David Harris
Statement
I began taking photographs in 1969, using 35 mm still and 16mm motion
picture to record student life in college. This early work, confined
to black and white imagery, laid the ground work for my approach
to the medium, namely as a means for documentation. For the past
three years I have used the West Medford Open Studios as a chance
to exhibit samples of images taken largely in the 1990s as part of
my “rust” series. Initially conceived simply as “rust,” the
project expanded from detailed images of rusted metal on construction
sites throughout Boston to include various other instances of distressed
or altered metal, wooden and stone surfaces wherever I saw them.
This year I have included more newly printed images from this early
work, images from Portugal, as well as more recent images from Maine.
While the work has shifted dramatically from the photojournalistic
work with which I began, I still use the camera as a way of seeing,
of recording the embedded but taken-for-granted beauty that surrounds
us, both man-made and natural. All images are produced from traditional
35 mm negatives or slides.
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