"Pipelines and Permafrost" collages
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"When a mountain peak turns upside down or a body of water becomes a place of connection between the sky and the earth, also upside down, the gaze seems to take a path without predefined indications. However in the fourteen photographs of the series "Pipelines and Permafrost" (2020) the imagination of Mary Mattingly, a Brooklyn-based artist born in 1978, has nothing dreamlike, and the provocation that it brings into the field is not limited to a temporary disturbance of the observer - you do not know where to start looking - but wants to talk about a time beyond human duration: the time of the Earth...
In "Pipelines and Permafrost" each image is a sequence that tells the story of the place represented: a complex story, therefore, that the artist returns directly using the technique of assembly. Each photograph is the result of a stratification in which several images join alchemically in a fluid timeline. Here the center and the vanishing point are missing, because every place escapes from the postcard aesthetics and is returned in its geological scope: Mattingly’s aims are in fact to go beyond the simple documentation, to try to insert the duration in the space of the image, and above all to witness how forced anthropization can cause drastic accelerations in the natural rhythms of the Earth. Looking at these photographs one perceives how nature is now in an intermediate position: strong because of the power of a time still not human and at the same time fragile in relation to all those current ideologies that consider it as passive extraction ground: an example of this short-circuit is 'Pipelines Crossing Permafrost', in which, adopting an upward point of view, the artist seems to create a continuity between the line of a split of the Alaska Arctic cap and the silhouette of an oil pipeline. Two signs, inserted in the rigid verticality of a single image, in front of which the observer is driven to adopt a holistic vision that strays both from an absolute protagonism of nature, both from an explicit denunciation of the extracivist ideology in the Anthropocene era. The artist remains in this interlude, keeping on a purely visual discourse in which photography stratifies in the same way as the Earth on which it rests its lens: geological image that speaks of a deep time...
The rest of the series is also born from this subtle provocation in which nature always shows itself to be plural and plastic according to temporal rhythms impossible to perimeter. Once this complexity is enclosed in the space of the image, it makes itself accessible, and projects the encounter with the observer elsewhere far from the actual present. So this shift allows us to move away both from the immediacy of a photographic report, and from the lyricism of a travel diary, to position ourselves on a broader perspective: an unprecedented perception toward which Mattingly invites without any final judgment, and in which is enclosed all the political value of "Pipelines Across Permafrost".
In times of the ‘irreversible catastrophe’ narrative and an aimless present, Mary Mattingly opens a critical confrontation with what geologist and writer Marcia Bjornerud defines as 'infantile indifference and partial disbelief about the time before our appearance on Earth'. The artist’s provocation is silent, therefore, all resolved at a perceptive level, at the moment when the gaze is disoriented as it embraces the fullness of the Earth it inhabits, discovering itself as an actor in a thousand-year history. The artist suggests this new perspective that goes beyond modern temporality, and dedicates these photographs to those people who have made this awareness a clear political voice aimed at protecting the places represented.
Considering again the photograph taken as example, 'Pipelines Crossing Permafrost', the title is completed with the following formula: "For Neetsa'ii Gwich'in elder Sarah James and the fight against oil development in Alaska’s Arctic National Wildlife Refuge"; and so it applies to all the other photographs in the series. Yet another expression of the bond that unites the human being to the Earth, now expressed in the light of future hope, with a dedication to those who mobilize so that that deep time in which we are all immersed does not radically change its rhythms that have always ensured life continuity on our planet. Mary Mattingly’s geological images are stories of awareness and hope: a new perspective in which the language of art uses its codes to talk about climate justice and protection of the planet, as long as the gaze agrees to get lost, even for a little while, in the fullness of that time that has always lived, and of which he seems to have forgotten." - PIERMARIO DE ANGELIS 12 OCTOBER 2021
50% of proceeds from sales of Pipelines and Permafrost go directly to the Grassroots Global Justice Alliance. Inquire with Caroline at Robert Mann Gallery