Artwork Description

Photograph on paper

Signed on the front.

1st Place International Garden Photographer of the Year Plants and Planet Category 2021

Part of an exhibition of my photography at the United Nations in New York in 2017, this aerial image of the Na Pali cliffs on the island Kauai is from a series of aerial images of Hawaii taken in 2016.

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Medium

Archival pigment ink print. Matte or gloss paper on request. 1/500. Alternate sizes and prices available.

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Unframed (requires framing)

This artwork is unframed and requires framing.

#Na Pali volcanic eroded cliffs forbidding dramatic spires island landscape blue sea, #dark green, #brown

All art by Stuart Chape

The images in my ‘Rust Coast’ series were taken on a short section of coastline east of Honiara in the Solomon Islands. Ships and vehicles that reach the end of their usefulness are dumped along the shoreline.  In the 12 years that I have been visiting this location I have recorded the changing seascape as rusting hulks are stripped, some metal salvaged and then left to rust away, and new wrecks added. Local people with limited resources eke a living in their shadows. The compositions change but the elements of rusting waste and poverty have remained the same. These recent images in my ‘Rust Coast’ series were taken on a short section of coastline east of Honiara in the Solomon Islands. Ships and vehicles that reach the end of their usefulness are dumped along the shoreline.  In the 12 years that I have been visiting this location I have recorded the changing seascape as rusting hulks are stripped, some metal salvaged and then left to rust away, and new wrecks added. Local people with limited resources eke a living in their shadows. The compositions change but the elements of rusting waste and poverty have remained the same. These recent images in my ‘Rust Coast’ series were taken on a short section of coastline east of Honiara in the Solomon Islands. Ships and vehicles that reach the end of their usefulness are dumped along the shoreline.  In the 12 years that I have been visiting this location I have recorded the changing seascape as rusting hulks are stripped, some metal salvaged and then left to rust away, and new wrecks added. Local people with limited resources eke a living in their shadows. The compositions change but the elements of rusting waste and poverty have remained the same. These recent images in my ‘Rust Coast’ series were taken along a short section of coastline east of Honiara in the Solomon Islands. Along the shoreline ships and vehicles that reach the end of their usefulness are dumped.  In the 12 years that I have been visiting this location I have recorded the changing seascape as rusting hulks are stripped, some metal salvaged and then left to rust away, and new wrecks added. Local people with limited resources eke a living in their shadows. The compositions change but the elements of rusting waste and poverty have remained the same.
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