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Uncategorized

Griffin State of Mind | Home Views – Charles Mintz

Posted on December 3, 2021

Charles Mintz is a photographer living in Cleveland, OH. His work is “primarily documentary, built around ideas that are interesting and important to him.” His series, Lustron Stories, is about the legacy of houses produced by the Lustron Corporation between 1948 and 1950. The corporation itself is gone, but several houses they produced are still in use, and the series asks who lives in these houses still, and what do their lives look like?

Lustron Stories is a part of the Griffin’s Home Views exhibition. You can find his work on the walls of our Main gallery until December 5th. To get a feel of his artistic process, we asked Chuck some questions, and here is what he had to say:

1.Tell us how you first connected to the Griffin Museum.

man holding photos

© Charles Mintz

Paula reviewed my portfolio at FotoFest in Houston in 2010. At that time I was showing “The Album Project.” I have followed the Griffin since and have participated in, at least, one of your juried shows.

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

I work on my photography every day. OK, sometimes life intervenes but that is exception. I am constantly looking for, and attempting, stories to build into projects. I also look at images online, primarily on Facebook and Instagram but also in response to emails. My friend KA Letts opened an exhibit in Toledo last night. I always find her work thought provoking. Attached is “Primavera”, by K.A. Letts, 2021, acrylic on paper, 38″ x 50″.

3. Please tell us a little about your series Lustron Stories, and how it was conceived.

young man holding photo album

© Charles Mintz

I have been working with the Ohio History Connection in Columbus for a while. I exhibited “Every Place I Have Ever Lived – the foreclosure crisis in 12 locations” there and also did one of the photo sessions for Precious Objects. I have attached images from both projects. They were planning a major group of exhibitions on the fifties that was to include a Lustron home as an exhibit. They give me a copy of their journal that included a major paper in Lustron. These houses were made between 1948 and 1950. I was born in 1948, they represent my lifetime. They were targeted at the stereotyped American family of the time. I was intrigued to see who really lived in them now. I worked on the project for six months, unsure of whether I was saying anything. Then I photographed “Richard”. Richard was retired boilermaker with the Santa Fe railroad. He was a collector. He wanted me to see his stuff but did not want me photographing it. As we looked at his collections he pulled out a Thomas Kinkade plate that he wanted me to have and then agreed to be photographed with it. When I saw that film, I knew I was going to stick with this project. 

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

Hard to answer that question since I have not had the opportunity to visit.

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

man standing my doorway holding a plate

© Charles Mintz

I was kind of knocked out by the book “Southernmost” By Silas House. I have a very special relationship with my son and the book really spoke to me. I am constantly awash in great music, right now listening to Miles Davis playing “Surrey with the Fringe on Top”, a pretty dumb song played stunningly.

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

Hard question. Jimmy Carter. How he found the strength to turn his post-presidency into a model of how we all should follow what might have been our crowning achievement. In his case, his portrayal as a failure when, in fact, he accomplished great things in his four years.

 

Filed Under: Uncategorized, Griffin State of Mind

Griffin State of Mind | Home Views – Brandy Trigueros

Posted on November 12, 2021

“The idea of home instantly transports me to my childhood…It is a tiny home with a massive heart, built from love and toil of parents working multiple jobs. It is my mother in the sunlight of day on her knees laying a brick walkway for my brother and I to skip along, only later to be lost to foreclosure. For me, home and the domestic space continue to be a complex set of psychological instability as well as genuine gratitude for the very roof over my head, especially when others may not even have one.” —Brandy Trigueros 

Featured in our Home Views exhibition, Brandy Trigueros’ There’s No Other Like Your Mother is a powerful exploration of the maternal subject and the domestic tradition. With photographs that explore psychological inner states in ways that are both compelling and nostalgic, Brandy’s exhibition is one we couldn’t wait to hear more about in our interview.

