About the Artist

Michelle Van Parys is a Professor at the College of Charleston in the Studio Art Department. Michelle received her B.F.A. from the Corcoran School of Art in Washington D.C; and her M.F.A. in Photography from Virginia Commonwealth University. Her photographs have been exhibited internationally in solo and group exhibitions. A monograph of her photographs entitled The Way Out West: Desert Landscapes was published in 2009 by the Center for American Places at Columbia College Chicago. Van Parys has been the recipient of the Virginia Museum Fellowship and the South Carolina Arts Commission Fellowship. Her work is included in several museum collections such as the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, The High Museum, the Virginia Museum of Fine Art and the Portland Art Museum.

 

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book_coverSMThe Way Out West:
Desert Landscapes

104 pages, 60 halftones
9-1/2 x 8 © 2008
with Essays by Lucy R. Lippard and Geoffrey Batchen

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The Way Out West

The photographs from The Way Out West chart my responses to the Southwest landscape in which humans have insinuated themselves throughout history. Specifically, I seek to juxtapose 19th century art historical notions of the sublime landscape with the ways in which we live on the land today, and thus to draw attention to our uneasy alliance with the natural world. Through this work I attempt to present a range of possibilities for these interactions. At times we appear oppositional and destructive to the land in which we live and at other times harmonious and custodial. I am interested in the myriad forms this relationship takes; humorous, ironic, dangerous, and fatalistic to list a few. The frame of the camera allows me to isolate and organize elements in the landscape which reflect our complex interactions with the land, both mythical and actual.

 

These photographs are portraits of the land constructed and altered by human presence. Our collective cultural imprint on this geographic region is staggering. There are enticing remnants from its earliest indigenous inhabitants as well as signatures on rocks by early American pioneers looking for a better life, spurred on by Manifest Destiny. The term, "Go West," has come to symbolize the quest for freedom and opportunity. Now, with the construction of mega cities in the desert, the southwest is still viewed as a place to reinvent oneself, despite the obvious environmental damage that occurs when we choose to do so.

 

I intend my images to be as much about the invisible threads that connect us as they are visible artifacts of a contested terrain.

 

The Way Out West images were taken between 1986 and 2006. The prints are toned gelatin silver prints.

Beyond the Plantations

The photographs from Beyond the Plantations: Images of the New South present the contemporary southern landscape in all of its rich complexity.  These images are offered in contrast to the idealized or romanticized landscapes that are often illustrated in depictions of the south through literature, cinema, or visual art. Images of the Old South are often sanitized views of a perfect and prosperous plantation life yet ignore the conflict, conquest, and transformation that is manifested in the changing landscape. The photographs from Beyond the Plantations incorporate the physical beauty of the landscape within the context of its longstanding complexities and contradictions.

 

Beyond the Plantations is an extension of my southwestern images from The Way Out West, taken over a 20-year period in the desert southwest.  In this new series I continue to create images that examine the layers of change within the human-inhabited landscape -- geological, archeological, historical, cultural, and ecological. I see the landscape as dynamic representation of the complex relationship we have with our surroundings over time. It is the accumulation of layers of human trace within this verdant landscape that drives this series of photographs.

 

Beyond the Plantations: Images of the New South is an ongoing project that I started in 2007. The prints are toned gelatin silver prints.