Daniel W. Coburn lives and works in Albuquerque, New Mexico.
Selections from his body of work have been featured in exhibitions at the Los
Angeles Center for Digital Art and the Chelsea Museum of Art in New York.
Coburn's prints are held in many public and private collections including The
Mulvane Museum of Art, The Albrecht-Kemper Museum of Art, The Mariana
Kistler-Beach Museum of Art and the Moraine Park Museum. His writings and
photographs appear regularly in regional and national publications including Fraction
Magazine and Photo-Eye Magazine. Coburn received his BFA with an emphasis in
photography from Washburn University where he was the recipient of numerous
honors including the Charles and Margaret Pollak Award. He is currently an
instructor and graduate student studying photography at the University of New
Mexico.
Find out more about Dan here
In Domestic Reliquary I use appropriated imagery and
iconography to explore my own dark family narrative. A complicated relationship
with my family, and an immersive, cult-like experience with an evangelical
Christian church resulted in my loss of spiritual and domestic faith. My work
relates specifically to these personal struggles and explores the quiet
suffering that occurs within the perimeter of a family unit living under the
auspices of the ideal American dream.
I use the salted paper process to reproduce a series of found objects and photographs. This antiquated printing technique is linked directly to the domestic environment because it employs simple household chemicals that combine to make the printing paper light sensitive. The imperfections and technical artifacts of the process allow me to simultaneously deconstruct and repair the image. This method is cathartic and has become a metaphor for my own personal healing process.
By working into each print using a variety of mixed media, I create a series of one-of-a-kind domestic artifacts. This work explores concepts related to gender, loss of innocence, and the small tragedies that occur within the confines of suburban dystopia. I correlate domestic to religious symbolism, reinterpreting objects and icons to create my own sacred visual vocabulary.
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