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    • Focus Awards
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      • John Chervinsky Emerging Photographer Scholarship
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Exhibitions

John Chervinsky Emerging Artist Scholarship Award | Bridget Jourgensen

Posted on July 23, 2024

The Griffin Museum of Photography is thrilled to announce the winner of the 2024 John Chervinsky Emerging Photographer Scholarship, Bridget Jourgensen. Her series Homeshadows captivated this year’s jury to earn her a monetary award, an upcoming exhibition and artist talk at the Griffin Museum as well as a volume from the collection of photographer John Chervinsky.

Over 281 photographers submitted applications to be considered for the scholarship this year. The jurors, Arlette and Gus Kayafas, Frazier King and Bruce Myren have selected Bridget Jourgensen as the 2024 recipient of the John Chervinsky Emerging Photographer Scholarship.

Wrist
Light Switch
Fan

The exhibition of Homeshadows will be December 11, 2024 – January 5, 2025. We will announce programs and artist reception later this fall.

Homeshadows is a study of solitude.  Over the course of a year and at the height of the pandemic in 2020, I found myself in a new home and very much alone on a day-to-day basis.   As an introvert and sometimes anxious person, it was a bit of a dream come true.  But while I wasn’t exactly lonely, I was yearning to use my time creatively and feel connected to something while the world outside raged.    I began to document the light and shadows that streamed through the windows of my house.  Everything in my home was new to me, and I had the pleasure of watching the seasons unfold from the inside.  I sometimes put myself in the images to round out the developing narrative.  I worked to capture light and manage composition with great attention to mood and detail in order to convey the sense of solitude, beauty, and mystery that I was experiencing during this period of time.  Although I had been taking photographs for many years, this was my first intentional series and attempt at cohesive storytelling through images.

About Bridget Jourgensen: 

My love of photography began as a young girl leafing through my mother’s Vogue magazines and feeling enthralled by the lush images within. As a pre-teen I made images of my family with a Kodak Instamatic 100, and documented the mundane details of my day-to-day life. It seemed that everything looked more glamorous printed on 4×4 squares, accompanied by strips of eerie negatives. I was hooked.

As an adult photographing a world which is increasingly complex, my lens seeks out simple, quiet subjects that are familiar yet presented in a distinctive way. Influenced by the work of Vivian Maier, Gordon Parks, and Sally Mann, I’m drawn to photographing people in the world around me. Whether that world is within my own four walls or a country I’ve never stepped foot in, my desire to observe others is the foundation for a great deal of my work. By sharing my images, I hope to spark human connections and emphasize our commonality through a moment captured in time.

About the John Chervinsky Emerging Photographer Scholarship

Photographer John Chervinsky, whose work explored the concept of time, passed away in December of 2015, following a typically resolute battle with pancreatic cancer. The modesty and unassuming character John conveyed in life belies the extent to which he is missed, not only by his family and friends, but also by the entire photographic community of which he was so proud to be a part. The John Chervinsky Emerging Photographer Scholarship was announced in June 2016 to recognize, encourage and reward photographers with the potential to create a body of work and sustain solo exhibitions. Awarded annually, the Scholarship provides recipients with a monetary award, an exhibition of their work at the Griffin Museum of Photography, and a volume from John’s personal library of photography books. The Scholarship seeks to provide a watershed moment in the professional lives of emerging photographers, providing them with the support and encouragement necessary to develop, articulate and grow their own vision for photography.

We extend our gratitude and thanks to our jurors for their work in reviewing submissions and selecting our winner, and thank you to the artists who submitted their work for consideration.

Filed Under: Uncategorized, John Chervinsky Scholarship Award, Griffin Gallery, Exhibitions Tagged With: scholarship, emerging artist

Behind the Lens: Framing History with the White House Photographers | Shealah Craighead

Posted on March 26, 2024

President-Elect Donald J. Trump gazes out of a window from the Red Room on the State Floor of the White House on Friday, Jan. 20, 2017, during an Inaugural Tea and Coffee Reception hosted by President Barack Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama. The traditional reception serves as a prelude to the 58th presidential ceremony held at the United States Capitol, where Mr. Trump will be sworn in as the 45th President of the United States.
Official White House Photo by Shealah Craighead


In The Room Where it Happened: A Survey Of Presidential Photographers
January 12 – March 31, 2024

Our understanding of the U.S. presidency is largely shaped by images. Photographs of political campaigns, international engagements, historic legislation, and national tragedy, accompany more intimate family scenes and humanizing portraits, each contributing to the global perception of the American presidency for generations to come.

Featuring the work of the official White House photographers Shealah Craighead, Eric Draper, Michael Evans, Sharon Farmer, David Hume Kennerly, Bob McNeely, Yoichi Okamoto, Adam Schultz, Pete Souza, David Valdez and staff photographer Joyce Boghosian, this group has shaped our vision of the presidency for the last 6 decades.

Presidential photography highlights the complex nature of creativity, documentation and portraiture. Each photographers’ perspective and stories provide context for framing important moments, giving viewers a deeper understanding of the challenges and rewards of documenting the presidency, offering a comprehensive and insightful visual narrative of the U.S. presidency through the lens of these dedicated and talented photographers.

About Shealah Craighead –

For Shealah Craighead, taking a picture isn’t a point and click “moment.”  It’s elbowing into North Korea to photograph a history-making handshake, diving into the gridiron to capture the game-winning catch, or observing from the background to catch the subtle smiles and sighs that convey the greatest emotions. With over two decades of experience, Craighead has built a career on turning moments in time, into tangible memories through the art of observation and photography.

