Aaron Rothman: Signal Noise
”Rothman’s images hint at the endless potential of the unrestrained territory, yet with that, a feeling of disturbing emptiness inevitably follows.”
—Jinny Choi, Float Magazine
Photography by Aaron Rothman
Essay by Cassandra Coblentz
Hardcover
13.75 x 11 inches
124 pages / 64 images
Trade ISBN: 9781942185352
Signed ISBN: 9781955161473
Limited edition of this book available HERE
”Rothman’s images hint at the endless potential of the unrestrained territory, yet with that, a feeling of disturbing emptiness inevitably follows.”
—Jinny Choi, Float Magazine
Photography by Aaron Rothman
Essay by Cassandra Coblentz
Hardcover
13.75 x 11 inches
124 pages / 64 images
Trade ISBN: 9781942185352
Signed ISBN: 9781955161473
Limited edition of this book available HERE
”Rothman’s images hint at the endless potential of the unrestrained territory, yet with that, a feeling of disturbing emptiness inevitably follows.”
—Jinny Choi, Float Magazine
Photography by Aaron Rothman
Essay by Cassandra Coblentz
Hardcover
13.75 x 11 inches
124 pages / 64 images
Trade ISBN: 9781942185352
Signed ISBN: 9781955161473
Limited edition of this book available HERE
Signal Noise presents an open-ended meditation on our desire to connect with the natural world, and the limits of our abilities to do so.
Photographs altered with unconventional digital processing ask us to reflect on the nature of individual perceptual experience and the impact of our collective presence in the landscape.
The images in Signal Noise are rooted in AARON ROTHMAN’s response to places familiar and meaningful to him, but his interest lies in the transformative rather than the documentary nature of photography. Landscapes overtaken by digital noise, layering, erasure, amplification, and interference examine the blurry boundaries between natural and artificial, between real and virtual, and between the world and how we perceive it.
Interspersed views of desert mountain vistas and dense forests, made with fallibly perfect photographic clarity, anchor the work in the space of the physical world while also casting doubt about what is real and what is a figment of photographic, perceptual or human alteration.