Photographer Meggan Gould explores an obsession with computer screen backdrop images. What does your desktop say about you?
D.M. Desktop 2007
Courtesy of Meggan Gould
M.W. Laptop 2007
Courtesy of Meggan Gould
A.C. Laptop 2008
Courtesy of Meggan Gould
W.L. Desktop 2008
Courtesy of Meggan Gould
L.L.G Desktop 2008
Courtesy of Meggan Gould
K.I. Laptop 2008
Courtesy of Meggan Gould
B.G. Laptop 2008
Courtesy of Meggan Gould
S.M. Destkop 2009
Courtesy of Meggan Gould
B.H. Laptop 2009
Courtesy of Meggan Gould
T.L. Laptop 2009
Courtesy of Meggan Gould
J.H. Laptop 2010
Courtesy of Meggan Gould
Meggan Gould's early work involved getting a screenshot, inverting it, printing the image on a transparency, then making a print in the darkroom. This image is from 2005. She now uses a 4x5 view camera.
Courtesy of Meggan Gould
L.W. Laptop 2007
Courtesy of Meggan Gould
In the course of a 20-minute phone conversation, photographer Meggan Gould referred to herself as "obsessive" four different times. I liked her immediately.
And you would have to be somewhat obsessive to devote years to photographing computer screens. But Gould has a great explanation of why it appeals to her:
"I find myself fascinated with how people build up personal spaces for themselves," she says on the phone, "both on a physical desktop with tangible objects and on a screen with pixel representations of objects. There is a strange public-private tension to it that intrigues me."
Gould studied anthropology and languages as an undergrad, but later switched gears to study photography in grad school at the University of Massachusetts--Dartmouth. She now teaches at the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque.
"The way we use photographs on our screens is fascinating; the background is decorative, but we aren't meant to sit and stare at it," she says. "Our personality is represented in how we maintain the surface, but we don't take it as seriously as our physical space."
Gould started photographing desktops in 2005 and has since taken more than 150 images with a 4x5 view camera. Her methodology isn't exact — she just waits until she sees a computer screen that she finds appealing.
Gould photographs the scenes as she finds them, without manipulating the background in any way.
"I want [people] to look at their own desktop critically," she says. "That's a way they can learn something about themselves."
So what does your desktop say about you?
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