Wednesday, March 4, 2009
Lecture # 4: Amy Stein
During Stein’s lecture she explained two of her most prominent series, Domesticated and Stranded. While showing these series she explained her background and how it influenced her in creating these series. As a photographer, Stein had almost no formal training, but her background in politics becomes evident in her photos which show American families and communities coping in hard economic times. However, this is not the overwhelming factor in her imagery. Her series Domesticated consists of staged images based on real stories about encounters that locals of Matamoras, PA, have had. These staged scenes always involve taxidermied animals of some sort, and sometimes involve interactions between people and animals. Stein stated that the purpose of this series is to examine the boundary between the built environment and the natural world, as well as the tension between humans and animals. Given her intent, I think her series accomplishes its mission, because upon viewing the images I immediately feel a tension between the domesticated and the wild, even though I know the images are staged. Her other series, Stranded is almost the opposite of Domesticated, in the sense that it is not staged, and doesn’t involve props of stuffed dead animals. When working on this series Stein realized that she wanted to take portraits of stranded motorists, and that by doing this all over the country she would also be documenting the political and economic temperature of the time. This series began right after Hurricane Katrina, and ended around the same time as the Bush Administration, and certainly shows people in a certain light that no doubt were affected by the times. Over all I really enjoyed viewing Steins images, and the way in which she works. Though both Domesticated and Stranded are two very different series, they both revolve around a central structured element – and it is partly this structure that makes them so successful.
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