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Blog

Atelier 32 | Michael King

Posted on September 17, 2020

Mike King‘s series Fish Market is on the blog today, celebrating the artists of Atelier 32 now up on the walls of the Griffin. We asked him a few questions about the work.

Which of these images was the impetus for this series? How did it inform how you completed the series?

mk

© Mike King

For Italians, food is the opera of life. It is important to use the best local ingredients. It’s important to think about it, talk about it, dream about it, dwell on minuscule details of the preparation and finally ,sit down with family and friends to partake in the communal meal.  In Italy the preparation and enjoyment of good food is the metronome for life.

mk - fm

© Mike King

 

In these photographs (taken in 2017) of the Catania Fish Market (La Pescheria) in Sicily I portray the opening beat. For me the first photo depicts the opening operatic scene where all the players are preparing to break out in song.  From there the photos depict the buyers partaking in an animated ritual of talking, joking, smelling and hand movements all aimed at securing the finest and freshest item at the lowest price.

How did the Atelier help to hone my vision as a photographer?

mk - fish market

© Mike King

The Atelier has created opportunities to explore areas outside my normal photographic comfort zone.  The assignments covered such diverse subjects such as abstraction, the use of words, still life, telling a story etc. These activities helped me to develop and refine new skills and expand my photographic vision.

In the past my photography activity began with stepping on an airplane taking me to some exotic destination.  The Atelier has better prepared me for this post Covid-19 world in which I can now appreciate the photographic opportunities closer to home.

About Mike King – 

mk fish market

© Mike King

Michael King is a retired physicist who worked in diverse fields of optical imaging. He has achievements and inventions in 3-dimensional holographic imaging, electron device photolithography and refractive eye surgery (PRK). A lifelong interest in photographic expression has led him to explore astrophotography along with underwater, travel and nature photography. In the early days of digital photography, he taught children attending summer camp to use digital cameras to develop an appreciation for nature.

He has exhibited at the Griffin Museum, two juried shows at Concord Art, and has studied at the Griffin Museum, NESOP and the deCordova Museum all located in Massachusetts.   One of King’s bird photos was included in the book “Who’s Who in the Natural World” by Kay Fairweather. He also had an early hologram accepted into the Museum of Holography in Manhattan. In recent years King has used photography to explore the human condition and man’s place in the natural world.

 

You can see more of Mike King‘s work on his website. Follow him on Instagram @mikeking1940

Filed Under: Blog, Atelier Tagged With: Atelier 32, Portfolio Development, Griffin Museum Education, Griffin Exhibitions

Atelier 32 | Conrad Gees

Posted on September 16, 2020

We continue our focus on the talented artists of Atelier 32. Through the lens of Conrad Gees, we take a trip to Cuba and Los Habaneros.

Los Habaneros  (Havanans)

cg - cuba 1

© Conrad Gees

I have been fortunate that for a brief period of time, travel restrictions to Cuba from the US were eased and ordinary citizens such as myself could visit the island independently without a specified itinerary.  The impetus for this series was to finally begin pulling together the images taken during several trips to Havana beginning in 2015. 

 

cg - cuba

© Conrad Gees

Born at the height of the Cold War, I was eight when the Cuban Missile Crisis occurred.  Fidel Castro was the enemy and Cuba became the isolated isle.  The US embargo took effect in the 60’s and the collapse of the Soviet Union Left the Cuban economy hamstrung, the effects of which are evident today.  My photographs reflect that, but that is not their intended subject.  What fascinated me most was how the people living in three sections of Havana, Habana Vieja, Centro Habana and the Vedado, have developed strong, vibrant neighborhoods working and living together as a community. Their homes, the means by which they get food, their jobs, and even the newly sanctioned small private enterprise ventures, left me, an American with many privileges in life, awed and humbled by the resilience and ingenuity of the “Habaneros.”   

What do you hope we as viewers take away from viewing your work?

cg - cuba

© Conrad Gees

The four images chosen here could be subjects of Norman Rockwell paintings (grabbing a snack, getting a haircut, enjoying cake with a friend, coming home to a brother) but the backdrop is Cuba.   These are the universal human experiences we often forget about when visiting countries vastly different from ours.  In my images I want to share the commonalities we share.  

Tell us what is next for you creatively.  

There are ten images in this show, but ultimately my goal is to make a book.  

 

 

How the Atelier has helped you hone your vision as an artist?

cg - cuba

© Conrad Gees

My second Atelier proved to be as helpful as the first one I participated in three years ago.  The project I am undertaking had me frustrated by its sheer size and scope, and I was struggling for a focus.  Meg Birnbaum is an excellent facilitator, and even on line she brought together a group of eight individuals, each at different points in their development, and pushed us to think deeply about what each of us is trying to convey with our photographs.  At the end of the Atelier, I was left with a very strong set of ten images which helped narrow my focus, yet at the same time have also given me a frame work to expand on for this project.

About Los Habaneros – 

There is truth in the statement, Havana is a city frozen in time sixty plus years ago. This is clearly evident in the American cars from the 1950’s still traveling the streets, and in many of the storefronts with their limited consumer goods, but it is also a characterization, which can lead one to a false sense of sentimentality or condescension.

