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Online Events

June is Photobook Month!

Posted on May 19, 2023

It’s that time again! We are so excited to bring you another round of conversations about the photobook! This year we are focused on the process of how to move from concept to completion.

We are thrilled to launch the month of conversations and opportunities with Mary Virginia Swanson and Susan kae Grant with their seminar on demystifying the process of publishing.

This year we have a series of Publishers in Residence. Have a book project and need some feedback? Want to start figuring out what to do with your project? We have a group of publishers, editors, designers and consultants ready to help you find your next step.

Our publisher conversations this year include one with Minor Matters publisher Michelle Dunn Marsh and Annu Palakunnathu Matthew to discuss the process of publishing Matthew’s mid career survey The Answers Take Time.

Here is a look at month of events. More are being added daily. Check back or check our events page for more information.

Seminar – Online in the Griffin Zoom Room

Sunday June 4th – 11:00 AM – 2:00 PM Eastern / 8:00 AM Pacific

Mary Virginia Swanson & Susan kae Grant | Making the Match, Bringing Your Artwork to Book Form

Panel Discussion & Book Signing –

Saturday June 10th – 3 to 6pm (at the Griffin Museum)

Caleb Cain Marcus | Workshop Arts with Caleb Cain Marcus, Elizabeth Clark Libert, Rita Nannini and David Bernstein | The Road to Publishing

Tuesday June 13th – 2pm Eastern / 11am Pacific Preston Gannaway & Stuart Smith | Remember Me – GOST publishing

Friday June 23rd – 6 to 8pm

Sarah Malakoff | Personal History

Publisher Conversations – Online in the Griffin Zoom Room

Thursday June 15th – 7.00pm – 8.30pm Eastern Michelle Dunn Marsh & Annu Palakunnathu Matthew

Publisher in Residence –

Saturday June 10th 11.30am to 2.30pm (Griffin Museum) – Caleb Cain Marcus

Sunday June 11th 11.00am to 1.00pm (Online) – Alexa Dilworth

Sunday June 14th 1.00am to 3.30pm (Online) – Karen Davis

Saturday June 17th 10.00am to 12.30pm (Online) – Melanie McWhorter

Saturday June 24th 11.00am to 2.00pm (Online) – Michelle Dunn Marsh

Photobook Sale!

Sunday June 25th Photobook & Ephemora Sale! 1 – 5pm – Charles Meyer Collection

The Griffin Museum is honored to celebrate the life of photographer Charles Meyer with the sale of select tomes from his personal collection of photobooks as well as collected ephemera on Sunday June 25th at 1pm. Over 150 books in the collection, plus photo equipment, including a Beseler 4×5 enlarger will be available for purchase.

Filed Under: Uncategorized, Portfolio Reviews, Events, Online Events, Education

Art of the Photobook | June 2022

Posted on May 5, 2022

We are excited to showcase the photo book in the month of June with a series of conversations, workshops and lectures all highlighting the creativity of the printed page.

Are you a collector of photo books? Have you wondered how to get your ideas to print? Looking for the perfect independent publisher? We are excited to offer the following opportunities for artists to connect and learn from our professionals and creatives. We are continuing to build out our program, and will add more events as they confirm.

We are looking to host a book and zine fair in person in Winchester. If you would like to be part of that event, please contact us for more information.

This series of Artist and Panel programs are FREE to all our Griffin members, and individual tickets for Non Members are $10. Not a member? See the benefits of Membership here.

Current list of Events – All events are online unless otherwise listed.

 

Artists & Publisher Conversations

June 2 – Eat Flowers, A Conversation with Cig Harvey and Two Ponds Press

June 9 – Ice Fog Press | A conversation with publisher Ben Huff & Eirik Johnson of Ice Fog

June 15th – 21st Editions | Adger Cowans and Stephen Albahari

June 16th – Visual Voices in Print | J. Sybylla Smith with Karen Marshall, Lydia Panas and Amy Touchette

 

Artist Publishing Resources

June 4 – Curator in Residence with Melanie McWhorter | online book project reviews

June 5 – Curator in Residence with Karen Davis | online book project reviews

 

Artist Talks

May 24 – Ed Kashi  | Abandoned Moments

June 7 – Sue Michlovitz & Eliot Dudik| Handmade. From vision to production.

