Parking Lot Pandemic 18 (2020/2021)
To save our fellow citizens from infection the logical advice from medical experts was to wear a mask. At first wearing a mask seemed to interfere with identity. Wearing a mask did not look traditional. Wearing a mask quickly aroused the philosophical issue of free will. Masks looked creepy.
Jeanne Randolph
from Parking Lot Pandemic
27 photographs
Created in 2020
Printed in 2021
Inkjet on Epson Premium Luster paper
Edition of 2
8 ¼ x 11 inches
“The Exchange District in Winnipeg, where all the grand warehouses, factories and national banks were established in the early 1900s, is also a district of parking lots. Ordinarily some lots would be more popular than others, but when public life closed down during the pandemic, every parking lot in The Exchange District was empty. The bistros and cocktail lounges that were more home than my home was, were empty. Their interiors were darkened by massive curtains pulled across massive windows. And next door or half a block over, there would be a parking lot with not a single car. Parking lots were unexpectedly on display. Without cars they looked raw, as if the hide of the city had been stripped off. I remember walking across King Street to look closely at a lot, and when I beheld the huge jagged potholes, gouged out gravel, crumbling, split uneven ground I laughed out loud. There’s a pandemic.
But there never had been time or energy to flatten and smooth these wilderness surfaces, especially ones that will be hidden under car bodies when everything is normal again. Standing on the King Street sidewalk, the phrase “car bodies” mingled in my mind with “human bodies.” At that moment my imagination filled the empty parking lots with the poetry of the pandemic. Every possible emotion the pandemic heightened, every version of death, of near misses and of escape that poetry provides.” — Jeanne Randolph