The 1961 US embargo did, in one sense, freeze Havana and cut it off from consumer goods progress, and severely limited its economic development, but the Havana of today is not the Havana of 1961.  Havana today is the outgrowth of the 1959 Revolution, the US embargo and the Cold War which forced the inhabitants of this city, just 90 miles off the US coast to develop in ways they can speak of with great pride and in ways which leave them longing for more.

In 2015 I traveled through Mexico to Havana for the first time.  Although restrictions on travel from the US to Cuba had just been eased, I was one of very few Americans on the streets of Havana not tied to a tour.  The excitement and openness expressed to me by the Habaneros was infectious and led to my returning three additional times.

While concentrating on the sections of Havana known as “Habana Vieja,” and “Centro Habana”, now United Nations World Heritage Sites being renovated and brought back to life, I decided to document not only the buildings but the people living in these currently run-down sections of the city.  Their homes, the means by which they get food, their jobs, and even the newly sanctioned small private enterprise ventures, left me, an American with many privileges in life, awed and humbled by the resilience and ingenuity of the Habaneros.

The images in this body of work grew out of, and helped me to develop, a deeper understanding of Havana and its people. Havana is truly a city of resilience.

See more of Conrad Gees‘ work on his website. 

Filed Under: Blog, Atelier Tagged With: Atelier 32, Portfolio Development, Griffin Main Gallery, Cuba, Exhibition, Atelier

Atelier 32 | Sarah Forbes

Posted on September 15, 2020

Today’s featured artist from the Griffin Atelier 32 is Sarah Forbes. These lovely quiet images from her series, Illuminating the Invisible is what we are looking at today. We asked her a few questions about her experience.

Which of these images was the impetus for this series? How did it inform how you completed the series?

sf - beech leaf

© Sarah Forbes – Dried American Beech Leaf

Dried American Beech Leaf, 2020 was the impetus for this series.  It was taken during a walk at the beginning of the pandemic.   While I was excited to be out of the confinement of my house, the woods still felt dormant and dreary until my eye caught the golden glimmer of the American Beach tree leaves dangling from their branches.  Intrigued, I moved closer and noticed the delicate texture of their skin and the fractal patterns that their veins created.  Inspired by this experience, I continued to look closer at the natural world and find things that were often invisible to my naked eye.  It allowed me to observe nature in its constant state of change and gave me some perspective on the changes going on in my own life.

How the Atelier has helped you hone your vision as an artist? 

sf - maple

© Sarah Forbes – Japanese Maple Keys

Atelier 32 was a wonderful creative community to connect with during a very strange time.  I looked forward to the weekly Zoom call.  Presenting my work each class and having to discuss it helped me to recognize, develop and articulate my own vision and what I was trying to convey through my images.  My classmates and Meg, our instructor, were an important part of that process as their feedback and reactions would sometimes introduce something that I may not have seen on my own.

sf - beech leaf

© Sarah Forbes – Newly Opne Beech Leaf

Tell us what is next for you creatively. 

I plan to continue working on this series following the seasonal changes and capturing more of the nature world as it transitions.  I am also enrolled in the Griffin’s Monthly Mentoring and Critique Program with Vaughn Stills, which should help me to continue to develop my artistic vision and work.

 

About Sarah Forbes – 

Sarah Forbes is an emerging landscape photographer based in Boston, Massachusetts whose work explores the natural world and the perspective it can reveal.

Her artistic vision has been influenced by a variety of mediums and genres. Earning her BA at Connecticut College, Sarah’s childhood interest in photography became a passion as she immersed herself in the dark room and experimented with landscape, still life and portraits.  A career in marketing communications introduced her to graphic design and computer presentations, which she continued to explore through her custom stationery and invitation business and multimedia shows to celebrate milestones.

sf - curl

© Sarah Forbes

Photography resurged with the arrival of her two children as she documented their adventures.  As they grew to adolescents and no longer wanted to be her muse, she turned her lens to their athletic contests and captured the finesse and emotions of the players. With her passion rekindled, Sarah began taking classes at the New England School of Photography and had her first group exhibition at the Garner Center for Photographic Exhibitions in January 2020. This spring she enrolled in the Griffin Museum’s Photography Atelier 32, which culminated with an exhibition that can be seen at the Museum through September 29th or viewed online.

To see more of Sarah Forbes work, log onto her website. She is on Instagram @sforbesphotos

Filed Under: Blog, Atelier Tagged With: natural world, Atelier, Atelier 32, Portfolio Development, Griffin Museum Education, Griffin Exhibitions, Trees, Green, Environment

Atelier 32 | Adrien Bisson

Posted on September 14, 2020

Today we are pleased to present Atelier 32 member Adrien Bisson and his project – Alone Together, looking at the 90 days of sheltering in place during COVID.

Atelier 32 is on the walls of the Griffin until September 27th. The museum is open by appointment. We look forward to seeing you in a safe and healthy way to experience the talented Griffin artists community. 

