Initiated in the late 1980s and continuing across four decades, Offshore Recordings is an ongoing body of camera-based works in which language, memory and environment are brought into direct physical contact. Text fragments are typed, staged and submerged beneath moving water before being recorded onto large-format analogue film.
Working with water as an active optical condition, Hamilton allows surface movement, duration and reflected light to reorganise the legibility of language during exposure. Words remain visible but unstable, shifting between document, image and event.
Each photograph records a singular encounter between text, liquid and time. Sentences appear suspended within changing optical fields, becoming less fixed statements than material traces of thought passing through physical conditions.
Presented as unique works and resolved directly onto film without post-production, the series extends Hamilton's long-standing investigation into photography as physical event: images formed through construction, observation and duration rather than extraction.
As Bob Chaundry observed for The Huffington Post: "This method of exploring the subtle distortions that water makes on light is painstakingly exact and the results are simply extraordinary."
Working with water as an active optical condition, Hamilton allows surface movement, duration and reflected light to reorganise the legibility of language during exposure. Words remain visible but unstable, shifting between document, image and event.
Each photograph records a singular encounter between text, liquid and time. Sentences appear suspended within changing optical fields, becoming less fixed statements than material traces of thought passing through physical conditions.
Presented as unique works and resolved directly onto film without post-production, the series extends Hamilton's long-standing investigation into photography as physical event: images formed through construction, observation and duration rather than extraction.
As Bob Chaundry observed for The Huffington Post: "This method of exploring the subtle distortions that water makes on light is painstakingly exact and the results are simply extraordinary."
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photography, unique work
40.6 x 50.8 cms
16 x 20 inches
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