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Atelier Gallery

Rolls and Tubes | Griffin State of Mind

Posted on July 7, 2023

With the exhibition of Rolls and Tubes coming to a close on July 9th, the four artists were asked to delve into their process and thoughts behind the work. Be sure to stop by the museum to see each artists reinterpretation of a known photograph in the arc of contemporary, and the history of photography, utilizing toilet paper as an element of the image.

Tell us a little about how your work with photography began? 

“My father was an incessant amateur photographer and filmmaker. He was armed with his Bolex movie camera or some manner of camera his whole life—though an architect by trade. SO it is no surprise that Santa brought me a Kodak Instamatic in 1971. My formal training, however, began in high school.” – Colleen Mullins

“My introduction to photography was when I was a child. Home movies and slideshows –then learning to process and print in elementary school when I was 12. From that time on, photography was simply a part of me, it never occurred to me to stop, in fact it felt very wrong to stop. It wasn’t until my late twenties that I thought of myself as ‘a photographer’ and ‘an artist.'” – Jenny Sampson

“I took my first photography class in high school but it wasn’t until college when I had conversation with a career counselor who asked me “How would you like to spend your day if you could do whatever you want” and without hesitation I said “I’d walk around taking photos of people out in the world.” Neither the career counselor nor I knew what that meant in terms of an actual job, but it was that single conversation that ultimately led me to majoring in Art/Photography at UC Berkeley and becoming a photographer. While I have done all kinds of photography for work since then, walking around out in the world taking photos of people is still my favorite way to spend a day and is now my primary practice.” – Christy McDonald

“It’s weirdly straightforward. I took photography classes at the Art Institute of Boston while in high school and that was it. I had found something that allowed me to understand the world around me, and much later, myself. But I suppose my real formative experience was at MassArt. That place, and more importantly the people within it, were the catalysts for much of the way that I still think about and approach image making. Now, as a professor of photography, I try to emulate the environment I experienced there in my own classroom.” – Nicole White

What do you want this work to convey to the public? Has the message changed between showing on instagram vs showing in a museum?

“At first, this project was for us; a means to find some humor, reconsider the photographic canon, and question societal priorities during the pandemic. As we progressed, there was a realization that other people were getting something out of watching the project unfold via Instagram. The public response showed us that it provided a small escape from the pandemic through the daily task of looking at our work and investigating the source. Along with that, maybe they got a little chuckle from our reinterpretation. 

Once the work was made physical (i.e. a book), the possibility of how it could function changed. The book allowed us to consider a level of engagement and interaction with the work that was not possible with Instagram. Showing the work on a wall is an entirely different experience, one which enables us to put different pieces in conversation with one another each time it is installed.” – Nicole White (answering for the group)

Were there any rules you began to follow but lost over time?

“We stayed pretty true to our initial prompt. As we kept making them, we allotted ourselves more time because our processes became more elaborate. Outside of that, the initial prompt gave us enough flexibility that we felt like we could make a piece that was a very close duplicate to the original or something that was more of a nod to the original.” – Nicole White (answering for the group)

“Well, there really weren’t any rules of the group except that we had to use toilet paper in some way to recreate a photograph. I had my own personal rules, which I allowed myself to break if necessary. My overall rule was that I can do whatever I want because there are no rules; within that rule, I wanted to make things with my hands, and I accomplished this with few exceptions –because I could do whatever I wanted.” – Jenny Sampson

Has there been a piece of contemporary art that has particularly engaged or moved you?

“It changes. I saw a remarkable work by Edward and Nancy Keinholz at Frieze this year. My Country ’Tis of Thee, 1991.