Which of these images was the impetus for this series? How did it inform how you completed the series?

ab - on the sill

© Adrien Bisson – On the Sill

I had been doing some still life images in my condo in mid-March of this year, just as most of us had become aware of the scale of the pandemic. It quickly became clear that “normal” life was going to be changed for some time. Over the weeks of the Atelier I began to realized that my project had to be a story about my newly-limited world in the condo. The photo called “On the sill” was one of the first that became part of the project and still reminds me of that early period of self-isolation, feeling unable to do much, while at the same time mourning the separation that my wife and I felt from my son and his family. The sill on which the herb plantings were placed was our window to the outside world, and the pots contained images of our granddaughter whom we could only see in photos and FaceTime.

What do you hope we as viewers take away from viewing your work?

ab - lo

© Adrien Bisson – Looking Out

Everyone has their own stories about the pandemic, and mine is just one of them. Part of my story is simply about our lives together in those first months, but another part is about my desire to make something come out of that isolation and to work with the limitations that were imposed on me.

ab - aop

© Adrien Bisson – Artifacts of the Past

How the Atelier has helped you hone your vision as an artist?

Working those weeks with Meg and the rest of the group really helped me think through and refine a vision for a project. It was incredibly helpful to get criticism and feedback on what I would produce each week, as well as to be able to see the work that the others were creating and having the opportunity to formulate and express my thoughts about it.

Tell us what is next for you creatively.

ab - daydream

© Adrien Bisson – Daydream

I have been working for a year or so on a project about the small town in which I grew up. Because my introduction to photography came at that time and place, I am working with a toy camera in black and white for this project. I am also working on a project about the Merrimack River, which starts in the White Mountains, runs along the building in which I live, and ends up emptying into the Atlantic, in Newburyport, and how it affects the daily lives of those of us while live by it.

To see more of Adrien’s work – find it online on his website, and social media.
Web site:  adrienbisson.com

Instagram:  @adrien_bisson

Facebook:  www.facebook.com/adrienbisson

Facebook Page: www.facebook.com/AdrienBissonPhotography

Filed Under: Blog, Atelier Tagged With: griffin museum, corona, Atelier, Atelier 32, Portfolio Development, Griffin Main Gallery, Griffin Museum Education

Atelier 32 | Miren Etcheverry – Oh My Goddess

Posted on September 10, 2020

We are pleased to highlight the talented artists of Atelier 32.  Today we focus on the creativity of Miren Etcheverry. 

me - grandmother

Etcheverry’s Grandmother

I started with a formal photographic portrait of my grandmother, which has hung, since it was taken in the 1920’s, at her house, now our family home, in Bayonne, France (see next).I have always liked this portrait of my grandmother (whom, incidentally, I adored), but felt that it never captured her colorful and vivacious personality.  So, I decided to “add some color” to it. One of my attempts at remaking her portrait, hence “Suzanne #2”.  I made quite a few versions of this portrait.  Some of them, I was told were reminiscent of one of my favorite artists Gustav Klimt, which, of course, inspired me to explore this work further.

me - suzanne 2

© Miren Etcheverry – Suzanne #2

So I continued on the Klimt theme, loosely, and created “Paulette”.  She is my mother, now 93.  This image is based on a snapshot I took of her about 10 years ago.

“Oh My Goddess” is a celebration of the women in my family. It is about honoring these women, most of whom are living full and active lives in southern France. (I wonder… is the secret to longevity in southern France the Madiran wine or the foie gras, or both…?)

Among these beautiful women are my nonagenarian mother, her peers, and other members of my extended family. A few of them have now passed, but their memories live on.

me - yvette

© Miren Etcheverry – Yvette

“Yvette”, which is a portrait of my 80-year old cousin, this one based on a photo I took of her recently.

me suzanne

© Miren Etcheverry – Suzanne

“Suzanne #1” is one of my favorites.  It is also of my grandmother, based on a snapshot of her when she was in her 60’s, where she was sitting at a dining room table.  What I love about this one is that it totally captures her personality, the twinkle in her eye, and her mischievous spirit.  This time, I decided to “channel” Frieda Kahlo, another one of my favorite artists. 

During the recent period of the pandemic and its associated restrictions, the distance between me and my family of origin has never seemed so great. Knowing that I am no longer just a simple airplane flight away from visiting them saddens me.

These playful depictions of the women reflect happy moments spent with them, while I am here and they are far away. During my period of confinement, I revisited my family photographs and transformed these ordinary women, giving them a breath of new life, and capturing their lively spirits and dynamism. I mean to convey what is most beautiful about them, perhaps enhancing that beauty, even transforming them into goddesses.

me - paulette

© Miren Etcheverry – Paulette.

These portraits are a pleasure for me to work on.  Working on them allows to “spend time” with my family members, at lease figuratively.  Some, like my beloved grandmother, have been gone for some time.  Others, like my mother and Yvette, are far away.  While France did not feel that far away prior to the pandemic, the complications of traveling during the pandemic has imposed a great distance between my family in France and me.  Creating these portraits had brought them closer to me.

Meg and my Atelier group were a huge inspiration for my pursuing this project.  For one, they responded very positively to the portraits, and to my verbal descriptions of these women.  I had also created portraits of anonymous people, but Meg and the group members made it clear to me that it was my connection with these women that made it work.  So I continued to focus on women in my family.  One of my favorite assignments during the Atelier workshop is the conversation with an artist.  I conversed with Gustav Klimt for that assignment, which led me to the “Paulette” and “Yvette” portraits. 

