NEW YORK, NY.- Evan Hume first began filing Freedom of Information Act requests to obtain declassified photographs and documents when he was still a graduate student at George Washington University. Years later, his study of and subsequent archive of incomplete, redacted, "historical fragments" fills the pages of
Viewing Distance. Time passage between when an image is taken and when it is viewed, and partial truths revealed as a result of obscured or redacted elements, combine and result in speculation and implication. It is within this space that Hume explores in this project with images that link decades and speak to the changing role of photography as a historical document.
In the twentieth century photography became a more pervasive and essential tool in the international political landscape, utilized for reconnaissance and surveillance, both on the ground and aerial.
"Viewing Distance combines photographs pertaining to Cold War developments in photographic technologies with contemporary documents and devices, connecting past and present with implications for the future," Hume writes.
To achieve the imagery, Hume then layered, manipulated, and combined analog printing, digital collage, scanner manipulation, and data bending to create a deeper sense of "flux, open to alternate associations," he writes, highlighting even further the divide of time, perspective, and associations drawn when incomplete or manipulated information is given to the public.
Art historian Lily Brewer contributed an essay in the book, and she highlights the "new speculative postulations" that are invited when the full picture (literal and conceptual) is concealed in parts or as a whole.
"As he came into contact with more and more images and documents related to the use of photographic technologies deployed in reconnaissance and surveillance, Hume found that while plenty of photographs were legible, so many more were distorted and so heavily redacted they were rendered unintelligible. While he began to use more of the representational photographs as well as those that had been transformed through reproduction, he identified a tension between the available information related to weapons testing, surveillance, and the indeterminacy of those sources."
The resulting images are at once literal and abstract, beautiful in their color dynamic range yet carrying at times dark contextual content in their origins of surveillance or weapons testing documentation: buried, glimpsed, censored.
Hume also manipulates sound and picture, and two-and-three dimensional realities, providing a new kind of visual landscape for speculation on information, international political schema, and the role of truth in both. In an example of visualizing audio, Hume takes supersonic jet and shock waves and translates the video image into audio software and then back into image that "mirrors the transformation of sound in a supersonic jet and its shock wave. The disconnection between the image and its sound waves emulates a space- and time-based distance between the photograph and its noise," Brewer notes.
There is depth of content in both the words and pictures that fill a space, as well as the seemingly blank in betweens. Poets know this, and Hume does, as well.
Evan Hume is an artist based in South Bend, Indiana where he is the Visiting Lecturer of Photography at the University of Notre Dame. He earned his BFA from Virginia Commonwealth University and MFA from George Washington University. Raised in the Washington, DC area, Hume's approach to photography is informed by the experience of living in the nations political center for much of his life and focuses on the mediums use as an instrument of the military-industrial complex and intelligence apparatus. He has exhibited widely at venues including Fotografiska (New York, NY), Filter Photo (Chicago, IL), and Furthermore (Washington, DC). Humes work has been featured by publications such as Aperture and Der Greif and is currently part of the Museum of Contemporary Photographys Midwest Photographers Project.