Jeffrey Ladd – A Field Measure Survey | special #5
Book + Print #5: HABS CT-348 - James Chipps
Buch + Print #5: HABS CT-348 - James Chipps:
17 x 23 cm fiber-based gelatin-silver print on Fomabrom Variant III Naturglanz paper enclosed in an inkjet-printed Canson 160/gsm paper folder. Hand-printed and archivally processed by Jeffrey Ladd directly from LVT negatives; each print is notated on the verso with the survey number, location, date, photographer and the edition number.
Drawing from the nearly half a million photographs and documents comprising the Historic American Buildings Survey held in the US Library of Congress, this book constructs a fictional ‘one-way road trip’ across the United States, weaving north and south across the Mason-Dixon line while tacking west. In A Field Measure Survey of American Architecture, Jeffrey Ladd uses the HABS archive as a surrogate in order to manifest a portrait of his former country at a moment when its democracy seems imperiled.
Inspired equally by the social documentary work of Walker Evans and the architectural interventions of Gordon Matta-Clark and others, Ladd embraces the muteness of photographs to create an ambiguous space where the sculptural, political, forensic, and fictional coalesce within a landscape of both beauty and fragility. What initially appears to be a single voice is revealed to belong to dozens of makers; what seems a description of the distant past is revealed to be closer to the present than expected. A Field Measure Survey sheds light not only on this remarkable archive but on the proliferate meanings that can be shaped from its images.