Tell us how you first connected to the Griffin Museum.

woman holding book

© Brandy Trigueros

I’ve been following and a huge fan of the Griffin Museum for some time so it was really lovely to be able to meet with Paula Tognarelli while in Portland for Photolucida in 2019. Paula was so generous with her time and supportive of my work, that same year she selected a piece of mine for the Center for Photographic Art’s International Juried Exhibition. It is a tremendous honor to be a part of the 2021 Home Views exhibition at the Griffin Museum that Paula beautifully curated.

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

I love looking at photographs and absorb them like a sponge, whether at the local bookstore or online, photography fuels my soul. If I am personally not making pictures, I am imagining, conceiving, and note taking by way of visual sketches with my camera. I do a lot of journaling and normally have a physical paper journal with me that I write, sketch, and collage in but more recently found I haven’t been keeping it up as a daily habit as I’d like to, so on days that run away with me I use a digital journaling app called Day One and before bed I take a few minutes to write and attach an image or video to.

I recently found the playful portrait, performance, sculpture, and installation work of the German artist, Thorsten Brinkmann, who is definitely in my wheelhouse ~ so inspiring. I would love to meet him someday and scavenge junkyards together!

Please tell us a little about your series There’s No Other Like Your Mother, and how it was conceived.

When I was 29, my mother passed away suddenly, leaving a gaping hole in my heart and sense

woman with snakes on her head

© Juul Kraijer

of self, as my identity was completely interlocked with hers. This was during a time in which I was also considering becoming a mother myself. A daily ritual of journaling helped process my emotions. A riot of reoccurring ambivalent thoughts surrounding the idea of motherhood began to seep onto the page, which was a visual invitation to follow curiosity. The psychological underpinnings of my desires and ambiguities of bearing my own child provided a road map for this self-portrait series, which is a personal exploration of feminine identity and the maternal subject.

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

Living in Los Angeles I have not yet had the pleasure of visiting the Griffin Museum or the countless exceptional exhibitions in-person so I rely on the virtual programming but top of mind, I found these exhibitions particularly moving: The Disappearance of Joseph Plummer by Amani Willett, the 2018 Arnold Newman Prize Exhibition, Gray Matters, and Aline Smithson’s Self & Others.

woman with pink hat and gloves with magnifying glass held over her left eye

© Aline Smithson

What is your favorite place to escape to?

The trees, a long indulgent bath, live musical performances, and The Museum of Jurassic Technology.

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

I’ve been particularly obsessed with mushrooms – reading, thinking about, and imagining fungal bodies and their underground networks as well as Prototaxites, the giant fungi of the Devonian period. My newest logo is even influenced by mushrooms. Merlin Sheldrake’s Entangled Life is an eye-opening, informative book on fungi.

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

book with mushrooms

© DRK Videography

A seemingly difficult question because there are several influential women, such as Mary Wollstonecraft, Ada Lovelace, Virginia Woolf, and Remedios Varo but first and foremost, it would be my mother Sherryl, as there are a multitude of unanswered questions, shared laughter, and unfinished craftworks, I would give anything to sit and create and just be together.

 

Filed Under: Uncategorized, Exhibitions, Griffin State of Mind

Griffin State of Mind | Home Views – Colleen Mullins

Posted on November 11, 2021

Colleen Mullins is a photographer and book artist living and working in San Francisco. Her work, The Bone of Her Nose, will be featured as part of the Home Views show, and will be on the walls of our Atelier Gallery until December 5th. If you missed her artist talk on November 5th we have another opportunity here to learn more about her work and creative processes. Here is what she had to say:

Tell us how you first connected to the Griffin Museum.

house with man washing the sidewalk

© Colleen Mullins

I first met Paula Tongarelli at PhotoLucida in 2007 as one of her reviewees. At the time I was trying to place a body of work I had made traveling, off and on, for six years on cruise ships with my mother. It was so long ago, that in my follow up thank you to Paula, I sent her a sheet of twenty slides!

