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A Lost Place
Aletheia Casey
Series description

These images are a heartfelt reaction to the dramatically increased global threat from destructive wildfires, which have recently wrought devastation in numerous countries, particularly in my homeland, Australia. Images featuring preserved Victorian museum specimens of indigenous wildlife brought back to the UK by Australia’s colonising powers serve as an ironic counterpoint to the millions of contemporary living creatures that have perished. My own archival photographs from Australia have been stripped of their original peaceful quality with the addition of oils and inks. I also scratched and reworked them to represent both the violent power of these conflagrations and my fear and anger at such devastation, my own hand attempting to control the uncontrollable. The intervention of my brushstrokes on the prints is intended to mirror human intervention in nature, and to implant into them my emotional response to nature’s continual destruction, whilst simultaneously trying to find beauty and hope amidst the tragedy of these lost places.

Biography

Aletheia is a photographic artist based between Sydney and London. She has exhibited widely throughout the UK, Europe and Australia and has published with The Guardian, The Sunday Times Magazine, BBC, and many others.
Aletheia won the Head On Landscape Award in 2021, was named '31 photographers to watch' by the British Journal of Photography and was twice a finalist for the National Photographic Portrait Prize.
She is a senior lecturer at the London College of Communication.

A Lost Place
Left: Preserved specimen of a koala, archived in the Grant Museum of Zoology, London. Right: This image uses my own archival photograph from my homeland, which was then painted, scratched and reworked.
A Lost Place
Left: Preserved specimen of a bat, archived in the Grant Museum of Zoology. Right: An imagined landscape of a wildfire from Australia, made using an image from my own archive and painted and distorted to depict a forest fire.
A Lost place
Left: Jellyfish in a museum tank. Right: The interference of my brushstrokes on this archival print of my homeland is a mirror of human intervention in nature; of my own hand attempting to control the uncontrollable.
A Lost Place
Left: A bird flies over the Australian landscape during a forest fire. Right: An archival photograph from my homeland, which was painted and reimagined in an attempt to represent the violence and terror of environmental change. My manipulation is a way of implanting my fear and devastation at the continual destruction to nature, but also serve as a way of finding beauty and hope amongst the tragedy of lost places.
A Lost place
A Lost place
Left: A tree from my home, draped in netting to protect it from non-native birdlife. Right: A reimagined landscape following a forest fire.
A Lost Place
A Lost Place
A reimagined landscape near Wagga Wagga (Wiradjuri Land), which has been painted and scratched. Wagga Wagga has been facing serious drought conditions for years, with regular water restrictions and water bans, and a continued threat of wildfires.
A Lost Place
A Lost Place
Left: A reimagined landscape of a wildfire. Right: Blue Mountains, New South Wales. The Blue Mountains lost an estimated 1,000,000 hectares of land in the 2019-2020 wildfires, and more than 70 percent of the mountains’ forest coverage was damaged. The area remains under constant threat and is still recovering from the loss of land, forest and wildlife.