June 14 – On Seeing | Alyssa Minahan, Linda Morrow and David Sokosh all discuss thier path to creating their beautiful hand crafted works.

June 22nd – Minny Lee | Field Notes. A presentation about Lee’s residency, publication and exhibition with Datz Press.

 
Closing Conversation: 
Placing your Photographic Bookworks in Collections
June 26th – Mary Virginia Swanson, moderator;
Panelists
Jon Evans, Chief of Library and Archives, Museum of Fine Arts, Houston
Susan kae Grant, lens-based artist whose creative practice includes book arts, having produced twelve limited edition artists’ books to date
Deborah Hollis, Associate Professor, Rare and Distinctive Collections, University of Colorado Boulder Libraries

Filed Under: Uncategorized, Portfolio Reviews, Events, Online Events, Education

Picturing the Future 2021

Posted on October 6, 2021

Picturing the Future 2021

The Griffin Museum presents the 2021 Picturing the Future benefit print sale happening October 15 through October 31st. Preview begins October 6th.

The Griffin Museum of Photography in Winchester, Massachusetts, along with photography creatives from across the United States invite you to add new photographic works to your collection. The Picturing the Future Benefit Auction brings together forty prints from emerging and established artists with sales benefiting the Griffin’s educational programs, exhibitions and operations.

We are thrilled to be part of a community of photographic artists who are supporting the Griffin by donating their time and creative work to help sustain the Museum. This special event will be a silent auction via the auction platform GiveSmart and will be available for viewing all over the world. There will be images that will excite both seasoned photography collectors, as well as those just starting to collect. Prints will be affordable and the proceeds will help support the Griffin and enhance our programming. Participation in the auction is free, and the auction items will be on view for one week prior to bidding.

Preview of the works opens on October 6th – October 15th, with bidding available starting October 16th – October 31st.

To preview and bid on the works in Picturing the Future the link is here PTF2021.givesmart.com

The Griffin Museum of Photography is a nonprofit organization dedicated solely to the art of photography. Through our many exhibitions, programs and lectures, we strive to encourage a broader understanding and appreciation of the visual, emotional and social impact of photography.

Forty prints spanning a wide spectrum of photographic genres will be available. Original photographs will be available from established photographic luminaries such as John Paul Caponigro, Harold Feinstein, Fran Forman, David Hilliard, Lou Jones, David Levinthal, Vaughn Sills, Joyce Tenneson, Bradford Washburn, Ernest Withers and so many more.

We are also pleased to introduce you to works from the next generation of creative artists, Granville Carroll, Raymond Thompson Jr, JP Terlizzi, Sal Taylor Kydd among others.

For additional information about how you can participate in this incredible auction of photographic works, please contact the Griffin Museum at 781.729.1158 or by email contact Crista Dix, Associate Director at crista@griffinmuseum.org.

Filed Under: Picturing the Future, Uncategorized, Support the Griffin, Events, Online Events

Griffin Museum Photobook Week May 11-17, 2021

Posted on April 27, 2021

Griffin Museum of Photography

11 May – 17 May, 2021

PT Shelfie

Celebrate the creativity and artistry of the Photobook at the Griffin in a series of conversations with independent publishers and creators in May!

The Griffin Museum of Photography in Winchester, Massachusetts is highlighting the enduring creativity of the Photo Book! We have invited independent publishers and creative artists to share their work, from concept to completion.  As a series of online talks and panels hosted by the Griffin Museum, this weekend of programming provides an in depth look at how Photobooks are made and the artists and craftsman who make them. 

The majority of these events are FREE to Griffin Members.

