- 04.29.13
- 6:30 AM
Dietmar Eckell has traveled
the world in pursuit of ruin. His portfolio is filled with mystifyingly
beautiful pictures of abandoned buildings, forgotten military sites and
decomposing cars. For his newest project, he tracked down 15 rotting airplane
carcasses left over from crash sites where there were no fatalities and everyone
was rescued.
“We hear enough about air disasters in the news so I didn’t
feel the need to dramatize that in my photography,” he says. “Instead I wanted
to give the viewer a positive ‘wow’ effect.”
For nearly three
years, he trekked to extremely isolated locations across the world — nine
countries on four continents — to find the photos and now he’s running an Indiegogo
campaign to fund a self-published book.
“I shoot all kinds of abandoned relics with amazing stories,
but the planes are special,” he says. “Visually it’s just surreal when you see
an airplane after the long journey to get out [to these remote spots].”
In Papua New Guinea he says the quest to find a downed plane
was like a trip through history. He was after a piece of modernity, but to get
there he had to cross through communities that still clung to centuries-old
traditions and had no electricity or running water. While chasing another wreck
in North Africa he had to negotiate with a local rebel group in order to get
transported across the border from Mauritania into Western Sahara.
“That was a different kind of thrill,” he says
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