OXBOW
ARCHIVE
Joel Sternfeld
Softcover,
12½ x 11", 160
pages
77 color illustrations
Color cover image tipped-in
2009, Steidl
From the Publisher:
On a summer morning in 1833, Thomas Cole, a British-born, American
landscape painter climbed to the top of Mount Holyoke in central
Massachusetts and made a sketch of the Connecticut River where
it bends and resembles an ox yoke. Three years later the sketch
he made that morning became View from Mount Holyoke, Northampton,
Massachusetts, after a Thunderstorm (The Oxbow).
The four by six foot painting, now a key work
of American art has been described as Cole’s attempt to
create a moving time/space panorama within a single frame –
the passage of time is represented by the ongoing fury of the
storm on the mountain as sunshine returns to the meadow below.
Cole was skeptical about progress and the painting may represent
a warning about the clearing of wilderness to make open land for
farms and factories. Nearly two hundred years after Cole painted
The Oxbow, the American photographic artist, Joel Sternfeld,
walked into the mile square field depicted in the lower right
quadrant of Cole’s painting. Sternfeld had first photographed
this field in 1978 while traveling on American Prospects.
By the time he returned in 2006, the Oxbow in the river was crossed
by an interstate highway and the destructive effects of progress
that Cole had feared were making themselves apparent globally
as climate change.
Sternfeld spent the next year and a half walking
that field, commuting to it on an almost daily basis from his
home in southern Vermont. His archive is a record of classic New
England seasonality, a nature study unlike any other as it is
made with the foreknowledge that because of global warming it
will never be the same again. His choice of subject matter, a
flat unremarkable corn and potato field (archetypal new world
crops), signals a conceptual stance away from previous nature
depictions: his field is neither Beautiful, nor Sublime, nor Picturesque.
The flatness of the field, an unusual stretch of visual freedom
in the New England highlands offers an eloquent emptiness and
a vessel for the true subject his work: iconic seasonal effect
as manifestation of the orbiting Earth.
Sternfeld’s time landscape is also a companion
piece to his recently published Sweet Earth: Experimental
Utopias in America and to When It Changed (pictures
at the Montreal Climate Change Conference) and needs to be understood
in terms of the political and cultural resonances of those works.
Joel Sternfeld is a much published and exhibited artist. Amongst
his previous books with Steidl are American Prospects
and Walking the High Line. |