OXIDIZED
The oxidized metals of the Mojave Desert landscape — rusted cans, discarded bolts, conveyor parts, spiraling culverts, and other metallic objects — seem annihilated by the gritty red rust of time. Yet these remnants have been ‘born again’ as contemporary art photographs through selected light, edgy textures and micro-details, revealing beautiful metals that supported desert pioneers as they pursued life, love and riches in a hostile and unforgiving environment.
I began Oxidized! as a photographic exploration of the vast wilds of the Mojave National Preserve. Initially, I wanted to capture the lonely beauty of the desert landscape but discovered instead an oxidized history revealing itself within the ‘left behinds’ of junked cars, abandoned military vehicles, dilapidated mining equipment and detritus of destroyed farming implements. Each of these, and more, are a testament to lives lived in a high sun of played-out ore bodies, insufficient water, failed markets and autocratic environmental laws. Metals within the Mojave experienced the glory of usefulness, now vanishing into times past. Abandoned, yet now reborn through art, these slowly disappearing structures remain as oxidized sentinels to the march of time.