Highway Deconstruction

  • Dates
    2016 - Ongoing
  • Author
  • Location Orlando, United States

These images are part of a seven-year project photographing the highway infrastructure in Central Florida as it is renovated and expanded.

The altered landscape has always been a persistent element of my photographic practice. Photographing in gravel pits, for example, was like photographing on another planet. The same could be said for my passion to photograph in construction sites.

For the past seven-years I’ve been creating images that explore the activities and artifacts associated with the process of transforming the landscape by the construction associated with an enormous highway infrastructure project.

My goals are very different from anyone else working on the new I-4 highway running through Central Florida. The engineers and construction workers are focused on weight loads and distribution, gravity, traffic flow and water runoff. I’m exploring the construction process from a perspective of re-interpretation.

The aesthetic strategy I weave into the imagery would normally be associated with the way photographers have approached national parks like Yosemite or Yellowstone. I’m intrigued with the idea of producing images using rebar, concrete and dirt to create beautiful seductive photographs as a way to draw attention to the effects of our interaction with the land. The complexity of the construction process is experienced as a Surreal undertaking and is reflected in the visual language of the photographs.

I’m reminded of Margaret Bourke-White when she said, “…industrial forms were all the more beautiful because they were never designed to be beautiful. Industry…had evolved an unconscious beauty – often a hidden beauty that was waiting to be discovered.”

The process of making these photographs function as collaborative activities with individuals I only know through the evidence of their actions. These actions of others are incorporated into my photogrography in an effort to recontextualize the meaning of the construction process and its effect on the landscape.

© Steven Benson - Not sure but I probably shouldn't wake it up!I believe these black strips are for reinforcement of the concrete structure.
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Not sure but I probably shouldn't wake it up!I believe these black strips are for reinforcement of the concrete structure.

© Steven Benson - A seal broke on a fire hydrant.
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A seal broke on a fire hydrant.

© Steven Benson - One of the first images made for this series in 2016. Feels like contemporary site specific sculpture.
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One of the first images made for this series in 2016. Feels like contemporary site specific sculpture.

© Steven Benson - Materials storage facility feels like a ritual site.
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Materials storage facility feels like a ritual site.

© Steven Benson - Driving home from teaching photographed this car on I-4 running through Central Florida.
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Driving home from teaching photographed this car on I-4 running through Central Florida.

© Steven Benson - The Sandhill cranes seemed strangely out of place in this constructed environment.
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The Sandhill cranes seemed strangely out of place in this constructed environment.

© Steven Benson - Conduit running under the highway.
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Conduit running under the highway.

© Steven Benson - Photographed from a bridge, this scene reminded me of the film 'Brazil'.
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Photographed from a bridge, this scene reminded me of the film 'Brazil'.

© Steven Benson - Image from the Highway Deconstruction photography project
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This is a good example of what I'm interested in photographing.The process of making the picture has transformed fill dirt and concrete barriers into something Ansel Adams might like!

© Steven Benson - It is amazing how quickly the landscape can be transformed by the construction process.
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It is amazing how quickly the landscape can be transformed by the construction process.

© Steven Benson - A mountain landscape inside a drain segment.
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A mountain landscape inside a drain segment.

© Steven Benson - The sense of discovery is part of what keeps me coming back for more.
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The sense of discovery is part of what keeps me coming back for more.

© Steven Benson - Sometimes the new constructed landscape can feel ancient ruins.
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Sometimes the new constructed landscape can feel ancient ruins.

© Steven Benson - Never been inside a culvert until making these photographs. Someone said they thought it was a cathedral at first glance.
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Never been inside a culvert until making these photographs. Someone said they thought it was a cathedral at first glance.

© Steven Benson - Painting concrete to match the landscape.
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Painting concrete to match the landscape.

© Steven Benson - Water management is one of the major challenges when removing so much ground that would normally absorb rain water.
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Water management is one of the major challenges when removing so much ground that would normally absorb rain water.

© Steven Benson - Part of what I love about the photographic process is deciding what should be left out of the picture.
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Part of what I love about the photographic process is deciding what should be left out of the picture.

© Steven Benson - When I cannot physically enter a space - my camera can!
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When I cannot physically enter a space - my camera can!

© Steven Benson - When going places people are not permitted to go leads to seeing things people were never intended to see.
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When going places people are not permitted to go leads to seeing things people were never intended to see.

© Steven Benson - Image from the Highway Deconstruction photography project
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Passed this several mornings on the way to teach in Daytona. I was able to predict when to be in this location for the reflection from the other side of the highway will have this placement.

Highway Deconstruction by Steven Benson

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