Jem Southam:The Seventh Winter
25.01 – 04.03.2023
Closed
Hours
Monday to Saturday
10:00 am – 5:30 pm
Gallery
3–5 Swallow St
London
W1B 4DE
Huxley-Parlour are delighted to announce their third presentation with British photographer, Jem Southam: The Seventh Winter. The exhibition is the culmination of seven years photographing the same, short stretch of floodplain on the River Exe, and is testament to Southam’s enduring interest in conceptual landscape photography, ritual and repetition, transition and flux.
For the past seven years, Jem Southam has returned to the same, short, 100 yard stretch of the River Exe to photograph the liminal period between sunrise and daybreak during the winter period. Arriving in darkness, Southam waits and watches as the sky brightens, observing the gradual awakening of the river’s wildlife, and as each day passes, the cumulative encroach of Winter.
The Seventh Winter brings renewed meaning to the ‘presence’ of the photographer, the landscape’s slow evolution contrasting with his ritual return. Gestative and expectant, Southam’s photographs describe the ‘theatre’ of the landscape: ‘each and every day the sculptural form of the view I am contemplating is different, and presents a quiet drama of which I am a part. The river and its immediate banks, the stage; the distant view, the surrounding trees and the sky, make up the wings and the backdrop.’
THE EXHIBITION
10
B. United Kingdom1950
Biography
Jem Southam’s richly detailed works document subtle changes and transitions of the South West English landscape, allowing the artist to explore cycles of life and death through spring and winter, and also to reveal the subtlest of human interventions in the natural landscape. His work is characterised by its balance of poetry and lyricism within a documentary practice.
Southam’s works exclusively in series, with bodies of work including Bristol City Docks (1977 – 1984); Paintings of West Cornwall (1982 – 1986); The Red River (1982-1987); The Raft of Carrots (1992); The Shape of Time: Rockfalls, Rivermouths and Ponds (2000); and Upton Pyne and the Red River (2007). Southam’s early and seminal body of work The Red River followed a small stream in the West of Cornwall from source to sea, documenting the legacy of tin mining on the river’s valley and the people who live there.
His 2012 series The River – Winter investigated how the concept of winter is embedded in society’s shared imagination. The series traced the passage of a single winter, following the path of the river Exe and its tributaries in Devon. The Moth (2018), revisits sites from The Red River made almost two decades earlier. Inspired by the old English poems ‘The Wanderer’ and ‘The Seafarer’, the series moves freely between interior and exterior, from sweeping vistas to quiet, overlooked details of rural life. Southam’s 2018 series The Long White Cloud is the result of a six-week journey to document the landscapes of both the North and South Islands of New Zealand. The photographs in this series show his continued fascination with the subtleties of colour, with reflection and transience, and with the effects of the shifting seasons and weather on the landscape. Exploring notions of the sublime in the varied natural landscapes of New Zealand, these photographs accentuate the connections between the drama of nature to the inherent mythologies of the land.
Born in Bristol in 1950, Southam has had solo exhibitions at The Photographers Gallery, London, Tate St Ives, Cornwall and The Victoria & Albert Museum, London. His work is held in many important collections, including those of the Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam, Museum Folkwang, Essen, the Yale Centre for British Art, New Haven, and the The Victoria & Albert Museum. He is currently Professor of Photography at the University of Plymouth.