Work samples
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Between death and, 2024
3 minute clip from single channel video, overall running length 11'55"
About Lynn
Following graduation with a BFA in photography, Lynn moved to Australia in 1975. She fell in love with the country’s vast inland desert landscape. After spending all her life in an urban environment, it was a challenge to depict a space extending over thousands of miles that defied traditional pictorial conventions. Photographs of this landscape was the subject of her first one-person exhibition, Horizons (1981), at the National Gallery… more
Between death and, 2024
Single channel video, running time 11'55"
"Between death and," in collaboration with Catherine Borg, is an exploration of a funeral parlor in the center of Baltimore City on the precipice of its own transition. The film is a meditation on crossing boundaries—the liminal states embedded in life, death, and grief.
The video is unique for the range of image capturing technologies used to describe the condition of the building and to convey to the emotional nature of the subject. This is also true of the score which was generated by recording sounds emanating from the building’s internal structure and objects found in the former funeral home.
In A Matter of Time, 2020-present
Several years ago, while sorting through boxes of family photographs with a view to culling the collection of images, I discovered an assortment of tightly rolled photographic scrolls. These scrolls, depicting groups of campers, rows of school children, and adults sitting at dining tables, were taken decades ago with a wide-angle banquet camera. My interest in these vintage photographs eventually expanded to cover other commemorative events such as an assembly of new recruits during WWI.
Back in the studio, I began to strategically unfurl and rotate these scrolls, sometimes lighting both the front and back of the image, as a way of revealing simultaneously the photograph and autographs scribbled on the back. The landscape framing the edges of the picture was also of interest, suggesting ways of manipulating the scroll to emphasize its presence.
Given the relationship a photograph inevitably has with the past, my desire is to focus on the act of remembering. The contortions of the scrolls—the twisting, curling, and blurring during exposure—mirror the fragility of memory. My manipulation of the scrolls attempts to evoke how the gap between the photograph and memory continues to widen as the time when the picture was taken recedes further into the past.
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"To a Swell Old Friend," Summer Camp 1940 (23.12.05)
Black and white gelatin silver print from medium format negative, 18 1/2 x 23 inches
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"Phyllis Greenburg," Junior High School 1941 (23.05.06)
Black and white gelatin silver print from medium format negative, 18 1/2 x 23 inches
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"Sargent Smith," Army Recruiting Camp circa WWI (23.17.09)
Black and white gelatin silver print from medium format negative, 18 1/2 x 23 inches
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"2nd row From Bottom 8 Fm right" 1940 (24.10.07)
Black and white gelatin silver print from medium format negative
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Summer Camp 1937 (20.43.03)
Black and white gelatin silver print from medium format negative, 23 x 18 1/2 inches
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Camper, Summer Camp n.d. (23.09.02)
Black and white gelatin silver print from medium format negative, 18 1/2 x 23 inches
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Cabin, Summer Camp n.d. (20.22.16)
Black and white gelatin silver print from medium format negative, 18 1/2 x 23 inches
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First Love 1938 (20.17.11)
Black and white gelatin silver print from medium format photograph, 18 1/2 x 23 inches
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High School 1967 (20.35.01)
Black and white gelatin silver print from medium format negative, 18 1/2 x 23 inches
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Cloud, Military Camp n.d. (23.22.02)
Black and white gelatin silver print from medium format negative, 18 1/2 x 23 inches
Relative Time 2015-present, Part 1 Winter
A country’s landscape and identity are inextricably linked together. The incredible geographical diversity found in the United States continues to be an ongoing subject for artists and storytellers. Like mounds and pyramids, cemeteries are part of a larger story narrating the impact humans continue to have on the land.
Scrolling through countless maps on Google, mile by mile, I discovered that every state in the contiguous US has at least one cemetery situated on or near a state line. This realization was critical in providing a focus to this ongoing project. I like to think of Relative Time as a kind of national survey of these border cemeteries. More than a straightforward typology of cemeteries, the photographs reflect my varied responses to the details found in each cemetery and the site’s relation to the greater environment. (to be continued in Part 2)
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North Carolina to Tennessee
Archival digital print from medium format negative, 18 x 22 3/4 inches
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New York to Pennsylvania
Archival digital print from medium format negative, 18 x 22 3/4 inches
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Maryland to Pennsylvania
Archival digital print from medium format negative, 18 x 22 3/4 inches
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Alabama to Tennesse
Archival digital print from medium format negative, 18 3/4 x 22 inches
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Tennessee to Virginia
Archival digital print from medium format negative, 18 x 22 3/4 inches
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Tennessee to Mississippi
Archival digital print from medium format negative, 18 x 22 3/4 inches
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Kentucky to Tennessee
Archival digital print from medium format negative, 18 x 22 3/4 inches
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Delaware to Maryland
Archival digital print from medium format negative, 18 x 22 3/4 inches
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Maryland to Virginia
Archival digital print from medium format negative, 18 x 22 3/4 inches
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Colorado to Kansas
Archive digital print from medium format negative, 18 x 22 3/4 inches
Relative Time 2015-present, Part 2 Spring
Like a surveyor, my tripod is grounded in the cemetery with the camera lens directed towards the neighboring state. Adopting this position was critical in thinking about the invisible line that divides swaths of land into separate states. Although there may be considerable political divisions between states, the landscape is generally contiguous, a large plot of land that we all share. (to be continued in Part 3)
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Arkansas to Oklahoma
Archival digital print from medium format negative, 18 x 22 3/4 inches
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West Virginia to Ohio
Archival digital print from medium format negative, 18 x 22 3/4 inches
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Louisiana to Texas
