Marlene MacCallum, “sleep walk”

Marlene MacCallum
Ontario, Canada
https://www.marlenemaccallum.com
IG: @marlenemaccallum

sleep walk
2023
Sewn board binding with wraparound case with magnetic closure system, archival digital pigment prints on Asuka and Niyodo papers
Four volumes held in slipcase: Closed case: 1 1/16 x 7 1/8 x 10 3/16 inches, folio section page spreads: 13 7/16 x 10 1/16 inches, expanded accordion sections: 26 3/4 x 10 1/16 inches

Artist Statement

In early June 2020, to mark the end of my regular walks, I began to photograph at the edge of Lake Ontario, always from the same south-facing vantage point. Over the following months and years, I slowly amassed a visual record that reflects the ever-changing conjunction of sky, water, and land.

My conception of this vast lake as a static entity was transformed into a realization of the mutability, vulnerability, and adaptability of this environment. The process of making sleep walk was a discovery of the phenomena of shifting states: natural, physical, social and psychological. This resulted in a seven-section work, using a combination of accordion and nested folio sections.

Section One: fluctuate
The unfolding natural pattern of seasonal flux. Two forms of time are present, the diachronic time of movement through the book and the synchronic time of each page.

Section Two: sublimate
Each section begins with a word that encapsulates a form of shift.
Sublimation—the phenomenal occurrence as snow bypasses its watery self to become sky, this shocking shift of states where water feels wedged between solid and gas and the ever-present horizon.
The artist is out of view but present in how the work is framed and offered, sharing the wonder of a world that is ever affected by our presence.

Section Three: invert
Negative to positive—a world of photographic inversions where the shift-maker is the artist choosing to flip black and white and colour when given the surprising gift that a lake’s edge can be its own mirror image. The eerie process of translation when a negative turns snow into stone.

Section Four: lit becomes split
The rip tide that spills past into future.

Section Five: saturate
The cycle of drain and rain unbalanced by temperature shifts.

Section Six: cloud
The visual veil.

Section Seven: sleep walk
The algae clogging the water and zebra mussels clogging the shore.
Are we oblivious to or observant of the evidence at the event horizon?