Breath Rayographs
A personal story through breath
Concept
Breath Rayographs, are produced directly in the darkroom without the use of camera. The method is inspired by the American DADA artist Man Ray's photographic technique, developed in 1919.
In the darkroom I breathe and shout onto ash placed on light-sensitive paper. The trace is captured by the light and developed following the normal steps for black-and-white photography. The photographs, which are in 1:1 format, show traces of my body and the working process; my hands, knees and mouth can be seen as empty, dark contours where the ash has been prevented from further movement by these physical obstacles.
“What the viewer sees on the image is the silence after the sound or the activity. It is the echo that is left on the paper, an absence of sound reminding us of a former presence. The absence is materialized in these images.”
— Camilla Eeg-Tverbakk, writer and curator (from catalog text White Noise, 2006)