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

My phone has become my most frequent camera, as I use it to take notes, record that which I am also photographing with a “real” camera, and it’s always in my pocket. A picture I keep going back to is An-My Le’s “The Silent General, Fragment VI: General Robert E. Lee and General P.G.T. Beauregard Monuments, Homeland Security Storage, New Orleans, Louisiana.” I started working on a project in 2018 in Humboldt County in far northern California, where the first statue of an American President would be eventually removed, William McKinley. Because of a long-term project in New Orleans, I had been watching with interest, both arc of the monument removals there, and the arc of Le’s relationship with the city. But back to that picture: I am enraptured with it. The conversations in scale are terrific—the way Robert E. Lee interacts with P.G.T. Beauregard, and how their grandeur is further emphasized by the human scale of the door. And then there is the building. It is makeshift, and built only large enough to imprison and cover these archaic traitors. The floor is dirt. A good photographer sees these things, and combined with the opportunities of light and access, uses their camera as a big index finger to point. It is informative at its basis. Here they are. Protected and put away. But the picture is so far beyond reportage.

Please tell us a little about your series The Bone of Her Nose, and how it was conceived.

porta potty with tree

© Colleen Mullins

The Bone of Her Nose was conceived as I worked for the Friends of the Urban Forest pruning trees in 2015. Each week we are assigned to a different neighborhood, and I started noticing how ridiculous an amount of house renovation was happening in all parts of the city. Over the weeks, I then started observing this phenomenon that they also had a homogeneity to their completion. It was first and most obvious in the Sunset District that was built all at the same time, and has a particular kind of house number with a little black frame. Those vanished, and were replaced with mid-century styled sans-serif font numbers, on a substrate of grey paint. The phenomenon of removing color from San Francisco had been documented by San Francisco Chronicle writer, John King, the prior year in an article in which he posited that “In the world of San Francisco architecture, black is the new black.” By 2015 this had spread from new development and apartment buildings in the trendier areas of the city to residential neighborhoods. And I was just seeing it everywhere. The doors were often painted a bright color that mimicked, also, the mid-century. And garage doors were either frosted glass or horizontal redwood.

 Having returned to the city to live in 2014, after a 25-year hiatus, to occupy my childhood apartment, I had been grappling with numerous internal complaints. What had happened to “real” San Franciscans? Nobody was funky anymore. The streets were filled with over-moneyed 25-year-old tech-industrialists looking to party, and as it turned out, spill grey paint everywhere. The houses, I thought were a physical manifestation of what I had been observing and thinking about. A Greek-chorus of the new folks saying to we “natives” again and again—both verbally and in paint, “If you can’t afford to live here, move somewhere else.” My approach takes me back to that phone camera—a typologic taking of notes. Evidence of what is troubling….a slow tide of “fog grey.”

building with sidewalk and tree

© Colleen Mullins

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

I have never been to the Griffin! But I am a huge fan of Amani Willet’s book “The Disappearance of Joseph Plummer” (Overlapse Books). I would have loved to see that exhibition in person.

What is your favorite place to escape to?

New Orleans.

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

I know I should have some brilliant on-brand answer to this, but I’m going to say Travels with Charley in Search of America. I’ve been taking these trips in a tiny delivery van with no windows, with an idea about being a woman traveling alone in America. In the year plus of the pandemic that has left us without the ability to see America, while America has been on full display in a sense of liberty and death, but not physical space, I have been roaming in my tiny mobile Covid-avoidance vehicle. I’m a little obsessed with Steinbeck’s privilege, as a white male, to forge forth with his largest concern being not recognized as a famous author. But he says in the prologue, “When the virus of restlessness begins to take possession of a wayward man, and the road away from Here seems broad and straight and sweet…” That’s certainly where I am.

old picture of house

© Colleen Mullins

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

 My dad. The stuff I didn’t know to ask.

To see more about Colleen Mullins creativity log onto her website. Follow her on Instagram @colleen_mullins_photography

Filed Under: Griffin State of Mind, Uncategorized

New England Portfolio Review | March 11 – 13, 2022

Posted on November 10, 2021

We are thrilled to start of 2022 with the New England Portfolio Reviews in March of 2022!