A sculpture of four unrepentant businessmen, pantsless. Life size. All had their right legs in the same barrel, their right hands over their hearts, and their left hands reaching back to stoke the penis of the man behind. Red white and blue bare lightbulbs drained out from the barrel like water. And it felt so present. So now. So raw. So hopeless, in that it was made 30+ years ago.” – Colleen Mullins

“A local Bay Area photographer, J.M. Golding, has been making these gorgeous lumen print diptychs –of course work born out of an accident– that I cannot stop thinking about. They are dreamy, haunting, bewildering and engaging.” – Jenny Sampson

“When I was in college my photography class went to a lecture given by Sebastiao Salgado where he presented his series on Brazilian mine workers. I was blown away by the deep dark richness of his images and by his focus on the human condition, at the time, I had never seen anything like it. This was when I realized documentary photography could be fine art. I have also been heavily influenced by the work of Bruce Davidson, Robert Frank and Josef Koudelka, three of my favorite photographers.” – Christy McDonald

“Sure. I look at work all the time to better inform my practice and my teaching. Last month, I was in Paris and saw the Lynne Cohen and Marina Gadonneix exhibition at the Centre Pompidou and it has stuck with me. While both artists’ work read as somewhat detached as first, there is a beauty and depth to the pieces that really surprised me. I was taken by the entire exhibition. I’m still thinking about it. It also made me want to dust off the 4×5 camera…” – Nicole White

Where do you expect to take your art next?

“I am working on a small edition artist book about love letters my mother exchanged with the scientist who later decoded RNA and was the first to use the term mRNA. The work uses certain characteristics of RNA, and the search for its alphabet as the formation of the physical object. I am interested in storytelling, and as a bookbinder—I naturally first gravitate to the book in my work.” – Colleen Mullins

“I have several projects in the works –a few tintype studies that have grown out of (literally and figuratively) my time spent at home during the pandemic including pasiflora mutliples (multiple exposure tintypes) and my weeds. In addition, I am working on an upcoming exhibition of my Skater Girls and Skaters tintype portrait series. And also there’s the collage. Never a dull moment.” – Jenny Sampson

“I’m off to Palestine in the Fall to take more photos for a project I started there in 2016.” – Christy McDonald

“I have no idea. I’m juggling several projects at the moment, but I couldn’t tell you anything about expectations other than those that I put onto myself as an art maker.” – Nicole White

ABOUT THE ROLLS AND TUBES COLLECTIVE

Colleen Mullins is a photographer and book artist. She has garnered numerous grants and fellowships, including two McKnight Fellowships, four Minnesota State Arts Board Grants, and in 2020, she was a nominee for the Leica Oskar Barnack Award for her project “Expositions are the timekeepers of progress”. Additionally, she has been an artist in residence at the Vermont Studio Center, the Penland School of Crafts Winter Residency, and In Cahoots Residency. Mullins’ work is in the collections of the US Embassy in Moscow, Ogden Museum of Southern Art and Southeast Museum of Photography, among others. Her publications include Photo District News (PDN), The Oxford American Eyes on the South, The New York Times Lens Blog, and numerous textbooks. She has authored articles for Afterimage and PDNedu. Recent exhibitions include Griffin Museum of Photographic Art, the North Carolina Museum of Art, and Tilt Institute for the Contemporary Image with the Rolls & Tubes Collective.

Jenny Sampson was born and raised in San Francisco and currently resides in Berkeley, California. She earned a B.A. in Psychobiology in 1991 at Pitzer College and has since dedicated her time to her photographic endeavors: wet plate collodion, traditional black and white photography and commissioned portraits. Sampson is a member of The Rolls and Tubes Collective. Her first monograph, Skaters, was published in October 2017 by Daylight Books and Jenny’s Skater Girls in September 2020.

Nicole White is a Bay Area artist and curator. White uses historical and contemporary photographic processes to examine the medium’s varied functionality while looking at the American cultural landscape. She holds a BFA from Massachusetts College of Art (2002), a MA in Art History from the University of Connecticut (2010) and a MFA in Studio from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago (2012). She is a Professor of Art (Photography) at Diablo Valley College in Pleasant Hill, CA. In 2021, she published a book, Rolls & Tubes: A History of Photography, in collaboration with Christy McDonald, Colleen Mullins, and Jenny Sampson.