** Linda Connor ** is a fully ticketed event. $5 for Members / $10 for Non-Members

We have created a Photobook Week Pass available for Non Members at a price of $85 a 50% savings from attending all 18 events during the week. 

Not a member of the Griffin? To learn more about the benefits of being a member of our creative community see our Membership pages for more information. 

 

Event Listings – 

 

Tuesday May 11th – 

7pm – Linda Connor   Cost to Members $5 / Non-Members $10

 

Thursday May 13th – 

2pm – Grenade in a Jar with Melanie McWhorter

5pm – Larissa Leclair and the Indie Photobook Library

7pm – Mary Beth Meehan & Fred Turner

 

Friday May 14th –

2pm – Yoffy Press with Jennifer Yoffy

6pm – Shelf Talkers Social Hour

7pm – Debi Cornwall 

 

Saturday May 15th –

1pm – Daylight Books with Michael Itkoff

3pm – Peanut Press with Ashly Stohl and David Carol

5pm – Too Tired with Kelly Burgess

7pm – +Kris Graves Projects

 

Sunday May 16th – 

11am – Schilt Publishing with Maarten Schilt with J. Sybylla Smith

1pm – Emily Sheffer of Dust Collective

3pm – Saint Lucy Books with Mark Alice Durant 

5pm – 21st Editions with Steve Albahari interviewed by J. Sybylla Smith

7pm – Datz Press with Sangyon Joo

 

Monday May 17th – 

2pm –  Alexa Becker, Kehrer Verlag

5pm – Caleb Cain Marcus 

7pm – Fran Forman – The Rest Between Two Notes

 

See you online in May!

Filed Under: Events, Online Events

July Photo Chat Chat | Member’s Exhibition Edition

Posted on July 16, 2020

Join us Thursday night July 16th for a chat with four artists participating in our 26th Annual Member’s Exhibition, curated by Alexa Dilworth. 

Yorgos Efthymiadis

door behind grass

© Yorgos Efthymiadis, “Rusty Door”

There Is a Place I Want to Take You I had an unsettling feeling when I returned, for the very first time after many years abroad, to the place of my origin. Even though I was surrounded by loved ones, friends and family who were ecstatic to see me, there was a sense of non-belonging. After a couple of days of catching up and hanging out, they returned to their routines. I stopped being their center of attention and became a stranger in a foreign land. It was harsh to come home, to a place which I banished in the past, only to realize that I have been banished in return. Time leaves its mark, transforms places, and alters people. Even the smallest detail can make a huge difference to the way things were. After moving away, I had to rediscover what I have left behind. Using my memories as a starting point, I walked down the road that led to my high school, I lay on the sand at the beach, close to the house where I grew up, I nodded to a familiar face I couldn’t quite place and yet they smiled back. All these round-trip tickets to the past, to a place that I once used to belong, reminded me one of Henry Miller’s quotes that always resonated with me: “One’s destination is never a place but rather a new way of looking at things.”

Leslie Jean-Bart

Have always found great comfort in or by the ocean.

The ocean has become the anchor for my current series, Reality & Imagination.

figure walking along beach

© Leslie Jean-Bart, “The Prayer”

This ongoing series is a body of work of over 100 images that were edited from hundreds of images shot over the past 8 years. The images are squarely rooted in the tradition of Elliott Erwitt, Jay Maisel, Eugene Smith, Lou Draper, and sport photography. They are basically as they are in the instant shot.   

I photograph the tide as visual metaphor to explore the dynamic interaction which takes place between the cultures when one lives permanently in a foreign land. 

The cultures automatically interact with each other in a motion that is instantly fluid and turbulent, just as the sand and tide. It’s a constant movement in unison where each always retains its distinctive characteristics. This creates a duality that is always present. 

The current climate towards immigrants in the US and the present migrant situation in Europe shows that the turbulent interaction between the duality created by the mix of the two cultures does not only manifest itself within the foreign individual but also within that foreign land.

