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Blog

Atelier 31 | Meet the Artist – Fern L. Nesson

Posted on March 25, 2020

All Here, All Now is an immersive experience, marrying still and moving images, using graphic and abstract elements to engage the viewer in a discussion of the greater hypotheses of time and relativity. At the intersection of science and art, Fern Nesson ponders the concepts of the here and now. What does that look like? Sound like?

abstract lines     abstract flash    nest

About All Here, All Now – 

Our subjective experience of time is continuous and uniform, emerging from the past and flowing toward the future. But Einstein proved that time varies relative to the speed of light, slowing down or speeding up depending upon our own trajectory through space.  And Buddhists say time is cyclical, always repeating.  Some physicists even assert that, given the right conditions, time may flow backwards.

As a scientist, I line up with Einstein; spiritually, I feel kinship with Buddhism. Like all of us, I experience the forward flow of time’s arrow, rushing me all too fast into my future. But, as a photographer, I don’t have to choose sides. For me, the debate is both infinitely interesting and totally beside the point. Whatever we believe the nature of time to be, we have only the present moment in which to experience it. Living in that moment and capturing its essence in an image is reward enough.

These images and video are my way of communicating that we have only the present moment. We cannot relive the past and the future will never come. When and if we get there, it will be the present. All here, all now.

 

abstract rectangleCan you tell us about the video that accompanies your photographs?

The soundtrack to “All Here All Now” was composed by Domenico Vicinanza, a particle physicist from Cambridge, England, to commemorate

the 40th birthday of the Voyager 1 spacecraft. It premiered at the SC17 Supercomputing Conference in Denver in November, 2017. Professor Vicinanza created this music using data captured by the Voyager 1’s Low-Energy Charged Particle (LECP) instrument – a special telescope that identifies protons, alpha particles and heavier nuclei in space. Professor Vicinanza turned that data into music using data sonification, mapping from the intervals between numbers to the intervals between the notes of the scale. Every number from the detector became a musical note, creating a melody that followed the entire journey of Voyage 1 from lift-off in 1977 until it exited the solar system in August 2012.

The first half of the piece features stringed instruments echoed by flute, piccolo and glockenspiel. Piano and French horns double these instruments when the spacecraft encountered Jupiter and Saturn, highlighting the rising and falling of the cosmic ray count in the atmosphere of these giant planets. When the spacecraft enters interstellar space, the music changes. The cellos, violas and woodwinds give way to the more ethereal sounds of the harp and celesta. The key also changes from C major to E flat major as does the spacing between the notes, reflecting the dramatic decrease in the charged particles outside our solar system.

Translated into music, the Voyager 1’s journey is mysterious, magical, transcendent. As Professor Vicinanza says: “The entire piece breath[s] and pulsat[es] with the spacecraft. The score is more than just inspired by one of the most successful space missions, it [is a] part of it.”

See the video here on Fern’s video channel on  YouTube

abstract flashesWe asked Fern to discuss her Atelier experience –

Twenty years ago, I took the Atelier course with Karen Davis and Holly Pedlosky at Radcliffe Seminars. This September, I decide to enroll in the Atelier again, hoping to connect with others who were interested in critiquing work and getting feedback on their own photographs.

I was not disappointed. The excellent teaching and the supportive participation by fellow photographers made the fall and winter fly by. It was so exciting to see the work that each person produced. As to my own work, I was especially impressed with the flexibility that the course offers. I do abstract photography. In the beginning, it was puzzling to my fellow students — and even possibly to the teachers. But they were game. They stayed right with my concept and did their best to understand it. I was so appreciative of their adventurous spirit and incisive critical eyes. Each week, their good advice, made my work better.

abstract graphWhat does the future hold?

