L. C. I. W. 85 

     Murder is not generally a subject in which most artists find themselves immersed.      But twelve years ago, Deborah Luster's mother was murdered, sparking a photographic      project which led her to three different state penitentiaries in Louisiana,      her home state, as a means of healing and understanding. Photographing inmates      against a black backdrop or in the fields, Luster captures the individuals      housed behind the barbed wire and prison cells in a project called "One      Big Self" . Cutting 5 x 4" aluminum and coating it with a liquid silver      emulsion, Luster creates images which serve as reliquaries for these men and      women whose cockiness, youth, bravado and shyness are imbedded in these pocket-sized      contemporary tintypes. Through these images she asks us to "see beyond their      crimes ... to suggest that our punitive models are as reflective of who we      are as our reward system."     
 Deborah Luster's earlier body of work, Rosesucker Retablos, is based on Mexican religious votive paintings created as offerings of thanks for spiritual or medical miracles. Luster photographs people she connects with, creating her own "saints," transforming them into luscious magical portraits which are printed on aluminum, layered with paint. Poet C.D. Wright creates the text which accompanies the images. The final pieces radiate with an energy rarely seen in photography today.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
