2014 Portfolio Prize Runner Up: Sadie Wechsler

Read a statement by Michael Famighetti, Editor of Aperture Magazine

Sadie Wechsler, Eruption, July 2013

“I create and reflect upon a natural landscape as it explodes and re-forms around its last survivors,” Sadie Wechsler, a recent Yale MFA grad writes, noting that photography is “a medium that speaks to a life in flux, fluttering between tangible and imaginary states.” Her series of untitled images describes an off-kilter, if not quite sci-fi, vision of our world: a group of tourists calmly take in the spectacle of a dramatic brush fire, two inexplicable holes appear in an ashen landscape, and a pretty girl photographs a garish pink sunset, while simultaneously posing for a photograph herself. These pictures underscore their artifice and point to photographic tropes such as the moody landscape, the psychological portrait, tacky CGI, and the contrived stock image.

Wechsler intentionally avoids creating a coherent series, and instead offering oblique hints at narrative, the images linked only by their thematic weirdness and ambiguity. The viewer might find the results disorienting, maybe even a little maddening, but hopefully not at the expense of the pleasures offered by this playful, aestheticized dystopia that suggests this photographer has more in store for us.

Sadie Wechsler, Click Button, 2013
Sadie Wechsler, Eruption, 2013
Sadie Wechsler, Headquarters East, 2013
Sadie Wechsler, 2 Pit Crater, 2013
Sadie Wechsler, Fuji GF+, 2013
All photographs from the series Part 1: Redo. Courtesy the artist.

Sadie Wechsler (born in Seattle) received her BA from Bard College and her MFA in photography from the Yale School of Art. Her work has been exhibited across the United States, including at Aperture Gallery, New York; Johalla Projects, Chicago; and Green Hall, New Haven, Connecticut. Her work has been published in print in the 2013 edition of Yale’s Shannon, and online in I Wish Every Day Was Sunday, Miranda July’s Joanie 4 Jackie video chainletter project. In 2006, she was a recipient of Bard College’s Delavan Grant.