Most recently, Craighead served as the Chief Official White House Photographer to the 45th President; becoming just the second woman in history to ever hold the position and the first to maintain the position for an entire presidency term.  A two-time Official White House Photographer, working with the 43rd presidential administration, Craighead crafted a stealth style for documenting history as it unfolds from an observer’s perspective.  In the political arena, she was honored to serve First Lady Laura Bush, multiple U.S. Presidents, as well as, many other prominent lawmakers and political candidates.  

Throughout her career, Craighead has been trusted to take photos of some of the most prominent people in the world, having traveled to every state and over 80 countries.  Her photos have been viewed globally, featured in major news outlets, and have made more than a few viral rounds on social media.  In addition, she’s taken photos of celebrities and CEOs, athletes and activists, foreign dignitaries and divas, royal families and the families next door.

Craighead credits her passion for photography and steadfast work ethics to her parents, who owned a photo lab in their native Connecticut, as well as, to her insatiable curiosity for traveling and love of adventure. She is an alumni of the Art Institute of Boston, has a loyalty to Sony cameras, and enjoys multimedia production. Current clients include Governors of State, international disaster relief organizations, and documenting legacy events for private clients.  When she’s not stealthily photographing history, Craighead can be found on long road trips, high altitude mountaineering, or globetrotting wherever adventure awaits.  

Interview with Shealah Craighead, Chief White House Photographer for President Donald J. Trump –

What does it mean for you to be in conversation with so many photographers who share similar journeys in these exhibitions? Has it allowed you to see your practice under a different light? 

Being in conversation with the unique group of photographers who share similar journeys as presidential photographers in this exhibition is incredibly meaningful and humbling to me. We are a small but mighty collection of photographers, who despite decades between our time in the Oval Office, share the same mission: to document history as it unfolds, as neutral observers on behalf of posterity for our nation. 

From Left to Right –
Shealah Craighead, Sharon Farmer, Robert McNeely
and David Hume Kennerly

The setting of the museum exhibit provides a unique opportunity to connect with fellow colleagues and friends who understand the challenges and triumphs of working in a high-profile setting such as the White House. The conversation is a chance to showcase the evolution and growth of the White House photo office, and the role the office plays then and currently. 

The time together is an opportunity to celebrate our shared passion for visual storytelling and documentary photography. It’s a humbling experience to realize that despite our unique journeys, we all face similar obstacles and joys in our work. I adore that our individual galleries of presidential images showcase a collection of images that together tell stories of decades that cannot be compared. 

Thank you to the Griffin Museum for the opportunity to be heard, seen, and valued for the roles that we have played on behalf of history.

How do you approach capturing the essence of a U.S. President through your lens? 

As a White House photographer, my approach revolved around capturing the President, the First Family, and the White House senior leadership in a manner that reflects their character, leadership style, and the nature of their role during the administration. This involved observing their interactions, expressions, and actions in various settings, whether during official duties or during private moments. I tried to convey not only their public persona but also the humanity and depth behind the office, sometimes choosing to document the moment through photography and other times not, depending on situational awareness and instinct. 

For presidential administrations and all my clients in general, I aim to cover most situations by utilizing a style I honed earlier in my journalism career. This approach involves shooting wide, tight, and detail shots, capturing images that encompass the entire environmental space as comprehensively as possible, shooting from both high and low angles, and seeking out tools to enhance creativity. The environment serves as a photographer’s playground, offering endless possibilities for creative expression. 

President Donald J. Trump participates in a press gaggle on the tarmac of Morristown Municipal Airport in Morristown, N.J., on Sunday, Aug. 9, 2020, before boarding Air Force One en route to Joint Base Andrews, Md.
Official White House Photo by Shealah Craighead


The rule of thumb is to capture the essential shot first- bank the shot- then explore the creative angles and compositions. I photograph for myself listening to the intuitive conversation of my inner warrior and then edit with the client’s needs and preferences in mind. This approach ensures a balance between personal expression and fulfilling the objectives of the assignment.

How do you navigate the balance between capturing authentic moments and respecting the president’s privacy? 

I would suggest opting for a different word than “authentic” for this question. Words like “genuine,” “organic,” or “posed” might be a better fit. Using the word “authentic” could imply that the photographer is staging or doctoring the photos in some way, or that the subjects are not genuine or legitimate in the moment. Authenticity serves as the baseline for the White House photo office. With that in mind, to address your question… 

I navigate the balance between capturing moments as they unfold and respecting the President’s privacy by utilizing my experience, listening to my intuition, reading a room and trying to empathize with the subjects. 

President Donald J. Trump waits backstage before being announced to take the stage for the final presidential debate against Democratic presidential candidate former Vice President Joe Biden at the Curb Event Center at Belmont University on Thursday, Oct. 22, 2020, in Nashville, Tenn. Official White House Photo by Shealah Craighead

The official photographer is a visual diarist. Throughout each day, during events and meetings, there is inevitably a balance between posed photos and candid shots. It is the photographer’s responsibility to capture all aspects of these moments. I relied on my instincts and experience to determine if and when to step back or immerse myself in the moment. If the President required space, or if I preferred not to risk interrupting the moment, I opted for a longer lens to distance myself from the immediate space. I utilized the silent mode on my [Sony] cameras and slowed down my movements to minimize disruption, aiming to be less obtrusive and eye-catching.

I always carried two camera bodies, one equipped with a longer lens (typically 70-200mm) and the second with a versatile, catch-all lens (such as a 24-270mm or a fixed prime lens depending on the environment). Additionally, I tried to empathize with the subjects, considering how I would feel in their shoes. For example, would I want a camera in my face the first moments of my day as I’m walking into my office or during an emotional moment with families of fallen soldiers? Probably not. Therefore, I chose a lens and positioning that allowed for maneuverability and distance to minimize distractions, to create the space for the most authentic moments to organically unfold. 