Christy McDonald uses photography as a way of engaging with the world and exploring the varied cultural and social conditions she encounters. Based in the San Francisco Bay Area, Christy holds a B.A. in Art (photography) from UC Berkeley, is a member of the Rolls and Tubes Photographic Collective, and has ongoing personal projects in parts of the Middle East and the California Central Valley.

Filed Under: Griffin State of Mind, Atelier Gallery Tagged With: black and white, color, Artist Talk, Photographers on Photography, Griffin Exhibitions, Photography

Gail Samuelson | Griffin State of Mind

Posted on August 22, 2022

It has been a true pleasure to see Gail Samuelson‘s work on the walls of the Atelier Gallery in Winchester this month. Her exhibition, Passing Through has layers of light, color and texture all mixing with the light and beauty of the gallery. Our visitors have been deeply engaged with the work, and its implied meanings. We wanted to know more about Gail and her work. We asked her a few questions about her creative process, her attachment to the museum, and to her beautiful works, and this is what she had to say.


Tell us how you first connected to the Griffin Museum.

I first visited the Griffin in 2010 on a field trip while taking the Photography Atelier when it was still being offered through the Art Institute of Boston at Lesley University. I fell in love with the space, the light, and the quirky setting next to a pond. But what excited me most was the prospect of our class showing work at the museum. It was a huge notch up from the hallways of Lesley! What I didn’t know at the time was how many good friends I’d make and the sense of community I’d find there.

I took the Photography Atelier six times, twice at Lesley University and four times at the Griffin Museum. In the Atelier, I learned how to hone in on a project via assignments about portraits, landscapes, and still lifes until something struck a chord with me.

After the Atelier, I took Emily Belz’s Topics in Photography classes “Sense of Place” and “Light and Color”. In Light and Color, I made images of light passing through my house, some of which would eventually find their way into Passing Through. Both classes had a big influence on me.

orange wall
yellow wall

Cerulean, Crimson, and Sunglow from the series Light House, © Gail Samuelson, 2021

How do you involve photography in your everyday life? Can you tell us about any images or artists that have caught your attention recently?

Mostly, I photograph the small, often fleeting, moments I notice as I go about my day, so I always have a camera with me. I like to photograph light and shadows in my house with a digital camera and when I’m exploring the landscape, I bring along a film camera (or two) because I like to shoot my landscapes with film. I have favorite spots both in Sherborn and in Orleans that I visit often; I almost always find something new to photograph or a new way to photograph.

For artists, there are so many but to name a few, I love Rinko Kawauchi’s 2010 Aperture book, “Illuminance” and the way she uses light, color, pattern, and how she sequences images. And as I’m writing this feature, I took a break to buy Barbara Bosworth’s “The Sea” from Radius books! I’ve been spending time on the cape this summer and am interested in the way the camera lens captures patterns created by the interaction of light, wind, sand, and water. I have Barbara’s first Radius book “The Meadow” and marvel at her dedication to a particular landscape. I also love all of S. Billie Mandle’s projects and I’m eager to delve into Teju Cole’s “Golden Apple of the Sun”. His kitchen images remind me of another favorite, Jan Groover.

Driftwood, from the series Passing Through © Gail Samuelson, 2019

Please tell us a little about your series Passing Through, and how it was conceived.

The series began in a rare “Aha” moment when I was studying my prints from two separate projects: one of landscapes where I live in Sherborn and on Cape Cod, and the other was Light House that had its origins in Emily’s Light and Color class. I noticed a kinship between them and started making pairs: of light and color; inside and outside; concrete and abstract.

Each pairing is a visual conversation about the interconnectedness of place, between the shelter and intimacy of being in my home and the quiet landscapes I discover outside my door. The images are from different places, but they form a consonant union. There’s a term in music, “counterpoint”, a relationship between two musical lines which are interdependent in their harmony yet independent in rhythm and melody. I love that and see a visual analogy when pairing my photographs.

Because I use different cameras for each project, my diptychs combine a square shaped landscape that I get from my film cameras, with a rectangular image of light in my house that I capture with my digital camera.

