• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

Griffin Museum of Photography

  • Log In
  • Contact
  • Search
  • Log In
  • Search
  • Contact
  • Visit
    • Hours
    • Admission
    • Directions
    • Handicap Accessability
    • FAQs
  • Exhibitions
    • Exhibitions | Current, Upcoming, Archives
    • Calls for Entry
  • Events
    • In Person
    • Virtual
    • Receptions
    • Travel
    • PHOTOBOOK FOCUS
    • Focus Awards
  • Education
    • Programs
    • Professional Development Series
    • Photography Atelier
    • Education Policies
    • NEPR 2025
    • Member Portfolio Reviews
    • Arthur Griffin Photo Archive
    • Griffin State of Mind
  • Join & Give
    • Membership
      • Become a Member
      • Membership Portal
      • Log In
    • Donate
      • Give Now
      • Griffin Futures Fund
      • Leave a Legacy
      • John Chervinsky Emerging Photographer Scholarship
  • About
    • Meet Our Staff
    • Griffin Museum Board of Directors
    • About the Griffin
    • Get in Touch
  • Rent Us
  • Shop
    • Online Store
    • Admission
    • Membership
  • Blog
  • Visit
    • Hours
    • Admission
    • Directions
    • Handicap Accessability
    • FAQs
  • Exhibitions
    • Exhibitions | Current, Upcoming, Archives
    • Calls for Entry
  • Events
    • In Person
    • Virtual
    • Receptions
    • Travel
    • PHOTOBOOK FOCUS
    • Focus Awards
  • Education
    • Programs
    • Professional Development Series
    • Photography Atelier
    • Education Policies
    • NEPR 2025
    • Member Portfolio Reviews
    • Arthur Griffin Photo Archive
    • Griffin State of Mind
  • Join & Give
    • Membership
      • Become a Member
      • Membership Portal
      • Log In
    • Donate
      • Give Now
      • Griffin Futures Fund
      • Leave a Legacy
      • John Chervinsky Emerging Photographer Scholarship
  • About
    • Meet Our Staff
    • Griffin Museum Board of Directors
    • About the Griffin
    • Get in Touch
  • Rent Us
  • Shop
    • Online Store
    • Admission
    • Membership
  • Blog

Carolle Benitah | Griffin State of Mind

Posted on March 31, 2023

Carolle Benitah is our featured artist apart of our show, Ties That Bind, on show now at the Griffin.

Ties that Bind stitches together three unique visions looking at the idea of family and the rewriting of history, myth and personal narratives. These artists work with images and objects, including various materials, with the addition of stitching on found images, personal family photos. Each artist finds ways to change the script, rewrite what has been lost and gain clarity of vision.

Tell us a little about yourself and your background. 

I came from fashion background. And I started to explore the medium of photography in early 2000. (more included in artist statement)

Tell a little about your work in the new exhibition, “Ties That Bind.” 

The works exhibited at the Griffin Museum come from family photographic archives. I use mediums such as embroidery, drawing or writing to give another meaning to these photographs. It’s a way to put these photographs back in motion. 

What led to your decision to implement handmade accents like embroidery into your work?  

“Photos Souvenirs” is a work that I undertook between 2009 and 2014 on my personal archives. Snapshots are related to memory and loss and often attest to family happiness. I created an imaginary album as a crossing of appearances where I deconstruct the myth of the ideal family to let emerge a more nuanced image. And to do this, I use the deceptively decorative function of embroidery to give these images a different meaning they had in family mythology, and to do something liberating. My needle works, which are reminiscent of conflict, drama and pain, summon the dark matter of family history, which is precisely absent from these photographs. This slow and precise work is the metaphor of a meticulous construction of oneself and of passing time. 

Embroidery is also the work of women. 

It is the metaphor of a meticulous construction of the self. 

Finally, What is a literary, musical or visual obsession you have at the moment? 

I discovered 4 years ago at Sydney Biennale the work of Miriam Cahn. And I just saw her exhibition at Palais de Tokyo in Paris. I totally fell in love with her work, bought her books, read everything about her, and her practice. The power of her work overwhelmed me. 

Since 4 mouths, I mostly listen to podcasts instead of music. I listen to Lex Fridman podcasts which are smart, intense and very instructive. I discover worlds far from the milieu of photography and open my perspectives on life. I listen philosophy podcasts too. 

ABOUT CAROLLE BENITAH

French Moroccan photographer Carolle Bénitah, who worked for ten years as a fashion designer before turning to photography in 2001, explores memory, family and the passage of time.  Often pairing old family snapshots with handmade accents, such as embroidery, beading and ink drawings, Bénitah seeks to reinterpret her own history as daughter, wife, and mother.

The work of Carolle Bénitah has been published in magazines such as Leica World, Shots Magazine, Photos Nouvelles, Spot, Center for Photography Houston, Foto Noviny, and Lens Culture, among others.  Carolle Bénitah was born in Casablanca (Morocco) and graduated from the Ecole de la Chambre Syndicale de la Couture Parisienne (Paris).  Her series Photos-Souvenirs  was also selected to exhibit in FotoFest’s 2014 Discoveries of the Meeting Place showcase of past Biennial portfolio reviews. We thank Corinne Tapia and Sous Les Etoiles Gallery for working with the museum to showcase Carolle’s works.

