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The Family and the Land: Sally Mann

Zoltan Arva-Toth | Events | April 7, 2010 | 2 Comments
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Hosted by The Photographers’ Gallery in London, The Family and the Land: Sally Mann is the American photographer Sally Mann’s first solo exhibition in the UK. The ‘family’ element of the title will comprise Mann’s early series Immediate Family and the newer series Faces, both of which depict her children at various ages. The two series Motherland: Virginia and Deep South represent the landscape, portraying images made across the south of the United States. The exhibition opens on 18th June and runs until 19th September 2010. The Photographers’ Gallery is located at 16 – 18 Ramillies Street, W1, London. Admission is free.

The Photographers’ Gallery Press Release

First UK Solo Exhibition for Sally Mann at The Photographers’ Gallery

The Family and the Land: Sally Mann

Dates: 18 June – 19 September 2010
Press view: 10.00 – 13.00, 17 June 2010
Location: The Photographers’ Gallery, 16 – 18 Ramillies Street, W1
Admission Free

This exhibition at The Photographers’ Gallery will be the American photographer Sally Mann’s first solo exhibition in the UK. Combining several series from her long photographic career, The Family and the Land: Sally Mann will reflect Mann’s artistic impulse to draw on the world around her as subject matter.

The ‘family’ element of the title will comprise Mann’s early series Immediate Family and the newer series Faces, both of which depict her children at various ages. The two series Motherland: Virginia and Deep South represent the landscape, portraying images made across the south of the United States. The more recent body of work, What Remains brings together both strands of the exhibition, through its examination of how bodies, as they decompose, merge into the land itself.

Sally Mann (b.1951, USA) first gained prominence for Immediate Family (1984–94) a series of intimate and revealing portraits of her three young children, Emmet, Jesse and Virginia. Taken over a ten-year period, Mann depicts them playing, swimming and acting to the camera in and around their homestead in Lexington, Virginia. Born out of a collaborative process between mother and child, the work encapsulates their childhood in all its rawness and innocence.

Mann followed Immediate Family by focusing on the land itself in her series Motherland: Virginia (1993–94) and Deep South (1996–98). Here she is drawn to locations steeped in historical significance from the American Civil War, which left both literal and metaphoric scars on the trees and the land itself. Using antique cameras and processes throughout, Mann accentuates the sense of age in the subject while embracing the imperfect effects created by her printing process.

The most recent series in the exhibition, What Remains (2000–04) seeks to further connect human contact to the land and how the body eventually returns to and becomes a part of the land itself. This concept led Mann to photograph decomposing cadavers at the University of Tennesse Anthropological Research Facility, Knoxville, where human decomposition is studied in a variety of, mainly outdoor, settings. What Remains deals directly with the subject of death, still a social taboo. As with her other work, Mann’s subjects are sensitively handled and beautifully realised, encouraging us to reflect upon our own mortality and place within nature’s order.

The Family and the Land: Sally Mann at The Photographers’ Gallery is an edited version of a touring exhibition, conceived by Sally Mann in collaboration with Hasse Persson, Director, Borås Museum of Modern Art, Sweden. It has been presented at Fotomuseum Den Hague and the Musée de l‘Elysée, Lausanne as well as in Stockholm, Oslo, Helsinki, Helsingborg, and Copenhagen.



 

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#1 ben

And till the 6th of June, you can see it at Lausanne (Switzerland), Musée de l’Elysée !

5:52 pm - Wednesday, April 7, 2010

#2 Eric L Hansen

I just came across the feature-length documentary film about Sally Mann called “What Remains”. I was so blown away I wanted everyone in the world I know to see it. So I set it up as a free workshop (http://www.ericlhansen.com/the-film-sally-mannwhat-remains-p_22.html). What struck me about both Keith Carter *and* Sally Mann is how grounded they are in their sense of place. I just want to let that sink in for a minute. Sally Mann grew up on a horse farm in Virgina, married, and now lives on a horse farm in Virginia, where she has photographed around the farm, raised children whom she has photographed on the farm; and so on. She uses an 8x10 view camera and collodion wet plates, so I wouldn’t expect her to be flying around like a photojournalist. But her medium is so matched to her sense of place. I think we could all benefit from (re)considering how our chosen medium links up with our sense of place.

7:53 pm - Monday, May 17, 2010

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