Events

Browse

Erin Siddall | Proving Ground: Nevada, Vancouver | Opening Reception

This event is in the past

BAF, in partnership with Capture Photography Festival, present alumna Erin Siddall's Doomsday Counter in their street-level windows in tandem with her photographs Proving Ground: Nevada, Vancouver, exhibited at Broadway City Hall skytrain station.

When

Mar 22, 2018 7:00pm – 11:30pm

Add to Calendar: iCal Google

Burrard Arts Foundation Opening Reception | March 22, 7pm

Canada Line/BAF Installation Tour | April 7, 2pm

Burrard Arts Foundation (BAF), in partnership with Capture Photography Festival, present Erin Siddall's Doomsday Counter in their street-level windows on Broadway March 22 - May 12, in tandem with her photographs Proving Ground: Nevada, Vancouver exhibited at the Broadway City Hall station April 1 - August 31, 2018.

In her ongoing project Proving Ground, Erin Siddall delves into global histories of nuclear power, from the Cold War era to the present — a topic of enduring pertinence, not only in light of past disasters, but also with the potential for new catastrophes within the current unstable geopolitical climate.

With the objective of shedding light of these seemingly “unrepresentable” histories as she puts it, Siddall focuses her camera on the once coveted commodity known as uranium glass in Proving Ground, Nevada, Vancouver, a new iteration of Proving Ground. Admired for its hues ranging from yellow to green, uranium glass was popularly used to make dishware and miscellaneous novelty items. First manufactured in the mid-nineteenth century, its production was curtailed during World War II; in the US, the Manhattan Project monopolized demand for uranium, and subsequently, it was used to fuel nuclear reactors during the Cold War.

Formally, Proving Ground, Nevada, Vancouver can be read as a series of still lifes. Documenting this little-known history of material culture, Siddall photographs uranium glassware both individually and in groupings of almost talismanic arrangements against the rocky terrain of a peace camp located outside the infamous Nevada Testing Site. By shining an ultraviolet light onto these objects — symbols of the peace protesters themselves — Siddall transforms them into a glowing fluorescent shade of green, thus revealing their concealed radioactivity. Highlighting what she describes as the “invisible threat to the body” of these seemingly mundane objects, Siddall subtly explores the “hidden trauma in the landscape.”

These photographs taken in situ are interspersed with other photographs of the same objects, but this time photographed miles away from the Nevada site in the safety of her Vancouver studio. The transparent bowls, cups, and saucers — some in shattered shards — appear to float against a dark backdrop. In Siddall’s focus on their radiant and fragile materiality, they become otherworldly reminders of the precariousness of peace and the innocent desire for domestic embellishment they once signaled.

About Erin Siddall: