secure the Shadow: Death and Photography in America (an excellent book).

Stranger, stop and cast an eye;
As you are now, so once was I.
As I am now, so you shall be;
Prepare for Death and follow me.