
More coverage, this time in the Joondalup Weekender.
As always, thanks for all the support.
an in-depth explanation
The resulting images of Project Possession will follow the historical clash of cultures united under the banner of religion, showing the similarities and differences between cultures in the West, the East and Africa by tracing their historical transitions, transitions instigated by religion and domination.
From the United Kingdom, birthplace of Anglican Christianity, David travels to Spain, a Catholic state who not only attempted invasion of England under religious pretence during the Anglo-Spanish War in the 16th century, but who themselves struggled under occupation for hundreds of years at the hand of medieval Islamic power states.
From Spain David then moves into Morocco, the country from which eighth century Muslim invaders launched their campaigns against Spanish Catholic sovereignty. David continues to follow the religious trail by moving into Mali, where Islamic and African Tribal Animism begins to blend. Here David will focuss on a now vanished people, the fabled Tellem tribes of Mali’s Dogon country; a group of cliff dwelling pigmy people who, following clashes with Dogon Animist groups, are said to have fled the Dogon region for the Seno-Gondo plains of central West Africa.
Finally David will travel to France, colonial occupier of Mali and empirical enemy of England, who up until the 20th century were the world’s greatest rivals. This final leg of the journey connected all aspects of the study, steering the focus back to countries like the UK, who since World War One have become increasingly less religious.
But more importantly the study questions wider ideas around religion and culture. From the progressively secular United Kingdom, to Catholic Spain, Muslim Morocco, Tribal Mali and back to liberal France, this photographic study considers religion’s place in society, asking the question “what has been lost by discarding religion, and what do those who hold on to it still desire?”
Given the world’s current political, social and economic climate, this all-encompassing question is part of an essential step toward the greater understanding of the different cultures of the world, a step that will foster the necessary goodwill required to overcome the vastly complex issues surrounding our planet’s single most important challenge, climate change.