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Anne C. Savedge, photographer
Savedge combines traditional color photography with
digital imaging and new computer technology to create her art.
In her work, she takes color photographs with a Canon point-and-shoot camera
(the image quality of digital cameras “is not quite there yet,” she says),
scans the negatives, then uses Photoshop to combine negatives and manipulate
the images.
The evolution of her art: Savedge originally trained as a painter, even
exhibiting her work in a Virginia Museum of Fine Arts biennial in the
mid-1970s. Her paintings were super-realistic, and she came to realize that
photography would be a more satisfying medium to work with so she began
taking photography classes at VCU.
Her photos never turned out exactly the way she wanted, so she started
drawing on the negatives with fine-tip permanent markers before printing
them. “I was never interested in capturing the perfect image,” she says. “I
would take a picture and think, ‘Now where can I go with this?’”
In 1990 she began teaching commercial photography at the Chesterfield
Technical Center, and in 1993 won a grant that enabled her to spend a week
studying Photoshop at the Center for Creative Imaging in Maine. The
experience has a profound effect on her teaching and art, both of which have
since been focused on the latest technology.
Her artistic epiphany: Savedge was vacationing with her family in Atlanta
during the 1996 Summer Olympics when she was captivated by the sight of
hundreds of people frolicking in a fountain in Olympic Park. The six images
she shot of that scene set a new direction for her artistic career.
She came home, combined the negatives into one long horizontal image and
manipulated it so that the figures were elongated and abstracted, and all
identifying features were removed. The result is “Fountain Freeze,” a large,
(15-
inch-by-50-inch) lovely, evocative work of obscured, watery figures
representing the union of traditional photography, technology and an
artist’s eye.
Why so much water? Much of Savedge’s work focuses on water: fountains,
swimming pools, beaches, waterfalls. Part of that is because her son is a
competitive swimmer, and she has spent many years sitting by a swimming
pool. And she says she is interested in the distortions caused by the
reflection and refraction of light and her subject’s relationship to the
water. “When you get in the water it’s like you’re in another world. … Even
if you’re in the midst of a lot of other people, the water forms a barrier.”
— by Jessica Ronky-Haddad (from a Style Weekly Magazine article, November
2002) |

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