Waterthread
Series Notes

With continued dedication to his medium of pinhole photography, David Sharpe continues to expand on the "Waterthread" series, a considered contemplation of Colorado's Clear Creek - the river that winds its way down from the Front Range of the Colorado Rockies through suburban Denver, past the city and into the South Platte River.
Recognized in the region and critically respected for his large-scale pinhole images of the West, Sharpe's technical means of image-making utilizes handcrafted cameras made from containers such as 35mm film canisters, to create his ethereal worlds. Now working primarily in color, the artist's enveloping style and refined sense of subject offers opportunities for poetic narratives and introspection within the artist's emblematic landscapes.
Sharpe's photographs appear dreamlike as they immerse viewers within panoramic, yet intimate contemplative worlds as a means of exploring aspects of place both familiar and in flux.
For "Waterthread", Sharpe accumulates images that serve not so much as a record in a photo-historical sense, but rather, to express that water is a vital force - building and dismantling as it meanders through the Colorado landscape. Water's ebb and flow in conjunction with the vicissitudes of weather, move the earth as mounds are formed, eddies are scooped out and floodwaters rampage.
As if by design, the river deposits man-made and natural forms, then later, returns with high water to retrieve the objects and reposition them downstream. Sharpe's photographs likewise reposition the lens, offering a view into the river's layered accumulations; framing moments as it embraces rock formations and flows eastward.
The "Waterthread" photographs' soft focus, rich pigment and the parabolic view from the pinhole lens provides a template from which to meditate on the river as metaphor - as life-giving and ever-changing.
Sharpe's sense of the world resonates perfectly with the unusual challenges presented in the pinhole photographic process. With masterful technique, the artist works within the known parameters of his medium while seeking the unknown through his direction of each image.
Without the control of a precise shutter, Sharpe opens up to and accepts the possibilities of environmental factors like sudden breezes or shifting clouds affecting the image he is creating. In Sharpe's hands, the movement of river water or swirling clouds across the sky will become something other than what it seems or started out to be.
As the mutable images translate onto the small rectangle of film curved into the pinhole camera, the breadth of movement exposed at various times of day is registered through the recognizable blurring of edges inherent in the pinhole process. Directing the camera as it visually bends familiar objects into abstracted forms, Sharpe offers a sense of wonder as the sphere-like view of the landscape is manifested.
In doing so, he imbues the ordinary with deeper meaning. With senses engaged through his imaginative decision-making process, David Sharpe reveals his uniquely illuminated curvilinear worlds where place and moment perfectly merge.