Amanda Marchand

While moving studios years ago, some experiments with ink on film were filed, then forgotten in the shuffle. In February 2020 I found them in an envelope and, curious to see them for the first time, sent them to be scanned. I got them back one day after NYC schools closed for pandemic safety, as alarming numbers of sick and dying were rolling in.

I have continued working with these surreal landscapes ever since. Part of my fascination with this project has been with the strange alchemy of creativity itself - how something you begin can sit patiently, like a seed, until the right moment.

I use antique photo retouching inks and old slides from my personal photo archive. These inks traditionally erase flaws that occur in analog photography—to create a ‘perfect’ print. The inks interact serendipitously with the landscape, as stains, blotches, floating vessels, imaginary interventions, each suggesting different relationships to the land; political, environmental, formal, and corporeal. While once the images seemed tied to a global pandemic, now they seem to suggest and relate to climate chaos and the huge changes we are witnessing in our natural environment throughout the world.

25

41

85

42

50

67

19

82

61

84

25

41

85

42

50

67

19

82

61

84