370 Views
11
View In My Room
Peter Misfeldt
Denmark
Photography, Archival Pigment Print on Paper
Size: 47.2 W x 35.4 H x 0.1 D in
Ships in a Tube
370 Views
11
Artist featured in a collection
From the series 'The Second Survey'. Archival Pigment Print on Hahnemühle Fine Art Paper / Image size: 90 x 120 cm / Paper size: 122 x 152 cm. Signed on verso, include a signed and numbered certificate of authenticity. Available in the following editions: Image size 37 x 50 cm. Paper size: 54 x 66 cm. Edition of 9 + 2 AP. $800 + shipping. Image size: 57 x 76 cm. Paper size: 81 x 100 cm. Edition of 6 + 2 AP. $1500 + shipping. Image size: 90 x 120 cm. Paper size: 122 x 152 cm. Edition of 3 + 1 AP. $2500 + shipping. Please contact Saatchi Art at curator@saatchiart.com if you wish to purchase a print from an edition which has not been put up for sale. If you wish to buy a print framed and ready to hang I'll be happy to arrange for that, price on request. About The Second Survey: In the middle of the 19th century the American West was still considered frontier. Here the native tribes and the wildlife were still Kings, but slowly and steady the frontier was being pushed further and further west by the ever growing numbers of immigrants looking for a better life. At the same time federal government officials were traveling across Arizona, Utah, Nevada, Wyoming and the rest of the entire West seeking to uncover the lands natural resources. The first photographer joining these teams were Timothy O'Sullivan who from 1867 to 1869 was the official photographer on the United States Geological Exploration of the Fortieth Parallel under Clarence King and later on the United States Geographical Explorations West of the One Hundredth Meridian under Lt. George M. Wheeler. My first experience with the American West was in 2009 traveling in the Southwest around Utah, Nevada and Arizona. I immediately fell in love with the landscape and was in no way prepared for the effect it would have on me. It was like I could feel the people who had walked the ground centuries before me and in a sense I felt very much at home. Since then I kept coming back to the American West, especially the Southwest, hiking and backpacking into the desert back-country trying to do my own survey of a landscape now well mapped but still way out of reach and out of mind for many people. People have been there of course, first of all the indigenous people who have inhabited the place for thousands of years but also cattle farmers, prospectors, explorers etc. but in a sense much of it is still as much frontier as it was some 150 years ago. O'Sullivan's pictures were among the very first to record the American Southwest. It involved picturing nature as an untamed pre-industrialised land without using the normal landscape painting conventions. Most of the photographers sent to document the west tried to make this strange new land look accessible and even picturesque – but not O'Sullivan. He pictured the land as it was, forbidding and inhospitable. I didn't know about Timothy O'Sullivan until just recently (2012) but upon discovering his work I felt a strong sense of familiarity with the way he saw the landscape through the lens. Like O'Sullivan I'm not interested in portraying the landscape in only picturesque ways. I'm not interested in waiting for sunrises or sunsets, I'm interested in the landscape on it's own rugged terms. I'm simply trying to look at the landscape the same way an explorer would have done 150 or 200 years ago and in many ways when I'm walking the desolate landscape with my backpack or sitting around the campfire surrounded by complete darkness I feel like I'm the first person to be there. Of course that's not the case but some places you could probably stay for months or even years without seeing another soul. The Second Survey is about all that; seeing the grand landscape for the first time and feeling very small and insignificant in the grand scheme of things. © Peter Misfeldt.
2014
Archival Pigment Print on Paper
1
47.2 W x 35.4 H x 0.1 D in
Not Framed
Not applicable
Ships Rolled in a Tube
Typically 5-7 business days for domestic shipments, 10-14 business days for international shipments.
Ships rolled in a tube. Artists are responsible for packaging and adhering to Saatchi Art’s packaging guidelines.
Denmark.
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Denmark
Born 1966 in Georgetown, British Guiana. Lives in the rural part of Denmark. In 2004 I picked up a digital camera in order to photograph my paintings, but little did I know it was going to change my approach to making art. I had previously played around with Polaroids - SX-70 and the like, and upon getting the digital camera I quickly began to explore the possibilities outside my studio and slowly but steady the camera replaced the brush and pixels and prints replaced the paint and canvas. Now many camera bodies later I'm devoted to photography and travels extensively in order to pursue my visions of the world. Much of my time is spent in the American Southwest where I hike and backpack into the remote and desolate backcountry with just the essentials and my camera.
Artist featured by Saatchi Art in a collection
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