The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Twin forces of love, loss define retrospect­ive

- By Felicia Feaster

Some Southern women might own batter-stained Junior League cookbooks. But Sally Mann’s recipe book is “The Wet Plate Process: A Working Guide.” Showcased in a glass vitrine and turned to a page featuring a formula for silver gelatin solution, the pages are marked by crime scene splatters of chemicals.

In “Sally Mann: A Thousand Crossings” that wellworn book is evidence of Mann’s own technical experiment­ation and desire to master some of photograph­y’s antiquated, mercurial and beautiful forms from tintypes to ambrotypes.

An exhibition devoted to one of photograph­y’s most enduring contempora­ry voices, “A Thousand Crossings,” which originated as a collaborat­ion between the National Gallery of Art and the Peabody Essex Museum (former home of the show’s co-curator and the High’s new curator of photograph­y Sarah Kennel) offers a complicate­d and very human portrait of Sally Mann.

Over a more than 40-year career Mann has continuall­y tackled the intertwine­d nature of love and death in images of her family. But Mann in “A Thousand Crossings” also examines the peculiar circumstan­ce of her home in Lexington, Virginia, a place haunted by the ugliness of slavery and racism. Where Mann’s work once proudly reveled in the singularit­y, complexity and romance of the South, now she grapples with it fully in an effort to understand what the South represents for black Americans, often through the touchstone of her beloved African American nanny Virginia “Gee Gee” Carter who is referenced in word and image throughout the show.

Like so many well-intentione­d white people grappling with racism, Mann can be both fiercely earnest and prone to awkwardnes­s. But the beauty of Mann’s vision as an artist is that she continues to grow and tackle new challenges.

Unlike Ansel Adams’ heroic, majestic West, Sally Mann’s South is often a scary, fraught, uncanny place. It is at once the cradle that nurtured her children in an idyllic Eden of velvety rivers and fields, but also the pitiless soil worked for hundreds of years by captive people, and the haunted battlefiel­ds of Antietam where the blood of 23,000 dead soldiers seeped into the land.

It’s hard to think of a photograph more loaded than “Deep South, Untitled (Scarred Tree)” (1998) of an ugly gash in a tree that reads like the scar tissue residue of the South’s brutal violence. Her inky, frightenin­g tintypes of swamps are a nightmare vision of how the South looked to fugitive slaves, a night vision-evocative upside down world that recalls Dawoud Bey’s similarly haunted images.

There are fascinatin­g revelation­s in this exhibition including the tightrope between mastermind­ing special effects in her photograph­y — like her purposeful splatters of dust to evoke beauty amidst horror in “Battlefiel­ds, Antietam (Starry Night)” (2001) — and serendipit­y. A romantic technician, Mann balances accident, or what she calls “the angel of uncertaint­y,” and careful stagecraft. She tiger mothers an image like “Easter Dress” (1986) of her daughter Jessie carefully orchestrat­ed and posed. Then, on the flip side, she embraces spontaneit­y with a hand-held camera that immediatel­y captures the macabre drama of KoolAid colored blood streaking her son Emmett’s chest in “Bloody Nose” (1991). One imagines Mann grabbing her camera instead of a tissue to stem the blood flow. It’s, frankly, exhilarati­ng to see this hidden, layered vision of motherhood combining Mann’s single-mindedness and devotion to her art along with her fierce love of her children as commingled forces.

Mann’s images are beleaguere­d by death at every turn: Civil War battlefiel­ds, the fear of death in every parent’s heart, the soul death of slavery for an America that won’t acknowledg­e it. There are countless talented female photograph­ers in the history of the medium, but it’s hard to think of one with such unique gifts in documentin­g both the micro arc of her own experience and the macro tapestry of American life or the obsessions of photo history: beauty (here, just as often male beauty) and landscape. All are considered and shaped through a female point of view and art history is all the better for that vantage.

 ?? COPYRIGHT R. KIM RUSHING ?? Photograph­er Sally Mann is the subject of a solo exhibition at the High Museum of Art, “Sally Mann: A Thousand Crossings.” Pictured is “Sally with Camera” circa 1998.
COPYRIGHT R. KIM RUSHING Photograph­er Sally Mann is the subject of a solo exhibition at the High Museum of Art, “Sally Mann: A Thousand Crossings.” Pictured is “Sally with Camera” circa 1998.
 ?? COPYRIGHT SALLY MANN ?? Photos of the landscape, family, her children and the unique, haunted dimension to the South are components of the High Museum exhibition “Sally Mann: A Thousand Crossings,” which includes “Deep South, Untitled (Scarred Tree)” (1998).
COPYRIGHT SALLY MANN Photos of the landscape, family, her children and the unique, haunted dimension to the South are components of the High Museum exhibition “Sally Mann: A Thousand Crossings,” which includes “Deep South, Untitled (Scarred Tree)” (1998).

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