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Dislocation PDF Print Email
Expressive possibilities in lifeless environs.
By Peter Light / Salamanca, Spain
Saturday, March 9, 2002





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Three years passed before I could compose photographs in Providence, Rhode Island. While attending college in one of New England's post-industrial ports, I repeatedly searched in vain for a frame that might resonate with my adolescent aesthetic, some strain of 'nature photography.' This vision stemmed from my childhood in the sublime alpine panoramas of the Colorado Rockies, which I had grown to celebrate through images. But that naive approach was irrelevant in Providence.

Artistically unbound and awash, I finally attempted to define that aesthetic in negative terms, to capture what might constitute its opposite. My sterile engineering classrooms, a bleak parking lot under an indelibly overcast sky, a fluorescent-lit cement stairwell--what could inspire in these entirely forgettable places?

I see this collection of photos as merely a sketch, a rough meditation on some expressive possibilities in lifeless environs. It is highly personal. But what does it mean to you?
 
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All religions have honored the beggar. For he proves that in a matter at the same time as prosaic and holy, banal and regenerative as the giving of alms, intellect and morality, consistency and principles are miserably inadequate. —Walter Benjamin, German critic
 
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