Currently, I am working on several projects:
     The first one is nearly complete. It is called “My Original Self.”  I set out in this project to explore ,both  visually and writing, my identity as a very young child — to unearth the original spirit that I brought into this world as unencumbered as possible by other, later influences.
   For the project, I wrote a story about the fascinating experience that inspired this search and then created a video that expresses what I found.
    To finish up, I plan record the story (as audio accompanying the video) and to add a series of still photographs as well.
     My second project is to complete the shooting and curate a selection of abstract photographs of  cityscapes for a solo exhibit in the Auburn Gallery in LA toward the end of this year. Currently, I have photographs from Paris Rome, Boston New Toronto and LA. With Boston street deserted, I pklan to shoot a bit more downtown at night.
     Lastly, I am writing photoessays for two online publications :
           Bonjour Paris and The Living New Deal.
     For Bonjour Paris, I am doing a series of ten essays entitled “Fifty Things I Miss About Paris.”  The first essay appeared this w eek and one will appear each week for the next 9 weeks.
    The Living New Deal  website, run by two professors at U. Cal. Berkeley, is a history website about  New Deal Projects in the Roosevelt Administration.  I write a regular column from the website entited “Travels with the State Guides. Roosevelt’s WPA published these Guides for each state from 1939- 42. They included essays on history, geography, cultural traditions, food, economy and  they suggested travel routes.
     For my photoessays, I return to some of the interesting places and iconic examples of writing in these guides and explore what what is there now. So far, I have published essays on several towns in Maine, New Hampshire and Massachusetts. Last week , my photoessay on Walden Pond appeared; next month my essay on Nantucket will appear.  Currently, I am  working on two essays close to home:  one on the Mount Auburn Cemetery and one on pre-Revolutionary Cambridge.
      Lastly,
a) I am preparing to teach an online  course at the Maine Media Workshops on Text and Image.
b) I am proofreading the final draft of my new photobook, “Word”.

 

abstract buildingsAbout Fern L. Nesson – 

Fern L. Nesson is a fine art photographer and installation artist who lives in Cambridge, Massachusetts. She received an MFA in Photography from Maine Media College, where she is currently the school’s first post-graduate Fellow. Her spare, abstract photographs are not constructed. Instead, they distill reality to its essence, embodying the moment when mass becomes energy.

Nesson’s  videos have been exhibited at the MIT Museum Studio in September-November, 2019 (“La Vérité est la Créatrice d’Illusions”) and at the Meta-Lab Gallery at Harvard in October,2019. (“E=mc2″). She has had three solo exhibitions of her photographs:  “E-mc²” at Les Rencontres de la Photographie and Voies Off Festival in Arles, France in 2019,  “Be Living” at the Pascal Gallery in Rockport, ME. in 2018 and “The Light Dances” at Panopticon Imaging in Rockland, MA. in 2016. Currently, her work is showing at the Praxis Gallery In Minneapolis, MN.

Her photobook, Signet of Eternity, was recently chosen for the 10th Annual Self-published Photobooks show at the Davis-Orton Gallery (2019) and is currently showing at the Griffin Museum (2020).

“Abstraction and Perception,” an exhibition of Nesson’s photographs will open at the Beacon Gallery in Boston on March,  2020.

For more information and creativity log onto Fern’s website

Filed Under: Blog, Atelier, Portfolio Reviews

Nathalie Seaver Photo Playlist

Posted on July 22, 2019

© Nathalie Seaver from deconstructing beauty https://www.nathalieseaverphoto.com/gallery-new
© Nathalie Seaver from deconstructing beauty https://www.nathalieseaverphoto.com/gallery-new
© Nathalie Seaver from deconstructing beauty https://www.nathalieseaverphoto.com/gallery-new

© Nathalie Seaver from deconstructing beauty https://www.nathalieseaverphoto.com/gallery-new
© Nathalie Seaver from deconstructing beauty https://www.nathalieseaverphoto.com/gallery-new
© Nathalie Seaver from deconstructing beauty https://www.nathalieseaverphoto.com/gallery-new

© Nathalie Seaver from deconstructing beauty https://www.nathalieseaverphoto.com/gallery-new
© Nathalie Seaver from deconstructing beauty https://www.nathalieseaverphoto.com/gallery-new
© Nathalie Seaver from deconstructing beauty https://www.nathalieseaverphoto.com/gallery-new

© Nathalie Seaver from deconstructing beauty https://www.nathalieseaverphoto.com/gallery-new

[metaslider id=64]

Filed Under: Blog, Photo Playlist

Patrick Nagatani

Posted on November 15, 2017

Patrick Nagatani obituary in the New York Times by Sam Roberts. Patrick left us on October 27, 2017. So many broken hearts.

Image © Patrick Nagatani. One of Mr. Nagatani’s dreamlike collages, “Kwahu/Hopi Eagle Kachina, White Sands Missile Range, New Mexico,” 1989 and 1993.

Filed Under: Blog

Marie Cosindas

Posted on June 5, 2017

We lost a unique person and photographer this week. Marie Cosindas leaves us at age 93. We thought she would live forever. The New York Times writes on her life.

 

Filed Under: Blog

John Chervinsky Scholarship 2016

Posted on December 16, 2016

Congratulations to Tricia Gahagan who has been awarded the John Chervinsky Scholarship!
Thank you to the judges who spent long arduous hours deciding the outcome.

View the press release here:
John Chervinsky Emerging Photographer Scholarship awards 2016

Our thank you to the judges and nominators for the thoughtful time spent.

