Katherine Wolkoff鈥檚 photographs tell a story of contrasts. The photographer of 爆料公社鈥檚 November-December 2011 cover story, 鈥,鈥 she traveled to Lake Okeechobee to document the natural beauty of the imperiled waterway that plays such a crucial role in the Everglades ecosystem. In her work, shot from New Orleans to Block Island, she incorporates themes seemingly at odds with each other. 爆料公社 caught up with her to hear about her trip to Florida and what lies ahead.
[video:24461|caption:VIDEO Capturing Lake Okeechobee]
How did you start taking photos for environmental stories?
I did a lot of work after Katrina in New Orleans, but this it probably the first purely environmental story I鈥檝e done. A lot of my work is of the natural world, but this is the first policy story I鈥檝e done.
Did you know what the piece was about before you went down to Lake Okeechobee?
I knew what the story was about, but I was really reacting to my surroundings. The pictures...they鈥檙e not policy pictures, and that鈥檚 pretty true to .
When you say it鈥檚 true to your work, what do you mean?
The work that I do doesn鈥檛 have a political agenda. It鈥檚 just more art-based. I鈥檓 more interested in emotional issues than policy issues. I鈥檓 not a photojournalist, I鈥檓 an artist, so for me to go make pictures in Lake Okeechobee, I respond to what I see, I respond to the people I meet.
What struck you about Lake Okeechobee?
I think that the thing I found so interesting about Lake Okeechobee is the differential between the problems and the beauty. The lotus and the kite. It was a breathtaking place, and yet I know it鈥檚 in the middle of this policy problem in Florida. The way that the land transitions into the lake is so beautiful. The beauty struck me, and the way that the development hides the beauty.
How do you plan?
My work is incredibly intuitive. When I get there, my work is so dependent on the light, so it鈥檚 all about being up early and out late. There鈥檚 no way I could know how the water would look over those lily pads, but I saw them and they surprised me. That鈥檚 what I do: I look at things that surprise me or make me think of something I鈥檝e seen before.
How did you get into photography?
I studied American history in college and started taking photographs my senior year, and found that was the way I could express my personal voice in the world. I started off taking pictures of my family, but a lot my pictures are of the landscape environment and the natural world. It was the way that the world made sense to me.
Are there certain shoots that stick out in your mind as being particularly memorable?
I went down to work in New Orleans after I heard this story on NPR about how the trees were drowning. That was the impetus for me to go down. I stayed down there for about a year.
What did you find? Were the trees drowning?
They weren鈥檛 drowning, but there was incredible destruction. The trees became weapons. There was all of this violent damage due to the trees, but they were also devastated themselves. There were a lot of conflicting things going on.
I saw that you鈥檙e going to have a show on stuffed birds?
On Block Island, Rhode Island, which is a very important spot on the Northeast Flyway, there was this woman at the turn of the century named Elizabeth Dickson who collected and stuffed birds when they died. There鈥檚 this great collection that still resides at the school where she worked. On each tag they have the Latin and common name and how it died, so they say, 鈥淒eath by cat,鈥 or 鈥淒ied in the lighthouse,鈥 鈥淒ied on a telephone wire.鈥 The oldest bird in the collection is from the 1890s. I photographed the whole collection, 178, in silhouettes to give them an alive feeling, and also because of the importance of the silhouette in birding and identifying birds in the sky. The collection is really interesting because Elizabeth Dickens used them on the island in the school and created this culture of environmentalism on the island that still exists today.
Did you expect yourself to be taking photographs of the natural world?
No. It鈥檚 such an amazing gift to get paid to make photographs. I consider the work that I make to be artwork, so the idea of being sent on assignment to make these kinds of pictures is breathtaking to me. It鈥檚 unbelievable.
Do you think that you鈥檒l continue taking photographs of the environment?
Oh yeah. It鈥檚 really an important part in who I am. My father worked for The Nature Conservancy for 30 years, and my mother is a science teacher, so this is my way of doing what they taught me about.