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The
recent work of Belfast born photographer Paul Seawright
takes place on the "periphery of incident," to use the
expression of his fellow countryman and poet John Montague.
This artist, whose previous work focused on the "troubles"
in Northern Ireland, went to Afghanistan shortly after
the bombing came to a halt. As well as showing the sad
spectacle of ruins, he photographed the landscape and
the surprising peacefulness of his surroundings. Seawright
eschews all sensationalism and invites viewers to quietly
contemplate the disasters of war.
Born
in 1965 in Belfast, Northern Ireland. Lives and works
in Wales.
An
accomplished artist whose photographs are exhibited
and collected internationally, Paul Seawright is also
a professor of photography at the University of Wales
College, Newport. In 1997, he was awarded the Irish
Museum of Modern Art/Glen Dimplex Artists Award. He
is one of the artists selected to represent Wales at
the 50th International Venice Biennale of Art in 2003.
Seawright was commissioned by the Imperial War Museum
to respond to the terrorist attacks of September 11th
and the war in Afghanistan in June 2002. His response
to Afghanistan's heavily mined desert landscapes extends
and reworks the distinctive aesthetic established by
his earlier photographs of contested, politically contaminated
landscapes in his home city of Belfast and, more recently,
on the fringes of various European cities.
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