Mandy Barkers Cyanotypes Revive a Pioneering Botanists Book to Warn About Synthetic Debris
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Jersey boxers (Gigartina sunday). All images from Photographs of British Algae: Cyanotype Imperfections by Mandy Barker, published by GOST Books. All images Mandy Barker, courtesy of the author and GOST, shared with permissionMandy Barkers Cyanotypes Revive a Pioneering Botanists Book to Warn About Synthetic DebrisMarch 18, 2025Kate MothesIn 2012, I found a piece of material in a rock pool that changed my life, artist Mandy Barker says. Mistaking this moving piece of cloth for seaweed started the recovery of synthetic clothing from around the coastline of Britain for the next ten years.Barker is known for her photographic practice that takes a deep dive into marine debris. Her work has been featured in publications like National Geographic, The Guardian, VOGUE, and many more. Often collaborating with scientists to raise awareness about plastic pollution in the earths oceans, she eloquently highlights its harmful impacts on marine habitats, wildlife, and all of us who depend on the ocean for sustenance.Patterned blouse (Laminaria materia)Forthcoming from GOST Books, Photographs of British Algae: Cyanotype Imperfections surveys the unexpected and out-of-place along British shores. At first glance, each specimen appears like a fragment of a leaf or a scatter of organic material, but upon closer inspection, the subjects of Barkers images reveal details of unraveled polyester or scraps of nylon tights.Barker hopes to raise awareness of the damaging effects of fast fashion, synthetic clothing, and the increasing amounts of microfibers in the oceans. The fashion industry is responsible for more greenhouse gas emissions than all international flights and container ships combined and is also the second-largest consumer of water, requiring about 2,000 gallons of water to produce a single pair of jeans.Barkers new book is composed as an homage to the work of trailblazing botanist and photographer Anna Atkins (1799-1871), who is thought to be the first woman to take a photograph and the first person to publish a book containing photographic illustrations. Her 1843 study, Photographs of British Algae: Cyanotype Impressions, employed blue photograms to illustrate photosynthetic organisms and seaweeds.Barkers work serves as a kind of sibling or sequel to Atkins pioneering publication, presented in a similar style with handwritten names in Latin beneath each specimen.Coat lining (Dichloria vestis)In their updated versions, the titles take Atkins scientific names as a starting point and tweak them just slightly to conjure references to clothing or the human body. In the plate titled Dichloris vestis, for example, Barker draws on a real type of algae Atkins catalogued, Dichloria viridis, but vestis is instead a tongue-in-cheek reference to outerwear, often made of polyester or other synthetic materials. Conferva tibia, which portrays frayed tights, employs the Latin word for leg.From John o Groats at the northernmost tip of Great Britain to Lands End at its southernmost, Barker recovered specimens of clothing from more than 120 beaches. Her finds, ranging from parkas to wigs to sports jerseys, were pulled from the sand, tide pools, or directly from the sea. In Photographs of British Algae: Cyanotype Imperfections, Barker looks to the past to better understand how our actions in the present have both immediate impacts and will shape the future of the climate crisis.Find your copy on GOSTs online store, where signed editions are also available, and explore more of Barkers work on her website and Instagram.Nylon tights (Conferva tibia)Shawl (Odonthalia amiculum), shown on a spread from Photographs of British Algae: Cyanotype Imperfections by Mandy BarkerJacket lining (Rhodomenia ignotus)Fishnet tights (Chylocladia funda)Two Blouses (Asperococcus indusium)Synthetic fur hood (Myrionema Palliolum)Lining (with algae) (Grateloupia intra)Next article
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