Abstract
This thesis explores the search for a creative process that satisfies my urge to combine photography with imagery and objects from personal and mass media sources, revealing the artist's hand in the work. This work also explores the use of a subject as a means to finding a working process and its importance in that discovery.
Auto racing motivated me to study photography, thus the use of automobile culture, with an emphasis on the subculture of auto racing is a key element in this work. Juxtaposing unrelated materials and imagery was a new experience. As I worked, the evolving imagery revealed new meaning which in turn led to new combinations of imagery and material. Auto racing was both the personal connection which allowed me to work and the connection to the discovery of my working process. In the same way the work challenges the audience to embrace a new aesthetic experience not usually associated with contemporary car culture.
The key to this body of work is "process." It is a process which offers no solutions or judgments. Its importance is in the commitment to the act of creating, embracing the journey rather than focusing on the destination. Driving the track.
Library of Congress Subject Headings
Automobile racing--Pictorial works; Documentary photography--Themes, motives; Photography, Artistic--Themes, motives
Publication Date
8-19-2005
Document Type
Thesis
Student Type
Graduate
Degree Name
Imaging Arts (MFA)
Advisor
Elaine O'Neil
Advisor/Committee Member
Angela Kelly
Advisor/Committee Member
Willie Osterman
Recommended Citation
Nicholas, Tony, "Chasing the track" (2005). Thesis. Rochester Institute of Technology. Accessed from
https://repository.rit.edu/theses/8099
Campus
RIT – Main Campus
Comments
Physical copy available from RIT's Wallace Library at TR821 .N43 2005