Petrograph Gallery

Sunday, April 13, 2008

Fleeting Fossils Bluestone Pathway



Pathway to the Past was completed in April, 2008, in downtown Northampton, Massachusetts. It was composed of 43 petrographs on Pennsylvania bluestone lain on the lawn of the Unitarian Society of Northampton and Florence. The above image shows the pathway shortly after I installed it. Most of the paving stones were printed with images of the city and surrounding area lent by Historic Northampton (the originals, most of which are in the Howes Brothers Collection, were shot between 1850-1950). The images below are details of two individual petrographs, the first an historic image, the second shot by a resident of the Lathrop Retirement Community in Northampton. (See below for more information on the Fleeting Fossils installation involving Lathrop and Jackson Street Elementary School.)



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CLICK ON EACH OF THE IMAGES BELOW TO SEE THE ENTIRE INSTALLATION OR SERIES

CLICK ON EACH OF THE IMAGES BELOW TO SEE THE ENTIRE INSTALLATION OR SERIES
Mill River Installation III

Sandwich Beach Installation I

Storytellers' Cairn

Fleeting Fossils Sidewalk Installation

Tides, New Brunswick

Faces in Nature Installation

Ghosts of Overbrook Installation

The Menna Series

The Mary Series (Ongoing)

AfterShadows: A Grand Canyon Narrative
PURCHASE INFORMATION

To purchase a petrographic image from any of the installation series, or to contact me about creating a "collaborative portrait"--a personalized petrograph that I create for clients, using their selections of environment, objects, and images--please contact me at pamelapetro@comcast.net.

I usually invoice through Paypal, and ship through the USPS or FedEx. Customers may purchase work that is framed or unframed prints.

"NORMAL" PHOTOGRAPHS

"NORMAL" PHOTOGRAPHS
Mail Delivery, Bordeaux, France. Click on the image to see travel photos from Southwest France, May 2011.

MORE "NORMAL" PHOTOGRAPHS

MORE "NORMAL" PHOTOGRAPHS
Misty Day at the Grand Canyon. Click on the image to see an album of Grand Canyon photos, January - February, 2011.

YET MORE "NORMAL" PHOTOGRAPHS

YET MORE "NORMAL" PHOTOGRAPHS
The 5000 year-old cromlech, Pentre Ifan, near Newport (or Trefdraeth) in Northern Pembrokeshire, Wales. Click on the image to see an album of Wales photos from my hiking trip with The Wayfarers in September, 2011

"Hiraeth"

"Hiraeth"
Click on the photo to read an essay about Wales that mentions Pentre Ifan (above), from The Paris Review Daily

NORMAL BUT ABSTRACT

NORMAL BUT ABSTRACT
Abstract beach images from the Petit Manan Wildlife Refuge, Millbridge, Maine, Summer, 2011. CLICK TO SEE THE ALBUM

Normal and Abstract Brazilian Photos

Normal and Abstract Brazilian Photos
These photos were taken in the contemporary art park, Inhotim, outside of Belo Horizonte, and in the colonial town of Tiradentes, in June, 2012. CLICK ON THE IMAGE TO SEE THE ALBUM.

Abstract Photos From Gatineau, Quebec and Denver, Colorado, 8/12

Abstract Photos From Gatineau, Quebec and Denver, Colorado, 8/12
In the Canadian Museum of Civilization

NORMAL AND ABSTRACT PHOTOS FROM THE AZORES

NORMAL AND ABSTRACT PHOTOS FROM THE AZORES
Algae-ringed rock on the beach in the fishing village of Mosteiros, on Sao Miguel

Photos from Wales, 2013: In the Footsteps of Dylan Thomas

Photos from Wales, 2013: In the Footsteps of Dylan Thomas
Criccieth, Lleyn Peninsula, Wales

Photos from Wales, 2014: The Dylan Thomas International Summer School in Creative Writing

Photos from Wales, 2014: The Dylan Thomas International Summer School in Creative Writing
Images are from the inaugural session of the DTISS, University of Wales, Trinity St David

Mass Ave, Cambridge

Mass Ave, Cambridge
Images from walking Mass Ave, twice a day, during the Lesley MFA in Creative Writing Residency, June 2014

Photos from London, August 2014

Photos from London, August 2014
Millennium Bridge, late twilight

My Website

My Website
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Pamela Petro

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Pamela Petro
I'm a writer and an artist--I prefer to be both simultaneously, but that doesn't happen very often--and I live in Northampton, Massachusetts. I can be reached at pamelapetro@comcast.net.
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Artist's Statement

Petrographs are silver gelatin images printed on stone. My name—Petro—means rock in Greek. What a stroke of luck….