Even the “goddess” concept came from a member of the group.  

me

© Miren Etcheverry – Andrée

Indeed, these women are my goddesses.  I come from a long line of strong women, who are my role models and source of my own strength and feminist spirit.

There are a lot of women in my family and extended family of friends that provide with much more material to work with, and I look forward to continuing with this series.  I am honored that since have shared these portraits, many people have responded by asking me to do portraits of their mothers and other women in their lives.

About Miren Etcheverry – 

Miren Etcheverry is an award-winning photographer whose work has been exhibited internationally.  

Based in Cambridge and Provincetown, MA, she spent her early childhood in Paris and in the Basque Country. Her passion for photography began early, as she traveled extensively throughout her youth and continued to travel throughout her career in international finance.

me - me

© Miren Etcheverry – Self Portrait

Her photographs have been selected for juried exhibitions at Danforth Art (Framingham, MA), in galleries, including Menier Gallery (London, UK), Darkroom Gallery (Vermont), Kiernan Gallery (Virginia), and at the Griffin Museum of Photography, Cape Cod Art Center, Cambridge Art Association and Bedford Public Library. 

Miren’s photographs received various Honorable Mentions in the 2014, 2015 and 2016 International Photography Awards (IPA) , ArtAscent’s “Blue” competitions. Her work has appeared in publications and blogs, including the Cape Cod Times, Art Ascent and About Basque Country.

Miren studied photography at New England School of Photography, Maine Media Workshops and Griffin Museum of Photography, and with Alison Shaw and National Geographic photographer Michael Melford.  She had her first formal training in photography while a student at Stanford University, where she worked in video production at the pioneering Stanford Instructional Television Network.  She has a BA from Stanford University and an MBA from M.I.T.

See more of Miren Etcheverry‘s work on her website. Follow her on Instagram @etchephoto. She’s on Facebook at Miren Etcheverry Photography.

Filed Under: Blog, Atelier Tagged With: Atelier, Atelier 32, Griffin Gallery, Portfolio Development

Griffin State of Mind | Martha Stone

Posted on August 7, 2020

Martha head shot

Martha Stone

Martha Stone is our weekends operations manager here at the Griffin Museum. Her multifaceted artistic talents often go unseen when most people see her working her day job. But in our Griffin State of Mind interview we peel back the front desk you often see in front of her and Martha showed us what creativity and thoughtfulness lies behind her hobbies and personal artwork.

Martha’s work is featured in a permanent collection at Delloitte and Touche in Boston and in private collections throughout the United States and Europe.

 

Describe how you first connected with the Griffin. How long have you been part of the Griffin team and please describe your role at the Griffin.

I worked for Paula Tognarelli in the 1990’s when we were both employed by a commercial printer. After spending the early 2000’s concentrating on my artwork as a painter and a good portion of my time living in Italy, I reconnected with Paula.

At the time I was ready to return to working outside of my studio and she suggested I come to the Griffin Museum as an intern. Little did I know that I would become the Weekend Manager and Director of Visitor Services for over ten years. It has been a wonderful experience to have great colleagues, see an amazing variety of exhibitions, meet photographers and develop friendships with members.


What is one of your favorite exhibitions shown by the Griffin.

I have seen many high-quality exhibitions at the Griffin, so it is difficult to choose only one. As a painter of landscape, I was very drawn to the “Voice of the Woods” by Koichiro Kurita. The exhibition was derived from a larger project commemorating the 200 year anniversary of the birth of Henry David Thoreau. The photographs were taken at Walden Pond using the method of Henry Fox Talbot, a contemporary of Thoreau. The work is quiet, ethereal and mesmerizing.

How do you involve photography in your everyday? Can you describe one photograph that recently caught your eye?

Although I enjoy looking at photography and can be moved and inspired by it, I am unable to make a decent photograph. I take snapshots of scenes and objects as reminders for use in my paintings.

On a recent morning I heard an interview with one of our members, Edward Boches, who curated the website, Pandemic Boston, as a visual documentation of the Covid-19 outbreak. I immediately viewed the website and was struck by the unique perspectives of the six photographers, Edward Boches, Lou Jones, Margaret Lampert, Jeff Larason, Coco McCabe and Juan Murray; each captured palpable images of pandemic life ranging from quiet isolation to heroism.


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

“Michelina’s Letter” edited by Victor Pisano is a collection of the memories of my sculptor friend’s mother, who was born in 1901 and immigrated to the United States from Italy in 1919. She was a self-taught writer, feminist, wife, mother and a designer of fine women’s clothing.

tranquility

© Martha Stone
Title: Tranquility
Medium: Oil on Linen
Size: 21.5 x 23.5 inches

I was impressed by her strength and determination, while amazed at how closely her story parallels some of today’s difficulties traversing the discrimination of immigrants, equal rights for all and the 1918 Spanish Influenza.

What is your favorite place to escape to in nature…mountains? beach? woods? and why?