Certain spaces, such as the private office, off the Oval Office, or the Executive Residence, are respected as private areas for the Principal. I generally assessed the situation before entering these spaces, again relying on intuition. The Residence remains private unless invited. It’s a bit of common sense, understanding how to read a room, and ultimately, respecting the President’s need for personal space. I haven’t met a shy President yet, they will tell you to back off when they need space. 

Keep in mind, in my opinion, it’s not about me or anyone else; it’s about the President and history first. Sometimes, you simply have to refrain from taking a photo or step away to preserve the trust relationship between a photographer and the President. Trusting the process is essential. If history required a moment to be captured, an opportunity would have presented itself to document that moment as a tangible memory.

Can you discuss the importance of visual storytelling in conveying the president’s narrative through your photographs? 

President Donald J. Trump participates on a conference call with high-ranking military officials on Friday, July 28, 2017, in the Treaty Room of the private residence at the White House. Flanking President Trump are National Security Council Adviser Lt. Gen. H.R. McMaster (right), Deputy National Security Council Adviser Dina Powell (center), and Senior Director of the National Security Council Matt Pottinger (left). The call focuses on concerns regarding North Korea’s second test of an intercontinental ballistic missile within 24 days.
Official White House Photo Shealah Craighead

Visual storytelling plays a crucial role in conveying the President’s narrative through photography as a collection of images spanning the administration’s tenure. As a White House photographer, my images serve as a window into the President’s world, offering insights into their character, leadership style, and the events shaping their presidency. Together, these images capture the essence of the presidency—the challenges, triumphs, and defining moments that shape history, whether evident in real-time or as history unfolds over time. 

We understand that photographs hold the power to capture fleeting moments, evoke emotions, and communicate messages beyond words alone. By composing shots, capturing candid moments, and selecting images that highlight key moments and themes, I aimed to construct a narrative that portrayed history from the perspective of a neutral observer, while also reflecting the President’s priorities, values, and achievements. I often collaborated with the communications team to gather feedback on images befitting for media releases and social media posts. These photos provided the White House with an opportunity to share its version of the story alongside those of the White House press pool of reporters and photographers. 

Each photograph is protected under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) and serves as a piece of a larger puzzle, contributing to the overall narrative of the administration for future generations. Whether capturing the President’s interactions with world leaders, moments of empathy with the American people, or scenes of decision-making in the Oval Office, every image released or not released to the public, helps shape public perception and understanding of the President’s presidency and administration. On a smaller scale, photographing meet-and-greets with the President and guests allows individuals to have a tangible memory of their moment in history with a President, which continues to tells the person(s) individual story. 

Through my photographs, I aimed to provide a nuanced and multi-dimensional portrait of the person behind the presidency, showcasing them as both a leader and as a person, from a neutral perspective, on behalf of both my country and history. 

Are there specific rituals or routines you follow when preparing for a presidential photoshoot? 

Per Crista, during a previous conversation: “’Photoshoot’ may not have been the right word. The question is more like, what is a daily routine for you? How do you prepare yourself for a 14-20 hour day of shooting?” 

I agree with Crista; ‘photoshoot’ doesn’t accurately capture the scene, aside from the one-time official portrait opportunity. When I hear ‘photoshoot’, I envision more of a commercial or portrait session, involving setting up lights, etc. So, I’ll approach the question from the perspective of describing the daily routine and how to prepare for the unexpected. 

Supporting the daily schedule of a President and administration requires more than just one photographer; it necessitates a team. The White House photo office has grown from a small team of one or two individuals at its inception in the Kennedy administration, to 12-18 people, as was the case in the final days of both the Bush 43 and the Trump 45 administrations, speaking from my experiences. 

The photo office team typically consists of two additional photographers to support the Chief Photographer’s schedule in support of the President. Two additional photographers are assigned one each to the Vice President and First Lady, with additional assistance provided, as available, to the Second Lady, and to senior staff and happenings around the White House. The team also includes multiple editors, a master printer, a photo archivist, administrative personnel, staff assistants, volunteers, and interns. Personally, I had two photographers supporting my schedule, covering the President both on campus and off-premises events, splitting the AM and PM shift. We always had a photographer in the office while the President was in the Oval Office. Once he concluded the day and went up to the Private Residence, the duty photographer was released.

It’s important to note that to do the job properly, one’s schedule is not entirely one’s own during their time in the administration. This was a known factor I anticipated going into the Trump administration, based on my experience during The Bush administration. I adjusted my schedule according to the President’s, and on days when I wasn’t photographing, I often found myself catching up on office tasks, meetings, and managerial duties. Generally, my schedule ran from 12 to 16 hours, with travel adding additional hours, resulting in days stretching to 18-20 hours. Even on days off, one remains ‘on’, remotely addressing correspondence, and always prepared for the possibility of an emergency requiring a swift return to the White House. 

Navigating each day required a delicate balance of living in the moment and planning ahead where possible. I learned to adapt quickly to changes in the schedule, going with the flow and remaining flexible became essential for survival. One thing you can always count on is to expect the unexpected. 

To prepare for a standard day, routine was key, and coffee was a necessity. In my personal life, I packed a lunch the night before, and laid out my suit or packed for a trip. Snacks were stashed everywhere, and I automated whatever I could, such as grocery delivery, seizing free moments as precious gifts. 

