Latitude 47 is a new annual photography magazine published by Seattle’s Photographic Center Northwest. Conceived and directed by Minor Matters Books founder and PCNW Executive Director Michelle Dunn Marsh, and renowned photographer and PCNW Programs Chair Eirik Johnson, Latitude 47 aims to bring the refined work and tight community of Northwest photographers to the rest of the world. While online content marketing (i.e. your favorite photo blogs) has done a great job of democratizing work of many artists, this traditional method of getting work in front of influencers promises to give Northwest photographers a larger footprint on the map. We spoke with Eirik Johnson about the project and ideas behind its first issue, which includes work from Seattle photographers and photo-based artists Canh Nguyen, Susan Robb, Glenn Rudolph, and Serrah Russell.
In her recent body of work, Equivalents, Seattle-based Serrah Russell rephotographs details from advertisements and editorials within fashion, lifestyle and nature magazines, giving them new meaning by encouraging viewers to rethink how we "see." She focuses on the native photographs' dead space and superficially less important details in body parts, foliage and domestic interiors, and uses them to produce new images that serve as textural landscapes and emotional narratives.
"The source image often is intended to sell a product or a brand," says Russell, "so if even the fragment continues to do that, then that is not an image I want to rephotograph. I seek image fragments that can create some type of narrative, perhaps about beauty, sadness, experience, memory, individual, landscape, environment. "
Russell uses a Polaroid DayLab Copy Systems Pro camera -- which is essentially a scanner that uses Polaroid film -- to maintain the original scale of the image, allowing her to zero in on specific details without alteration. "I like the physicality that the Polaroid image provides as an art object. The images are transitioning from one printed image to another printed image and maintains the feeling of fragmentation."
Although the resulting pictures are clearly abstractions, they retain enough original details - the bridge of a nose, the space where hairline meets forehead, a closeup of a hand leaning on an old rug - to ground them, ever so slightly, to their original material. Russell's use of the Polaroid to carefully crop, isolate, enlarge and soften these secondary details, ultimately turns images that at once may have existed to sell products, sexuality, or constructed experiences of the natural world into thoughtful meditations on intimacy.
Serrah Russell received her BFA in photography at the University of Washington. She works and lives in Seattle where she is also co-founder of Violet Strays, an online curatorial project with an emphasis on temporality and experimentation.