I cannot last too long without visiting the sea as it provides me with an expansive sense of tranquility. Having lived a number of years in the hills of Chianti, Italy, I immediately feel at peace when I return.

What has been the most eye opening part of our time of physical distancing? 

The absence of touch has been difficult. No hugs!

If you could be in a room with anyone to have a one on one conversation about anything, who would that person be and what would you talk about?

My late husband was an artist and a political activist. I would love to know what he would have to say about the current state of our country and the world. It would be a joy to walk together through a museum and continue the dialogue we shared while looking at art.

Filed Under: Blog, Griffin State of Mind, About the Griffin, Uncategorized

Griffin State of Mind | Lou Jones

Posted on July 24, 2020

photographer lou jones

Portrait of Lou Jones

Photographer and long time board member Lou Jones has a bright energy that emulates well from his personal work and more importantly was evident in his responses to our Griffin State of Mind interview.
 
Recently we asked Jones about how his journey started with the Griffin and we wanted to get to know a bit more about what his latest inspirations are. Here is what we learned.

 

Describe how you first connected with the Griffin. How long have you been part of the Griffin team and describe your role.

tuta bridge by lou jones

tuta bridge by Lou Jones

I think I visited the Griffin Museum once when Arthur Griffin was still alive. I wanted to meet him having seen his byline on so many photographs during my early career. Subsequently I was recruited by the previous executive director to join the board of directors.
 

How do you involve photography in your everyday? Can you describe one photograph that recently caught your eye?

I make my living taking pictures. I have maintained a studio in Boston for many years. A very long-time colleague sent me a photograph of myself taking pictures in the 1980s & it rattled me.

What is your favorite place to escape to in nature…mountains? beach? woods? and why?

pan africa logo

Pan Africa Project © Lou Jones

I have been traveling to Africa continuously for the last several years & found it draws me back because of its almost infinite variety in things that are completely alien to me & my world here. The continent provides almost continuous new opportunities & completely new narratives that cannot be imagined from our western imaginations. It is a cornucopia. 
 
See Lou Jones’ body of work from Africa on his website www.panAFRICAproject.org. 
 

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

Since the pandemic started I have been working on photographing how people have been dealing with the new paradigm, how it affects their lives positively or negatively, how they have adapted to the new complexities, imaginative ways to continue & what our environment “looks” like with all the restrictions.
 
mirror covid

Mirror COVID by Lou Jones

lifeguards

Lifeguards COVID by Lou Jones

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

What has been the most eye opening part of our time of physical distancing?   

The fact that the whole world can come to a voluntary standstill. I am mystified by what segments can/cannot operate inside the pandemic. 
 

If you could be in a room with anyone to have a one on one conversation about anything, who would that person be and what would you talk about?

 
jb headshot

James Baldwin

Maybe James Baldwin. He was so ahead of his time in being creative, gay & an African American. He was the darling of the “intelligentia” until he became strident about race relations. His analysis is becoming more & more pertinent & relevant today & he was ignored towards the end of his life.

I would like to talk about being an artist being so ahead of the debate & how do you maintain your resolve under such pressure. I chased him down the street in Paris once but never caught up with him.

Filed Under: Blog, Griffin State of Mind, About the Griffin Tagged With: board of directors, photographer, griffin state of mind, documentary photography

Griffin State of Mind | Barbara Hitchcock

Posted on July 19, 2020

barbara hitchcock in gallery

Snippet from Glasstire TV Curator Interview for “The Polaroid Project at the Amon Carter Museum of Art”

The alternative process powerhouse herself, Barbara Hitchcock gave us some of her time this past week so we could interview her via email.

She shared her latest insights with us and below are some of the ways she hops into her Griffin State of Mind.

Her strong voice in the art community has been a part of the Griffin journey for many years as she has even curated multiple shows for us.

We have always appreciated her true and authentic appreciation for the history of photography and the integration of all photographic processes to create imaginative masterpieces.


How long have you been part of the Griffin team and describe your role at the Griffin?

In 2006, Blake Fitch, the Executive Director then, and her team, established the Focus Awards and I was one of the awardees. I joined the Board of Directors shortly thereafter and continued on the Board the maximum number of terms and then became a Corporater.

I still serve at the discretion of the Board. Periodically, I have curated exhibitions displayed at the Griffin, among them William Wegman: It’s a Dog’s Life; Barbara Crane: Challenging Vision; Patrick Nagatani: Themes and Variations and most recently, Shadows and Traces: The Photographs of John Reuter.

Describe how you first connected with the Griffin.

The then director of the Griffin Center contacted me, asking me to do an exhibition at the Griffin that illustrated creative art photography, a departure from their usual practice. At that time, the center’s mission concentrated on photo illustration and journalism, highlighting the professional work of Arthur Griffin who established the Center that then evolved into the Griffin Museum.

I believe it was the 1990s. I hung an exhibition titled  “New Dimensions in Photography” that featured artists making photographs using antique or alternative processes – cyanotypes on fabric, Polaroid image transfers on watercolor paper, platinum prints and the like.

How do you involve photography in your everyday?

