Chloe Dewe Mathews: Caspian: The Elements
By (Author) Chloe Dewe Mathews
Text by Morad Montazami
By (author) Sean O'Hagan
By (author) Arnold van Bruggen
Aperture
Aperture
7th January 2019
United States
General
Non Fiction
Photography and photographs
Places and peoples: general and pictorial works
Photographs: collections
779.092
Winner of British Journal of Photography International Photography Award 2011 (United States)
Hardback
216
Width 190mm, Height 260mm
820g
Caspian: The Elements is Chloe Dewe Mathewss record of five years spent roaming the borderlands of the Caspian Sea. In a resource-rich region roiled by contested geopolitics, Dewe Mathews found that elemental materials like oil, rock, and uranium are central to the mystical, practical, artistic, religious, and therapeutic aspects of daily life. With essays by Morad Montazami, Sean OHagan, and Arnold van Bruggen, Caspian: The Elements offers a series of powerful visual narratives that explore the deep links between the peoples of the Caspian and their enigmatic and coveted landscapes.
Copublished by Aperture and Peabody Museum Press
In Caspian British documentary photographer Chloe Dewe Matthews delves deep into the landscapes and people of the Caspian Sea. Using the regions rich natural resources oil, rock, uranium she explores the religious traditions and communal practices, including bathing in crude oil, that endure in an area more often defined by its contested geopolitics.Sean OHagan, The Guardian, Best Books of 2018, Photography category
Chloe Dewe Mathews (born in London, 1982) is an artist, photographer, and video maker, whose work includes Shot at Dawn, a series depicting the locations at which "cowards" and "deserters" were executed during World War I; In Search of Frankenstein, a project created in the Swiss Alps, where Mary Shelley conceived her novel Frankenstein, using themes from the book to consider environmental and social issues of our time; and Thames Log, an investigation of the symbolic use of water and contemporary ritual in the British landscape. Dewe Mathews is the winner of the Robert Gardner Fellowship in Photography from Harvard University's Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology, and her work has been exhibited at Impressions Gallery, Bradford, UK; 3-D Foundation, Verbier, Switzerland; and the British Library, London. Morad Montazami is adjunct research curator at Tate Modern, London, for the Middle East and North Africa. He has published essays on Farid Belkahia, Bahman Mohassess, Behjat Sadr, Hamed Abdalla, and Jordi Colomer, among others. Montazami is the author of Latif Al Ani (2017), a monograph on the Iranian photographer, and is the director of Zman Books, which is focused on publishing books about Middle Eastern studies, visual culture, and contemporary art.