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Posted on May 26, 2017

The Visual Metric
Various Artists
August 4 – January 23, 2018

Closing Reception TBD

Calibration marks
© Julie Anand and Damon Sauer, Calibration Mark AC48 with Satellite
Old Building with new signs
© Andrew Janjigian, Metamorphsis/ The Changing Form
Person in center of beach and ocean
© Susan Wilson, Centered

Map of the USA
© Sant Khalsa, Lebanon, Kansas (from “Death of the Heart”)
Abstract image
© Mary Daniel Hobson, Conserve Ecology
Old map
© Steve Gentile, “Old News Chesapeake Bay 1941

Picture, map and sinker
© Mary Daniel Hobson, Evocation #020
Woman
© Ralph Mercer, Cosmic Reverie
Torsos
© Jean Sousa, Archaic Torso

Diagram of feet
© Karen Garrette de Luna, 2003 & 2005, New York City, NY & Lewiston, ME, Inversion Sprain of the Anterior Talofibular Ligament
Diagram
© Karen Garrett de Luna, Father (Eclipsis Solaris – Luna, Tierra)
Abstract image
© Richard Alan Cohen, Finale

Abstract image
© Doug Johnson, Untitled (Waterline)
Abstract image
© DM Witman, Melt N45 E45-2
Grid
© Frances Jakubek, Untitled from Carefully Omitted

Map
© Adam Neese, Map of Memories
Track of an insect
© Roger Archibald, Submerged Ramblings
Wire circles on fence
© Daryl-Ann Saunders, “Wire Circles #974

Wire onto of fence
© Daryl-Ann Saunders, “Wire Vs #9770”
2 Mao watches
© Susan Lapides, Mao Watch
Growth marks on wall
© Donna Tramontozzi, The Draytons

Grid of shoes
© Julie Williams-Krishnan, March, part of the series “Seven-Eight”
Abstract image
© Sara Silks, Leaving Terra Firma 11
Tree diagram
© Randi Ganulin, Untitled (Cedar Code 2)

Growth rings
© Meg Birnbaum, Tree Rings
Children leaping
© Kim Campbell, The Childhood Gravity Games – Red
Collection of items
© Barry Rosenthal, Sea Life

Painting palette
© Norm Diamond, China Painting Palette from What Is Left Behind — Stories from Estate Sales
River and land
© Tom Lamb, MORPHOSIS – Marks on the Land Series
Rivers and land
© Tom Lamb, AUTUMN – Marks on the Land Series

Dress
© Marky Kauffmann, Royal Green
Road maps
© Jane Szabo, Road Maps, from the series Reconstructing Self
Dress pattern
© Dianne Yudelson, Straight of the Grain

Sewing on photo
© JP Terlizzi, Gemini, from the series Mother
Stiches on a hand
© Karen Bell, Left Hand
Tracing a hand on paper
© Carol Isaak, Mapping the Family

Work gloves
© Barry Rosenthal, Work Gloves
Used auto parts
© Charan Devereaux, Nissenbaum’s Used Auto Parts, Somerville, MA
Groceries
© Charan Devereaux, Reliable Market, Somerville, MA

Pomegranate seeds
© David Weinberg, 613 Pomegranate Seeds
Plants planted in a grid
© Charlyn Zlotnick, Clark Air Base
Pilings in snow
© Susan Wilson, The Pilings in Winter

Fence on Salt Lake
© Nicolò Sertorio, 2 Salt Lake
Arrows on a road
© Joy Bush, You Were Here from “Road Rune” Series
Road marking
© Joy Bush, Celestrial from “Road Runes” series

Building facade
© Noritaka Minami, Facade I
Doll vacuuming and carrying a globe
© Grace Weston, House of Atlas
Wall with pictures, globe and chair
© Rachel Barrett, The Bookstore

Sphere in fountain with people and bikes
© Karen Bell, Unisphere
Globe in nose of plane
© Troy Paiva, The World in Your Nose

 

Anyone from a manufacturing background has a propensity for visual depictions of measurement, process and outcome. Whether it be an excel graph for tracking a trend, a work flow diagram following a widget through production or a fish bone chart to problem solve, it is easier to analyze with a pictorial rendering than a spread sheet of raw numbers or a written description of a procedure. This is the thread of the idea leading to “The Visual Metric” exhibition for the Griffin Museum of Photography.

What is a metric? Loosely put, a metric is a system for measuring the relationship between linked elements. Creating a metric involves unbiased observation over a period of time, mapping observations into numbers, and creating ratios that have a relationship to the outcome. The result of the ratio is the metric.

Metrics can also mean the measure of a meter. While the metric system never quite took hold in the United States as the daily norm for measure, we rely on conversion charts to understand the meaning when presented to us.

Recently a friend took me to the hospital due to an injury I incurred. The hospital set me in a chair to weigh me. When I realized what they were doing I told my friend to leave the room. The nurse told me not to worry as the scale reported in kilograms and nobody understands what that means. I asked my friend if she could convert kilograms to pounds. “Not even if my life depended on it,” she replied.

For the purpose of this exhibition I did not intend to actually hold fast to statistical principles but only suggest scientific measure. In the end I am more concerned with the poetry of the visual metric rather than in its veracity.

