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British documentary photographer (born 1982) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Chloe Dewe Mathews (born 1982)[1] is a British documentary photographer,[2] based in St Leonards-on-Sea, UK. She is "best known for ambitious documentary projects that can take years of preparation."[2] Dewe Mathews has said "I am exploring ways in which to project the past on to the present".[3]
Her series Shot at Dawn records sites where British, French and Belgian soldiers were executed for cowardice or desertion during the first world war. It was published as a book in 2014 and exhibited at Tate Modern and at the Irish Museum of Modern Art. In Search of Frankenstein was exhibited at the British Library in 2018.
Dewe Mathews' work is held in the collections of the British Council, Herbert Art Gallery and Museum and Sheffield Galleries and Museums Trust.
Dewe Mathews was born in 1982 in London.[1] She studied fine art at the Ruskin School of Drawing and Fine Art, Oxford.[1]
For her series Caspian, she walked around the Caspian Sea, through Azerbaijan, Iran, Kazakhstan, Russia, and Turkmenistan.[1][2]
Her series Shot at Dawn records many of the sites across France and Belgium where around 1000 British, French and Belgian soldiers were executed for cowardice or desertion during the first world war.[2][4] She photographed each site at dawn, the time that most of the men were executed; close to the date on which they occurred; and from around the same vantage that they were shot.[4] It was commissioned by the Ruskin School of Art at the University of Oxford as part of a commemorative art series,[4][5] published as a book in 2014 and exhibited in various places.
Dewe Mathews completed an artist's residency at the Verbier 3-D Foundation, Bagnes, Switzerland in 2016 on the topic of the so-called Year Without a Summer, a period of severe climate deterioration.[3][6] This provided the backdrop for Mary Shelley when writing Frankenstein (1818) whilst staying in the same area. Dewe Mathews' series made there, In Search of Frankenstein, is concerned with contemporary environmental and social issues via the themes of Shelley's novel.[7]
She spent five years making Thames Log, a series about the variety of peoples' relationship with the River Thames.[2][8][9]
Dewe Mathews' work is held in the following permanent public collections:
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