Winter Water, from Passing Through, © Gail Samuelson, 2019

Has there been a Griffin Museum exhibition that has particularly engaged or moved you?

“Leaps of Faith” was either the last or next to last exhibit at the Griffin Museum in March 2020 just before the pandemic forced the museum to close its doors to the public. The exhibit featured the work of Armani Willett, John Horvath, Walter Pickering, and Barbara Diener. It was a marvelous curation and installation, and I am drawn to how beautifully Barbara Diener layers patterns of color and light over her images.


What is your favorite place to escape to?

I live next to Rocky Narrows, a Trustees of Reservations property so when I need to “escape”, I just walk out my back door and explore the woods. It’s a restorative tonic for all the senses. I also love Maine: Rockport and its neighboring towns, home of Maine Media Workshops and a good friend of mine; and Acadia. I enjoy garden spaces, so I’ve made my reservation to visit the Coastal Maine Botanical Gardens in Boothbay later this month.

What is a book, song or visual obsession you have at the moment?

On July 12th, we were dazzled by the first images from the James Webb Space Telescope. The telescope’s ability to register infrared wavelengths combined with its enormous mirror and pixel resolution allowed us to see light from 13.7 billion years ago, just 100 million years after the Big Bang and creation of our universe!

­­If you could be in a room with anyone to have a conversation, who would it be and what would you talk about?

­David Byrne comes to mind. I’ve always loved the Talking Heads, his 1984 movie “Stop Making Sense”, the rhythmic layering of his songs, and his idiosyncratic movements on stage. My husband and I went to see “American Utopia” in early 2020 when it was in previews at the Emerson Colonial Theater, shortly before it closed due to the pandemic.

We’d talk about how he came up with his style of movement on stage, how he goes about writing a new song, and what he’s working on now.

To see more of Gail Samuelson‘s work visit her website. You can find her on Instagram @gailsamuelsonphoto

Filed Under: Uncategorized, Exhibitions, Griffin State of Mind, Atelier Gallery

Olga Merrill | Griffin State of Mind

Posted on June 17, 2022

Olga Merrill’s textured photographic work, Enigma, was on the walls of our Atelier Gallery in June 2022. We wanted to know more about her creative journey and how the work inspired her and in turn inspires us. We asked her a few questions, and this is what she had to say.

Tell us how you first connected to the Griffin Museum.

© Andre Kertesz, Distortion, image courtesy MOMA

My first connection with Griffin Museum was in July 2019 at the reception of the Juried Members Show. My husband and I came to congratulate photographers I knew and know now. I became a member after and only one thing I regretted that I did not join earlier. My works have been part of a few exhibitions, I enjoyed a lot of online events as well. My gratitude to the Griffin Museum for everything.

How do you involve photography in your everyday life? Can you tell us about any images or artists that have caught your attention recently?

I was not shooting as intensively last year as I did before. In any case photography and other media are part of my everyday life. I love to make warm tea, set up music and look through wonderful images. I recently got the first edition catalog of Andre Kertesz: The Mirror as Muse. I love studying his Distortion images now.

Please tell us a little about your series Enigma, and how it was conceived.

The concept of this series was born after I became a citizen of the USA. I still have my original citizenship as well. The duality, feeling as I am personally in between two worlds, literally and metaphorically. My “Enigma” is my interpretation of the relationship between our human existence and the Earth. 

© Olga Merrill
man looking up
© Olga Merrill, Fortitude

We all witness the endless flux of life. I invite and provoke the viewer to see deeply into what mysteries are hidden in the intimate corners of the soul. I hope that in the end, one finds answers as to what legacies will be left behind.

correia - peeking
© Susan Irene Correia

Has there been a Griffin Museum exhibition that has particularly engaged or moved you?
This year I enjoyed the exhibition ” E. caballus: The Domesticated Horse“, a wonderful group of photographers, fabulous prints and installations. The horse can be a metaphor for your world and life. A steady rhythmic horse provides riders with an opportunity to move up the scale and to accomplish new things. Take inventory of your world.  What horse are you riding?