Since 2009 The New England Portfolio Reviews (NEPR) have been co-produced by the Griffin Museum of Photography, Winchester, MA and the Photographic Resource Center (PRC), Cambridge,  Massachusetts with the mission of bringing reviewers and photographers from New England and beyond for two days of discussion, networking, and gaining fresh perspective on one’s work. This NEPR is an online event to be held on March 11-13, 2022 with a keynote lecture by Meghann Riepenhoff – March 11th at 7pm. 

NEPR serves photographers who are just embarking on their careers and more established photographers hoping to reach new audiences. The online format allows for an expansion of participants in volume and in location including reviewers such gallerists, book publishers, museum professionals, critics, educators and advisors from all over the world who provide guidance and potential opportunities to grow artist practices.

Of the 90+ participating photographers, ten are emerging photographers that will receive full scholarships. We believe that providing professional opportunities to emerging photographers is key to keeping the industry strong and active.

Here is a list of current reviewers – more are being added, and all are subject to change.

Camilo Alvarez, Samson Projects, Boston, MA
Ernsto Bazan, Bazan Photos Publishing, Vera Cruz, Mexico
Emily Belz, Photographer and Educator
Makeda Best, Menschel Curator of Photography at the Harvard Art Museums
Nancy Burns, Stoddard Associate Curator of Prints, Drawings and Photographs, Worcester, MA
David Carol & Ashly Stohl, Peanut Press, LA & NY
Alyssa Coppelman, Photo Editor & Consultant, Austin, TX
Carrie Cushman, Edith Dale Monson Director/Curator of the Joseloff and Silpe Galleries, University of Hartford, Hartford, CT
Karen Davis, Gallerist, Davis Orton Gallery
David DeMelim, Managing Director, RI Center for Photographic Arts
Mark Alice Durant, Saint Lucy Books, Baltimore, MD
Michael Foley, Foley Gallery, New York
Donna Garcia, Executive Director, Atlanta Photography Group, Atlanta Georgia
Bill Gaskins, Director of Photography + Media & Society MFA, MICA, Baltimore, MD
Hamidah Glasgow, Executive Director, Center for Fine Art photography Fort Collins, CO
Lonnie Graham, Executive Director, PhotoAlliance, San Francisco
Karen Haas, Lane Curator of Photographs, Museum of Fine Arts Boston
Karen Harvey, Shutterhub, London, UK
Tailyr Irvine, Indigenous Photograph, Documentary Photographer
Ann Jastrab, Executive Director, Center for Photographic Art, Carmel, CA
Frances Jakubek, Director of Exhibitions, Bruce Silverstein Gallery, NY
Caleb Cain Marcus,  Roving Exhibitions Editor, Damiani Publishing, NY, NY
Melanie McWhorter, Independent Photography Consultant
Bree Lamb, Fraction Magazine, Albuquerque, NM
Arlette Kayafas, Gallery Kayafas, Boston, MA
Anne Kelly, Photo-Eye, Santa Fe, NM
Michael Kirchoff, Analog Forever Magazine, Los Angeles, CA
Paul Kopeikin, Kopeikin Gallery, Los Angeles, CA
Kirsten Rian, Independent Curator, Oregon
J. Sybylla Smith, Independent Consultant, Boston MA
Aline Smithson, Founder, Lenscratch, Los Angeles, CA
Susan Spiritus, Susan Spiritus Gallery, Irvine, CA
Elin Spring, What Will You Remember, Boston, MA
Dana Stirling & Yoav Friedlander, Float Magazine
Mary Virginia Swanson, Educator, Author and Entrepreneur in the field of photography, and a respected advisor to artists and arts organizations.
Lauren Szumita, Independent Curator, Fitchburg Art Museum, Fitchburg, MA
Barbara Tannenbaum, Chair of Prints, Drawings, and Photographs and Curator of Photography, Cleveland Art Museum
Lisa Volpe, Associate Curator Photography, Museum of Fine Arts Houston
Joanne Junga Yang, Artistic Director, Korea International Photo Festival,  Seoul, Korea

Reviewer biographies and areas of interest will be online soon.

