Photo by Adrian Kinloch
Weâve been to the moon and just about everywhere on Earth. So whatâs left to discover? In September, Future Tense is publishing a series of articles in response to the question, âIs exploration dead?â Read more about modern-day exploration of the sea, space, land, and more unexpected areas.
The summer I was 6, my father and I trudged through stinking silt and razor-sharp reeds to explore a canal near our home in Suffolk, in southeast England. In a small clearing, what looked like dinosaur bones poked through the dark mudâ"giant black rib cages, evenly spaced down the waterway as far as the eye could see. âSon, these were 100 horse-drawn barges that a long time ago used to transport bricks,â I remember Dad telling me. âSuffolk legend has it that the owner sunk them all and shot all the horses when the railway came." To me, this was shocking, epic, mind-expanding. Suddenly, my pastoral home in âConstable Countryââ"named for the British Romantic landscape painterâ"gained a dynamic fourth dimension. The edges of town, the fields, rivers, woods, and canals where I played were now filled with the ghosts of industrial revolution, technological innovation, and dark legends. I thought about the horses for months.
Many summers later and thousands of miles away, Iâm up to my shins in Coney Island Creek, trying to photograph a Jurassic-looking barge that has evolved, Anak Krakatauâ"like, into an island complete with flora and fauna. I move around as quickly as possible, because water levels can rise dramatically in minutes. I leave the camera on the tripod with the shutter open, and shine a torch on the places I want to be illuminatedâ"this is called âlight paintingâ and with a little practice, you can make an abandoned barge look as though itâs been stage-lit.
Photo by Adrian Kinloch
After I moved from London to Brooklyn, I was immediately drawn to the interzones where the city meets the wild: where wind, water, and time push man-made detritus to the edge of the city limits, or where once-viable industries have died and nature has crept back to colonize the rusting carcasses of production. So much of urban space is about human activity corralling and conquering nature, but you can glimpse the reverse in progress in so-called liminal spaces: transitional, threshold places where man has exploited nature and nature has returned to exploit what man has left behindâ"exploit it, but not purify it. In such a heavily populated and exhaustively documented city, photographic adventures to places like Dead Horse Bay, Gerritsen Beach, Marine Park, and Coney Island Creek offer the chance both for open-air solitude and for the thrill of discovery.
Photo by Adrian Kinloch
For the barges of Coney Island Creek, it was containerized shipping, not the railways, that spelled the end of their working life. In the 1960s their owners scuttled or burned the vessels, and they have been there ever since. Industry on the creek dates back as far as the 1660s, when Dirck De Wolfe opened his saltworks. The saltworks were burned to the ground, too, by furious locals after De Wolfe refused to let them pasture their cows nearby.
Photo by Adrian Kinloch
Mayor Michael Bloomberg wants to clean up Coney Island Creek and its environs, restoring them to their original pristine state. But when I ran into some guys from the Army Corps of Engineers, they said this task is nearly impossibleâ"if you move any of those rotting barges, all the diesel and toxic chemicals encased in the silt will escape up to the surface.
Urban liminal zones are both beautiful and toxic. The geo-historic strata of a liminal space might include the metabolic processes of barges, saltworks, livestock, oil and coal and iron and trees and shopping malls. You might feel as though youâre in the past and the future at the same timeâ"an early settler or a post-apocalyptic wanderer in a landscape out of Nathaniel Richâs recent novel Odds Against Tomorrow, which is partly set in Brooklynâs Flatlands. (Those who want a taste of the liminal experience without getting the smell of it in their nostrils and clothes should pick up Richâs brilliant, unsettling book.)
Photo by Adrian Kinloch
Liminal zones can also change right under your feet. If you venture into the bushes off Flatbush Avenue near the Belt Parkway, youâll soon be tangled in dense weeds that top 6 feet or more; plantsâ"plants that can seem weirdly oily or rustyâ"tug at you and wrap around your feet. Dense clouds of unidentified insects bite and sting you. Youâre utterly alone, even though you just passed clothes hanging on a branch. Then, suddenly, the muck and mire drop away in favor of a startling marshland vista: blue, open skies reflected in creeks, tall trees and orange grass. The only feature that Constable wouldnât recognize is the jumbo jet roaring toward nearby JFK.
Photo by Adrian Kinloch
Photo by Adrian Kinloch
Well, thatâs not quite right. Constable also wouldnât recognize the vinegary, even fecal smell of the mud underfoot, or the rainbow film of pollutant laying motionless on the waterâs surface. Constable wouldnât have a name for this baby.
Photo by Adrian Kinloch
Spend enough time in liminal zones and you find that inanimate objects seem to vibrate with a creepy potential energy. On the other side of Flatbush, there is a pink mouse who used to have a heart. She stares out to sea with her blank blind eyes, listening through her one remaining ear, hands clasped patiently for something or someone. She could be waiting for thousands of years, as thatâs how long it will take her pink plastic body to decay.
Photo by Adrian Kinloch
This creatureâs domain is Dead Horse Bay, a name derived from the thousands of horse carcasses dumped here some 70 years ago. The area was home to horse-rendering plants that employed Polish, Irish, and Italian immigrants, who lived on neighboring and equally putrid Barren Island. Tides and eroding waves conspire to tell the tale of this industry even today, as horse bones still wash up or are pulled from the banks, along with childrenâs toys, crockery, bottles, and shoes.
Photo by Adrian Kinloch
No other liminal zone has as grisly a provenance as Dead Horse Bay, but most of them carry a sense of death, decay, and desertion. Near Gerritsen Beach is Marine Park, which contains a beautiful salt marsh featuring a sculpture park of abandoned vehicles. Some have almost completely dissolved into the creek; others have arrived more recently.
Photo by Adrian Kinloch
Photo by Adrian Kinloch
Sometimes these cars have been left near domestic setups evocative of Cormac McCarthyâs The Road, typically consisting of chairs arranged around an extinguished fire, with primitive found-object sculptures placed carefully on the periphery. It was near one of these I saw a naked man pulling fish out of the creek with his bare hands.
Photo by Adrian Kinloch
Sometimes these zones inspire people to create personal, intimate memorials to lost loved ones. Bodies are hidden in, and occasionally pulled from, these city nether-regions. Perhaps itâs the solitude and somberness of these places that makes them attractive as shrines, as well as the feeling that youâre standing on a threshold between life and death, past, present, and future.
Photo by Adrian Kinloch
The most unsettling scenes in the liminal underworld are where offerings and rituals seem to have taken placeâ"or perhaps objects are posted as warnings. These spots remind me of the gruesome forest discoveries of my childhood in Suffolk, like the time I was walking through the woods and came across several crows that had been nailed to trees. According to my parents, the crows were the cranky gamekeeperâs way of admonishing poachers to keep out. I donât dare imagine what a village of teddy bears impaled on poles might mean.
Photo by Adrian Kinloch
Other vales and copses put me in mind of The Blair Witch Project.
Photo by Adrian Kinloch
These zones produce some of the most indelible picturesâ"in my mind, at least. These locations can conjure a sense of vulnerability and even primal fear, but I try to channel it through the detachment of the viewfinder. I dread the moment Iâm downloading the dayâs shots and I notice a figure in the trees. There are dark druid groves just off the Belt Parkway.
Photo by Adrian Kinloch
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