INTRODUCTION
Before the advent of photography,
a popular pastime was to use a Claude glass to frame the perfect picturesque
landscape. The viewer would stand with their back to the vista, moving
the glass until the ideal image appeared. Rose, yellow, scarlet--the glasses
even came in different colors to simulate the color of light at different
times of day.
What is the ideal view of the
estuary? At one time wetlands were viewed as wastelands. Later they glittered
with dollar signs and were filled in to make prime shoreline real estate.
By the seventies scientists sounded alarm, claiming that coastal wetlands,
were among the most productive habitats in the world.
This work is a proposal
in a dozen questions:
Instead of answers it offers
a suggestion to think ecologically, to examine relationships. The viewing
stations point to phenomena from all parts of the estuary. Viewing scopes
both frame and deliberately distort the view. Do we, like the users of
the Claude glass, turn our back on nature in search of preconceived or
idealized views?
Stop.
Look.
Listen.
What can we learn?
|