It is a strange thing for something so opposite to fabric to take on any sort of cloth-like appearance, yet here we are met with a most bizarre sort of muslin almost asking us to look underneath. Though our Earth has had access to a variety of tools and materials to work with over billions of years, the erosion of sandstone seems to be the ideal choice for dynamic, strange, and mesmerizing sculpture.
Draped Stone depicts such negative structures. The ghostly white Entrada Sandstone, formed between 180 and 140 million years ago, can form hoodoos, or towers, carved by ages of erosion with a protective, less erodible rock on top. These hoodoos have lost their protective caps, but are still less eroded than their surroundings.
I am taken with the textile like qualities of this rock. It is almost as if fabric were draped over boulders to protect them from the elements. In another way, the rocks begin to resemble spirits rising from the surrounding mountains to engage in congress with one another, speaking across geological timescales.
professional category
Draped Stone (Series)
DESCRIPTION
AUTHOR
Zac Henderson is an editorial and fine art photographer. He is inspired by science and nature, particularly that which exists outside our plane of experience. His personal work seeks to challenge and alter perspectives of the planet, ourselves, and our place in the cosmos.
Originally from the Deep South, he travels full time with his wife and two dogs across the US in a self-converted camper van.
Originally from the Deep South, he travels full time with his wife and two dogs across the US in a self-converted camper van.
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