What is your favorite place to escape to?
Escape from what and why?  Perhaps some people are trying to escape from themself thinking that they are escaping somewhere. You cannot escape from yourself.

city view from water
© Olga Merrill, Friday Night

What is a book, song or visual obsession you have at the moment?

I always love to listen to music by Jean Michel Jarre, especially when I am doing post-processing of my photos. The “Hard-Boiled Wonderland and the End of the World” by Haruki Murakami is on my table, I want to read it again.

man looking right
© Olga Merrill, Invisible Thoughts
man with weeds in eye
© Olga Merrill, The Moment

If you could be in a room with anyone to have a conversation, who would it be and what would you talk about?

If God can be called “anyone” it will be God. The topic of conversation will remain a mystery to the public.

To see more of Olga Merrill‘s work, log onto her website. You can find her on Instagram @merrill.olga

Filed Under: Uncategorized, Blog, Exhibitions, Griffin State of Mind, Atelier Gallery

Griffin State of Mind – Stefanie Timmermann

Posted on August 16, 2021

In today’s Griffin State of Mind, we feature Stefanie Timmermann. Her creative work, Blue Morphs is on the walls of the Griffin until August 29th, 2021. We wanted to get to know more about Stefanie and her work, so we asked her a few questions.

Tell us how you first connected to the Griffin Museum.

timmerman headshot

Stefanie Timmermann

My friend Janice Koskey told me about the Griffin, and was incredibly positive about her experience. Naturally, I checked the Griffin out a few days later. Just coming up on it, I loved the house and surroundings. And I felt very welcome inside, too. A funny thing happened right away – I only had a $20 bill to pay admission (I wasn’t a member yet), and there was not enough cash in the till, so the staff graciously let me in for free. It kind of set the tone, and I was glad to become a member soon after.

How do you involve photography in your everyday life? Can you tell us about any images or artists that have caught your attention recently?

Photography is pretty integral to my day-to-day life. Of course, I’m usually the dedicated photographer on any outing or party, but that just scratches the surface. On our walks, my teenage daughter and I collect anything out of the ordinary that could be used as a prop, and we do impromptu photoshoots where she might be wearing a fish head or gluing pufferfish spines to her face. I also use my camera as a license to be curious: A question might come up, and I will investigate and document the answer with photography. My most recent research answered whether chocolate burns or simply melts when you use a focused magnifying glass on it.

As to which artists have caught my attention recently – they don’t all have to be photographers, right? – I’m very much enjoying Serena Korda’s bizarre sculpture conglomerations right now (@serenakorda). Very recently, I discovered the phantasmagorical drawings of Anna Zemánková – in a way they feel like kin to my Blue Morphs.

For photographers, I’m really digging Suzanne White (@shepherdess1), Anneli Kunosson (@annelikunosson) and Laura de Moxom (@alibraryoflaura). Then there’s the always incredible Cho Gi Seok (@chogiseok), and also Sarah Waiswa (@lafrohemien) for cool fashion photography.

Anna Zemánková, Untitled, undated.

@Alibraryoflaura: “Anthotype of my spirit city Berlin. Made with a beetroot emulsion, the sun and patience.”

Please tell us a little about your exhibition, Blue Morphs and how it was conceived.

crying morph

Stefanie Timmermann, “Youth”, 2019

Blue Morphs is a series of cyanotypes layered with marks from paints, pens and the heat from a soldering iron. It is a melding of deliberate photography and expressive painterly gestures, and incorporates environmental and social justice messages in some images.

I started working on Blue Morphs during my Artist in Residence in Stone Quarry Hill Art Park in Cazenovia in upstate New York, in 2019. The natural surroundings really inspired me to make a lot of different cyanotypes from the available plants, and to research different ways to make my images multi-layered.

The artist paint manufacturer Golden Artist Colors is located quite close to Cazenovia, and after we artist residents toured the factory, we got a large box of seconds to take home. I started adding acrylics to the cyanotypes and was hooked!