The cost of 4 portfolio reviews is $200. The event is SOLD OUT, and we are accepting waiting list registration.  Registration is now open for the waiting list only. The possibility for additional reviews is available on a day to day basis during the reviews.  All attendees will be alerted to those openings.

We will provide an artist index for download of all of the participants of the portfolio review that we will make available to participating artists, our reviewers and the public. The Artist Index for 2020 is available online.

New England portfolio review

Schedule:

Friday, March 11, 2022:
7:00 – 8:00 pm – Keynote Lecture with Meghann Riepenhoff

Saturday, March 12, 2022: NEPR Reviews
9:00 am – Noon
Noon – 3 pm
3 pm – 6 pm

Sunday, March 13, 2022: NEPR Reviews
9:00 am – Noon
Noon – 3 pm
3 pm – 6 pm

 

We would like to thank Joni & Mark Lohr and Larry Smukler for their sponsorship of our Scholarship Award Participants.

This year’s review is generously sponsored by Stanhope Framers and Digital Silver Imaging (DSI)

               

Filed Under: New England Portfolio Reviews, Uncategorized, Portfolio Reviews Tagged With: portfolio reviews, artist conversations, NEPR, New England Portfolio Review

Griffin State of Mind | Home Views – Kathleen Tunnell Handel

Posted on November 5, 2021

We are excited to bring you the Griffin State of Mind featuring Kathleen Tunnell Handel. Her work is featured in our current exhibition Home Views on the walls through December 5th, 2021. Kathleen will be part of an online panel discussion on November 10th at 7pm Eastern. We wanted to know more about Kathleen and her work, so we asked her a few questions. Here is what she had to say.

Tell us how you first connected to the Griffin Museum.

home views - tunnell handel

© Kathleen Tunnell Handel

I initially connected with the Griffin through meeting and having one of my first portfolio reviews at PhotoNola 2018 with Paula Tognarelli, the Griffin’s esteemed Executive Director and Curator. Her positive, encouraging comments and immediate connection with my work, as an emerging photographer, gave me a wonderful sense of my own possibilities in a way that I continue to build on to this day.

 

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

Photography IS my everyday life! Since I’m writing this response on Indigenous Peoples Day, I will mention the photographer who goes by the name of Ryan Vizzions and his impactful work made during his time at Standing Rock.

Please tell us a little about your project, Where the Heart Is: Portraits from Vernacular American Trailer and Mobile Home Parks, and how it was conceived.

wood pile

© Kathleen Tunnell Handel

 My ongoing project Where the Heart Is: Portraits from Vernacular American Trailer and Mobile Home Parks wasn’t so much conceived as it has continued to evolve. My curiosity has basically led me in new directions in response to experiences photographing in mobile home communities beginning in 2017. Many conversations with residents about their lives, communities, and concerns, along with my being captivated by the feelings of community and the personality on display outside of many homes, inspired my going beyond photographing to deeply researching and reaching out to residents, advocates, and scholars to collaborate with.

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

In general, I feel that the excellent quality of curation and online programming has been incredibly inspiring and supportive of a diverse range of people and is truly commendable.

What is your favorite place to escape to?

stairs pots

© Kathleen Tunnell Handel

Are we dreaming of pre and post-Covid escape or whatever we currently feel comfortable with? Escape to me implies a distance from everyday responsibilities, so I’d have to say either Utah or Kenya, and maybe be unable to leave Croatia out!

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

Given my intense focus on preparing for my first solo exhibition at the Griffin, I’d have to say my obsession is with trying to make perfect the self-published catalog of Where the Heart is with all twenty-seven of my exhibited images, a foreword by Paula Tognarelli, and my essay that dives deep into the project and includes quotes from some of the recorded oral histories that I’ve begun incorporating into the project. 

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

snow trailer park

© Kathleen Tunnell Handel

I’m fairly practical, so I’d say the new Governor of New York State – Kathy Hochul, and I’d focus on trying to amplify the voices of those working on the affordable housing crisis and tidal wave of evictions underway in our state that are universal across the country. Without housing stability, it’s almost impossible to lead a healthy, productive life and current regulations often leave out mobile and manufactured housing as a hybrid of land-lease ownership.

