Object Details
Artist
Barbara Bosworth, born Cleveland, OH 1953
Exhibition Label
Bosworth does not always photograph the landscapes we have been led to expect; instead we see charred timber; a highway underpass alight with birds; a hiker's lookout surveying an interchange. These are not images of a remote wilderness secluded from contact, yet we are still surrounded by the pleasures of the natural world: a cold river skimmed by the palm of the hand or the pulsing rush of a waterfall. Her photographs are peopled with tourists, friends, family, and sometimes the artist herself: "As a photographer I am interested not just in the terrain but in the ways we interact with our environment. I began to make panoramic photographs as a way to impart a greater sense of the land, to convey the experience of being surrounded by the landscape."
The large-scale color prints from the series Meadow were all made within a space of several acres just outside suburban Boston. Photographed along the intersection of manicured fields and rough brush and bramble, the meadow is home to blackberries and wild roses, nesting birds, fireflies, coyotes, and an occasional black bear. We watch as the sunlight angles and shifts through each season, and the dense growth of the meadow opens and closes around this compact and intimate world.Earth and Sky: Photographs by Barbara Bosworth exhibition label
Credit Line
Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of Haluk and Elisa Soykan
Copyright
© 2003, Barbara Bosworth
Date
2003
Object number
2008.2.25
Restrictions & Rights
Usage conditions apply
Type
Photography-Photoprint
Medium
chromogenic print
Dimensions
sheet and image: 32 x 40 in. (81.3 x 101.6 cm)
See more items in
Smithsonian American Art Museum Collection
Department
Graphic Arts
Data Source
Smithsonian American Art Museum
Topic
Landscape\meadow
Landscape\Massachusetts\Carlisle
Link to Original Record
Record ID
saam_2008.2.25