I continued experimenting with overprinting and layering colors on cyanotypes when I came home. At first, I mainly worked intuitively, picking colors and forms subconsciously. During the pandemic, this meditative approach increasingly felt at odds with my escalating worry about social injustices and looming environmental disasters. I read a lot of thought-provoking articles during this time. Soon, I realized that my cyanotypes connected with these theories and constructs, and I developed these ideas further with the help of a paintbrush. My approach therefore shifted to meditating on the forms presented in the cyanotype before picking up the brush. Once I settle on a fitting theme, I interact with the raw cyanotype as if writing an essay.

Has there been a Griffin Museum exhibition that has particularly engaged or moved you?

Oof, there have been so many! Most recently, I’ve been enamored with the sublime and thought-provoking exhibit “Spirit: Focus on Indigenous Art, Artists and Issues”. 

nail gate

© Jerry Takigawa from Balancing Cultures, “EO 9066, 206”

 ‘Balancing cultures’, by Jerry Takigawa, was another standout. Such a beautiful and subtle exhibit on a heart-rending theme (the Japanese-American experience before and during WWII). Having Jerry talk so eloquently about his series in a Zoom presentation really deepened my understanding of his work and his subject matter.

Edie Bresler - anonymous

© Edie Bresler, Anonymous.

The same can be said for Edie Bresler’s incredible photo/embroidery hybrids (‘Anonymous’). Her talk opened the subject matter to me, and in I engaged much deeper with her show when I visited. In general, being able to zoom into presentation has made it much easier for me to participate in evening talks, and I really hope that this format continues to be offered by the Griffin for quite some time.

Of older shows, Rocio de Alba’s ‘Honor thy mother’ still is very much on my mind. The unabashed campiness of the images hides the rather sordid truth of stereotyped roleplaying that goes on in so many families. 

 Last but not least, Gary Beeber’s ‘Personalities’ was in turn funny, sad, and poignant and has stayed with me all this time.

I should also mention that the annual member shows, both the juried Summer show and the open Winter solstice shows are also always very engaging. I personally love to see the variety of styles, techniques and thematic approaches that comingle under one roof during these shows.

What is your favorite place to escape to?

The beach in winter, when it’s mostly empty; the woods in summer; and always my own mind whenever I can have a little quiet space.

What is a book, song or visual obsession you have at the moment?

‘Braiding sweetgrass’ by Robin Wall Kimmerer was an eye-opening and hope-inspiring book. I wish books like this would be required reading in high school.

Filed Under: Griffin State of Mind, Atelier Gallery Tagged With: griffin state of mind, Photographers on Photography, alternative process, cyanotype, hand made, Griffin Artist Talk

Ryan Zoghlin | Lacus Plasticus

Posted on June 17, 2020

The Griffin Museum of Photography is pleased to announce a new exhibition from artist Ryan Zoghlin.  Known for his use of alternative photographic processes, Zoghlin has created a series blending creativity, science, technology and the environment building a fanciful series call Lacus Plasticus.

plastic under black
“lacus plasticus 27”, © Ryan Zoghlin

Many artists look to our surroundings to explore their creativity, and Zoghlin has found that inspiration off the shores of Lake Michigan. Repurposing plastics to create unique underwater environments using the light of the sun with the Photogram process, these one of a kind images tell the story of a natural habitat from unnatural sources. 

Hanging in our Atelier Gallery, Lacus Plasticus is a creative adventure of exploration.

royal plastic
“lacus plasticus 31”, © Ryan Zoghlin

In anticipation of his Artist Talk happening Thursday June 18th, we asked Ryan a few questions about his work.

Your whole body of work seems to come from a place of art as object, that each piece is unique and handmade. What drew you to use alternative and historic processes to complete your vision? 
 
round plastic

“Porthole 1′, © Ryan Zoghlin

I have always been interested in the perceived power of objects. Rabbits feet for luck or an evil eye to ward off bad luck. Even more so with personal objects. Objects owned by lost relatives or the famous seem to have greater gravity. I used to collect daguerreotype cases. Most had portraits in them. How important these pieces must have been to those who knew the folks photographed. Now their value is mostly in the case. The power of these images has been greatly diminished by the loss of personal attachment over time. For me the process I choose is one that I think will best support the subject. I also love to see the hand of the artist in the work. Historical processes lend themselves to this better. I am not against contemporary ways of image capture at all. For my aesthetic, though, I find there are instances where I see it as too perfect. 
 
