The WSJ has a story about a photographer who has created still-life photos from animal remains confiscated by Canadian customs agents.
‘The illegal trade of wildlife is one of the great disgraces of humanity
"To create “Trafficked,” Fitzgerald holed up for days with the Wildlife Enforcement Branch of the Canadian government in a locked area containing cases of confiscated specimens from the illegal wildlife trade. She created all of the images using the laborious 19th century wet collodion process that involves exposing chemically treated photographic plates and then developing them in a darkroom. What resulted is a poetically compelling look at the evidence of human beings’ sometimes illegal, often abusive, relationship in wildlife trading."
‘The illegal trade of wildlife is one of the great disgraces of humanity
"To create “Trafficked,” Fitzgerald holed up for days with the Wildlife Enforcement Branch of the Canadian government in a locked area containing cases of confiscated specimens from the illegal wildlife trade. She created all of the images using the laborious 19th century wet collodion process that involves exposing chemically treated photographic plates and then developing them in a darkroom. What resulted is a poetically compelling look at the evidence of human beings’ sometimes illegal, often abusive, relationship in wildlife trading."
1 comment:
Wow what a informative blog; if you want to know about different birds, animals and pests name even different kinds. Mark Hutchinson can help you.
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