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Gary Saretzky Photo Books

Stein, Amy. Domesticated by Amy Stein.

Stein, Amy. Domesticated by Amy Stein.

Regular price $75.00 USD
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photolucida, 2008. Essay by Alison Nordstrom. Photographs of animals, primarily in conjunction with human incursions into natural environments. [Born in 1970, Amy Stein's "work has been shown at the National Academy of Sciences in Washington, D.C. In 2007, she was one of fifteen "emerging artists" selected by American Photo magazine."] Stiff illustrated oblong wraps, unpaginated (about 68 pages). 1st edition. Like new. Summary:

Domesticated (2008), published by Photolucida as part of their Critical Mass Monograph series, is a compelling contemporary photography book featuring the work of artist Amy Stein. The 64-page volume features an insightful introductory essay by Alison Nordstrom, then-director of photographs at the George Eastman House, and explores the complex, tense psychological borderland where human suburban development clashes with the natural world.

Key Elements of the Work

  • The Matamoras Portfolio: The core of the book consists of striking, surreal color photographs set in and around the small town of Matamoras, Pennsylvania, a community bordered by state forest lands. Stein documents the daily, often unsettling interactions between native wild animals (such as bears, deer, coyotes, and foxes) and the human-built suburban environment.

  • Constructed Realism: The publication highlights Stein's unique narrative methodology. Rather than waiting for chance encounters as a traditional wildlife photographer would, Stein painstakingly recreated real-life stories and local newspaper reports of animal encounters. Utilizing taxidermied animals staged within real suburban backdrops (lawns, garages, and roadsides), she crafts hyper-real, allegorical tableaus that feel simultaneously documentary and cinematic.

  • Nordstrom’s Critical Analysis: In her accompanying essay, Alison Nordstrom contextualizes Stein's imagery within the history of landscape photography and dioramas. Nordstrom unpacks the underlying themes of the work, analyzing how the photographs reflect our deep-seated human desire to both control and connect with nature, and the mutual vulnerability that results from our ecological encroachment.

  • Themes of Containment and Comfort: The book's title speaks to its central thesis: the modern human impulse to "domesticate" our surroundings. Stein's imagery portrays wild creatures trapped in an artificial limbo—scavenging from garbage cans, staring down SUVs, or wandering through manicured lawns—serving as a mirror for our own isolation from the natural world.

Narrative Intent

The monograph functions as a modern cautionary tale and a psychological exploration of contemporary American life. By staging these quiet, haunting collisions between the untamed and the suburban, Stein and Nordstrom challenge viewers to look past the comfort of modern domestic safety, revealing the unresolved, primal anxieties that linger just beyond the edge of the driveway.

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