Title
The Unseen – An Atlas of Infrared PlatesPosted in
Photography, BookFormat
18.5 x 24 cm (portrait)Details
Hardback
266 pages with 127 photos in full colour
ISBN
978 90 5330 863 9Price
£30 | $50 | €45Detailed Information | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Title | The Unseen – An Atlas of Infrared Plates | Posted in | Photography, Book | Format | 18.5 x 24 cm (portrait) |
Details | Hardback
| ISBN | 978 90 5330 863 9 | Price | £30 | $50 | €45 |
The project fittingly started in 2011 as a ghost chase while Thompson was looking for ways to substantiate claims that Pluckley, a village in Kent, was haunted. This led him to take up infrared photography (IR), which can capture light above the visible spectrum and thus render the invisible visible. Having gone through 6 rolls of medium format Kodak Aerodrome film, he may not have discovered any lurking phantoms but was intrigued enough to dig into the film’s history which inspired him to devise a wider, twelve-part project— evolving into the book’s twelve chapters—to uncannily capture the world through IR’s unique properties.
Kodak Aerochrome was created in the 1940's as reconnaissance technology to detect camouflaged enemy forces and was later used in aerial vegetation surveys where the health of foliage can be determined—which it does by capturing chlorophyll and rendering them in red (healthy) and magenta (unhealthy) hues. Appropriating these and other usages and sourcing the last 52 dead-stock rolls—Kodak discontinued production in 2009—Thompson has documented a wide range of subject matter, from London’s pollution in “The City” (2014) and rapidly melting glacial ice caves in “Hellir” (2016), to families affected by flooding in “After the flood, after the Red River valley” (2012) and the most radioactive forest in the world in “The Red Forest” (2012) in which Chernobyl in Ukraine is re-imagined, as the photographer eloquently explains, “in deep Soviet burgundy”.
In “The Veins” (2014) Thompson takes advantage of Infrared wavelengths’ ability to penetrate a few millimeters into the epidermis to create fractal maps of bodily veins branching off under milky, smooth stretches of skin, while in “The War” (2015) he taps into the film’s original use of uncovering camouflage to reveal hidden charcoal underdrawings in military paintings. With additional subject matter such as celestial bodies, bee-keepers and open-heart surgery, “The Unseen” is a true pictorial atlas of our age, penetrating the visible surface to expose its lambent underside.