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Win a Solo Exhibition in July 2026 + An Exclusive Interview!
Win a Solo Exhibition in July 2026 + An Exclusive Interview!

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By Graig Easton

Publisher: GOST Books
Publication date: January 2026
Print length: 92 pages
Language: English
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An Extremely Un-get-atable Place is a quietly powerful photography book by Craig Easton that revisits one of the most secluded and symbolically charged locations in modern literary history. Published by GOST Books, the volume takes its title from George Orwell’s own words, written during his years of self-imposed isolation at Barnhill, a remote farmhouse on the Isle of Jura. Easton’s project is less a document than a poetic meditation, reimagining the atmosphere in which Orwell conceived Nineteen Eighty-Four, a work that continues to resonate with unsettling relevance today.

Invited to stay at Barnhill, largely unchanged since the late 1940s, Easton approached the site with restraint and attentiveness. Using a large-format 10x8 field camera, he photographed the surrounding landscape and the modest interiors of the house, allowing light, texture, and silence to guide his compositions. The resulting images evoke solitude rather than spectacle: a stove bearing traces of daily use, simple tools resting in a shed, a mirror, a teapot, worn surfaces shaped by time. These still lifes suggest presence through absence, offering a tangible sense of Orwell’s lived experience without ever depicting the writer himself.

The photographs are interwoven with excerpts from Orwell’s letters and diaries written during his Jura years, creating a subtle dialogue between image and text. This pairing deepens the emotional register of the book, situating Easton’s images within Orwell’s physical fragility, intellectual intensity, and desire for isolation. After returning from the island, Easton printed the negatives as hand-made silver gelatin prints, toning them in strong tea—a quiet, almost ritual gesture referencing Orwell’s famously austere habits.

More than a historical homage, An Extremely Un-get-atable Place reflects on solitude, endurance, and the relationship between place and thought. It is the first volume in Easton’s forthcoming Island Trilogy, a body of work that promises to explore remote landscapes as sites of memory, imagination, and creative resistance, where geography shapes not only daily life but the ideas that emerge from it.

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