OCEAN VIEW 2: Verschiebung des Blickfeldes, 2015 – 2024

Heidemarie von Wedel


Weight 230 g
Dimensions 320 × 230 mm
Cover

softcover

printrun

print-run 50 copies

printing

digital printing, fine art digital print on 120g uncoated paper

binding

thread bound

coverage

36 pages, with an A5 set of cards

Publisher

published by UND EINS

year

2024

60,00 

VAT exempted according to UStG §19
Delivery Time: 10 working days

Weight: 230g

In stock

“Great Albatross, I found you dead by the sea among the rocks. The image of your miserable demise has haunted me.” (2024)
How has our perception, our view of the sea, changed due to our awareness of its endangerment and exploitation? Does the memory of the magic of cosmic energies and forces remain? The starting point for this work are analog photographs of a sea surface, taken in 2015; preserved as small prints on paper in the archive. Retrieved again in 2024 and photographed. Overlays have emerged, both temporally and visually. No further documentation of plastic and garbage, not a dead bird. No boats can be seen, no longlines, no oil slick…

*) The Snowy albatross is one of the largest birds in the world, with a wingspan of up to 3.50 meters. Some species are threatened or critically endangered. According to bird conservationist Barry Weeber, several hundred thousand albatrosses die every year worldwide as victims of longline fishing and plastic debris in the sea.