Freezing Time
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Lost in Translation,
the late William Vaughan '30, the photographer's father
© 2005 Safe Harbor Books. Used
with permission. safeharborbooks@aol.com |
In the context of digital media, manipulated
images, and fast effects, a simple but elegant book of photography
is a restful contrast. "Quartet is a throwback, an endangered
art form," writes Georgann Eubanks '76 in the introduction
to this collection of thirty-four images from four North Carolina
photographers. She describes the compilation as "refreshing
in the quiet pace required to absorb them. Such a contemplative
venture is the same process that these prints required of their
makers: a slow dance in near dark."
Caroline Vaughan '71 is one of those four artists.
Eight of her images, both color and black-and-white, are featured
in Quartet, along with the works of Rob Amberg, Elizabeth Matheson,
and John Rosenthal.
Eubanks writes that "Vaughan often speaks in metaphor because
she sees in metaphor.... [She] always seeks out the most transient
elements in a landscape, 'things that took a shorter time to be
created and that require non-discovery by humans to survive, like
the mud dauber's nest. These fragile things I try to photograph
in the most noninvasive ways,'"she says.
"At least once a year over two decades, Vaughan made a series
of portraits of her father, a skilled woodworker. This longitudinal
study demonstrates the fine patina of human aging, sturdy and burnished
as the oak cane that William Vaughan ['30] refused to carry for
walking but used to steady his hands for his daughter's camera.
Indeed, all of Caroline Vaughan's work aims to freeze time in order
to distill its effects."
An earlier book, Borrow Time: Photographs of Caroline Vaughan,
was published by Duke University Press. Amberg's Sodom Laurel Album
was published by Duke's
Center for Documentary Studies and the University of North Carolina
Press. The Jargon Society published Blithe Air: Photographs of
England, Wales, and Ireland by Matheson, who once worked for Duke's
publications and bulletins offices. In 1998, a Rosenthal collection,
Regarding Manhattan, was published by Safe Harbor Books, which
printed Quartet.
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