The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

PHOTOGRAPH­ER FINDS POETRY IN AIRPORT SETTING

- By Felicia Feaster

Airports are strange places, filled with frantic people hustling through security and rushing to catch planes. But they are also places of contemplat­ive stillness and endless waiting; for planes, for transporta­tion, for loved ones. They are mini cities teeming with people and activity where individual moments get lost in the fray.

Training his camera on the goings-on at the world’s busiest airport, Athensbase­d photograph­er Mark Steinmetz captures this unique world in a bubble, zeroing in on those stolen moments, finding the peculiar and particular within the grand scheme.

As part of its ongoing “Picturing the South” project of commission­ing works on the South for the High Museum of Art’s collection, the museum’s latest iteration, “Mark Steinmetz: Terminus,” is centered on the quotidian operations — on the ground and in the air — of Hartsfield-Jackson Internatio­nal Airport.

Steinmetz’s silver gelatin prints are dreamy, timeless, and seem to capture some unchanging, eternal characteri­stic of human life on Earth, of waiting and transition­ing, and gazing into the middle-distance, lost in thought. At the airport, people engage in private reveries in plain sight, sleeping, daydreamin­g, lost in heartfelt exits and reunions. In Steinmetz’s hands, those assembled moments become something more than a simple documentar­y of a place. They feel like an exegesis on the human condition. People at rest or waiting, these photograph­s observe, let their guard down to some extent, and reveal a degree of vulnerabil­ity that connects us to them.

If some of the images feel elevated and enlighteni­ng, others grovel in the funkiness of 21st-century life, as Steinmetz also captures the un-self-conscious, freefor-all zone that air travel has become, a world of sweatpants and meals eaten on laps and outfits accessoriz­ed with neck pillows and headphones.

From the soft, fleshy human dramas inside the airport to the abstract, airborne missions in the air above, Steinmetz’s “Terminus” goes both micro and macro. When these people board planes and soar above the airport, they enter another realm, one lofty and distanced from the quotidian one on ground, where cloud formations and sun and the limitless horizon reframe existence in another dimension.

One of the visual ironies of Steinmetz’s images is the proximity of this miniature

airport city he records — a place founded on technology, money, expensive aircraft and global commerce — and the fields of kudzu, vacant lots and desolate roads to nowhere that encircle this teeming hub. In those moments, Steinmetz is like an explorer on the ground, peering up at the skies from within a forest of bramble to see a jet passing overhead, like an elephant lumbering by on an African safari.

At times, Steinmetz’s vantage is surreal, as when he captures a plane passing overhead, so close to the treetops it looks like a disaster movie in progress or the juxtaposit­ion of a plane going nose to

nose with a bird, equivalent objects in the air. He records the crazy optical tricks of air travel, in which one minute planes are monstrous, lumbering beasts and the next gnat small, which becomes a kind of metaphor for human experience in which vantage and perspectiv­e are everything.

Such images of flight give a sense of the enchanted, perilous, miraculous dimension to air travel. “Terminus” shows the marvel of flight high above, coexisting with the simple human dramas playing out down below, in the process delivering a kind of theater of human life played out in grand and granular form.

 ?? PHOTOS CONTRIBUTE­D BY THE ARTIST AND JACKSON FINE ART ?? Athens-based photograph­er Mark Steinmetz captures the human and aeronautic­al activity at Hartsfield-Jackson Internatio­nal Airport in his show “Terminus” at the High Museum of Art.
PHOTOS CONTRIBUTE­D BY THE ARTIST AND JACKSON FINE ART Athens-based photograph­er Mark Steinmetz captures the human and aeronautic­al activity at Hartsfield-Jackson Internatio­nal Airport in his show “Terminus” at the High Museum of Art.
 ??  ?? Athens-based photograph­er Mark Steinmetz captures the human and aeronautic­al activity at Hartsfield­Jackson in his show “Terminus.”
Athens-based photograph­er Mark Steinmetz captures the human and aeronautic­al activity at Hartsfield­Jackson in his show “Terminus.”

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