
As the eclipse unfolds Monday, one UofL professor will have her camera lens trained to the skies to capture it in a unique way.
, a Hite Art Institute professor, is creating 鈥,鈥 a 鈥渃ollaborative, experimental exhibition that examines the meeting point between photography, landscape and astronomy.鈥
Carothers has pulled a team of 17 photographers together to shoot the eclipse, with at least one in each of the 12 states in which the eclipse passes with totality. They鈥檒l use a new technique called slow scan photography, which captures reality in a slow scanning motion across a scene, offering a new twist on the traditional long exposure. The culminating images of the eclipse will聽be made of nearly 4,000 to 5,000 photographs.
The 鈥淥vershadowed鈥 images will be on display at the Cressman Center for Visual Arts, 100 E. Main St., Sept.聽22 through Oct. 28.
The opening reception for the show, which is part of the , is 5-6 p.m. Oct. 6 during the First Friday Gallery Hop.
Carothers co-created the project with British photographer , a pioneer of the slow scan technique. As a UofL Liberal Studies visiting scholar, he’ll give a talk titled “Space, Place and Time,” from 4-5 p.m. Oct. 2 in the Chao Auditorium of Ekstrom Library. The lecture will overview his 30 years of experimenting with photography and video and will include work on the total solar eclipse and the aurora borealis.聽
On Monday, Carothers and McClave will be in South Carolina to shoot the eclipse as it departs聽American soil and heads out over the Atlantic Ocean.
Others from UofL are involved in “Overshadowed” as well:
- Photography professor Mitch Eckert and incoming MFA photography candidate Zed Saeed will cover different locations in Kentucky.
- UofL聽Astronomy Professor Benne Holwerda, who is the resident astronomer at Kentucky Dam, will contribute聽from that location.
- John Jaynes, UofL’s聽Assistant Director of Sponsored Program Development and an astronomy and photography buff,聽will shoot from a pontoon in the Land Between the Lakes.
- Several Hite photo alumni will be stationed in other states: Kelsi Wermuth in Oregon, Mary Yates in Illinois, Laura Arrot Hartford in Tennessee and Jimmy Devore in North Carolina.
鈥淔or me, this is like a grand performance,鈥 Carothers said. 鈥淓ach photographer will soon聽be聽connected by聽forces聽much greater than time and landscape. I do have at least one聽photographer positioned in every eclipse state …聽but when it comes to thinking about this rare聽occurrence,聽state lines are merely聽man made boundaries.鈥
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