Background information
"In the summer of 2004, Richard ROTHMAN travelled west with a 4x5 camera to explore the remaining fragments of ancient old-growth forests in Northern California. He pitched a tent amid the mammoth stands of redwoods and began making formal, intricate portraits of the forest, which he describes as 'the most visually stimulating environment I had ever been in.' Unexpectedly, he also began developing an interest in the neighboring town of Crescent City, an economically depressed logging and fishing community. Richard ROTHMAN was affected by the town's architecture, it's emotional tenor, it's political and religious culture, and the sometimes unconscious relationship that the townspeople had with the corralled forest to the east and the Pacific Ocean, which represents the end of the Western frontier. The contrast between the radical, spectacularly ornate environment of the forest and the trashed, disposable landscape of the town that abutted it became the subject of a more complex project which would take some surprising twists and turns. The body of work, made over a five-year period, is gathered together in the artist's monumental first book, 'Redwood Saw'.
Content
This stunning monograph, 'Redwood Saw' by Richard ROTHMAN, is an ambitious attempt to represent the culture, people, and landscape of Crescent City, and, by extension, the current American moment. Crescent City - a place that at one time must have seemed to possess an almost limitless abundance of natural resources - is revealed here as a compelling and dramatic model of a former boom town that staked its future on what can only be described as an 'unsustainable cultural and economic reality.' Beautifully printed in duotone on matt art paper, this first printing of 'Redwood Saw' is limited to 1,500 casebound copies." (publisher's note, Nazraeli, 2011)
About the American photographer, Richard ROTHMAN
Photo books by Richard ROTHMAN
- Format
- HC (no dust jacket, as issued), 32,5 x 30 x 2 cm., o.pp., color ills., text language: English