In the office, the President’s schedule provided a framework for the day, and the duty photographer was always on standby to support last-minute meeting requests. The duty photographer is in constant communication with the outer oval staff for changes to the schedule. If an event required multiple photographers to cover various angles, I would coordinate the team positions accordingly to ensure comprehensive coverage. This often involved extensive logistics and coordination with other offices to collaborate with the photo office team. Additionally, a White House photographer is always present when the press is, for historical purposes. 

President Donald J. Trump converses with Chief of Staff Mark Meadows on the steps of the North Portico of the White House before departing for Joint Base Andrews Air Force Base on Tuesday, Sept. 1, 2020. President Trump is scheduled to travel to Kenosha, Wisconsin, for a day trip.
Official White House Photo by Shealah Craighead

Once you get into the battle rhythm, sometimes it’s easier to stay in the flow than to tap out for time off. It’s a tricky balance. The campus-wide staff at the White House quickly becomes a support system for each other, like a work family. One certainly sacrifices personal life to dedicate the necessary time to ensure this position successfully supports the President.

What role does collaboration play between you and other members of the presidential communication team? 

Collaboration between myself, as a White House photographer, and other members of the presidential communication “comms” team was integral to effectively conveying the President’s message through visual storytelling. Together, we worked in tandem to ensure that the images released aligned with the administration’s communication objectives and messaging priorities- edit for the client. In these instances, “released” is the term used for sharing the photos with media outlets, on official White House social media sites, and on the official White House Flickr page. 

After an event, meeting, or general moment, collaboration continued as the photo editor(s) and/or photographer(s) reviewed the entire take and selected a curated group of images for distribution to the comms team, who in turn chose the final images for release. All photos were coupled with metadata and a caption written in AP style format. If multiple Principals (POTUS, VP, FL, SLOTUS) were in attendance, their designated photographer and photo editor selected photos to be shared with each principal’s comms team. The comms team then selected the photos to be released, with the President’s photos taking priority. Approval processes came from within each principal’s office, and on occasion, the photos selected for release were chosen by the principal themselves.

Is there a specific image or moment that most encapsulates your vision, or that you are most proud of? Among the millions of images taken during an administration, is there one that meets your measure of success in securing the history of that moment, whether it be significant or minor? 

Great question and very tough to answer with only one photo. I’ll list a couple that pop in my mind and heart. 

Official White House Photo by Shealah Craighead
Shealah Craighead in North Korea getting the shot.

The Handshake with Kim Jong-un: I captured the historic moment when President Trump met with North Korean leader Kim Jong-un at the demilitarized zone (DMZ) between North and South Korea. The meeting between the two leaders symbolized a significant diplomatic effort to ease tensions between the two countries. President Trump became the first sitting U.S. President to set foot on North Korean soil. The actual event took place on Sunday, June 30, 2019. The original plan was for President Trump to step over the border line, turn, and wave to the press, then walk back with Kim Jong-un for meetings on the South Korea side. However, the scenario evolved as the President chose. Instead, the handshake was followed by both leaders walking together deeper into the North Korea side—an iconic moment forever unique to President Trump and myself as a photographer, especially as a female photographer. I made the split-second decision to run into North Korea, beyond the distance President Trump was walking, in order to capture the perspective of the leaders from an angle that could not be accessed by others. My photo shows the leaders walking firmly into the North Korea side, with South Korea behind them, sharing in a moment of jubilant emotions.

Official White House Photo by Shealah Craighead

Dinner at Mount Vernon: President Trump and French President Emmanuel Macron engage in a private conversation in the New Room of George Washington’s Mansion at Mount Vernon on Monday, April 23, 2018, in Virginia. The private dinner set the stage for the White House State Dinner the following evening, marking the first State Dinner of the Trump administration. I am drawn to this image for both the historical significance of the environment and the scene setting itself. Historically, President George Washington was the last president to dine in the New Room of the Mansion prior to President Trump. The image captures a serene environment and details of the room, with soft lighting enveloping two leaders holding a private conversation. It’s a quiet moment showing both Presidents in a candid and relaxed state, amidst 48 hours of crowds, media avails, and a State Dinner. I was the only photographer to capture the moment since the press had restricted access, and my counterpart, the French official photographer, had been ushered out of the room.

Filed Under: Uncategorized, Exhibitions, Griffin State of Mind

Ruben Natal San Miguel | Collection Acquisition

Posted on August 9, 2023

We are thrilled to announce a new donation to the Griffin Contemporary Collection from photographer Ruben Natal-San Miguel. 

From the exhibition and series Women R Beautiful we have four prints to add to the collection. This generous donation will represent a broad selection of San Miguel’s magnum opus and years long series featuring the women of New York. 

Frank and honest, the women are confident, self aware and direct with their gaze into the lens. His exhibition was featured during Women’s History Month at Griffin @ Lafayette, and we are excited to showcase the diversity and breadth of the female gaze and shared experience of portraiture at its most pure.

From Left to right –

Brotherly Love (Never Dies), Jennifer (Unlock the Vixen), 3 Muslim Girls and Nykki & Ari (Valentine Twins & Morning Glories)

In a partnership with Boston Downtown Association we had a special Mother’s Day Street Portrait studio. Ruben spent 2 hours on the streets of Downtown Crossing, creating a series of the same name. This digital collection is also part of the Contemporary Collection here at the museum.

We are so grateful to Ruben for sharing his creativity and unique vision with the museum and our patrons.

