The Morning News

Saturday, November 21, 2009

Currently: TMN wishes you a very good weekend equipped with interesting things to read. Thank you, as always, for reading us. http://tmne.ws/h
1 day ago

» Advertise on TMN via the Deck

Field Dressing

Interview by Nicole Pasulka

TMN: In your artist’s statement, you say your father raised you to be a hunter. When did you start hunting? Where did you grow up? Are you still an active hunter?

BL: I took a hunter’s education class around the age of 12 and was hunting shortly after that. I was raised in Fargo, ND. I am still an active hunter, even while carrying a camera.

TMN: All the hunters in the photos are men, and the only woman I remember seeing in the series is a girl in a bar poster. Do women have a place in this world you’re capturing?

BL: That is a very good question. To date, as a work in progress, I have primarily focused on photographing in the field and the participants of the hunting trip.

TMN: Your pictures all have a significant stillness to them—it’s as though life’s been paused right before something significant is about to happen.

BL: To me, hunting is entirely about strategy and patience, above all.

The kill happens so fast, its significance can easily be neglected compared to the hours of non-event that might consume an entire day.

Traditional photography celebrates the trophy kill. That is not what interests me concerning this project and especially hunting.

TMN: Do you deliberately set out to capture people without expressions, even emotionless, in moments of stillness?

BL: My portrait-making process tends to be just as slow as setting up a still-life photograph. I welcome a degree of introspection on behalf of the subject.

TMN: What defines a hunting trip for you? Judging by the photographs, violence isn’t a very important part, though to many non-hunters it’s the defining aspect.

BL: Two aspects really define my attraction to hunting; one is the North Dakota agricultural location in seasonal transition. The fall colors begin to shift and falling temperatures bring the migratory Canadian birds into the area in great numbers, which to witness is amazing. We have been hunting in the same county for 11 years or so, and having the opportunity to return to this area is like having a constant in my life, comparable to the comfort of returning to one’s family summer home.

The second defining aspect is the camaraderie between my father, the friends we hunt with, and myself. This second aspect, I must admit, is an area of interest that has not yet presented itself visually in the photographs. Concerning making new work, that relationship is something that has my attention.

—Published April 19, 2006 » Tweet this gallery » Post to Facebook » More TMN Galleries
Nicole Pasulka
TMN Senior Editor Nicole Pasulka runs the Galleries desk and believes that she could beat a lie detector. When she sits in a chair she almost never puts her feet on the floor. Even though she likes the internet a lot, she is convinced that people will always read magazines and she is secretly building one in her basement.

» More by Nicole Pasulka


TODAY’S FEATURE

The Game of Love

Anyone who says video games shouldn’t appeal to adults, let alone women, has never flirted with General Carth Onassi. MARIE MUTSUKI MOCKETT explores a virtual courtship.

OUR MAN IN BOSTON

More From Gore Vidal

Like the man himself, Gore Vidal's scrapbook of the past half-century is unparalleled.

SOCKING STUFFERS

If a Bird Can’t Fly It Walks

Sanguine and adhesive, our bumper sticker makes a swell gift for anyone who’s swearing off excuses in the new year.
» ORDER NOW

TMN TALKS

RoseLee Goldberg

RoseLee Goldberg is an art historian, curator, and author of Performance Art: From Futurism to the Present. In 2004, she founded PERFORMA, a non-profit arts...