Portrait - NOMINEE: Kerry Dean
Kerry Dean
'Pom Pom Girls' - Taken from the body of work 'Observations and Orchestrations'
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Taken from the series of 'Pom Pom Girls', which makes up the larger body of work, ‘Observations and Orchestrations’, a the culmination of 14 years of Kerry Dean’s ongoing fascination with the people and topography of Mongolia. She is drawn back time and again by the uncomfortable and incongruous beauty that she finds in the clash of traditional and contemporary culture.
A troop of small girls making their way to school, every one with a synthetic froth of brightly coloured poms poms in her hair, strangely enough a last trace of the communist education system.
Themes that recur in the work very often start with chance encounters, which then become obsessions sparking a series of orchestrated images shot over several years. Through this process Kerry has built close and intimate relationships that have allowed her to go deeper into the heart of Mongolia, to see beyond the yurts and eagle festivals, capturing the every day domestic acts that are extraordinary and theatrical but rapidly changing and disappearing under a tide of urbanization and digitisation.
About author:
‘Observations and Orchestrations’ is the culmination of 14 years of Kerry Dean’s ongoing fascination with the people and topography of Mongolia. She is drawn back time and again by the uncomfortable and incongruous beauty that she finds in the clash of traditional and contemporary culture. A troop of small girls making their way to school, every one with a synthetic froth of brightly coloured poms poms in her hair, strangely enough a last trace of the communist education system. Cars and trucks seemingly marooned in the desert and wrapped in printed cloth to protect them from the extreme weather.. Themes that recur in the work very often start with chance encounters, which then become obsessions sparking a series of orchestrated images shot over several years. Through this process Kerry has built close and intimate relationships that have allowed her to go deeper into the heart of Mongolia, to see beyond the yurts and eagle festivals, capturing the every day domestic acts that are extraordinary and theatrical but rapidly changing and disappearing under a tide of urbanization and digitisation.