In finding candidates to exhibit, I looked for photographs that visually mapped, measured, analyzed, or implied a system of topological relationships albeit sometimes imprecisely. As the curator, I take great enjoyment from exercising curatorial license as in this exhibit. Photographers submitted selections for me based on a “call for entry.” Other photographers I invited from my recollection of their work. There are fifty photographs in this exhibition and forty-two photographers. Two of these photographers work collaboratively. The artists come from all over the United States and Canada. The artists included are:

Roger Archibald, Julie Anand and Damon Sauer, Rachel Barrett, Karen Bell, Meg Birnbaum, Joy Bush, Kim Campbell, Richard Alan Cohen, Charan Devereaux, Norm Diamond, Randi Ganulin, Karen Garrett de Luna, Steve Gentile, Mary Daniel Hobson, Carol Isaak, Andrew Janjigian, Frances Jakubek, Doug Johnson, Marky Kauffmann, Sant Khalsa, Tom Lamb, Susan Lapides, Ralph Mercer, Noritaka Minami, Adam Neese, Troy Paiva, Barry Rosenthal, Daryl-Ann Saunders, Nicolo Sertorio, Sara Silks, Jean Sousa, Jane Szabo, JP Terlizzi, Donna Tramontozzi, David Weinberg, Grace Weston, Julie Williams-Krishnan, Susan Wilson, DM Witman, Dianne Yudelson, and Charlyn Zlotnik.

Collaborators Julie Anand and Damon Sauer photographed “a system of 256 calibration targets that were created as part of a secret surveillance program in the mid-1960s in the Sonoran Desert.” In addition they mapped “specific satellites present in the sky at each site at the moment of photographing using a satellite tracking application.” (Anand and Sauer)

Noritaka Minami photographs the Nakagin Capsule Tower in Tokyo. Architect Kisho-Kurokawa, built the tower in 1972. “The …… aim was to formulate flexible designs that facilitate continual growth and renewal of architecture. Kurokawa attached the building with 140 removable capsules to promote modifications to the structure over time, theoretically improving its capacity to adjust to the rapidly changing conditions of the post-industrial society.” (Minami)

Dianne Yudelson sets up a scene of measuring tape and a pattern for making clothing. She says, “My image represents the process of how we use measurement to map our bodies.” Jane Szabo created a dress made out of maps, while JP Terlizzi stitched on a photograph of his mother. Karen Bell presents her stiches on her hand while Carol Isaak photographs a tracing of a hand.

“In today’s world, consumer goods are increasing in volume. At the same time their useful lives are shorter and shorter,” says Barry Rosenthal. He lines up and photographs in a manner as if to count all the objects that he’s pulled from the shores of New York Harbor. David Weinberg lays out pomegranate seeds in a similar way.

Several photographers measured time in different ways. Meg Birnbaum and Randi Ganulin used tree rings as a metric. Donna Tramontozzi photographed the marks on the wall of a familial home where a family watched all of the children grow. Susan Lapides makes a comparison of the time in different times zones. Jean Sousa presents a body turning to stone.

Mapping was presented in multiple ways by globes, aerial views and land and terrain maps. Roger Archibald photographed random snails’ trails. Geometry is also woven through the exhibition in architecture and the landscape. Kim Campbell maps a process while Norm Diamond charts the colors for a painting.

“The Visual Metric” has been organized to flow as a narrative from the beginning to end of the passageway. We hope our audience enjoys the exhibit and finds more interpretations of the visual metric within the show. Any questions regarding the artwork can be directed to the Griffin Museum at 781-729-1158 or via email to photos@griffinmuseum.org. We open with the exhibit on August 4, 2017 and end in early November. The exhibit is running during FlashPoint Boston.

We want to thank the Downtown Boston Improvement District and Lafayette City Center for their continued support of the Griffin Museum of Photography. We have enjoyed every moment you have allowed us to exhibit here.

Elin Spring’s review of The Visual Metric

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Floor Plan

Amy Rindskopf's Terra Novus

At the market, I pick each one up, pulled in by the shapes as they sit together, waiting. I feel its heft in my hand, enjoy the textures of the skin or peel, and begin to look closer and closer. The patterns on each individual surface marks them as distinct. I push further still, discovering territory unseen by the casual observer, a new land. I am like a satellite orbiting a distant planet, taking the first-ever images of this newly envisioned place.

This project started as an homage to Edward Weston’s Pepper No. 30 (I am, ironically, allergic to peppers). As I looked for my subject matter at the market, I found that I wasn’t drawn to just one single fruit or vegetable. There were so many choices, appealing to both hand and eye. I decided to print in black and white to help make the images visually more about the shapes, and not about guessing which fruit is smoothest, which vegetable is greenest.

Artistic Purpose/Intent

Artistic Purpose/Intent

Tricia Gahagan

 

Photography has been paramount in my personal path of healing from disease and

connecting with consciousness. The intention of my work is to overcome the limits of the

mind and engage the spirit. Like a Zen koan, my images are paradoxes hidden in plain

sight. They are intended to be sat with meditatively, eventually revealing greater truths

about the world and about one’s self.

 

John Chervinsky’s photography is a testament to pensive work without simple answers;

it connects by encouraging discovery and altering perspectives. I see this scholarship

as a potential to continue his legacy and evolve the boundaries of how photography can

explore the human condition.

 

Growing my artistic skill and voice as an emerging photographer is critical, I see this as

a rare opportunity to strengthen my foundation and transition towards an established

and influential future. I am thirsty to engage viewers and provide a transformative

experience through my work. I have been honing my current project and building a plan

for its complete execution. The incredible Griffin community of mentors and the

generous funds would be instrumental for its development. I deeply recognize the

hallmark moment this could be for the introduction of the work. Thank you for providing

this incredible opportunity for budding visions and artists that know they have something

greater to share with the world.

Fran Forman RSVP