Each of the sections of ‘Reality & Imagination’ explores this cultural duality. The section ‘Silhouette & Shadow’ and ‘Silhouette & Shadow Too’ I give an actual shape to the two cultures as silhouette & shadow, which are both entities that cannot exist without the presence of another.  Just as the sand and the tide, a silhouette & or a shadow constantly moves in unison with the object the projected light uses to create it. In that instance, both the object and the shadow always retain each their individual characteristics.

‘Silhouette & Shadow Too’ addresses the phase where immigrants are visible to the dominant society only in limited capacity when needed, and the fact that the potential of enriching the society at large is short circuited.

Personally,  the series has permitted me to readily welcome what’s good from both (all cultures in fact) and to let go from each what does not serve me as a human being. It has facilitated me to see at times what’s not readily seen as well as to be at times more present in life. It has given me the understanding that at every point I have the opportunity to act by choosing from within the structures of one of the two cultures what would serve best at that moment.                                                                                                                      

The constant intermingling of that duality is ever present.

Loli Kantor

papers

© Loli Kantor, “Travel Document, 1951-1952”

For Time Is No Longer Now: A Tale of Love, Loss and Belonging My mother Lola died in Paris on January 21, 1952, after giving birth to me. My father Zwi died in Tel Aviv of a heart attack, March 1966 when I was 14 years old. My brother Ami died of a cardiac arrest in New York City on Thanksgiving Day, 1998. My immediate family: grandmothers, grandfathers, aunts and uncles perished in the Holocaust. My missing family created deep holes in my life—holes so deep that I have been driven to fill them in through a comprehensive and sometimes fevered search. Studying the archives of my family which I collected and saved through my life I uncover facts and information about my mother my father and my brother that help me to better understand their stories. I travel to the places from which my parents came, to where I was born and my mother died, to where I grew up and to times I barely remember, and even before. This is the soul of my work.These are visual disclosures including historical photographs, letters and documents, as well as new photographic works which I created to insert myself into the story of my lost family.

Geralyn Shukwit

woman on couch

© Geralyn Shukwit “Victoria”

For the past nine years, Brooklyn-based photographer Geralyn Shukwit has traveled the backroads of Bahia, Brazil, returning to the same communities year after year to form relationships with the families who reside there. O Tempo Não Para, Portuguese for “time does not stop,” is a personal documentation of those interactions and observations, a poetic record of Bahian life that prevails despite economic and environmental hardships. One of 26 states in Brazil, Bahia has a population of about 14 million in a region approximately the size of Texas. The Portuguese named it “Bahia” (“bay”) in 1501 after first entering the region through the bay where its capital, Salvador, is now located. An agricultural community, Bahians reside primarily in the cities and towns on the coast of the Atlantic Ocean, where the weather is slightly more forgiving than in Bahia’s harsh, arid interior region, the Sertão. Bahia has one of the highest rates of poverty in the country; mothers often have to fish to feed her children and in many communities, water only arrives by truck. Mostly of mixed European and African lineage, Bahians are overwhelmingly Roman Catholic, and many practice the rituals of Umbanda, Candomblé, and other syncretist religious sects. Cloaked in Bahia’s unique light, Shukwit’s intimate portrayal of daily life in Bahia offers viewers distinctly quiet, in-between moments laden with profundity. Underpinning the collective power of O Tempo Não Para is the photographer’s acute ability to cultivate trust and develop close connections with community members. Set in the extraordinarily colorful landscape of Bahia, a contrasting palette of bright, cool and warm colors, each photograph leaves traces of a culture seeped in the rituals and traditions that bind them.

 

Filed Under: Exhibitions, Online Events Tagged With: Photo Chat Chat, Photographers on Photography, griffin online

June Photo Chat Chat | featuring Sean Du, Greg Jundanian, Eric Kunsman & Minny Lee

Posted on May 16, 2020

Once a month we bring together four photographers to talk about their work, and inspire us all creatively. Called the Photo Chat Chat, our next installment happens June 11th. Here is our line up. It promises to be a great conversation.

