Deep South

"A stunning collection of tritone photographs reinvents the art of landscape photography..." -- FORECAST, August 2005, commenting on Deep South series

In 2005, Mann came out with Deep South, her sixth book, which is a documentation of “dreary” landscapes.  Newsweek picked it as the book choice of the holiday season.  Sally Mann remains among the most innovative, talked-about, and daring artists working with a camera today. Deep South is a much anticipated collection of her exquisite, ethereal landscape photographs, taken in the years since she rose to international fame with her groundbreaking book Immediate Family.

The photographs in Deep South, many produced with the 19th-century collodion process and a variety of toning techniques, capture what Mann calls the "radical light of the American South." Borrowing methods favored by early masters of landscape photography, Mann bends classic craftsmanship to serve the expressive needs of a heightened contemporary sensibility. Serendipitous technical imperfections, such as light leaks or scratches on negatives, echo the accidental, chaotic workings of time. From ghostly images of historic battlefields to painterly visions of Louisiana, Mississippi, Georgia, and her native Virginia, Mann's landscape photographs transport the viewer to another time and place. (Source)



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