secret spaces
Welcome to Secret Spaces !
(See images below…)
In February of 2020, right before the Covid virus sent us all running for cover, I had my first ever photo exhibit at Fig Tree Gallery here in Fresno. The photos in that exhibit were taken over a 40+ year period of time from airplanes, flying between the East and West Coasts of the U.S. at 30,000 feet! Originally, these photos were never taken as Art Photography per se – they were primarily collected as resource materials – ideas for use in teaching design, or to be incorporated into my creative work in ceramics or fibers. From such a distance, the earth below offers us a rich canvas filled with beautiful yet ephemeral compositions. This amazing “aerial art gallery” is created by rock, water, soil and plants, as well as man’s interactions with these elements. Change is ever the constant.
All of the images in this exhibit, Secret Spaces, were taken under the sequester imposed on all levels of our lives and society by the SARS-CoV-2 (COVID-19) virus. Just 2 weeks after my exhibit closed, life as we knew it also shut down as we faced, too often alone and apart from loved ones, a devastating world pandemic that has yet to release its’ grip on us.
The images that had previously captivated me from my airplane flights were vast and expansive, but I now found myself turning inward and looking deeply into the plants, and especially flowers growing in our garden. I found myself wanting to crawl around the interior of a flower – much like its’ pollinators do by nature – and experience its’ internal secret architecture. And so, I spent many hours a day working with flowers, tripod and an iPhone fitted with a macro lens, while the news of the year played out in the background.
Here too, I found that Change is ever the constant. A flower’s passage from youth through old age exposed some amazing visual surprises. I very often found a suggestion of bird-like forms in these internal spaces. There were also figures which seemed to have large bulging “eyes”, but actually were the flower parts that contained the seeds of the next generation. I used to tell my Papermaking students that once you’ve made paper out of your own garden plants, you’ll never see the plant world the same again. I can now truly say the same about the experience of exploring the mysterious interiors of a flower! I hope you enjoy this journey.