© Michael Ormerod
Expositions du 13/11/2014 au 28/11/2014 Terminé
Newcastle College Rye Hill Campus, Scotswood Rd, Newcastle upon Tyne NE4 7SA, Royaume-Uni
Michael Ormerod: States of America is the photographic legacy of one of the UK’s leading photographic talents whose untimely death in 1991 ended prematurely the highly promising career of a distinctive and powerful photographic voice.Newcastle College Rye Hill Campus, Scotswood Rd, Newcastle upon Tyne NE4 7SA, Royaume-Uni
Michael Ormerod was born in Cheshire in 1947. He lived in Newcastle, but spent many years travelling America. Fascinated by the American image, and following in the footsteps of Robert Frank, Ormerod took to the Mid-West to find a washed out dream of capitalism. His images capture a strange juxtaposition of an American beauty tainted by a hidden sense of menace and corruption.
The photographs are understated, but show an unseen America, where the industrial heartland is decaying, highways stand empty and towns are deserted. The subjects of Ormerod's work are the disenfranchised. A teenager cycles through her neighbourhood wearing a Halloween mask, a Native American man stands in a graveyard. Their expressions are unreadable.
The work subverts traditional American icons. A white picket fence is staved in, a huge billboard for Miss Teen Dakota USA stands next to an empty highway. Inverting the famous Hollywood sign, Ormerod photographs a Texaco sign from the back, dominating the empty, industrial landscape.
© Michael Ormerod
His photographs are those of the outsider, constantly travelling through a no-man’s-land. A sense of pessimism pervades, showing how the commercial boom of the 1950s has collapsed, leaving deserted streets, rubbish dumps and alienation. It’s a land where the American Dream has turned sour.
Ormerod’s book, States of America, was published shortly after he died to mark an exhibition held at the Zelda Cheatle Gallery, London. Since then, only two exhibitions of his work have taken place in Sheffield in 2003 and in Brighton as part of the Photo Fringe in 2010. A reappraisal of his powerful and uncompromising chronicle of America is long overdue.
© Michael Ormerod