About Ruben Natal San Miguel –

RUBEN NATAL-SAN MIGUEL is an architect, fine art photographer, curator, creative director and critic. His stature in the photo world has earned him awards, features in major media, countless exhibitions and collaborations with photo icons such as Magnum Photographer Susan Meiselas. Gallery shows include: Asya Geisberg, SoHo Photo, Rush Arts, Finch & Ada, Kris Graves Projects, Fuchs Projects, WhiteBox Gallery, Station Independent Projects Gallery, LMAK Gallery,  Postmasters Gallery  Rome  & NYC  and others. His work has been featured in numerous institutions: The New York Public Library, Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, Griffin Museum of Photography, Museum of Fine Arts Boston, African American Museum of Philadelphia, The Makeshift Museum in Los Angeles, University of Washington, El Museo del Barrio and Phillips Auction House and Aperture Foundation. 

International art fair representation includes: Outsider Art Fair, SCOPE, PULSE, Art Chicago, Zona Maco, Mexico, Lima Photo, Peru and Photo LA. and Filter Photo Festival in Chicago Ill.  His photography has been published in a long list of publications, highlights: New York Magazine, The New York Times, The Huffington Post, Time OUT, Aperture, Daily News, OUT, American Photo, ARTFORUM, VICE, Musee, ARTnet and The New Yorker, PBS and NPR. In 2016, Ruben’s Marcy’s Playground was selected for both the Billboard Collective and website for Apple. His photographs are in the permanent collections of El Museo Del Barrio in NYC, The Center for Photography at Woodstock, NY, The Contemporary Collection of the Mint Museum Charlotte, North Carolina, The Bronx  Museum for the Arts, School of Visual Arts, NYC, The Fitchburg Museum of Art, Massachusetts, The North Carolina Museum of Art at Raleigh, NC., The Minneapolis Institute of Art, The Leslie Lohman Museum of Art, The Studio Museum of Harlem and The Museum of The City of NY, The Provincetown Art Museum, The Frances Lehman Loeb Art Museum Center at Vassar College and The Museum of Fine Arts , Boston, MA. 

Filed Under: Online Exhibitions, Public Art, Uncategorized, Exhibitions

Brianna Dowd | Griffin State of Mind

Posted on June 10, 2023

We were thrilled to have Brianna Dowd’s series, Mother Pearl, at the Griffin Museum! Read more to hear about the process and background to the beautiful work.

Tell us a little about your background.

I have an artistic background in photography and graphic design. My journey with photography started in the digital sphere, and in my undergraduate years of college I began to work with combining 19th century processes with digital technology (ie. cyanotype, van dyke). More recently, I have moved into, especially with my thesis work, exploring creating works of collage.  

What made you want to focus on this topic for your thesis?

I’ve been working in themes of identity, memory, and loss since my undergraduate years at UNC Greensboro, and developed a series about my paternal grandfather while I was there. From then I knew I wanted to have a body of work that revolved around my father’s mother as well, but was very strategic about how to approach it carefully because there was so much I didn’t know about her but still felt a close connection. I spent much time gathering photos, hearing and documenting stories, even visiting where my father grew up to aid me as I worked on what is now “Mother Pearl”. My love and appreciation for family, history, and paying homage to those who came before us was a huge inspiration in me choosing to move forward with this being my thesis work, as well as my personal experience with connecting to those who are no longer with us.

Is there anything in particular that drew you to photography originally? 

I would say nothing as far as a subject drew me to photography specifically, but more so the way photography has been and can be used. I grew up with parents who were wedding photographers, and to see them interact with couples and share in so many love stories helped me learn how important photography was with capturing important moments in life. My college journey specifically gave me a deeper love for photography, as I came to see the medium more than a means to record information and events, but one that can be used as a means to tell stories, express feelings, and encourage conversation.

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

There are so many pieces I could choose from, but I would like to salute a body of work entitled Sugar Coat, by Christina Leslie who is based in Toronto, CA. Her entire series was emotionally and visually moving, and it serves as a means of education and dialogue about the truths around the history of sugar, slavery, and the Caribbean Diaspora. Her finished photographs were produced from sugar and presented to the viewer appropriated pieces of pro-slave literature, sugar ads, etc. 

ABOUT BRIANNA DOWD

Brianna Dowd is an NC based artist whose background is in fine art photography and graphic design. She is a 2017 graduate from the University of North Carolina at Greensboro obtaining a Bachelors of Fine Art degree, and is currently pursuing a Masters of Fine Art at the Savannah College of Art & Design.

Brianna is also the founder and CEO of Butterfly Visuals, LLC, a media company providing quality service to creative and goal oriented individuals in the areas of photography, graphic design, website design, promotional design, branding materials, social media content, and more.

Filed Under: Uncategorized, Exhibitions, Griffin State of Mind Tagged With: Photography, black and white, color, Photographers on Photography, Griffin Exhibitions

Rohina Hoffman | Griffin State of Mind

Posted on May 19, 2023

Our shared and common humanity is assumed but not always evident. Making work inspired from my own personal experiences, I look for ways to further and deepen our thoughts on this connection.

In Embrace, Los Angeles based photographer Rohina Hoffman reflects on the theme of uncertainty while combining two of her photographic projects. In Gratitude, made during the pandemic, is a typology of portraits celebrating food and family and how we find comfort in times of unease. Generation 1.75 is a visual memoir of identity, belonging, and the complexities of acculturation.

Embrace will be on display at the Griffin until May 28, 2023.

Tell us a little about your background.

I grew up in a family of doctors spanning three generations. I also became a doctor, specifically a neurologist. Despite our emphasis on science, everyone in my family also had artistic pursuits. Since high school,I have always been involved with photography and decided about ten years ago to focus on it.

Can you explain the thought behind your show, and why it is presented in the way it is?

I wanted the show to be a sensory engaging experience. There are the photographs of course, but there is also text (both prose and poetry), scent, in the form of a reed diffuser, and my book, Embrace, to hold and touch and skim through. 