 

To see more of Kathleen Tunnell Handel‘s work visit her website. See her on Instagram @kathleen_tunnellhandel

Filed Under: Uncategorized, Exhibitions, Griffin State of Mind

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

Griffin State of Mind – Vicky Stromee

Posted on July 28, 2021

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

Tell us how you first connected to the Griffin Museum.

I met Paula in Portland at Photolucida. This was my first portfolio review and I really had no idea what to expect or how it worked. She was so kind in conversation. She was supportive of my work and encouraged me to stay in touch. Several years later she contacted me about doing an exhibition at one of the Griffin’s satellite sites where they had an unexpected cancellation. I had a show I had just taken down so I jumped at the chance to send off a crate of framed botanicals. My partner and I traveled to Boston for the opening and got such a warm welcome from Paula and the staff.  I remember seeing Jane Fulton Alt’s Burn series in one of the gallery spaces at the Griffin and falling in love with her work.  I’ve been a fan of the Griffin ever since.

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

vicky stromee studio

Vicky Stromee in her studio

I walk every morning with a good friend and our dogs and I carry my camera everywhere. I try to take pictures everyday – plants, animals, insects, patterns, and shadows – whatever catches my attention.  I’m pretty much in my studio every day where I build light experiments that I shoot for source images. I’m fortunate to have many rich connections with photographers – mostly through virtual connections on Facebook and Instagram, through my local ASMP chapter and an international group that I belong to – Shootapalooza. I have to say lately I’ve been following the work of Alanna Airitam – not only are her images beautifully executed (portraits and still lifes), but she is an impassioned and eloquent writer about her own journey as an artist and a person of color. I’m fascinated with the surreal qualities of Fran Forman’s work and the emotional explorations of Sandra Klein. I’m always inspired by Melanie Walker’s out of the box constructions and immersive installations. Annu Palakunnathu Mathew’s exploration of cross-cultural experience and invisibility also comes to mind.

Please tell us a little about your exhibition, Envisioning Solitude, and how it was conceived.

Vicky Stromee, “Capturing the Moon”, 2019.

Pattern and texture, light and shadow, movement and transformation –these are undercurrents that have dominated my explorations throughout my life. From an early interest in math and science, an education in literary criticism, my chosen profession in mental health and my interest in photography beginning at age 8, I have been fascinated with the continual processes of deconstruction and reconstruction, looking for what is eternal amidst the transitory.

I am interested in edges and intersections of transformation where one thing moves inexorably to become something else. When is the moment when love fades into anger and resentment; when disillusionment erupts into a violent uprising; when order descends into chaos? And when is the moment when war turns towards peace; unbearable grief shifts towards acceptance; or when pain gives way to relief?

In this series: “Envisioning Solitude,” I seek out close-up views of known objects to reveal patterns of color, texture and form, then capture these images and layer them together to create objects of meditation on that transformative process.  Central to this series is the image of the moon – a solitary celestial body reflecting the light of the sun. In mythology the moon is alternately a symbol of love, desire, change, passion, fertility, insanity, and violence. Often associated with the feminine, the nighttime illumination provided by the moon offers us a different perspective and cause for reflection.

Hear Vicky discuss Envisioning Solitude on the Griffin Museum YouTube channel In Their Own Words

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

Wow, that’s a tough question. I was moved by Jane Fulton Alt’s Burn work when I first saw it. Living at a distance, the experience of seeing images online is not the same as being in the room with the work.  That said, of recent note was Jerry Takigawa’s Balancing Cultures. My best friend in high school was second generation Japanese-American and I remember her frequently crying in front of the mirror because “she didn’t look like everyone else.” Both her parents had survived the internment camps. I’m also so fond of Patricia Bender’s work and loved Euclidian Dreams. I am amazed with the variety of exhibitions that the Griffin offers – often showcasing artists I am unfamiliar with. Paula and the Griffin are real treasures for the photographic community.

Jane Fulton Alt, “The Burn”, undated.

