Framing the Land: Canadian Landscapes Revisited in Jin-me Yoon and Lorraine Gilbert’s Photography

The representation of landscapes through survey photography in the mid to late 1800s largely contributed to document Canadian and American expansionist endeavors, to ascertain the documentary and scientific role that photography would play in that expansion and to foster a sense of national belongin...

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Main Author: Gwendolyne Cressman
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Centre de Recherche "Texte et Critique de Texte" 2023-11-01
Series:Sillages Critiques
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/sillagescritiques/15174
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author Gwendolyne Cressman
author_facet Gwendolyne Cressman
author_sort Gwendolyne Cressman
collection DOAJ
description The representation of landscapes through survey photography in the mid to late 1800s largely contributed to document Canadian and American expansionist endeavors, to ascertain the documentary and scientific role that photography would play in that expansion and to foster a sense of national belonging and of Anglo-Saxon supremacy which would also find its expression in landscape painting. While the photographers engaged in geographical and topographical expeditionary missions envisioned the land as the epitome of the sublime landscape, the Group of Seven painters of the 1920s and 1930s later sought to express the essence of Canada’s northern identity through the celebration of a mythical wilderness. This manner of framing the land implied that what was kept outside of the frame or conversely included within its bounds, was often informed by hierarchical relations and colonialist visions of the land. I will be looking at the ways in which two contemporary Canadian photographers, Jin-me Yoon and Lorraine Gilbert, have revisited earlier landscapes in their works and how, through various processes of reframing, they reveal and contest the political, social and ecological underpinnings active in the production of these spaces. I will be paying attention to the critical visual investigation they deploy around Nordic landscapes defined not as the abstract spaces of the nation but as the places where issues of identity and memory unfold.
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institution Kabale University
issn 1272-3819
1969-6302
language English
publishDate 2023-11-01
publisher Centre de Recherche "Texte et Critique de Texte"
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series Sillages Critiques
spelling doaj-art-224e8fdb0b5b444cb9c0341b6da758d62025-01-30T13:47:49ZengCentre de Recherche "Texte et Critique de Texte"Sillages Critiques1272-38191969-63022023-11-013510.4000/sillagescritiques.15174Framing the Land: Canadian Landscapes Revisited in Jin-me Yoon and Lorraine Gilbert’s PhotographyGwendolyne CressmanThe representation of landscapes through survey photography in the mid to late 1800s largely contributed to document Canadian and American expansionist endeavors, to ascertain the documentary and scientific role that photography would play in that expansion and to foster a sense of national belonging and of Anglo-Saxon supremacy which would also find its expression in landscape painting. While the photographers engaged in geographical and topographical expeditionary missions envisioned the land as the epitome of the sublime landscape, the Group of Seven painters of the 1920s and 1930s later sought to express the essence of Canada’s northern identity through the celebration of a mythical wilderness. This manner of framing the land implied that what was kept outside of the frame or conversely included within its bounds, was often informed by hierarchical relations and colonialist visions of the land. I will be looking at the ways in which two contemporary Canadian photographers, Jin-me Yoon and Lorraine Gilbert, have revisited earlier landscapes in their works and how, through various processes of reframing, they reveal and contest the political, social and ecological underpinnings active in the production of these spaces. I will be paying attention to the critical visual investigation they deploy around Nordic landscapes defined not as the abstract spaces of the nation but as the places where issues of identity and memory unfold.https://journals.openedition.org/sillagescritiques/15174photographylandscapeframeCanadanation19th Century
spellingShingle Gwendolyne Cressman
Framing the Land: Canadian Landscapes Revisited in Jin-me Yoon and Lorraine Gilbert’s Photography
Sillages Critiques
photography
landscape
frame
Canada
nation
19th Century
title Framing the Land: Canadian Landscapes Revisited in Jin-me Yoon and Lorraine Gilbert’s Photography
title_full Framing the Land: Canadian Landscapes Revisited in Jin-me Yoon and Lorraine Gilbert’s Photography
title_fullStr Framing the Land: Canadian Landscapes Revisited in Jin-me Yoon and Lorraine Gilbert’s Photography
title_full_unstemmed Framing the Land: Canadian Landscapes Revisited in Jin-me Yoon and Lorraine Gilbert’s Photography
title_short Framing the Land: Canadian Landscapes Revisited in Jin-me Yoon and Lorraine Gilbert’s Photography
title_sort framing the land canadian landscapes revisited in jin me yoon and lorraine gilbert s photography
topic photography
landscape
frame
Canada
nation
19th Century
url https://journals.openedition.org/sillagescritiques/15174
work_keys_str_mv AT gwendolynecressman framingthelandcanadianlandscapesrevisitedinjinmeyoonandlorrainegilbertsphotography