Artist Statement
Conversations with History
As long as people have been in the American West, they have found its barren desert landscapes to be ideal for dumping garbage and forgetting. I was born in Yuma, Arizona in 1980 and I have never known this landscape without the forgotten debris of urban sprawl. Today, the notion of land untouched by the hand of man is so foreign it might as well be make-believe.
The deserts of the West have special significance in the history of photography. By the time I became an adult I began to see that the Arizona desert was far different from the scenery once photographed by Timothy O’Sullivan in the 1860s. I have explored this landscape with an awareness of the photographers who have come before me, and this awareness has led me to pay close attention to the traces left behind by others.
I collect discarded cans from the desert floor, some more than four decades old, which have earned a deep reddish-brown, rusty coloration. This rich patina is the evidence of light and time, the two main components inherent in the very nature of photography. For this body of work, I manipulate these found objects through a labor-intensive 19th century photographic process known as wet-plate collodion. I create images on their surfaces that speak to human involvement with this landscape. The results are objects that have history as artifacts and hold images connected to their locations.
Process Statement
Each photograph is made on a unique object found in the Sonoran Desert. They are one of a kind and vary in size ranging from two inches to ten inches in any direction. I use the wet-plate collodion process to make the photographs on these objects.
David Emitt Adams is an artist whose current practice engages historical media and uses them in an informed contemporary dialogue about photography’s past and present. He obtained his BFA from Bowling Green State University in Ohio and a MFA from Arizona State University. Currently his exhibition titled Conversations with History on view at the Griffin Museum of Photography in Winchester, Massachusetts. He has given artist lectures at the San Francisco Art Institute sponsored by PhotoAlliance, the Carnegie Museum of Art as part of the f295 Symposium, the Medium Festival of Photography in San Diego, and the 50th Anniversary Society for Photographic Education Conference in Chicago. His work is in the permanent collection of The Museum of Photographic Arts in San Diego, Santa Barbara Museum of Art, The Center for Creative Photography, Tucson, and numerous private collections.
How to use our image viewer
Click on any of the thumbnail images to launch the viewer. You can then navigate forward and backward within the portfolio by clicking the left or right side of the enlarged image. Click the add to collection checkbox to automatically add an image to your collection. Image tags or search engine keywords appear below the collections' checkbox and each word or phrase is a link to potentially more image matches.