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Overview
In the summer of 2017-18, Annemarie Hope-Cross made a series of photogenic drawings that responded to her feelings and responses to undergoing treatment for cancer. Hope-Cross describes her Still series of prints, as slow photography – invoking the pace of her own life and also the method of employing one of the earliest processes in the history of photography, where each of her salt paper negatives required an eight hour exposure in the autumn light of Central Otago. Hope-Cross uses an antique ‘mousetrap camera’, similar to the kind used by William Henry Fox-Talbot in the 1830s, to expose her negatives. Annemarie Hope-Cross’s photographs connect people and events infused with the perspective of illness and inheritance. They are emotional and physical - related to life experiences, family history and the history of photography. They are the result of the process of making art in conjunction with the rhythms of illness and observations of the maker’s immediate world.
Summers day, refers to Hope-Cross's love of her garden and the time she spends in it. She comments: 'Michaelmas daisies (a favourite flower) is in the 'herbal concoction' bottle and lying in front as well (obscured due to the short focal length of the lens). Michaelmas daisies represent 'farewell' in the language of the flowers, indicating to me oncoming autumn and winter, a difficult time with short hours of daylight which can be depressing. I was also facing much time being away from home - the farewell - for weeks of radiation. Yet there's also an enclosed sense in this image - the background (lines) is slightly more in focus, and the table with my great grandmother's cloth, with the wine bottle ready, invites you to an afternoon drink in the sun.'