erin siegal


#07

erin siegal
born: Hebron, Connecticut
Currently resides in Brooklyn, New York

website:http://www.erinsiegal.com 

work statement
When I first encountered Hangar B at Brooklyn’s Floyd Bennett Field, I was overwhelmed with the haunting energy of the crumbling building.  I wasn’t sure why: I had never been interested in decrepit urban buildings before or any photographer’s depictions of them.   Departing from my traditional documentary work, I found myself helplessly infatuated with the abandoned airplane hangars.  I began shooting there
religiously, several times each week.  The weeks ran into one long stain of time.

In the beginning, I chose not to analyze my attraction and strange familiarity with the buildings.  Instead, I simply submitted to a heartfelt kinship with the space.  During my first few weeks there, I learned how to listen to the invisible stories that lay amidst the piles of rubble and fallen ceiling.  The forgotten airport became a place of reclamation for me, personally as well as artistically.  All around the looming spaces crept beautiful manifestations of the natural world, exerting a subtle yet all-powerful grip. The horrible crumples of the failed and forgotten airport had been reclaimed by the slow cycle of death, progressing at the congruous speed of rebirth.

This odd love affair is one I continue to have with Hangar B and her dying sister construction, Hangar A.  I sneak in to photograph, regularly getting kicked out for being in the “unsafe” area inside the structures.  The act of photographing the space gradually became a ritual and a tradition, as well as an urgent form of worshipful documentation. Each silent, staunch building is slated to be gutted in order to make way for basketball courts and ice skating rinks. Construction has already started on Hangar A, marking the start to the creation of a permanent absence.  After their deaths, the buildings will remain only in photographs.

bio
Erin Siegal is a 23-year-old NYC photographer who has studied at the School of Visual Arts, Harvard University, and Parsons School of Design.

Before starting her own career as a freelance photographer this past fall, Erin worked as studio manager for James Nachtwey.  She has also worked at the non-profit Boston Photo Collective, and is a photo editor for NYC Indymedia.  During the summer of 2004, she was an Artist-in-Residency in photography at the School of Visual Arts.

Her work was featured in The Indypendent, American Photo on Campus, Time Out New York, CounterPunch, Courier News, Spread Magazine, Playgirl, What’s Up, Altar Magazine, Visual  Opinion, Exquisite Corpse, nerve.com, Brooklyn Papers, and in the book, “Shut Them Down:  The G8, Gleneagles 2005 and the Movement of Movements,” published by Autonomedia. She shoots for Reuters in New York City and sells some stories through Redux Pictures.

Her latest project is about cowboys in Brooklyn.  Check out her website, www.erinsiegal.com, for details

3 Responses to “erin siegal”

  1. Venus Says:

    magnificent, really this photo is great.

  2. Hey, Hot Shot! » Blog Archive » Hey, Hot Shot, I’m sorry I missed it: Erin Siegal Says:

    [...] missed this one: Winter ‘06 Hot Shot Erin Siegal, who shoots for Reuters, had a photo in The New York Times. A great, [...]

  3. jen bekman news » Blog Archive » Winter Edition in the Press Says:

    [...] Benoit Aquin, Jessica Bruah, Claire Hester, Nicole Jean Hill, Andrew Long, Bob O’Connor, Erin Siegal, Rebecca Smeyne, and Rafil Kroll-Zaidi.” Absolutely [...]

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