October 11, 1993

Piece description from the artist

Lifelines is a response to a world preoccupied with identification through passwords, pins, codes, emojis, number and letter series. We continue to be marginalized, reduced and dehumanized. Should we not be identified as individuals with family, friendships, work, play, creation, joy, wonder and loss?
The hand comes to mind and is the departure point for this project. Fingerprints are entirely individual and traditional proof of our identity. However, by including the hand-print and hand gestures the person is more fully exposed. Lifelines can be read, revealing the individual's past and future, while the hand gesture reveals aspects of their nature and personality. This is something our digital identity fails to provide.

As project co-creators, participants were able to choose the placement of their hands on a high resolution scanner that revealed an aspect of their identity. While some felt friends and family were necessary to help identify themselves, others chose to go solo. By processing in black and white aspects of race and class become irrelevant. The fine lines in the image have the quality of an etching. What the viewers see is not just a portrait of a hand, but an impression of a life lived, left behind on the glass.

The hands are titled by date of birth with no identification by gender, family, race, cultural background or religion. These hands should be seen closely grouped together communicating and interacting like an extended family, a community of hands. In these times of racial, religious and cultural disparity these hand portraits simply talk about us, the human race.

Other works by Neal Panton

About Neal Panton

Cranbrook, Canada

Neal Panton is an Award winning Fine Art Photographer, an accomplished theatrical and travel photographer & portraitist.
Neal has been published in more than 25 countries with 18 solo exhibits & 60 group exhibits in Canada, Europe, the USA and South America.
Neal was born in Hamilton, Ontario. Neal has also called Toronto and Vancouver home andnow resides in Cranbrook, British Columbia, Canada. Neal spent 6 years in Ecuador employed as a photojournalist for Reuters and as a Photography Professor at the Universidad de Quito, Ecuador.
Neal’s photography is very quiet, like snow crunching underfoot in the dead of a winter night. His photography inhabits a wordless world where he shows you how his subjects feel when you touch them, how every detail and texture resonates.
He invites you to discover your own unique connections to his work.

See Neal's portfolio here
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