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"During a summer 2017 residency in Spain, near the border of France, Roe worked outside each day, exploring the natural terrain, its rocks, shadows, and natural vegetation. Like the groundbreaking artist Nancy Holt, who produced her own distinctive response to light and topography, Roe cultivates a personal relationship with nature—a bond that is dedicated, ongoing, and often tied to mourning [..]. In Catalonia, Roe further linked to the historical past and to memorials, the physical area covered by the artist encompasses the forests near the footpath where philosopher Walter Benjamin traveled before his suicide in Portbou. Roe resuscitates the past and sheds light on lesser known histories, specifically here, the role of women in the creation of cyanotypes, a critical process to the development of photography’s history and recognition as an art form. [British botanist] Anna Atkins published British Algae: Cyanotype Impressions in 1843. British Algae included more than 400 cyanotypes and became the first publication solely illustrated by photography."
Dr. Amy Galpin
Curatorial text from the exhibition catalogue, Time as Landscape: Inquiries of Art and Science
Cornell Fine Arts Museum | September 29 - December 31, 2017
PROJECTS
DESCENT ≈ An Atlas of Relation
Current Work-In-Progress
2021 - Present
Conditions for an Unfinished
Work of Mourning
2018 - 2020
The Majority of Those Who Are Dead
2017-18
2014-2016
The Sunshine Bores | The Daylights
2016
No One Was With Her When She Died
2013-15
2011-13
2009-12