MELINDA HURST FRYE
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Melinda Hurst Frye works within themes of ecology and place through photographs and scans of the Pacific Northwest landscape. By way of observation, experimentation, and slow investigation in the field, her imagery refers to the mysterious activity of urban and forested ecosystems layered with sense of place.
Melinda Hurst Frye is an artist and educator based in Seattle, Washington. Hurst Frye holds an MFA from the Savannah College of Art and Design, a BFA from Pacific Northwest College of Art, and has been featured on Humble Arts Foundation, Lenscratch, WIRED Photo.
Melinda may be found digging holes, collecting and raising insects, while learning and making work about the biology of the northwest region and beyond. -
THE WORKERS & THE FOREST FLOOR
Based on the unique ecology of the forest understory of the Pacific Northwest, The Workers is new work by Melinda Hurst Frye referencing the found characters, fungal and other, and their partnerships within the forest floor.
Slime mold migrates, changes shape, and decomposes its host. The fungal hyphae in the forest floor exchanges nutrients and signals between the trees, while other fungi recycle the fallen wood and return the deadfall to earth. The minerals inside of us today once passed through lichen as a result of its primeval labor gradually breaking down rock. The Workers is about the slow churning that takes the forest apart, so it may become again.
The Forest Floor is an ongoing observation and bearing of witness to the brilliance of urban and active forests, celebrating the smallest of natural efforts and champions. By way of observation, experimentation, and slow investigation in the field, the imagery references the activity of forested ecosystems that are layered with a sense of place. As a whole, Hurst Frye’s work leans toward the ecology of the Pacific Northwest region, with the goal of bridging the concepts of natural science with the poetry of art to ignite wonder and stewardship in the viewer.
ROOTS'Roots' is a collection of environmental photographs, cyclical metaphors of the natural world, drawing from memories to illustrate the emotive aspects of aging and place. My photographic approach aims to create curious representations of the landscape that live in the space between the real and the mysterious. The images are captured with both flatbed scanners and cameras, and constructed to emphasize the drama and the detail of the small spaces. With a background in printmaking and photography, I am drawn to process heavy work and the building of layers. I hope that the slowness of my observation of place, and the slowness in the process of building the images, is echoed in the viewer slowing their own viewing and considering the cycles that touch their lives.
UNDERNEATH
With dirt under my nails, my heart jumps when my hand brushes against a worm in the soil. I am reminded of the world that thrives underground, unsettled by the mystery that is at my fingertips. I watch the beetle make its path through the strawberry plants. Who else is below me making their work in and on the earth? The success and diversity of life near and below the surface contributes directly to life and survival above the surface, though some species and behaviors of these residents are often unknown. ‘Underneath’ is a series of implied urban subterranean ecosystems, an illustrated look at what lives, dies and feasts at ground level and below.
The images live in the space between the real and the mysterious, presenting the environment through a smaller lens of an urban, underground habitat. The work punctuates the need to honor the health of our urban spaces, as subterranean ecosystems reflect the condition of our greater, shared environment. Analogous to a natural history tableau, flora and fauna take center stage to illustrate that we are always tied to migration, evolution and metamorphosis. The surface is not a border, but an entrance to homes, nurseries, highways and graveyards.
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South Puget Sound Community College, Olympia, Washington
Portable Works Collection, King County, Washington
North Idaho College, Coeur d’Alene, Idaho
Savannah College of Art & Design, Savannah, Georgia
Microsoft Art Collection, Redmond Washington
AVAILABLE ARTWORK
THE WORKERS
Based on the unique ecology of the forest understory of the Pacific Northwest, The Workers (of the Forest Floor) is new work by Melinda Hurst Frye referencing the found characters, fungal and other, and their partnerships within the forest floor.
Slime mold migrates, changes shape, and decomposes its host. The fungal hyphae in the forest floor exchanges nutrients and signals between the trees, while other fungi recycle the fallen wood and return the deadfall to earth. The minerals inside of us today once passed through lichen as a result of its primeval labor gradually breaking down rock. The Workers is about the slow churning that takes the forest apart, so it may become again.
THE FOREST FLOOR
Based on the unique ecology and brilliance of the forest understory of the Pacific Northwest, the Nurse Log series is a set of 5 photographs made from scans along a fallen log while it returns to the soil as it cradles new life. The Nurse Log series is part of the series 'The Forest Floor', an ongoing observation and witness to the brilliance of an active forest, celebrating the smallest of natural efforts and champions.
By way of observation, experimentation, and slow investigation in the field, the imagery in 'The Forest Floor' references the mysterious activity of forested ecosystems layered with a sense of place. I approach a space like an amateur biologist; observing, sketching, noting, photographing specimens, and scanning the scene with a flatbed scanner. Once I have ‘collected’ the scene, I begin the process of visually telling the story of the ecology, place, and my own personal connection to the Pacific Northwest landscape.
ROOTS
'Roots' is a collection of environmental photographs, cyclical metaphors of the natural world, drawing from memories to illustrate the emotive aspects of aging and place. My photographic approach aims to create curious representations of the landscape that live in the space between the real and the mysterious. The images are captured with both flatbed scanners and cameras, and constructed to emphasize the drama and the detail of the small spaces. With a background in printmaking and photography, I am drawn to process heavy work and the building of layers. I hope that the slowness of my observation of place, and the slowness in the process of building the images, is echoed in the viewer slowing their own viewing and considering the cycles that touch their lives
UNDERNEATH
With dirt under my nails, my heart jumps when my hand brushes against a worm in the soil. I am reminded of the world that thrives underground, unsettled by the mystery that is at my fingertips. I watch the beetle make its path through the strawberry plants. Who else is below me making their work in and on the earth? The success and diversity of life near and below the surface contributes directly to life and survival above the surface, though some species and behaviors of these residents are often unknown. ‘Underneath’ is a series of implied urban subterranean ecosystems, an illustrated look at what lives, dies and feasts at ground level and below.
The images live in the space between the real and the mysterious, presenting the environment through a smaller lens of an urban, underground habitat. The work punctuates the need to honor the health of our urban spaces, as subterranean ecosystems reflect the condition of our greater, shared environment. Analogous to a natural history tableau, flora and fauna take center stage to illustrate that we are always tied to migration, evolution and metamorphosis. The surface is not a border, but an entrance to homes, nurseries, highways and graveyards.