What feeling do you hope to leave your viewers with when surrounded by your work?

Walking into the Griffin Gallery, I want viewers to be wholly embraced by the art and to feel alive. I hope they that they feel and connect with the photographs and text elements, and walk out of the gallery with a softer more hopeful heart.

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

I am currently obsessed with Maira Kalman and her books (most recent being “Women Holding Things”.) Her combination of witty text and bold colorful images, her simple playful approach about the human condition is at once personal and universal. I can read them over and over again.

ABOUT ROHINA HOFFMAN:

Rohina is a fine art photographer whose practice uses portraiture and the natural world to investigate themes of identity, home, adolescence and the female experience.

Born in India and raised in New Jersey, Rohina grew up in a family of doctors spanning three generations. While an undergraduate at Brown University, Rohina also studied photography at the Rhode Island School of Design and she was a staff photographer for the Brown Daily Herald. A graduate of Brown University Medical School and resident at UCLA Medical Center, her training led to a career as a neurologist.

A skilled observer of her patients, Rohina was instilled with a deep and unique appreciation of the human experience. Her ability to forge the sacred trust between doctor and patient has been instrumental in fostering a parallel connection between photographer and subject.

Rohina published her first monograph Hair Stories with Damiani Editore (February 2019) accompanied by a solo exhibition at Brown University’s Alpert Medical School. Her monograph, Hair Stories, is held in many notable public collections including the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Getty, Cleveland Institute of Art, and over twenty-five university libraries.

Her second monograph, Embrace, with Schilt Publishing was just released October 2022 (Europe) and January 2023 (U.S.).

In 2021, she was the winner of the Altanta Photography Group’s Purchase Award and several of her prints were acquired by the High Museum of Art in Atlanta, Georgia.

Her photographs have been exhibited in juried group shows both nationally and internationally in venues such as The Center for Fine Art Photography, Griffin Museum, Colorado Photographic Arts Center, Los Angeles Center for Photography, Photo LA,  and A. Smith Gallery. She has received numerous awards and has been published in Marie Claire Italia, F-Stop Magazine, The Daily Beast, Lenscratch, Shots Magazine, and Edge of Humanity among others. She lives with her husband, three children and two golden retrievers in Los Angeles.

Filed Under: Uncategorized, Blog, Exhibitions, Griffin State of Mind Tagged With: color, Artist Talk, Photographers on Photography, Griffin Exhibitions

Ruben Natal-San Miguel | Griffin State of Mind

Posted on May 5, 2023

The Griffin Museum is excited to bring Ruben Natal-San Miguel to Lafayette City Center to celebrate his magnum opus, Women R Beautiful. 

How might you define this work to a young child or to someone unfamiliar with your work? What are its core components?

The Women R Beautiful series was created from the starting point of me being  only 4 years old and seen how my grandfather treated my mother . She was nt allowed to look directly at him while speaking to him. That disturbing memory will never leave my mind. The series are pretty self explanatory. It’ s a celebration of women from all walks of life and children are portrayed interacting with their mothers so, it is pretty self explanatory . 

When thinking about your work, what drew you to the Griffin Museum? 

The idea of this body of work was to travel to different locations and expand it content while at it. I had photographed women from the Massachusetts areas ( East Boston, Revere, Fitchburg, Provincetown , South Boston , Roxbury and Boston ) so wanted to show New England the variety of diversity of women from all walks of life from other areas outside MA. As you know, New England still it is not as diverse as other parts of America. 

How has your relationship with your Mother impacted on your personal style and choices in this work?
I had a rare relationship with my mother. I loved her but, was never her favorite. I was just different and most times she did not knew what to do with me and handle me. I obviously loved her but, she never accepted me for who I am today so, was at times contentious. I did listed to her more then any of my siblings and this body of work was created to celebrate her life and her struggles. My mother was part of what I called ‘’ The Gary Winogrand Generation ‘ on high most women were told what to do, were objectified , could not even vote and their place to be was at home in the kitchen and tending to their families. I thought the Gary Winogransd series which were celebrated 52 years ago were limiting when it came to women representation, women were objectified  ( the mentality at the time ) and wanted to give women a newer , fresher andplified voice and presence. 

Color is a major part of this work and I’m curious as to how, in your eyes, it reflects or amplifies the meaning of this work? 
There is color in most marginalized areas of most cities. Bodegas, murals and most areas have a great intensity of color all over in most building surfaces. I do not stage my work! I find my subjects by walking where no one usually goes to , find the subjects and make an environment portrait of it. It is all about the subject being comfortable and not confronted . The result are very intense and direct portraits where get to capture their true essence. 

Lastly, What initially drew you to photographing people candidly on the street and out in public?
I am a September 11, 2001 survivor. I was at the North Tower that fateful day working as a financial controller in Wall Street. . After many months of complete human detachment, moved to Harlem and decided to start photographing based on the very rich street culture that witnessed every day on my way home . It helped me a lot to make and establish connections with total strangers . We could tell each other things that we cannot tell even our closest friends. We developed a quick bond based on humanity. I am a self taught photographer . There is no school in the world that can teach you what I do. It comes from something deeper than soul.

ABOUT RUBEN NATAL-SAN MIGUEL

RUBEN NATAL-SAN MIGUEL is an architect, fine art photographer, curator, creative director and critic. His stature in the photo world has earned him awards, features in major media, countless exhibitions and collaborations with photo icons such as Magnum Photographer Susan Meiselas. Gallery shows include: Asya Geisberg, SoHo Photo, Rush Arts, Finch & Ada, Kris Graves Projects, Fuchs Projects, WhiteBox Gallery, Station Independent Projects Gallery, LMAK Gallery,  Postmasters Gallery  Rome  & NYC  and others. His work has been featured in numerous institutions: The New York Public Library, Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, Griffin Museum of Photography, Museum of Fine Arts Boston, African American Museum of Philadelphia, The Makeshift Museum in Los Angeles, University of Washington, El Museo del Barrio and Phillips Auction House and Aperture Foundation. 

