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Otherworld #003

Otherworld #004

Otherworld #005

Otherworld #006

Otherworld #007

Otherworld #008

Otherworld #009

Otherworld #010

Otherworld #011

Otherworld #012

Otherworld #013

Otherworld #014

Otherworld #015

Otherworld #016

Otherworld #017

Otherworld #019
Keith Taylor
#001 from the series 'Otherworld', 2019
Silver Gelatin Print
7 x 7 in (17.78 x 17.78 cm) image size
10 x 8 in (25.4 x 20.32 cm) paper size
10 x 8 in (25.4 x 20.32 cm) paper size
Edition of 15 + proofs
Stamped, signed, dated and numbered on verso, printed 2019
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'The Kepler Mission, NASA Discovery mission #10, is specifically designed to survey a portion of our region of the Milky Way galaxy to discover dozens of Earth-size planets in or...
"The Kepler Mission, NASA Discovery mission #10, is specifically designed to survey a portion of our region of the Milky Way galaxy to discover dozens of Earth-size planets in or near the habitable zone and determine how many of the billions of stars in our galaxy have such planets." — NASA
Otherworld uses photographs taken in the upper Midwest to render possible models of the Earth-like planets currently being sought by NASA's Kepler mission, and it also references the mythologies of many cultures that establish a land that is home to spiritual beings or the dead. These mythical other worlds of hope or doom often share characteristics with our familiar earthly landscapes, and I am using photographs of real places to suggest realms that may or may not exist. My images use barren terrains to suggest the earth-like landscapes photographed by rovers and other missions in space. As an immigrant, the landscapes of the upper Midwest continue to surprise me. This adds a personal layer to my depictions of territories that appear familiar yet remain unknowable.
Otherworld is informed by an earlier project, DARK MATTER, which I made in conjunction with the Jerome Foundation and the Minnesota Center for Book Arts. Where DARK MATTER focused on a specific site, Otherworld is more of a fanciful musing on our curiosity. We send missions deep into space to search for evidence of other possible worlds, and we create mythological homes for our gods and our dead. How can I depict the geography of our desire? I use this world to create models of others, exploiting the dark tones to create barriers for understanding, always holding something back.
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