Artwork description:

In the immediate run-up to the 2017 solar eclipse, seen in totality across several states in the US, the media coverage of the event, both national and local, was considerable.

At a time of political shifts within the White House following a series of senior staff resignations, continued suspicions over claims of Russian hacking in the 2016 presidential election, growing tensions between the US and North Korea after missile fears for Guam, and domestic clashes in Charlottesville between White Nationalists and counter-protestors over the Civil War monument dispute, the eclipse story became a simple distraction.

Repetitive reports ran daily - ranging from how to best watch the eclipse (in which states and at what times, how to safely observe it without damaging the eye, ways to construct homemade viewing devices, etc) to discussions of a shortage of eclipse glasses in stores across the country (thus prompting shipments from the UK) and Bonnie Tyler announcing that she would sing ‘Total Eclipse of the Heart’ onboard a cruise ship leaving from Florida.

In looking up at the eclipse, as it was told to me by the people I spoke with at the time, there was a shared feeling of having witnessed the miraculous. One news reporter later described it as magical. It happened regardless of political and cultural stresses, and it happened for everyone. But for those who were too late to buy eclipse glasses, a Cheerios box with a pinhole on the side was all they needed to look away from America and forget.

Materials used:

Digital C-Type, Fuji Matt, Tray Frame, Oak Moulding

Tags:
#funny #humour #usa #astronomy #eclipse 
Solar Glasses (Hold Up To View) (2017)
Photograph
by Jeremy Philip Knowles

£726.24 Alert

Artwork description
Minus

In the immediate run-up to the 2017 solar eclipse, seen in totality across several states in the US, the media coverage of the event, both national and local, was considerable.

At a time of political shifts within the White House following a series of senior staff resignations, continued suspicions over claims of Russian hacking in the 2016 presidential election, growing tensions between the US and North Korea after missile fears for Guam, and domestic clashes in Charlottesville between White Nationalists and counter-protestors over the Civil War monument dispute, the eclipse story became a simple distraction.

Repetitive reports ran daily - ranging from how to best watch the eclipse (in which states and at what times, how to safely observe it without damaging the eye, ways to construct homemade viewing devices, etc) to discussions of a shortage of eclipse glasses in stores across the country (thus prompting shipments from the UK) and Bonnie Tyler announcing that she would sing ‘Total Eclipse of the Heart’ onboard a cruise ship leaving from Florida.

In looking up at the eclipse, as it was told to me by the people I spoke with at the time, there was a shared feeling of having witnessed the miraculous. One news reporter later described it as magical. It happened regardless of political and cultural stresses, and it happened for everyone. But for those who were too late to buy eclipse glasses, a Cheerios box with a pinhole on the side was all they needed to look away from America and forget.

Materials used:

Digital C-Type, Fuji Matt, Tray Frame, Oak Moulding

Tags:
#funny #humour #usa #astronomy #eclipse 

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Jeremy Philip Knowles

Location Germany

About
Jeremy Philip Knowles is a British artist working with photography and installation. He holds a Bachelor of Arts in Fine Art Photography from Camberwell College of Art (University of the... Read more

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