International art fair representation includes: Outsider Art Fair, SCOPE, PULSE, Art Chicago, Zona Maco, Mexico, Lima Photo, Peru and Photo LA. and Filter Photo Festival in Chicago Ill.  His photography has been published in a long list of publications, highlights: New York Magazine, The New York Times, The Huffington Post, Time OUT, Aperture, Daily News, OUT, American Photo, ARTFORUM, VICE, Musee, ARTnet and The New Yorker, PBS and NPR. In 2016, Ruben’s Marcy’s Playground was selected for both the Billboard Collective and website for Apple. His photographs are in the permanent collections of El Museo Del Barrio in NYC, The Center for Photography at Woodstock, NY, The Contemporary Collection of the Mint Museum Charlotte, North Carolina, The Bronx  Museum for the Arts, School of Visual Arts, NYC, The Fitchburg Museum of Art, Massachusetts, The North Carolina Museum of Art at Raleigh, NC., The Minneapolis Institute of Art, The Leslie Lohman Museum of Art, The Studio Museum of Harlem and The Museum of The City of NY, The Provincetown Art Museum, The Frances Lehman Loeb Art Museum Center at Vassar College and The Museum of Fine Arts , Boston, MA. 

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

JP Terlizzi | Griffin State of Mind

Posted on April 14, 2023

JP Terlizzi is a part of our show, Ties That Bind, on show now at the Griffin until April 16th.

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

Tell us a little about yourself and your background.

I come from a graphic design and advertising background. I work full-time as the Executive Creative Director for a retail design agency in NYC and have been creating designs in the retail sector for close to 40 years. I’m responsible for helping brands and retailers articulate their products and services, and how that visually gets communicated to consumers at retail. I came to photography much later in life, it was another outlet to express myself creatively without having to answer to clients. It allows me the freedom to explore subjects that interest me and create things on my own terms and timelines.

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

I come from a very large and loving extended Italian family. I’ve been thinking a lot about family history and the legacies that are left behind as I age, and how much of my own family history has been lost due to family members that I have passed. Their memories and stories of family are now also gone. I wanted to create a series around objects. Objects that focus on the relationship between the family archive and personal memory that I someday could pass down to the younger generations as my legacy.

What led to your decision to use mixed media photography as a means to explore connections between past and present? 

I’ve been curious and wanted to explore assemblages for a while. It seemed like a natural progression in my practice. I took a workshop in Oct. of 2021 with Dawn Surratt and really embraced the assemblage world. It was a way for me to use the photograph as a starting point and dive much deeper with the use of objects to tell more of a personal story with layers and create these one-of-a-kind pieces around each family member.

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

I’ve been visually obsessing with patterns for the past several months, specifically wallpapers. I am currently in the process of making some new work to add to the series The Good Dishes. The new work is much more colorful and elaborate with over-the-top patterns. I have been obsessing how I can make it all look visually chaotic but balance the beauty and elegance that The Good Dishes are known for. 

ABOUT JP TERLIZZI

JP Terlizzi is a New York City photographer whose contemporary practice explores themes of memory, relationship, and identity. His images are rooted in the personal and heavily influenced around the notion of home, legacy, and family. He is curious how the past relates and intersects with the present and how the present enlivens the past, shaping one’s identity.

Born and raised in the farmlands of Central New Jersey, JP earned a BFA in Communication Design at Kutztown University of PA with a background in graphic design and advertising. He has studied photography at both the International Center of Photography in New York and Maine Media College in Rockport, ME.

JP’s work has been exhibited widely in galleries including shows at The Center for Fine Art Photography, Vicki Myhren Gallery at the University of Denver, The Grin Museum, Tilt Gallery, Panopticon Gallery, Candela Gallery, The Los Angeles Center of Photography, University Gallery at Cal Poly, and The Berlin Foto Biennale, Berlin, Germany, among others.

His solo exhibits include shows at Foto Relevance Gallery (August, 2020) The Rhode Island Center for Photographic Arts, Cameraworks Gallery in Portland, OR and Soho Photo Gallery in Manhattan.

Filed Under: Blog, Exhibitions, Griffin State of Mind, Uncategorized Tagged With: black and white, color, Photographers on Photography, Griffin Exhibitions

Astrid Reischwitz | Griffin State of Mind

Posted on April 14, 2023

Astrid Reischwitz is a part of our show, Ties That Bind, on show now at the Griffin until April 16th.

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

Tell us a little about yourself and your background.

Although working in the field of natural science, art always played an important role in my life and I see photography as a way to explore life further and pave a path to the future. 

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

Images in this exhibition are from my series Stories from the Kitchen Table and Spin Club Tapestry, they are based on cultural memories and the evolution of village life in Northern Germany. I see my work as visual storytelling where memories and emotions intertwine into new stories. The work is also a reflection on belonging. I have lived for many years abroad and the photographic work is important to create a new home, a new shelter of emotions. 

What led to your decision to implement family keepsakes into your work as a means of exploring themes like memory and place? 

Keepsakes like old photos and embroidered fabric can tell us more about the past, about the people who touched these memorabilia.  Traditional stories have a profound impact on my current photographic work.  In my village in Germany, women met regularly in “Spin Clubs” to spin wool, embroider, and stitch fabrics for their homes. My composite images are based on these stories and cultural characteristics and I transform this tradition of storytelling into a visual journey. With my own embroidered elements, I explore the theme of memory further. 