 

sd canadian rockies

Canadian Rockies, No. 6    © Sean Du

Sean Du is a landscape photographer whose work aims to reconnect us with nature. His on-going project “Above the Treeline” records, by way of hiking and climbing, the normally unseen views of North America’s mountain wildernesses. Since earning his BFA in photography from Art Center College of Design in Pasadena, California, his work had been exhibited in institutes such as the Center for Photographic Art in Carmel, California, Los Angeles Center of Photography, the Center for Fine Art Photography in Fort Collins, Colorado, Sangre de Cristo Arts Center in Pueblo, Colorado, and Photographic Center Northwest, in Seattle, Washington. He currently lives in Pasadena, California.

 

gj woman

© Gregory Jundanian

Gregory Jundanian is an emerging artist focused on portraiture with a concentration on communities. His current project, In Their Footsteps, is about his connection to Armenia, and the connection between Armenia and Armenian break-away republic of Artsakh. Other ongoing projects include a series of work on male identity focusing on local area barbershops, and different landscape projects that keep him busy until he can photograph people once again. In
the meantime he is finally fully utilizing his Netflix account.

Jundanian was a 2017 Critical Mass Top 200 finalist with Spoken Word, his work on the poetry slam community in Boston. He also had a solo show with that work at the South Boston Public Library, and has shown both nationally and internationally in group shows. He recently completed his post-bac degree at MassArt, and will be entering an MFA program at the University of Hartford this summer.

 

ek - rochester

East Main St, Rochester, NY  ©Eric Kunsman

Eric T. Kunsman (b. 1975) was born and raised in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania. While in high school, he was heavily influenced by the death of the steel industry and its place in American history. The exposure to the work of Walker Evans during this time hooked Eric onto photography.

Eric holds his MFA in Book Arts/Printmaking from The University of the Arts in Philadelphia and holds an MS in Electronic Publishing/Graphic Arts Media, BS in Biomedical Photography, BFA in Fine Art photography all from the Rochester Institute of Technology in Rochester, New York.

Currently, he is a photographer and book artist based out of Rochester, New York. Eric works at the Rochester Institute of Technology (RIT) as a Lecturer for the Visual Communications Studies Department at the National Technical Institute for the Deaf and is an adjunct professor for the School of Photographic Arts & Sciences. He has owned Booksmart Studio since 2005, which is a fine art digital printing studio, specializing in numerous techniques and services for photographers and book artists on a collaborative basis.

 

ml - self portrait

Self-portrait, Asbury Park, NJ , 2012. © Minny Lee

Minny Lee is a lens- based artist who is currently focusing on making artist’s books. Her work contemplates the concepts around time and space and the coexistence of duality. Lee was born and raised in South Korea and obtained an MA in Art History from City College of New York and an MFA in Advanced Photographic Studies from ICP-Bard. Lee was awarded a fellowship from the Reflexions Masterclass in Europe and participated in an artist-in-residence program at Halsnøy Kloster (Norway) and Vermont Studio Center. Her work has been exhibited at the Center for Fine Art Photography, Camera Club of New York, Datz Museum of Art (S. Korea), Espacio el Dorado (Colombia), Les Rencontres d’Arles (France), Lishui Photo Festival (China) among other venues. Lee’s artist’s books are in the collection of the International Center of Photography Library, New York Public Library, Special Collections at the University of Arizona, Special Collections at Stanford University, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Amon Carter Museum Library, and many other private collections. Lee was based in the greater New York area for more than twenty years and recently relocated to Honolulu, Hawaii.

 

For more information about the photo chat contact us. If you wish to be a presenter at a future event email us. The chat is free for everyone. Reservations required and can be made on our website.

Filed Under: Portfolio Reviews, Online Events Tagged With: Photo Chat Chat, Griffin Museum Online, documentary photography, Photographers on Photography, Self Portrait, Landscape, artist conversations

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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