I’ve started to take photographs again, much more than I used to. But I have been lucky as I have continued to curate exhibitions – the most recent titled The Polaroid Project: At the Intersection of Art and Technology currently at the MIT Museum – and I occasionally write about artists and their artwork for catalogs and books.

"From Polaroid To Impossible" By Barbara Hitchcock

“From Polaroid To Impossible” By Barbara Hitchcock

Can you describe one photograph that recently caught your eye?

West Coast artists Victor Raphael and Terry Braunstein are collaborating on a series of images that deal with climate change. One dramatic, eye-grabbing image of a partia house on fire floats above palm trees into a hellishly scarlet sky scarred by black and red- reflecting clouds. A man, sitting on the edge of the house’s roof, weeps. The image is searing! Unfortunately, we know this image is not a warning, not fantasy. It is already a reality.

What has been the most eye opening part of our time of physical distancing? 

How difficult physical distancing is. You want to embrace friends and family; people want that basic warmth of physical connection. And some people just don’t seem to know how far 6-feet away really is…or their attention is on other things as they wander into your path.

What is your favorite place to escape to in nature…mountains? beach? woods? and why?

© John Reuter, “Rendering”

I’ve always loved walking in the woods and going to the beach. I grew up in houses with yards, but my brothers and I always used to play in the lots that had underbrush and rocks where garden snakes unsuccessfully hid from us. Walking in wooded parks with the sound and sighting of birds, the smell of plants, trees and fallen pine needles, the occasional deer sighting, the quietude – it is like a loving embrace. And walking barefoot along the ocean with its crash of waves on the beach is similarly magical.

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

Lin-Manuel Miranda’s Broadway production Hamilton. The music, the choreography, the history, the emotion, the humanity. I still get goosebumps watching it!

If you could be in a room with anyone to have a one on one conversation about anything, who would that person be and what would you talk about?

Georgia O’Keeffe would be an irresistible choice. Her paintings make me weep; I don’t know why. She was such a talented, strong, independent woman who was married to Alfred Stieglitz, an incredibly strong, monumental, stellar figure in the world of art. How did they negotiate the life they shared together and apart that allowed them both to grow and succeed? That, I assume, would be a fascinating conversation.

What is one of your favorite exhibitions shown by the Griffin?

John Reuter

© John Reuter, “The Witnesses”

I have too many favorite exhibits to highlight only one. It would be unfair to the ones I don’t mention! In general, I am attracted to work that is experimental in nature, imaginative and pushes the envelope visually and intellectually. What is the artist communicating to the viewer through his/her photograph? Is there a subtle message or is the image straight forward and uncomplicated? Stop. Look. Ponder. What is being revealed?

Filed Under: Uncategorized, Blog, Griffin State of Mind Tagged With: Member, griffin state of mind, griffin online, curator

Saba Sitton | Griffin Online Interview

Posted on July 14, 2020

We contacted Saba Sitton to ask her more questions about her journey in life and her photography. Below you will find her bio and her artist statement. You can see her work Journeys in Between and Distances Near Away in our Critic’s Pick Gallery.

tree and fabric

© Saba Sitton, “Acacias Dream,” from “Distances Near Away”

Saba, thank you so much for taking the time to answer some of our questions for our audience. I enjoyed meeting you in Houston at Fotofest this past March. Can you talk a bit about “the present day Persian diaspora” for you and your family that you mention in your statement?

I think the experience of being part of a diaspora is different for each person, but I believe there are some common threads. For example, I feel that many from my parents’ generation have always hoped that one day they could return home. For me, home is more nuanced; the concept of home is somewhere between the two cultures, and the intricacies of that, is at the core of my creative work.

 

 

You talk about transitory instances where your present recalls the past. Can you speak about what that means to you?

For an immigrant or an exile, there is always some degree of longing for one’s place of origin. This sense of longing does not undermine or overwhelm one’s being. It is just a part of one’s existence. Sometimes a familiar scent, a familiar shape, or a gentle breeze on a summer’s afternoon, can recall a similar experience from the past. These transitory instances of time, while not easy to define, are moments when one’s awareness is threaded between the present and a similar moment remembered from the past. It is these transitory moments that inspire and inform much of my work.

I love the words you use to describe your work and journey. One phrase especially is the “poetics of migration” and “stories of exile”. Can you talk about this in reference to your work?

Over the years, I have come to know many who live in exile, and others who have migrated to different countries around the world. I have heard stories of hope, of loss, of struggle, of longing, and of reconciliation. We are all on a journey. Some journeys are more layered, others have great contrast. I often think of my work as visual poems, and these are the poetics that find their way into my work.

fabric and flowers

© Saba Sitton, “Finding Solace,” from “Distances Near Away”

What does the flower mean to you in your photographs? It seems to me that the flower is a constant. Why flowers? Do you personally identify with the flower?

The flower has a special reverence in Persian culture. Throughout history, Persians have always prided themselves in their magnificent flower gardens. In Persian poetry, a flower symbolizes life’s beauty and fragility. A bouquet of flowers is considered a precious gift symbolizing life and renewal. In my work, a flower becomes a visual metaphor for a sense of connection with a remembered past and culture.

How do you use poetry with your work?

