CENTER ENVIRONMENTAL AWARD: Artist's Statement

Winner: Ella Morton

ellamorton.com

The Dissolving Landscape

24x30 and 16x24 Chromira prints

The Dissolving Landscape is a series of experimental analogue photographs that examine climate change in the Arctic and Subarctic landscapes of Canada and Nordic Europe. The project asks the question: what are we losing, in terms of our spiritual connection to the land, as the climate rapidly changes? I consider myself a poetic activist, articulating the profundity of our relationship with the land, and the emotional complexity of its change and loss as global warming unfolds.

The images are treated in the darkroom with mordançage, a black and white process that degrades the shadow areas of silver gelatin prints, libing the emulsion off the paper to create unique textures and veils. My goal in using mordançage is to capture the transcendent and fragile qualities of the landscape. The ways in which the images warp, melt and degrade highlight the spiritual power of the natural environment and also lament its destruction as the planet warms.

Research has shown that the Arctic is warming at almost twice the global rate. Many of the communities I’ve visited in northern regions have been witnessing the effects of climate change for decades already. While global warming is now a common theme in news reportage and traditional documentary work, I believe that my altered images offer a new way for viewers to engage with this issue on a deeper level. Photography can help to communicate the depth of our connection with the land and the urgency of its accelerating deterioration.

This work also addresses how the medium of photography itself is in transition. The proliferation of consumer photography through the emergence of smart phones and social media has challenged artists to use the medium in new ways. I aim to uncover how photographs can show more than a straightforward depiction of reality, and how the alchemy of analogue techniques can be reinvented in the digital age to tell deeper stories within images.


CENTER ENVIRONMENTAL AWARD: Juror's Statement

Melissa Dale

The Nature Conservancy, Interim Director of Photography

Throughout my two decades of work with The Nature Conservancy, I’ve always sought fresh, creative and compelling visual storytelling to inspire, inform, and motivate people to seek to understand the importance of our natural world and the challenges we all face in not only protecting, but also, restoring it.

In this year’s CENTER Awards’ Environmental category, overall, there were many excellent and creative interpretations of “the state of the ecological environment.” In my review process, I often experienced the joy of discovery, and gained an even deeper appreciation for the diverse visual explorations of our human relationship with the ecological world.

Nonetheless, this year, the most compelling project is “The Dissolving Landscape.”

The artist’s statement says it all:
“The Dissolving Landscape is a series of experimental analogue photographs that examine climate change in the Arctic and Subarctic landscapes of Canada and Nordic Europe. The project asks the question: what are we losing, in terms of our spiritual connection to the land, as the climate rapidly changes? I consider myself a poetic activist, articulating the profundity of our relationship with the land, and the emotional complexity of its change and loss as global warming unfolds.”

As I was reviewing submissions, I came to this project and the obvious shift in tonal values surprised me. It made me stop and investigate what’s going on visually. Literally, I exclaimed, “wow, what is that process?” Mordançage is an ideal technique to illustrate the story of climate change and the slow warming process in the Arctic regions. These images evoke a sense of change. Some parts of the prints are literally missing. Removing silver from the prints is akin to the loss of ice from the Arctic regions. I imagine that seen in-person, these prints with their incredible texture and detail, would be even more impactful.

These images create a poetic interaction between artist, print, & viewer. The clear contrast in tonal values forces the viewer to hesitate and contemplate the meaning and purpose in the imagery. Ultimately, the viewer is led to receive the artist’s point of view & message from a unique and fresh perspective. All of this, results in a fascinating new way of both projecting and interpreting our world, as well as the immediate challenges before it.

I love the mysteriousness, ambiguity, and dream-like quality of these images. Refreshing and intriguing. I want to see more!