ORLOVA

Named after a glamorous Russian movie star, the MV Lyubov Orlova was a 259 foot long ice-strengthened ship built in 1976 to ferry passengers along the eastern coastline of the Soviet Union.

Orlova, 2023, limited edition artist’s book, hard cover tunnel book with magnetic wrapper box, edition of 10. Digital printing and letterpress on paper and board. Closed dimensions are  6” tall x 6.5” wide x 1” deep. Open dimensions (for display) are 5.75” tall x 16.5” wide x 14” deep. Collected by University of Connecticut, Pennsylvania State University

This tunnel book is named after the MV Lyubov Orlova, a former Russian icebreaker—now a ghost ship—that took me safely to the Antarctic Peninsula in 2008 and again in 2009. I created the scene by making a collage of elements from multiple photographs taken at various times and locations. Like a colorized postcard, this abstraction of a real experience depicts passengers from the Orlova on a zodiac tour of an iceberg bay. In the foreground, one of my cabin mates, a Tasmanian prison guard on holiday, is taking photographs of the landscape. Towards the back of the scene, the Orlova waits patiently for her passengers to return for food, warmth and comfort. The hyper-saturated colors intentionally flatten the space even as the tunnel structure seeks to deepen it, reframing the polar landscape as a theatrical stage, and transforming my personal experience as an eco-tourist into a brightly packaged commodity.