Steven Duncan, Photographing Time (Art (2019))

Modern cameras are able to produce images at an indefatigable rate, so much so that it's often said that more photographs have been produced within the last 12 months than all images created throughout the rest of human history combined. Is there a way of slowing down? That is, to capture a single image that encompasses everything that happens within a time frame akin to that 12 months through which the entirety of human visual artistic endeavour has been more than doubled in depth due to modern photography. These are a selection from a series of images that together represents everything that has happened within frame over several months. Each image's exposure time are several months in length, and are all single exposures. The white lines you see are the sun's star-trail as it moves through the sky during the exposure, while the black inconsistent dots are periods of cloud covering the sun from the camera. The method by which I achieved this is a process called ‘solargraphy’ with my own unique twist I developed through very patient experimentation. Using my homemade equipment, I was able to place my cameras in opportune places and bolt or magnetise them in position for months on end. A large percentage of cameras were lost due to vandalism or theft, but the cameras that survived have produced the images in this collection.

Images have been resized for web display, which may cause some loss of image quality. Note: Original high-resolution images are used for judging.