What led to your decision to implement family keepsakes into your work as a means of exploring themes like memory and place? 

Keepsakes like old photos and embroidered fabric can tell us more about the past, about the people who touched these memorabilia.  Traditional stories have a profound impact on my current photographic work.  In my village in Germany, women met regularly in “Spin Clubs” to spin wool, embroider, and stitch fabrics for their homes. My composite images are based on these stories and cultural characteristics and I transform this tradition of storytelling into a visual journey. With my own embroidered elements, I explore the theme of memory further. 

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

I love street art/graffiti and became interested in the connection between street art and early rap music after visiting the exhibition “Basquiat and the Hip-Hop Generation” at the Museum of Fine Arts Boston. Absolutely obsessed with Rapture by Blondie.

ABOUT ASTRID REISCHWITZ

Astrid Reischwitz is a lens-based artist whose work explores storytelling from a personal perspective. Using keepsakes from family life, old photographs, and storytelling strategies, she builds a visual world of memory, identity, place, and home. Her current focus is the exploration of personal and collective memory influenced by her upbringing in Germany.

Reischwitz has exhibited at national and international museums and galleries including Newport Art Museum, Griffin Museum of Photography, Danforth Art Museum, Photographic Resource Center, The Center for Fine Art Photography (CO), Rhode Island Center for Photographic Arts, Center for Photographic Art (CA), FotoNostrum, Dina Mitrani Gallery and Gallery Kayafas.

She has received multiple awards, including the 2020 Griffin Award at the Griffin Museum of Photography and the Multimedia Award at the 2020 San Francisco Bay International Photo Awards. Her series “Spin Club Tapestry” was selected as a Juror’s Pick at the 2021 LensCulture Art Photography Awards and is the Series Winner at the 2021 Siena International Photo Awards. She was a Photolucida Critical Mass Top 50 photographer in 2021, 2020, 2019, and 2016; and is a Mass Cultural Council 2021 Artist Fellowship Finalist in Photography.

Her work was featured in Fraction Magazine, Lenscratch, LensCulture, What Will You Rembember?, Wired Japan, Il Post Italy, P3 Portugal, Aint-Bad Magazine, The Boston Globe, NRC Handelsblad Amsterdam, as well as other media outlets.

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

Marsha Guggenheim | Griffin State of Mind

Posted on April 7, 2023

Marsha Guggenheim’s series is on show now at the Griffin Museum. Without a Map reimagines this time that’s deeply rooted in my memories. Visiting my childhood home, synagogue and family plot provided an entry into this personal retelling. Working with family photos, creating new images from my past and turning the camera on myself, I found the means to evoke, reinterpret and address unanswered questions born from early imprints that were buried long ago.

two photographs

Tell us a little about your background

This is a picture I made of me as a young girl and as a woman today.  A lot has happened over these years.  I didn’t come to photography until late in life after a career in the nonprofit sector where I created programs supporting the underserved community.

How has your approach to photography evolved since beginning the project?

This project is technically a significant departure from my previous work.  I started with color but found sepia was a much more effective way to work with my old photos and to create a sense of time with my new ones.  I learned techniques for manipulating images with available light and in-camera affects and only used tools like Photoshop for basic cropping and print production.

on her way

Tell a little about your exhibition, “Without a Map”, and how it was conceived

For years I have loved making pictures of people and learning their stories.  About five years ago, I realized that there was one story I hadn’t addressed and that was my own.  To make this series, I looked at old family photos, made self portraits, and created pictures from conversations I had with people who had known my mother.   I also visited my childhood home, synagogue and family plot to gain a better understanding of my early childhood.

self portrait

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

I’m not sure Robert Frank’s work would still be considered contemporary, but he was my teacher, unbeknownst to him.  I love his work and how he makes pictures of daily life, whether it’s a trolly car or a funeral, you get a strong sense of the people involved and their environment.

ABOUT MARSHA GUGGENHEIM

Marsha Guggenheim is a San Francisco based fine art photographer. Her passion is storytelling and using images to re-imagine the past and inspire the present. Marsha spent years photographing and documenting the lives of formerly homeless mothers. This work resulted in the monograph, Facing Forward, highlighting thirty-five women through portraits combined with stories of their life experiences. Over the past five years, Marsha has been working on her series, Without a Map. The project draws on recreating images from memories and ephemera to reconstruct her personal history. Without a Map looks at the life-long impact of loss on a child and how both trauma and joy affect the human soul.

Represented by Corden Potts Gallery, Marsha is a 2021 and 2022 Critical Mass finalist. Her work has been shown in over fifty exhibitions and is included in numerous private collections. Feature articles and interviews range from Black & White Magazine, All About Photo Magazine, Fraction Magazine, F-Stop Photography Magazine and Lenscratch. In 2023, Marsha will be featured in a solo show at The Griffin Museum of Photography and will also participate in a six-artist group exhibition at the Harvey Milk Photography Center in San Francisco.

Filed Under: Exhibitions, Griffin State of Mind Tagged With: Griffin Exhibitions, Photography, black and white, Photographers on Photography

Carolle Benitah | Griffin State of Mind

Posted on March 31, 2023

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

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

Tell us a little about yourself and your background. 

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

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

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

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

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

Embroidery is also the work of women. 

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

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

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

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

ABOUT CAROLLE BENITAH

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

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

ARTIST STATEMENT

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

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

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

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

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

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

All images courtesy of Sous Les Etoiles Gallery.

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

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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