When natives of northeastern Siberia saw a view camera for the first time they called it, “a three-legged device that draws a man’s shadow to stone.”

Petrographs do the same thing. By casting and briefly fixing our shadows to the bedrock, they juxtapose the “snapshot” span of our mortal memories with the vastness of geological time. And that puts humans’ experience on earth back into perspective. We are not the planet’s masters. We’re just one of many species passing through deep time.



I grew up with rocks in the house—my father was a mineral collector—but I don’t make petrographs for keeps. After harvesting rocks from rivers, seabeds, and quarries, I coat them in photographic emulsion, print them with images from the human sphere, and return them to their original locations. Then time, water, sunlight, and weather do their erosive work as I record the process with my camera. The results, revealing the rocks as they’re distorted, obscured, and weathered by ever-shifting environmental factors, evoke in days the passage of years, and tether us to natural cycles of decomposition and replenishment. The installations, which scientists assure me have no ill-effects on their host eco-systems, are fleeting. Our images disappear, and the rocks return to their own silent business.

There is a Welsh word—hiraeth—that has no cognate in English. It suggests something akin to the “presence of absence,” and refers to a deep, and creative, longing for something unattainable that exists only in the imagination, possibly beyond place or time. In the case of Wales, a subject state since the 13th century, it derives from a longing for a national history that should have been but never was: a gap filled by myths, legends, and once-and-future yearnings.

Petrographs exist in the gap between human consciousness and the world around us. As our images erode in the sea or a river or under the snow, or the sun weathers and cracks them, their weathering enacts the presence of absence before our eyes: the hiraeth of the natural cycle. They insist that our lives are snapshot moments, and that we belong to the earth—that it is our home.

Petrographs’ insistence on our place in the natural order is a sometimes beautiful, occasionally unnerving reminder of how place shapes us—the rocks’ histories, formed and distorted by glaciers, ancient seas, fire, and ice, become miniature landscapes that give mass and form to our memories—and how everything we do imprints, for better or worse, on the environment.

The Slow Breath of Stone: A Romanesque Love Story, by Pamela Petro (Fourth Estate, London, 2005)

The Slow Breath of Stone: A Romanesque Love Story, by Pamela Petro (Fourth Estate, London, 2005)
A travel narrative set in Southwest France. Its obsessions -- limestone, sculpture, photography, and love -- prefigure my work with petrographs. Click on image to purchase.

TRAVELS IN AN OLD TONGUE: TOURING THE WORLD SPEAKING WELSH (Flamingo, London, 1997)

TRAVELS IN AN OLD TONGUE: TOURING THE WORLD SPEAKING WELSH (Flamingo, London, 1997)
I had a hard time learning Welsh in Wales--everyone was kind and let me speak English. So I took Welsh out of Wales and used it as an international language on a 15-country tour, in places like Japan and Argentina, where I found people who spoke Welsh but not English, and I was forced (forced!) to use the language. It worked. Here's the book about it...Click on the image to purchase

SITTING UP WITH THE DEAD: A STORIED JOURNEY THROUGH THE AMERICAN SOUTH (Flamingo, '01; Arcade, '02)

SITTING UP WITH THE DEAD: A STORIED JOURNEY THROUGH THE AMERICAN SOUTH (Flamingo, '01; Arcade, '02)
For my second book of travel literature I traveled through the American South listening to the tales of oral storytellers. Click on the image to purchase.

Memory Meets Stone

Memory Meets Stone
A picture book of petrograph images from 2005 to 2009. Custom copies are available from me, and an updated version is coming soon.

About a Train Wreck

About a Train Wreck
This blog is supposed to be about artwork but here's some writing, too, from a great new travel 'zine called Carry On (www.letscarryon.com). The essay is called "A Tale of Two Trains."

Ghosts of Overbrook

Ghosts of Overbrook
My graphic short story, "Ghosts of Overbrook," was published in this inaugural issue of The Ocean State Review, the University of Rhode Island's new literary journal, in June, 2011. CLICK ON THE IMAGE TO READ/SEE A VERSION OF THE STORY.

National Park Arts Exhibition

National Park Arts Exhibition
This image was chosen for an online exhibition of artwork by artists in residence at U.S. National Parks. It's called "Mary, Preserved." Click on the image to move to the online site.

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The Witch and the Poet

The Witch and the Poet
Click on the tarot card above to read Part I of a three-part essay I wrote in Fall, 2012 for The Paris Review Daily called "The Witch and the Poet." And then click on each of the tarot images below to read Parts II and III.

Click on the image above to read Part II of "The Witch and the Poet."

And finally, click on the image above to read Part III of the essay. Thanks!

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