| Ray Carofano |
| terra phantasma : the photographs of ray
carofano
An Essay written by Carol
McCusker Ray Carofano makes hauntingly beautiful photographs. Like Leiber, he presents us with a world he finds as much poetic as 'awe-full'. It is grounded in the grand and familiar ancient trees, graceful tunnels, ominous wireswithout lending familiarity. The light within his images appears to come from no apparent source; rather, it comes from the photographer himself. Indeed, Carofano treats his subjects so that they exude a life all their own that only his brand of darkroom alchemy can bring forth. He explains that photography starts with the eyes, but my work is not just about seeing. It is also about the languless realm of emotion and memory, of long childhood days spent in the woods of rural Connecticut where he grew up, and escaped, like a post-war Huck Finn, into the land of his imagination. Today, sometimes when I'm working in a wooded area, he says, I relive that experience, and when looking through the viewfinder, I try to isolate things to get that feeling of a strange and mysterious landscape ... which allows the viewer to sense what I felt. |