Scholarship Awardee
Tricia Gahagan

Finalists
Vanessa Filley
Ville Kansanen
Wen Hang Lin
Katie Mack
Tiziana Rozzo
Rebecca L. Webb

“In viewing the applications to the Inaugural John Chervinsky Emerging Photographer Scholarship, I could not help but think of John and his creative practice. 
Within the applications there were dozens of compelling projects that bore evidence of exploration of both ideas and process.  Upon viewing Tricia Gahagan’s project “11:11 Connecting With Consciousness” and reading her applications documents, I felt she had achieved that and more; I sense she is approaching her project with deep and profound contemplation.  Gahagan envisions life’s most complex issues in this series of simple images, affording the viewer a path towards their own contemplative journey.”
– Mary Virgina Swanson

 

“I was honored to co-jury the Inaugural John Chervinsky Emerging Photographer Scholarship.  I first showed John’s photographs when he entered and was accepted into the Photographic Resource Center’s Member Exhibition in 2003, which was juried by the PRC’s founder Chris Enos. John pursued each new step in his career and work with an unbounded sense of passion and creativity.

From the many admirable submissions to this first scholarship iteration, Tricia Gahagan’s project stood out.  Gahagan’s imagery, statement, and philosophy shared many of the same artistic and personal qualities that John exhibited.  With her quiet and contemplative series “11:11 Connecting With Consciousness,” Gahagan poses visual and conceptual questions.  Akin to John, she also works within realms of perception and paradoxes, observation and the everyday.  Nevertheless, her carefully composed and considered images come from a completely different well, and yield completely different results.  Like John was in 2003, Gahagan is both on a quest and at a cusp.  She will benefit immeasurably from the honorarium, course, and path that this award will allows.  I very much look forward to following her journey.” 
~ Leslie K. Brown, independent curator and PhD candidate

Learn more about John.

image below of John Chervinsky © L. Barry Hetherington

datesJohn Chervinsky portrait

Filed Under: Uncategorized, Blog

Horace and Agnes: A Love Story Book Launch

Posted on December 9, 2016

Horace and Angnes show sign

Filed Under: Blog, Imprint, Merchandise

22 Juried Show Blog Exhibition Curated by Paula Tognarelli

Posted on August 11, 2016

What we have done with the 22nd Juried Show: Peter Urban Legacy Exhibition…

Elizabeth Avedon juried an exhibition for the Griffin Museum’s main gallery to run through the end of August. She also assigned $4,300 in awards to different artists. Also part of the Juried Show process was to choose 4 photographers to be exhibited in the Griffin galleries next year. The Griffin then chose 3 photographers to highlight in its online galleries.

There were over 2,000 photographs, many worthy of showing, we felt the need to come up with a way to show what remained. We wanted to see how many exhibits we could put together. The Griffin wanted to show people that the jurying process can be so varied, based on the juror or who else submits to the call. It also takes on a life of its own and once started it is difficult to turn back. The number needed for a space is a limiter as well. What one sees in imagery can change from one day to the next, especially with a large sampling. And that was where it all began… the Griffin put together an Instagram exhibition from the pool of photographers that remained and then assembled more group exhibitions. We have decided that for this grouping, we would exhibit right here, on our blog!

One thing you might notice is that photographers are articulating common themes without even talking to each other. I find this fascinating. One example is “The Portal.” Perhaps people are examining the future or looking back at the past. Or perhaps it represents transition and change and even escape. An un-themed call for entry can tell a juror so much about what is happening in the world.

[portfolio_slideshow id=9899]

We would like to personally thank all of the artists for sharing their work with us.

All images are © of the artists. All rights reserved.

Featured photographers:

Alysia Macaulay
Amy Kanka
Amy Rindskopf
Andrew Feiler
Andrew Warren
Andy Schirmer
Anna Yeroshenko
Astrid Reischwitz
Barbara Curcio
Berette Macaulay
Bob Avakian
Cassie Bagent
Catherine Day
Chris Maliga
D. Clarke Evans
Darin Boville
Denn Santoro
Donna Tramontozzi
Emily Belz
Emma Powell
Eric Hovermale
Grace Weston
Honey Lazar
Jackeline Walters
John Benford
John Steck
Kolin Perry
Mark Thayer
Mary Aiu
Mary Doering
Mikael Carstanjen
Min Kim Park
Mitsu Yoshikawa
Nancy Edelstein
Robbie McClaran
Russell Hart
Stephen Sheffield
Sue Bailey
Susana O’Docharty
Tira Khan
Wendy Seller
Yuri Boyko

Filed Under: 22 Juried Show, Blog, Imprint

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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