Tillman Crane, Eight Ball, ME, 2020
Tillman Crane, Eight Ball, ME, 2020
(Eight Ball), Lost & Found: Doll Portfolio, 16.5 × 22 inches, Not editioned, whole portfolio sold for $40,000 or sold individually for $3,500
My Square Foot Studio work has increasingly changed what and how I see.
For years I focused on the marks of time and elements on the natural and manmade
environments. Large and small objects carried their changing marks of time over the
years as I returned to certain locations.
The limits on travel resulting from the pandemic forced me to work in very different
ways. At first, I pushed back against the restrictions but as I watched the light moving
through its daily path across our sun porch, an idea formed. I “borrowed” a stem from
the vase, fully intending to return it but instead, I photographed it up close until the last
petal fell away from the stem.
I saw these objects as larger-than-life-sized, isolated against a solid black background,
to be examined closely. Making such large prints required a steep (and expensive)
learning curve but the final prints made it worth it.
When traveling was possible again, I brought my Square Foot Studio. Rephotographing
the dolls in this way resulted in this portfolio. Isolating the objects in a neutral
background, using only natural light, my objective was for the viewer to see them from
across the room and be pulled in by eyes, just as I am.
The eyes are described to me as strange, haunting, and scary. I continue seeking to
understand their hold on me and others. With more questions than answers I know I
have more work to do with this subject.
Tillman Crane
2024