The poems that I use in my work are written by contemporary Persian poets. Persian culture has a strong history of poetry and celebrated poets. The culture has embraced poetry as a powerful carrier of ideas. The poetry in my work is an accompanying voice. Beyond the voice, the poems are also an integral element woven into the visual presence of the piece.

Is your use of color in your photographs deliberate. Reds are predominant in your work. I see reds holding such richness and strength. Can you talk about what the colors you use mean to you?

turquoise flowers

© Saba Sitton, “A Path in Turquoise”, from “Journeys In Between”

Color has always been an important part of my work. I often work with colors intuitively. But there are times when I use colors deliberately. For example, in my work, I often reference colors that are revered by the Persian culture like certain shades of blue, turquoise, and yellow. Intuitively, I am drawn to certain colors, like the color red. These colors, in all their variations, embody certain expressive qualities that I am looking for in my work.

 

Can you tell us about Ten by Ten: Ten Reviewers Select Ten Portfolios from the Meeting Place 2018, FotoFest 2020 Biennial as so many of us missed it due to the pandemic.

The Ten by Ten exhibition showcased the work of ten artists whose work was selected by ten international reviewers from the FotoFest 2018 Meeting Place. The selected work was very diverse and displayed a richness of ideas and approaches. My series, Journeys in-Between, was one of the selected portfolios. The exhibition was well received by the community and it was an honor to have been a part of it. Unfortunately, due to the pandemic, the exhibition closed early. I believe FotoFest is planning to reopen the exhibition at a later date when it will be safe to open it to the public.

What work are you thinking about doing now?

I am always photographing life around me. I often explore new locations in search of images that embody a quality of expression that I am after. I work with these photographs, along with poems, and other materials to create my work. Today, the pandemic has changed so much of our everyday experiences. I am exploring new ways to produce my work with an awareness of today’s challenges.

Is there something I haven’t asked you that you would like to talk about for our audience? 

I hope this interview will help reveal additional insights into my work. I want to thank you for this opportunity to discuss my work with you and with your audience.


Artist Statement

tree and fabric

© Saba Sitton, “Acacias Dream,” from “Distances Near Away”

My work explores the transitory instances of time when one’s awareness is threaded between the present and a similar moment remembered from the past. At times, these threaded moments have hard juxtapositions due to differences from the change of context, the passage of time, or a change of place. Other times, they blend and fuse a sense of continuity that are more fluid and often share a moment of contemplation. Oftentimes my work is a reflection on the poetics of migration and the stories of exile. As an Iranian-American artist, my work is informed by idealized landscapes and intricate designs of early Persian art. Persian miniature paintings are adorned with intricate depictions of flowers, plants, and tightly woven patterns of imaginary gardens. In Persian poetry, a flower often symbolizes a fleeting moment, a poetic remembrance

flowers 6

© Saba Sitton, “August Light”, from “Journeys In Between”

of life’s transience and fragility. In my work, a flower becomes a visual metaphor for a sense of connection with a remembered past. I often include poems in my work. These poems become an accompanying voice within the work. Sometimes the poems echo a sense of hope or longing, other times they evoke a sense of disorientation or doubt, as might be felt by an immigrant or an exile, on a life’s journey, of being in-between.

Bio

yellow and red fabric and flowers

© Saba Sitton, Distances of Resolve,” from “Distances Near Away”

Saba Sitton is part of the present day Persian diaspora. Her work explores transitory instances of time, either shared or solitary, visceral or recalled. Originally from Tehran, and having lived in Asia, Europe and the United States, Saba has firsthand experience living between cultures, languages, and traditions. Her work is often influenced by Persian art and literature as experienced and shared in a modern multicultural society. Saba studied art and design at the California Institute of the Arts and the University of Oregon where she received her MFA. She

machines and flower

© Saba Sitton, “Of Stillness Abound,” from “Distances Near Away”

has worked on art and design commissions, and has exhibited her work in solo and group exhibitions. Most recently, Saba’s work was on exhibit at the Ten by Ten: Ten Reviewers Select Ten Portfolios from the Meeting Place 2018, FotoFest 2020 Biennial, and will be a part of the upcoming exhibition The Blue Planet, at H2 – Center for Contemporary Art, Glass palace, Kunstsammlungen und Museen, Augsburg, Germany. Saba lives in the United States and spends her time between California and Texas.

Filed Under: Uncategorized, Blog, Online Exhibitions Tagged With: color of red, poetic migration, stories of exile, Saba Sitton, poetics of migration, Persian diaspora, Meeting Place 2018, FotoFest 2020, Ten by Ten, griffin state of mind, photographer interview

Griffin State of Mind | Marky Kauffmann

Posted on July 10, 2020

Since her first involvement with the Griffin Museum about twenty years ago, Marky Kauffmann has shown a dedication and love for the art of photography. For instance, her work has shown at the Griffin in numerous Annual Juried Exhibitions as well in a solo show of her work “Landscapes and a Prayer.”

Also, Kauffmann has taught professional workshops and lectures for us in an effort the raise up the next generation of photographers. Over the years, her creative spirit has fluidity blended with our mission to broaden the appreciation and understanding of the impact of photographic art to the world.