Archival digital print from medium format negative, 18 x 22 3/4 inches
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Georgia to Tennessee
Archival digital print from medium format negative, 18 x 22 3/4 inches
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Oklahoma to Arkansas
Archival digital print from medium format negative, 18 x 22 3/4 inches
Relative Time 2015-present, Part 3 Summer
My survey has taken me to some of the most remote parts of the country over the past decade. Without Google Maps my project would have been an impossible undertaking. Access to these maps is a game changer when it comes to previewing a particular site and plotting a route. In turn, our knowledge of a place has been altered by these satellite images. (to be continued in Part 4)
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Illinois to Indiana
Archival digital print from medium format negative, 18 x 22 3/4 inches
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Iowa to Missouri
Archival digital print from medium format negative, 18 x 22 3/4 inches
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Florida to Georgia
Archival pigment print from medium format negative, 18 x 22 3/4 inches
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Wyoming to Nebraska
Archival digital print from medium format negative, 18 x 22 3/4 inches
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Washington to Idaho
Archival digital print from medium format negative, 18 x 22 3/4 inches
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Michigan to Ohio
Archival digital print from medium format negative, 18 x 22 3/4 inches
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Ohio to Indiana
Archival digital print from medium format negative, 18 22 3/4 inches
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Montana to North Dakota
Archival digital print from medium format negative, 18 x 22 3/4 inches
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Nebraska to Colorado
Archival digital print from medium format negative, 18 x 22 3/4 inches
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Kansas to Nebraska
Archival digital print from medium format negative, 18 x 22 3/4 inches
Relative Time 2015-present, Part 4 Fall
When editing the pictures from this series, I think about the images depicting the western landscape by 19thC photographers such as William Henry Jackson, Carleton Watkins, and others. For these explorers, it was impossible to predict what laid beyond the mountain looming in front of them. Nearly two hundred years later, my survey of the American landscape depicts more quotidian occurrences. Fences not only demarcate the boundary of the cemetery but further divide the land for agriculture, housing, and roads. Sequencing the photographs according to season is another way of noting the passage of time. The annual flow of seasons is disrupted by an occasional passing vehicle that punctuates the stillness of the photograph.
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New Hampshire to Massachusetts
Archival digital print from medium format negative, 18 x 22 3/4 inches
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Connecticut to New York
Archival digital print from medium format negative, 18 x 22 3/4 inches
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Vermont to New York
Archival digital print from medium format negative, 18 x 22 3/4 inches
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Pennsylvania to New York
Archival digital print from medium format negative, 18 x 22 3/4 inches
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Rhode Island to Connecticut
Archival digital print from medium format negative, 18 x 22 3/4 inches
Memory Foam, 2022
Single channel video, running time 13'51"
Using animated black and white photographs with sound, Memory Foam depicts an imaginary dwelling that is a composite of views assembled from 26 different homes. The soundtrack, composed by Jason Sloan, is drawn from audio recordings of the sound generated by the electromagnetic field unique to each light source depicted in the video.
For most of us, “home” connotes an intimate space and, as such, may be thought of as a reflection of the self. The video attempts to blur the boundary between the individual and the world through shared experiences as evidenced, for instance, in the overlapping infrastructure collaged from several basements or the ubiquitous framed photographs of family and friends that appear throughout the video. Animals and plants thrive in this house, too. Clock faces serve as pauses or intervals between groups of images. The presence of digital technology explores how our personal environment is increasingly mediated and monitored by technology.
Memory Foam is a unique way of investigating the interface between still imagery, animation, and sound. Throughout the film, light and sound are the connecting threads as the camera makes its way from the basement foundation to the attic eaves, highlighting details of domestic life and love along the way.
Lifelines, 1994-2019
The conveyance of energy is a fundamental concern in Lifelines, my ongoing series of photographs depicting electric cords. Some of the cables have been repaired many times. I am struck by the effort to ensure the flow of electricity before the objects are re-wired and the old cords finally thrown away.
At least one of the cables shown in the image powers the light source that illuminates the scene. Like the activity of drawing which employs line and shading, the cable may change its identity from a crisp line to a faint trace as if it was a ray, wave, particle, halo or flare of light. The narrative aspect of the cord’s trajectory and the use of everyday materials impart a palpable quality to the light. My rendering of the cord is a way of giving life to light.
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Lifeline 94.47.12
Black and white gelatin silver print from medium format negative, 18 1/2 x 23 inches
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Landscape after the Battle (Lifeline 17.01.08)
Black and white gelatin silver print from medium format negative, 18 1/2 x 23 inches
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Warning (Lifeline 09.19.05)
Black and white gelatin silver print from medium format negative, 18 1/2 x 23 inches
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Lifelines 09.10.12
Black and white gelatin silver print from medium format negative, 18 1/2 x 23 inches
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Lifeline 06.18.06
Black and white gelatin silver print from medium format negative, 23 x 18 1/2 inches
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Crossing the Desert (Lifeline 10.11.07)
Black and white gelatin silver print from medium format negative, 18 1/2 x 23 inches
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Hold On (Lifeline 18.03.08)
Black and white gelatin silver print from medium format negative, 23 x 18 1/2 inches
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Let Go (Lifeline 18.05.05)
Black and white gelatin silver print from medium format negative, 23 x 18 1/2 inches
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Below the Surface (Lifeline 06.26.02)
Black and white gelatin silver print from medium format negative, 18 1/2 x 23 inches
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Soldier On (Lifeline 19.08.09)
Black and white gelatin silver print from medium format negative, 18 1/2 x 23 inches