Sigmund Freud believed the uncanny to be something which leads us back to what is old and familiar but is at the same time "unheimlich" or uncomfortable. This series explores the idea of the uncanny as it manifests in a longing for youth, and a recognition of mortality.
Driven by the nostalgia of our lost childhood, many of us have kept our dolls: sitting on a shelf, buried in a box in a closet, locked in an attic. In these portraits, women over 40 are posed with their childhood dolls. Each doll serves as an entry point into the history of our life which is both strange and familiar. In my photographic survey I consider the rediscovery of these doll-mementos, which lead these women to recall a past of comfort and security. It's hard to imagine a time and place when we would have played with these dolls. As young girls we spent hours with them. Our friend and confident, they kept us safe at bedtime, while comforting us during stressful times. Those days are gone forever, yet eternally present as evidenced by the doll: an assurance of a past.
These images are tinged with a sense of 'memento mori' - 'remember that you are mortal.' As I age, I am constantly reminded of life's uncertainty. This series helps me reflect on the human condition: the transience of life and the inevitability of death.
Tuesday, March 12, 2013
Vera Saltzman
Vera Saltzman is an artist who grew up in Novia Scotia, now residing in Saskatchewan. Photography was simply a hobby of hers until it became a vehicle necessary for forming a bond with the native Inuit people while she lived in Nunavut. Her portrait series "Sue and Winnie" won an Applied Arts Award in 2012.
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