Thursday, 1 May 2014

http://www.mackbooks.co.uk/books/58-Casa-de-Campo.html



Antonio M. Xoubanova
Casa de Campo

“Someone was here, somebody did this. Stuff happens here.”
Casa de Campo is a photographic fable rooted firmly in the realities of Madrid’s largest public park. Casa de Campo sprawls, five times the size of Central Park, to the west of Madrid. Between 2008 and 2012 Antonio M. Xoubanova wandered the paths of this urban woodland examining the people, animals and objects he saw as if he was on uncommon ground. Inadvertently he found himself transforming a given reality into narrative fiction.
Designed as an ancient fairy tale, the book is made up of five chapters referring respectively to love, death, fleeting moments, symbols and a lack of direction. It examines both the symbolic and the oneiric through the gathering together of people, animals, animate and inanimate beings within this single space. In his text Luis Lopez posits that for any researcher, archaeologist, intruder or anthropologist their findings will always be the same: someone was here, somebody did this. Stuff happens here.
These traces are what drew Xoubanova back into Casa de Campo over the years.

His work is very different to mine, however I feel showing the image as a actual narrative incredibly interesting. He has replaced the words with photographs. a literal representation of the written word and the idea that an image is worth more then a 1000 words. 

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