DOMESTIC
DOMESTIC is grounded in research on the food production industry, and focuses on relationships between humans and animals, eaters and eaten.
The project stems from a batch of found 16mm agricultural and advertising footage shot in America in the 1960's; a poignant time for industrial and technological change in agriculture. With labor and land being increasingly replaced by chemical applications and machine advancements, commercial farms were morphing larger in size and fewer in number. Agriculture continues to chase its tail.
As the found 16mm film aged over time, portions became pierced by the 16mm projector needing to be snipped off bit by bit. Hand printing these isolated strips in the darkroom form a basis of DOMESTIC's visual narrative, with positive to negative and negative to positive transitioning. This printing process trajected towards a myriad of image making endeavours: from photographing farm work in rural NSW, Australia, to documenting manufactured food waste in London, UK; Found human x-rays, scientific imagery and site specific installation accumulate, exploring the body as a 'coop'.
This book work looks specifically at some of our closest companion species, livestock and poultry: and how they experience gene silencing, mutations and behavioural change throughout evolution, and through living in close proximity with humans.
DOMESTIC poses important questions around what biological adaptations may occur in the future for these co-dependent relationships, and features excerpts of conversations between Katrina Stamatopoulos and Martin Johnsson, Quantitative Geneticist at the Swedish University of Agricultural Studies in Uppsala, Sweden.
96 pages, 17 x 24cm
Soft Jacket Cover, exposed binding
Unique edition of 100
Published in December 2024
Each copy comes with a signed contact print