As a part of our Griffin State of Mind series we interviewed this creatively contagious personality to better illustrate to you the spirit of the Griffin Museum of Photography.


Describe how you first connected with the Griffin. How long have you been part of the Griffin team and describe your role at the Griffin.

Marky Kauffmann portrait

In 1996, I had an image in the Griffin Museum’s The Juried Show. That, I believe, was my first association with the museum. But when Paula Tognarelli joined the Griffin team as an intern in the early 2000’s, my interest in the museum grew.

Paula had been my student at the New England School of Photography and when she became executive director in 2006, I was thrilled!

In 2016, after I retired from teaching photography at the secondary school level, Paula asked me to join the museum’s Board of Directors as a Corporator. I have been on the Membership Committee since joining the board. In that capacity, I have used my connections at Boston area high schools and independent schools to create the Griffin Museum Secondary School Photography Teachers’ Alliance.

Every spring the Griffin hosts a luncheon for the Alliance, bringing together public and private school teachers to share ideas and forge bonds. And every winter, we sponsor an exhibit of their students’ work at Regis College’s Carney Gallery. In these ways, I have expanded membership to the museum.

 

How do you involve photography in your everyday? Can you describe one photograph that recently caught your eye?

Rachel Wisniewski Memento

Photo by Rachel Wisniewski from her series “Memento”

I remain primarily an analog photographer and have a darkroom in my studio in Somerville. If I am not shooting film, I am printing in my darkroom, so making photographs is part of my daily life.

I recently went to see the exhibit, THE FENCE, brought to Winchester thanks to the vision and foresight of Paula Tognarelli. Many of the images on display caught my eye but “12 years old. My house. A family friend” and “13 years old. High school parking lot. My English teacher” by Rachel Wisniewski from her Memento portfolio held particular resonance.

 

 

 

 

What is one of your favorite exhibitions shown by the Griffin (see online archive here ).

There have been so many extraordinary exhibits put on by the Griffin that it is difficult to choose just one. But Nancy Grace Horton’s exhibit, Ms. Behavior, at the Griffin’s satellite gallery at Digital Silver Imaging in 2014, is a standout.

When I saw the show, I simply laughed out loud. Horton’s images use wit and satire to skewer prescribed gender roles. As a life-long feminist, Horton’s sly, piercing humor captivated me.

What is your favorite place to escape to in nature…mountains? beach? woods? and why?

In 1990, my husband and I bought 86 acres of land on Cape Breton Island off the coast of Nova Scotia, Canada. We built a small cabin there, surrounded by ocean, mountains, and pine forests.

It is the place where I am most at home and most at peace. We have traveled there every summer for thirty years, and since retiring, we have also gone in the fall. But because of the surging cases of COVID-19 in the US, the Canadian border is closed until further notice. I find it utterly heartbreaking that I can’t go there this summer.

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

I recently read the novel, On Earth We’re Briefly Gorgeous, by Ocean Vuong. The visual-ness of Vuong’s writing startled me. You get a glimpse of it just by reading the title of the book! And Sara Bareilles’ songs, especially her version of Elton John’s Goodbye Yellow Brick Road, got me through the spring.

What has been the most eye opening part of our time of physical distancing? 

I found and find the act of social distancing to be excruciating. Not setting eyes on my son for several months was hell, quite frankly. So, what is “eye opening” metaphorically, is that this could happen! We can be put in the position of not being able to be with the ones we love.

And literally “eye opening?” It was one of the most beautiful springtimes I have ever witnessed in New England. With less to do, there was more to notice. And that’s what photographers do – we notice, as in, make note of, and call attention to, the world.

If you could be in a room with anyone to have a one on one conversation about anything, who would that person be and what would you talk about?

I would like to be in a room with Francesca Woodman, the young photographer who killed herself at the age of 22. When I read about her life and work, I find parallels within my own life that I would love to explore with her. And I would like to tell her that I am inspired by her creativity everyday.

I find parallels within my own life…”         

Pivotal to Woodman’s career was her year spent in Rome, Italy, as part of the RISD’s Junior Year Abroad Honors Program. She was nineteen. I, too, spent my nineteenth year studying abroad – in Paris, France.

There, I studied with French photographer Claude LeMont and artist Tony Thompson. For me, the experience was also life altering, cementing my love for photography. I have always found Woodman’s self-portraiture to be extraordinarily inventive. She experimented wildly with clothing, props, and environments. I also try to be inventive with my photography, experimenting with darkroom techniques and chemistry.

In her essay, “On Being an Angel,” Gianni Romano writes that Woodman “utilized the female body to gain self knowledge.” In Fred Turner’s essay, “Body and Soul,” he states that Woodman “left behind images of an extraordinary inner life.” Her use of photography in these ways resonates with me, as I, too, explore themes around the female body and the female experience as a means of gaining self knowledge and an understanding of the life I have lived.

Why did she jump out of that window on the Lower East Side of Manhattan in 1981? I wish I could ask her. Her premature death and the loss it presents to the art world are incalculable.

 

See the work of Marky Kauffmann on her website. 

Filed Under: Griffin State of Mind, About the Griffin, Blog Tagged With: griffin state of mind, alternative process, griffin team, about us, Photography

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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