STATEMENT:
COPIA
Plenty, a plentiful supply: now chiefly in L. phrase copia verborum
abundance of words, a copious vocabulary. Cf. COPY n. 1c.
I. a.
Plenty, abundance, a copious quantity.
b.
Fullness, plentitude. Obs.
c.
esp. of language: Copiousness, abundance, fullness, richness.
copy
of words : = L. copia verborum. Obs.
II. A transcript of reproduction of an original.
In 2001 citizens were encouraged to take to the malls
to boost the U.S. economy through shopping, thereby equating consumerism
with patriotism. The Copia project, a direct response to that
advice, is a long-term photographic examination of the peculiarities and
complexities of the consumer-dominated culture in which we live. Through
large scale photographs taken within both the big-box retail stores and
the thrift shops that house our recycled goods, Copia explores
not only the everyday activities of shopping, but the economic, cultural,
social, and political implications of commercialism and the roles
we play in self-destruction, over-consumption, and as targets of
marketing and advertising. By
scrutinizing these rituals and their environments, I hope that viewers
will evaluate the increasing complexities of the modern world and
their own role within it.
Copia is composed of several chapters, currently Retail, Thrift, and Backrooms.
These further document notions of social class, excess, and corporate ideologies.
By combining photographs taken candidly with a medium-format film camera
outfitted with a waist-level viewfinder, and studied compositions taken
with a large format camera in thrift shops, I can capture lost excitement
and overwhelmed, subsumed moments. The large-scale prints allow the viewer
to stop and notice with a distanced perspective familiar places and things.
Over time these images take on new meaning, ones anthropological and historical
of an affluent society at the dawn of the 21st century. What we buy and
what we use up becomes the evidence of our experience of this time. |