The Carnival Crowdby Lily Bertrand-Webb
"I visited Dominica with my mother and my sister for the first time in 30 years. Being half Dominican, this trip was a very special trip for the family. Dominica’s Carnival is one of a kind. Carnival starts at J’ouvet, 4 am. As the light comes up, the costumes start to appear, and the sense of lunacy and freedom brews. Music, drums, rain, beer, chicken, costumes, colour, rum. This is the Crowd watching the floats pass by." - Lily Bertrand-Webb
Lily Bertrand-Webb presents her photographic series, “The Flâneuse.”
“For a woman to be a flâneuse, first and foremost, she’s got to be a walker – someone who gets to know the city by wandering its streets, investigating its dark corners, peering behind façades, penetrating into secret courtyards. Virginia Woolf called it ‘street haunting’ in an essay by that name: sailing out into a winter evening, surrounded by the ‘champagne brightness of the air and the sociability of the streets’, we leave the things that define us at home, and become ‘part of that vast republican army of anonymous trampers’.” - an excerpt from Flâneuse: Women Walk the City by Lauren Elkin.
Materials
Hand C-type Print
Dimensions
Print Dimensions: 73.5cm x 100 cm
Edition of 5
£1000
Framed Photograph Details:
This photograph is displayed in a Black frame. We also offer the option of framing it with non-reflective glass for £1,400. You can choose from three frame finishes: Walnut, Oak, or Black.
For a personalised quote including delivery, please contact us at: sister@studioashby.com.