Ruth Mittelholtz
The Dance of the Waves:
Photographs from Georgian Bay
October 8 - November 20, 2005
The moving water is a canvas on which light paints in colours of emerald,
sapphire, and deepest ultramarine. In this series of close-range photographs
of Georgian Bay at Indian Head Cove in Bruce Peninsula National Park, I
set out to record the fleeting compositions created by the dance of the
waves and the flash of the sunlight. Using a digital camera, a computer
graphics program to give nature a nudge, and pigment-based inks, I have
produced a series of giclée prints to try to reveal some of the
infinite number of ephemeral colour and shape configurations that unfold
from moment to moment.
I am fascinated by water, and have used it as subject material for some
time in drawing and photo-based works. Water has strong symbolic and
metaphoric meanings but in this portfolio of wave photographs I am interested
primarily
in taking a close look at the appearance of moving water, specifically
that of Georgian Bay, so notably transparent and intense in its colours.
I was first prompted to take photographs of the surface of Georgian
Bay when I found myself entranced by the hypnotic swirl and sway of the
waves
along the rocky coast. I tried to catch with my camera the movement
of the waves and their beauty and power. When I viewed my images, I discovered
compositions that were too fleeting to observe readily in the waves
themselves,
and I began to search for likely locations of these transitory designs
of nature. Indian Head Cove with its cliffs, submerged rocks, ledges,
and great depth, all within a very small area, proved to be the most
productive
for images, and it also happens to be one of the most beautiful spots
in the Bruce Peninsula.
Ruth Mittelholtz will be at the Gallery to respond to visitors on
October 15 and November 5 between 1:00 and 4:00 pm.