Chaco Reimagined
My work is strategically composed of photographs of photographs, and it asserts for an account of reality that is recursively fictional. It admits and elaborates upon the artificiality of its techniques in order to examine where relationships between the components of a constructed image are not always immediately sensical.
I recognize the constrictions of photography designated as an objective and indexed representation of reality and the absence of immediate “truth” in and of itself, and my use of doubled imagery presents a fictional order to be perceived on its own terms, admitting its historical precedence but with deviant fidelity to itself.
This series, produced at Chaco Culture National Historical Park in Northwestern New Mexico references and confronts a prevailing subscription to realism and the associated ideological precedents of its photographic representation.
The actions taken in the production of the imagery simultaneously create and critique in order to bypass the prescriptive readings of the dominant narratives ascribed to the landscape, the 900 year-old architecture and the ancestral Puebloan peoples who inhabited the area.