"John Willis and Tom Young's haunting photographs transform a New England paper mill factory and its mounds of raw material—recyclable printed matter cast off from the insatiable publishing industry—into an evocative archeological landscape, a contemporary Babel."
—Deborah Martin Kao, Chief Curator of the Harvard University Art Museums
"Recycled Realities is a book by two true visual poets, and it is difficult to imagine a richer or more fortunate collaboration. At a time when population and excessive consumption are deeply serious concerns worldwide, John Willis and Tom Young have made splendid, positive, lyrical images out of the waste and debris left over from our busy lives. 'Man buys what he destroys,' Frederick Sommer reminds us, and then goes on to assure us that it is the nature of the poetic act which secures our place in a world we do not control. Recycled Realities is such a poetic act and a marvelous visual accomplishment, all at once."
—Emmet Gowin, Professor of Photography, Emeritus, Princeton University |
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"In this wonderful book, the momentary and continually changing reality of the physical present is displaced by the ubiquitous and seemingly permanent static image: the photograph being the most disquieting of these. In Recycled Realities, evolution is witnessed as an inevitable process whereby all things and beings are recycled by the one true—and apparently eternal, but still largely unknown—reality: nature, the ultimate recycler. And nature is an extraordinary visual event, as is revealed in these remarkable photographs. Recycled Realities is ultimately a sad story, but happiness abounds along the way."
—Carl Chiarenza, Fanny Knapp Allen Professor of Art History, Emeritus, University of Rochester
"John Willis and Tom Young find surreal juxtapositions among texts and images pressed together in bales. Their long views emphasize our voracious consumption of paper products and the industry it has spawned, while close-ups form an exquisite corpse of collected waste. Together the photographs in Recycled Realities imbue the discarded stuff of everyday life with beauty, significance, and grace."
—Sylvia Wolf, Director, Henry Art Gallery, University of Washington
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