Readings Newsletter
Become a Readings Member to make your shopping experience even easier.
Sign in or sign up for free!
You’re not far away from qualifying for FREE standard shipping within Australia
You’ve qualified for FREE standard shipping within Australia
The cart is loading…

Archipelago presents a photographic meditation on human relationships as a series of emotional islands-separate, fragile, and bound by an invisible geography. Working within the tradition of tableau photography, Yolanda del Amo creates carefully composed, narrative-rich scenes reminiscent of a tableau vivant. Each image is methodically arranged, with precise attention to gesture, colour, and spatial relationships. At once intimate and strikingly distant, each tableau examines contradictions within relationships across countries, generations, and genders, reflecting on how a deep longing for closeness can coexist with an equally strong desire for individuality, and how intimacy is shaped, strained, and ultimately defined by social and psychological distance. Although Del Amo draws inspiration from real life, working primarily with sitters who are friends or family members, she introduces fictional elements that blur the boundary between reality and artifice. In her images, relationships are inseparable from their environments: domestic interiors, landscapes, and architectural spaces operate as psychological extensions of the figures within them, shaping emotional dynamics and revealing unspoken tensions. The work raises timely questions about class, gender, intimacy, and social connectedness, positioning personal relationships within broader social structures. From the text Islands in the Sea of Life by Vicki Goldberg Then she rearranged people, dictating where they sat or stood as well as their postures and positions. (Having taken many a dance lesson, she was particularly precise about poses, gestures, and carriage.) She told her subjects where to look and what to think about. These people became actors for a mere moment a moment that will most likely last beyond a lifetime, in a photographic theatre set arranged by a photographer who is the playwright, director, and stage manager. Colour plays a central emotional role throughout the series, while an ever-lingering silence emerges as a defining presence. And yet, despite their stillness, the photographs retain a sense of possibility and transformation. As Jean Dykstra observes in her text Alone Together: AAs in the theatre, roles can change, characters can evolve, silences can be broken, and that prospect is in these photographs, too.AE
$9.00 standard shipping within Australia
FREE standard shipping within Australia for orders over $100.00
Express & International shipping calculated at checkout
Stock availability can be subject to change without notice. We recommend calling the shop or contacting our online team to check availability of low stock items. Please see our Shopping Online page for more details.
Archipelago presents a photographic meditation on human relationships as a series of emotional islands-separate, fragile, and bound by an invisible geography. Working within the tradition of tableau photography, Yolanda del Amo creates carefully composed, narrative-rich scenes reminiscent of a tableau vivant. Each image is methodically arranged, with precise attention to gesture, colour, and spatial relationships. At once intimate and strikingly distant, each tableau examines contradictions within relationships across countries, generations, and genders, reflecting on how a deep longing for closeness can coexist with an equally strong desire for individuality, and how intimacy is shaped, strained, and ultimately defined by social and psychological distance. Although Del Amo draws inspiration from real life, working primarily with sitters who are friends or family members, she introduces fictional elements that blur the boundary between reality and artifice. In her images, relationships are inseparable from their environments: domestic interiors, landscapes, and architectural spaces operate as psychological extensions of the figures within them, shaping emotional dynamics and revealing unspoken tensions. The work raises timely questions about class, gender, intimacy, and social connectedness, positioning personal relationships within broader social structures. From the text Islands in the Sea of Life by Vicki Goldberg Then she rearranged people, dictating where they sat or stood as well as their postures and positions. (Having taken many a dance lesson, she was particularly precise about poses, gestures, and carriage.) She told her subjects where to look and what to think about. These people became actors for a mere moment a moment that will most likely last beyond a lifetime, in a photographic theatre set arranged by a photographer who is the playwright, director, and stage manager. Colour plays a central emotional role throughout the series, while an ever-lingering silence emerges as a defining presence. And yet, despite their stillness, the photographs retain a sense of possibility and transformation. As Jean Dykstra observes in her text Alone Together: AAs in the theatre, roles can change, characters can evolve, silences can be broken, and that prospect is in these photographs, too.AE