“The
stewardship of natural resources
and the challenging complexity of human interaction with our world
are of utmost importance to me.”
Dornith Doherty
and the challenging complexity of human interaction with our world
are of utmost importance to me.”
Dornith Doherty
The University of North Texas’ Research Professor
of Photography, Dornith Doherty’s
interest in the environment is a driving force behind her photography.
As she said of her
turn of the century Constructed
Landscapes project “By combining the precise detailing of photographic
realism with the extravagant exaggeration of the still life, my photographs
navigate the border between nature and artifice in order to explore my interest
in the human presence in the environment.”
With projects that have included
the examination of US and Mexican cultures in her Rio Grande project and the resilience
of coyotes in her back yard, Doherty’s current preoccupation is the exploration of “the role of seed banks and their preservation
efforts in the face of climate change.” Archiving Eden has been an eight year and counting labor of
love for Doherty.
As she told Hyperallergic’s “Archiving
Eden was
inspired by an article about the opening of the Svalbard Global Seed Vault near
the North Pole. When I read John Seabrook’s “Sowing for Apocalypse” in The New Yorker, the simultaneously pessimistic and optimistic
aspects of a global seed vault built to save the word’s botanical life from
catastrophic events made a profound impression on me.”
Since 2008 Doherty has collaborated with biologists around
the world from the US to Australia, from Britain to the Arctic circle documenting
the vital role seed banks play in protecting the genetic diversity of both wild
and agricultural species.
Doherty has also explored the poetic beauty inherent in her
core subject matter through the use of x-ray photography.
About which said in an exhibition press release “The amazing visual power
of magnified x-ray images, which springs from the technology’s ability to
record what is invisible to the human eye, illuminates my considerations not
only of the complex philosophical, anthropological, and ecological issues
surrounding the role of science and human agency in relation to gene banking,
but also of the poetic questions about life and time on a macro and micro scale.”
To
which she has added “And while they are an
incomplete and subjective response to this global effort, it is my hope that
these poetic visual artifacts may inspire conversation and awareness of this
important effort.”
Doherty’s
current exhibition Stow is on show at
the Houston
Center for Photography until the 10th of July.
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