Hardback, 56 pages, Full Colour illustrations, W115mm x H175mm
This distinctively designed small-format publication chronicles a new
body of work by the British artist, Suky Best. In The Return of the
Native, Best highlights the gradual disappearance of hitherto common
types of wildlife from their former habitats across the UK. Over a
series of vivid and disarming photographs and short video animations,
Best digitally reintroduces a number of birds and insects into
landscapes where they were previously seen in significant numbers but
where they are now virtually extinct. The slightly studied and stylised
nature of each composition, in which the respective elements don't
quite fit together, elicits a vague but deceptively disquieting sense
of loss.
Designed to resemble an old-fashioned Ladybird book of birds, this
book acts as kind of field guide to Best's recent work, incorporating
the images of marsh warblers, nightingales, soldier flies and
swallowtail butterflies etc that make up The Return of the Native.
The book also features a special introductory essay by one of
Britain's best-known writers on birds and birdwatching, Stephen Moss author of Garden Birds (Collins) and Bird in the Bush: A Social
History of Birdwatching (Arum Press). A further essay, by the artist
and writer Nicky Coutts, considers the themes and motifs of these new
works in the context of Best's fifteen-year practice as an artist.