Anna Atkins inspires eco-artist Mandy Barker to re-envision Atkins' British Algae - UPDATED

“In 2012, I found a piece of material in a rock pool that changed my life. Mistaking this moving piece of cloth for seaweed, started the recovery of synthetic clothing from around the coastline of Britain for the next ten years”. 

Two hundred and two ‘specimens’ of clothing and garments recovered from one hundred and twenty-one beaches mimic different species of marine algae, with the intention to raise awareness about the over consumption of synthetic plastic clothing also referred to as ‘fast fashion’, which is currently having the greatest impact on global climate change. 

After seeing an original copy of the book, ‘Photographs of British Algae, Volume 1’, by Anna Atkins, at The Royal Society in London, Barker was captivated by its detail and significance, for the way it changed how we looked at science in 1800’s, but more importantly for the possibility to re-create similar work that could engage how we look at science in connection with a present-day critical issue.

In this new presentation titled ‘Cyanotype Imperfections’, instead of the Atkins ‘Cyanotype Impressions’, the book includes 202 cyanotype images and 8 cyanotype text pages using original 1800’s J Whatman paper that Atkins used from the original Turkey Mill in Kent. 

The project was first published in The Guardian on 16 March, Atkins' birthday. See: https://twitter.com/plasticpieces/status/1768926794114089403

PHOTOGRAPHS OF BRITISH ALGAE CYANOTYPE IMPERFECTIONS
A - B (Atkins - Barker) 1843 – 2023. 
See: https://www.atkins-barker.com/

UPDATED see: https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2024/mar/19/mandy-barker-ocean-waste-cyanotypes-anna-atkins and https://twitter.com/plasticpieces/status/1771099288782651535

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