Artwork description:

Archival pigment print on fine art paper. 5cm white border for framing.

For me, like so many of us, the most marked change in our recent social upheaval has been the absence of other people; friends, family, clients, neighbours.

I had planned a project earlier in the year that I intended to shoot in May that would have involved a group of 3 people and as soon as we went into lockdown I realised that this idea would have to be shelved for the foreseeable future. As a lot of my work tends to include faces or figures, I struggled at first to work out what could replace it.

But near to where I live there is the site of an old Iron Age fort known as Oliver’s Castle. The high promontory is sprinkled with a distinctive line of trees swept into bleak shapes by years of prevailing winds. I took a camera up there and began to photograph over a period of a couple of weeks.

What this series has reminded me of is that as artists we draw attention not just to the presence of an object that we portray, but in how we frame the object, the space that we chose (or chose not) to leave around it, we also draw attention to the absence.

These trees are a perfect visual metaphor for the new world we all find ourselves in. Presence and absence.

Materials used:

Paper, ink

Featured by our Editors:

The Gloaming (2020)

Photograph 
by Claire Newman-Williams

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£310

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Artwork description
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Archival pigment print on fine art paper. 5cm white border for framing.

For me, like so many of us, the most marked change in our recent social upheaval has been the absence of other people; friends, family, clients, neighbours.

I had planned a project earlier in the year that I intended to shoot in May that would have involved a group of 3 people and as soon as we went into lockdown I realised that this idea would have to be shelved for the foreseeable future. As a lot of my work tends to include faces or figures, I struggled at first to work out what could replace it.

But near to where I live there is the site of an old Iron Age fort known as Oliver’s Castle. The high promontory is sprinkled with a distinctive line of trees swept into bleak shapes by years of prevailing winds. I took a camera up there and began to photograph over a period of a couple of weeks.

What this series has reminded me of is that as artists we draw attention not just to the presence of an object that we portray, but in how we frame the object, the space that we chose (or chose not) to leave around it, we also draw attention to the absence.

These trees are a perfect visual metaphor for the new world we all find ourselves in. Presence and absence.

Materials used:

Paper, ink

Featured by our Editors:
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Claire Newman-Williams

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Location United Kingdom

About
I have long identified as a photographic artist, but recently, my journey as an artist has taken a new turn leading me from photography into the captivating world of abstract... Read more

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