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  • April24th

    Constructive Deconstruction - MLG

    Limited Edition Series: 20

    One of the things I most enjoy about photographing such old relics of society is the history behind the architecture – stories told not only by the style of building and type of business, but also by the remnants and relics left behind by those who once toiled, worshipped, or slept within these spaces.

    Traditionally, I research each location I shoot to get some idea of its past before heading out as I find it helps me connect with and understand the building’s presence within the community and the circumstances of its demise. The more I immerse myself in the aesthetics of the building and the remnants therein, I find in myself a need to understand the entirety of my subject and not just the context in which I am shooting. Questions come to mind such as “who where the people who interacted with this place?” and “why did these people leave?”, or “what was this place like when it was alive with activity?”

    But how to get that across in my photography?

    A good photograph tells a story and these stories are present in landscape photos, architectural photos, portraits, street scenes, or whatever you choose to shoot. Sometimes they can be harder to find but making you contemplate, think, and discuss, I think, is also a goal of any art.

    Through urban exploration photography, I’m already exploring the concepts of impermanence, deconstruction, industrial evolution and devolution, and strive to convey these ideas in a way that educates, informs, and engages. How to enhance the story?

    After a long process of trial and error and experimentation – which is always encouraged in art – I started this new project that blends time periods, allowing the viewer to see the location in its present state of decay while glimpsing what might have been. This Constructive Deconstruction allows nature (and sometimes people) to deconstruct for me while I construct it back the only way I can – not through brick and mortar, but through history and imagery and storytelling.

    I’ll be working on this one as long as I find suitable locations to apply the technique to – which at this time means as long as spaces are forgotten by society and I can hold a camera.

    Additional images in my “Experimental” gallery.

  • January6th

    Michigan Central Library

    The Terminal (also known as Michigan Central Station) was built in 1913 for the railroad and was Detroit’s main passenger depot until 1988. At the time of construction, it was the tallest rail station in the world and today it is still a visible architectural icon on Detroit’s lanscape.

    The building is Beaux-Arts Classical in style and designed by the Warren & Wetmore and Reed and Stem firms who also designed NYC’s Grand Central Terminal. There are 2 parts to the building: the station and an 18-storey office tower used by the railroad.

    The main waiting room was modeled after an ancient Roman bathhouse with walls of marble. A large hall adorned with Doric columns contained the ticket offie and arcade shops. Beyond the arcade a concourse of brick walls lit by copper skylight housed the ramps to the 11 train platforms.

    The building was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1975 and restoration plans have been talked about and planned, but never followed through on. Every year there is rumour of it being torn down as it sits on prime retail land, but as yet that has not happened. Today the building has been stripped of most metal items for scrap and is covered in graffiti. Although surrounded by fencing, the building seems to be Detroit’s UE hangout, as photographers seem to come and go within the building with ease – with models and without – teenagers can be found doing what teenagers do, and locals show up with friends in tow from out of town to see “that building from that scene in Transformers”.

    You may recognize the building from some big-budget movies and television shows: Transformers, The Island, Naqoyqatsi, Four Brothers, and 8 Mile.