BIRGITTA LUND |
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Beyond these personal connotations, the restlessness of the traveler is also a sign of the times. The photograph depicting aunderground station in Madrid holds several aspects of the timeframe portrayed. Above the deserted platforms and tracks leading into the dark hangs a bird's eye view image of the illuminated city. This picture within the picture stands as a metaphor for the traveler's attempt to navigate and orientate herself in a world that constantly fades away into fleeting shimmers of light.At the same time the empty train station stands as a silent commentary on the terror that struck Madrid on March 11, 2004, exactly two and a half years after the attacks in New York. The picture connects the traveler's own uncertainty with the fear underlying the times. Along with this fear emerges a sense of the surreal in knowing that the truth is in the hands of those in power, who construct their own image of distant wars through the media. In Times Square, Lund captures the unequal fight for reality: a small but determined antiwar demonstration tries to manifest itself against a consuming sea of light created by neon signs. In Lund's work the concrete journey becomes a metaphor for disintegration and departure on many levels. Autobiographical elements intertwine with the timeframe she depicts, both thematically and visually, in her photographs. The traveler steps lightly on Earth and is in constant motion. Simultaneously the pictures become fixed points from which the traveler seeks to orient herself in a world - and a life - in transit. |
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