In my MFA project Unstable Ground: A Photographic Reflection on the Landscape of Table Mountain, I have photographed the landscape of Table Mountain, surrounding parks and green spaces to reflect on the entanglements between its history, notions of nature and landscape and subjective relationships to place. I have tried to make sense of this site through my photographs, research, and writing, not looking for stability but seeking to reveal the precarious, the in-between, the unseeable, while also trying to learn more about my own relationship with this landscape and land and how it allows or denies photographic representation. Table Mountain's geology, composed of layers of rock and sediment, is overlaid on its surface with human imposition...
This ITLA Art Journal about Women and Terraces presents two different contributions that harmonize d...
Unstable Landscapes is the outcome of a short residency with BridA in Sempas, Slovenia, in May 2017....
Artist statement: “Geological layers, historical and cultural layers lie beneath the ground we live ...
This studio-based research project explores how to paint the experience of navigating the ‘wild’, un...
This research explores my engagement as a rock climber with the landscape of Mt Arapiles in Western ...
This thesis brings feminist ontologies into a renewed dialogue with post-phenomenological landscape ...
While soil is crucial to the well-being of both human and nonhuman life, its importance is rarely ac...
In an age when it is becoming increasingly apparent that disturbed sites (or any other sites for tha...
The project deals with ways in which understandings of landscape reading, specificity, landscape int...
The images presented are my ongoing visual research into comparative observations of the natural lan...
This collaborative research project explores the significance of the Wye Valley Area of Outstanding ...
This article will an interdisciplinary printmaking practice focusing on the development of a series...
Memorial landscape normally includes material and abstract landscapes that can be used to mark a thi...
© 2013 Laura SkerljThis MFA project draws upon imagery of the natural environment, primarily geologi...
My thesis explores photography’s ability to influence and express our relationships with the environ...
This ITLA Art Journal about Women and Terraces presents two different contributions that harmonize d...
Unstable Landscapes is the outcome of a short residency with BridA in Sempas, Slovenia, in May 2017....
Artist statement: “Geological layers, historical and cultural layers lie beneath the ground we live ...
This studio-based research project explores how to paint the experience of navigating the ‘wild’, un...
This research explores my engagement as a rock climber with the landscape of Mt Arapiles in Western ...
This thesis brings feminist ontologies into a renewed dialogue with post-phenomenological landscape ...
While soil is crucial to the well-being of both human and nonhuman life, its importance is rarely ac...
In an age when it is becoming increasingly apparent that disturbed sites (or any other sites for tha...
The project deals with ways in which understandings of landscape reading, specificity, landscape int...
The images presented are my ongoing visual research into comparative observations of the natural lan...
This collaborative research project explores the significance of the Wye Valley Area of Outstanding ...
This article will an interdisciplinary printmaking practice focusing on the development of a series...
Memorial landscape normally includes material and abstract landscapes that can be used to mark a thi...
© 2013 Laura SkerljThis MFA project draws upon imagery of the natural environment, primarily geologi...
My thesis explores photography’s ability to influence and express our relationships with the environ...
This ITLA Art Journal about Women and Terraces presents two different contributions that harmonize d...
Unstable Landscapes is the outcome of a short residency with BridA in Sempas, Slovenia, in May 2017....
Artist statement: “Geological layers, historical and cultural layers lie beneath the ground we live ...