Corinne May Botz
Corinne May Botz published a book, The Nutshell Studies of
Unexplained Death, in 2004 to great acclaim. The subject
of those photographs and research is a collection of crime scene
dioramas at the Baltimore Medical Examiner’s office. Botz
claims that in her photographs she investigates “American
socio-cultural attitudes toward death, femininity, and fear as
they relate to and are embodied in architectural space.”
In her series of haunted house imagery, Botz herself is like a
ghost, hovering over corners of forgotten rooms, empty attics,
and basement stairs, using photographic film to absorb essences
and presences that might still linger, and in doing so extends
the Victorian tradition of female sensitivity to the otherworldly.
These photographs then are a perfect pairing of the domestic void
and the inherent melancholy of photographs. In obscure and legendary
haunted spaces Botz employs long exposure times that vary from
a few minutes to a few hours. Botz appears to be able to observe
and then absorb the complex layers of presence and absence that
thicken the atmosphere of not only these rooms but also to capture
our personal and collective notions of ghostly intimations.
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