In this issue, we interview David Benjamin Sherry, whose large-format images of the American west examine endangered monuments in aftermath of the Trump administration. The images were taken as a form of photographic activism, with saturated colour palettes alerting viewers to a sense of danger.
In photography, we are thrilled to present further series from Kate Theo, who places characters in their own surreal worlds. William Mullan and Andrea A. Trabucco-Campos offer highly stylised portraits of apples: the fruit that has long symbolised knowledge.
Elsewhere in the issue, we examine a new exhibition at The High Museum of Art, Atlanta: Picturing the South. The American South has diverse and complex histories. What happens when 16 photographers are invited to picture the region over 25 years?
Other striking image series include Kevin Krautgartner’s In Full Bloom, which captures large-scale tulip agriculture from above. Aerial shots depict rows of flowers like striped barcodes. On the cover, we have Harriet Moutsopoulos (aka Lexicon Love) who produces digital collages that provoke, tease and confuse.
In Topographies of Fragility, Ingrid Weyland manipulates and alters the landscape. The collage compositions, shown above, tap into the age of Anthropocentrism, with human hands literally altering ecosystems from the inside out. Weyland’s “expanded photography” spans Argentina, Greenland and Iceland.
In an interview with Noémie Goudal, we explore deep geological time and the narrative of Earth’s 4.543-billion-year lifespan. Further bridging the gap between art and science is Foto/Industria’s photography biennale, which offers a look at industrialised farming, and its impact upon global consumption processes.
Finally, Karen Constine subverts the LA landscape using an infrared camera. Deserted suburban streets are transfigured into surreal, hallucinogenic planes. The images are beguiling, with hedges like spun candy-floss. Here, Constine explores the realms between façade and reality.