 
How did you decide on the photogram process for Lacus Plasticus? 
 
too much plastic

“lacus plasticus 23”, © Ryan Zoghlin

A previous series of work I did titled “Bagged” was done as cyanotype photograms also. These pieces where made to document objects organized in clear plastic storage bags. The shadows created very three dimensional reproductions of the objects in the bag. With Lacus Plasticus, I wanted to be able to translate the plastic pieces’ dimensionality onto the flat paper.  
 
I love the stories that you tell with these objects, yet there is no clear storyline in your titles? Why not?
  
plastic on black

“lacus plasticus 29”, © Ryan Zoghlin

When I first started Lacus Plasticus, I went to the Shedd Aquarium in Chicago to get a better feel for the behavior of aquatic animals. Many of the exhibits are about the same size and shape, very much like windows. Also the descriptions are very scientific, lots of Latin. I wanted the same tone. One of scientific discovery or method. The titles are more about documentation than narrative.
 
 
 
What do you want us as viewers to walk away with after seeing your work?
 
round we go plastic

“Porthole 4”, © Ryan Zoghlin

My work is always personal to me. As the saying goes, what is personal is universal. As an individual views the work, I hope they can relate on their own personal level and make their own decisions about the subject. Some may care about plastics in our fresh water lakes. Some may not care at all. My goal is to present issues that concern me. My hope is it will concern others.
 

About Lacus Plasticus –

For almost 40 years, I’ve been sailing off the beaches of Lake Michigan. As a kid and now a father with children, I’ve always loved the shore. As time has marched on, I’ve noticed the increase in plastics on the beach year after year. A few years ago, I started collecting and disposing of the plastic bits I would find. Now I collect plastic to create photogram photographs. The images depict plastic parts and pieces as underwater creatures. The pieces dramatize, for now, a fictitious state where plastics displace nature. 

more plastic

“lacus plasticus 12”, © Ryan Zoghlin

About Ryan Zoghlin –

My memory of a love for photography started early on. Using my father’s Pentax Spotmatic during a family road trip to Cape Canaveral, I clearly remember taking photographs of an early rocket sitting on its launch pad. By 14, I had my own darkroom and was very fortunate to have a very good photography department in my high school. This gave me the tools to move on to Rochester Institute of Technology, where I gained a solid technical background in photographic illustration. Wishing to explore photography as fine art and art in general, I moved on to study at The School of the Art Institute of Chicago, where I received a BFA in photography and sculpture in 1991.

so much plastic
“lacus plasticus 31”, © Ryan Zoghlin

My personal pursuits in photography have not waned through the years. Though my subject matter is varied, the intensity and thought put into each project is the same. While some work has been produced as digital prints from both color negatives and digital files, most of my work is done traditionally in a personal darkroom that I’ve maintained for the last 35 years. In the same time, I’ve used many alternative processes such as kallitypes, ambrotypes, cyanotypes, and orotones in my art. My work in orotones has been included in the Getty Conservation Institute’s Research on the Conservation of Photographs project.My work has been a part of the Museum of Contemporary Photography’s Midwest Photographers Project in Chicago and is in the collection of the Museum of Fine Art in Houston, TX. A recipient of an Illinois Art Council Fellowship and a Buhl Foundation Grant, I have also been featured in publications including Black & White Magazine, Photography Quarterly, Diffusion Magazine, Camera Arts Magazine and Photo District News, as well as many others. I am currently represented by Etherton Gallery in Tucson, AZ and Obscura Gallery in Santa Fe, NM.

Filed Under: Blog, Exhibitions, Atelier Gallery Tagged With: photogram, aquatic life, Atelier Gallery, Exhibition, color, alternative process

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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