ARTIST STATEMENT

I started taking photographs in the early 2000s after very strong personal challenges. The fragile dimension of life came upon me and photography worked as an existential crutch. Faced with a reality that is difficult to grasp – such as illness in the series “Self-Portrait with the Red Curtain” (2002), or in the series “A bed of roses” (2001-2008), photography has acted as a new body of meaning. From the beginning, I placed my practice in the field of intimacy; the family and the passing of time were the objects of my research. Today, my work leads to more open topics such as filial ties, desire, loss, mourning and the confinement of women and touching the universal.

 “Photos Souvenirs” is a work that I undertook between 2009 and 2014 on my personal archives. Snapshots are related to memory and loss and often attest to family happiness. I created an imaginary album as a crossing of appearances where I deconstruct the myth of the ideal family to let emerge a more nuanced image. And to do this, I use the deceptively decorative function of embroidery to give these images a different meaning they had in family mythology, and to do something liberating. My needle works, which are reminiscent of conflict, drama and pain, summon the dark matter of family history, which is precisely absent from these photographs. This slow and precise work is the metaphor of a meticulous construction of oneself and of passing time.

I cultivate a protean approach to creation by developing installations around the series “Photos souvenirs” and “Fantômes”. I create books in which I embroider memories, paper mats that evoke the obsession, cushions that tell the stories of Tom Little Thumb … and through which I question the identity, the construction of oneself. I use materials that are in  the domestic world (placemats, handkerchief with embroidered monogram, tea towel, sheet …) and often embroiders on phrases from popular songs, dreams of young romantic girls to denounce the clichés of sentimentality blue flower.

Through the trivial objects that I create and embroider, I overthrow the hierarchy of the arts.  In 2013, “What cannot be said” and “What cannot be seen” are series from my  ID photographs. The philosopher Jacques Derrida wrote: “What cannot be said should certainely not remain silence but written”. Here, writing and drawing are a form of resistance to silence. I speak of women’s silence about their desires and the difficulty of accepting their body as a desiring object. 

 “Jamais je ne t’oublierai” (I will never forget you) (2017) is a series of anonymous photographs that I intervene by masking some elements with gold leaf. It is a negative album  of “Photos Souvenirs”. I point out the shortcomings of photography that says “I’ll never forget you” as the heady chorus of a nursery rhyme. I do this work because no one is concerned by these photographs anymore. “Ideal Standard” (2017) questions the ritual of Marriage in my culture of origin and denounces the desire to submit to the norm and to follow a ready-made model in order to reach a socially acceptable happiness or to his social environment.  

Art has a cathartic function for me. It is a way of overcoming hardships, going beyond earthquakes and standing up. The artist louise Bourgeois says: “Every day, you have to get rid of your past. If we can not, then we become an artist. There are two ways to get rid of one’s past: either one takes all the traces and one throws in the trash and that does not exist any more. Either we take these traces and we transform them. The very act of transforming these traces modifies my vision of the world.

All images courtesy of Sous Les Etoiles Gallery.

Filed Under: Exhibitions, Griffin State of Mind Tagged With: color, Photographers on Photography, Griffin Exhibitions, Photography

Primary Sidebar

Footer

Cummings Foundation
MA tourism and travel
Mass Cultural Council
Winchester Cultural District
Winchester Cultural Council
The Harry & Fay Burka Foundation
En Ka Society
Winchester Rotary
JGS – Joy of Giving Something Foundation
Griffin Museum of Photography 67 Shore Road, Winchester, Ma 01890
781-729-1158   email us   Map   Purchase Museum Admission   Hours: Tues-Sun Noon-4pm
     
Please read our TERMS and CONDITIONS and PRIVACY POLICY
All Content Copyright © 2025 The Griffin Museum of Photography · Powered by WordPress · Site: Meg Birnbaum & smallfish-design
MENU logo
  • Visit
    • Hours
    • Admission
    • Directions
    • Handicap Accessability
    • FAQs
  • Exhibitions
    • Exhibitions | Current, Upcoming, Archives
    • Calls for Entry
  • Events
    • In Person
    • Virtual
    • Receptions
    • Travel
    • PHOTOBOOK FOCUS
    • Focus Awards
  • Education
    • Programs
    • Professional Development Series
    • Photography Atelier
    • Education Policies
    • NEPR 2025
    • Member Portfolio Reviews
    • Arthur Griffin Photo Archive
    • Griffin State of Mind
  • Join & Give
    • Membership
      • Become a Member
      • Membership Portal
      • Log In
    • Donate
      • Give Now
      • Griffin Futures Fund
      • Leave a Legacy
      • John Chervinsky Emerging Photographer Scholarship
  • About
    • Meet Our Staff
    • Griffin Museum Board of Directors
    • About the Griffin
    • Get in Touch
  • Rent Us
  • Shop
    • Online Store
    • Admission
    • Membership
  • Blog

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