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Beyond Surfiace Matters: Unsettling Views of a Western American Landscape
- Author(s):
- Laura E. Smith (see profile)
- Date:
- 2022
- Item Type:
- Article
- Tag(s):
- decolonial visuality, Glenn Rand, Shoshone, landscape, photography
- Permanent URL:
- https://doi.org/10.17613/b03m-pv34
- Abstract:
- Photographer Glenn Rand’s (b. 1944, USA) Nevada 1979 features a passing car on Interstate 80, an industrial site, and the Humboldt River Valley in Eureka County. This place appears through laconic title to be at once particular to a settler nation, history, and poetic imagination, as well as revelatory of no place at all. Rand’s random western road trip offered him an opportunity to raise awareness of vision through kinesthetic sensation. Among many of his artistic peers, a photograph’s location was an arbitrary departure point for exploring surface matters. This paper redirects the attention on the artist’s formalist concerns to investigate the complex and conflicted narrativesInterstate 80 implicates. It inserts this picture into the longer story of modernist formalism and American landscape photography where travel and aesthetic landscape views are indicative of settler-colonial visuality. Upon its completion in 1986, the interstate was designated as a symbol of American freedom, particularly the freedom of mobility. But to see the highway in this way depends on erasing the colonial encounter and Indigenous presence. The Humboldt River valley pictured in Nevada 1979 is part of the larger Newe (Western Shoshone) territory in the Great Basin region. It is not an arbitrary vista; it crosses through a cultural landscape, a place that embodies Newe values, identities, and memories. Further, Interstate 80 was built on top of an historical path that guided settlers westward to California. It was also aligned with the path of the first transcontinental railroad. The environmental and social impact of settler influx into this region was significant. By extending Rand’s concerns with motion to study of the various pathways, migrations, and roadblocks encoded in that landscape, this paper unsettles this image. It counters historical blindness and artistic disengagement with land that obscured Indigenous presence and authority in the Americas.
- Metadata:
- xml
- Published as:
- Journal article Show details
- Pub. DOI:
- https://doi.org/10.34619/oijo-u6iv
- Pub. Date:
- 12/30/2022
- Journal:
- Revista de Comunicação e Linguagens
- Issue:
- 57
- Page Range:
- 67 - 85
- ISSN:
- 2183-7198
- Status:
- Published
- Last Updated:
- 7 months ago
- License:
- Attribution