Jerry Takigawa, “Like Goes With Like”, undated.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

What is your favorite place to escape to?

We have a 100+ yr old log cabin in the Pecos Wilderness of New Mexico – if I’m looking to just be – that’s the place. I lose track of time and can sit for hours listening to the river and watching the weather and the wildlife from the front porch. It is a place that brings me great peace. Beyond that, I love to travel and mostly to places that are so unfamiliar to me that it wakes up all my senses. India comes to mind as a favorite destination.

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

Most of the reading I do is of an academic nature. I do, however, listen to music when I’m working on images on the computer. I like a mix of jazz, blues, pop, world music – my current favorites are anything Taylor Swift, Adele, and Dua Lipa. My current visual obsession is watching the refracted early morning light that comes through the beveled glass window this time of year and fills the walls with rainbows.

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

First, I think James Hillman, a Jungian analyst. The conversation would be wide ranging and of a spiritual nature – about the soul’s progression, the meaning of existence, and where creativity comes from. If I could have a second option it would be to sit in on a gathering of the Bloomsbury Group (Virginia Woolf, Vanessa Bell, John Maynard Keynes, E. M. Forster and Lytton Strachey), of whom Dorothy Parker famously said: “they lived in squares, painted in circles and loved in triangles.” I would be content to just listen in to their conversations about life and art.

How do the people in your life influence your art?

Wow this could be a very long essay! Growing up our home was filled with gatherings of artists and scientists, rabbis and priests, and concerts with string quartets. I was surrounded by dancers, painters, musicians, photographers, actors, and philosophers. Art has always been a part of who I am.  I’ve explored a variety of mediums with many great teachers who have taught me so much about “seeing.”

When I was getting started as a fine art photographer many people told me I should go see Mary Virginia Swanson (who, lucky me, lives in Tucson). I guess I heard it enough that I set up a session with her. I brought my favorite prints and set them down on the table. I still remember the humbling moment as she rifled through my stack, sliding them quickly off the pile with “seen it, seen it, seen it,” and then a pause: “I haven’t seen this.” I began to take an interest in looking at my work as others might see it.

I have a tendency to fall in love with my most recent work and count on my wife and close friends to offer honest feedback and ask insightful questions. Through this process I have increasingly learned to step away from my work and view it as an outsider. I value their perspectives and hold that alongside my own resonance with a particular piece. These conversations and participating in critiques with mentors have helped me to cultivate my ability to see and reflect on my work.

Five years ago, we realized a dream with our best friends and created an artist compound with two houses and four studios. We are all artists in different mediums (author, painter, musician and photographer).  We often share long conversations about our latest projects, our hopes, and our challenges. Our home is filled with an eclectic mix of art that I draw inspiration from every day.

Filed Under: Griffin State of Mind, Uncategorized Tagged With: conversations on photography, Photographers on Photography, Griffin Gallery, Photography, griffin state of mind

New Griffin Museum Members Community

Posted on April 7, 2021

Director’s Welcome!

Hello and Welcome to a new experience at the Griffin Museum online!

We are thrilled to announce that the Griffin Museum of Photography has launched a new website at members.griffinmuseum.org  Our goal with this new members’ community is to create a user-friendly experience for our valued members. We hope you enjoy our new membership portal, community space and workflow that is easy to navigate, and more user-friendly. This new portal will provide you with increased value and benefits including:

  • A searchable membership directory (members can turn this feature off)
  • An online event calendar with online payments and better ticketing processes.
  • Ability to edit your profile and pay membership dues online.
  • Receive email renewal letters and reminders (one can opt out to receive paper if desired)
  • Have your photo news published.
  • Share photos.
  • Digital Membership Cards! (one can opt out if desired)
  • And more!

We welcome you and thank you for being part of a community of creative artists from around the world supporting our world class museum of photography online and in Winchester, Massachusetts.

We have launched an online platform for our Membership. Members were sent emails with login credentials to be able to access our new platform. If you are a member and did not receive an email from us, please let us know.

griffin members community header

If you are a new member and are just learning about us, 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 photographic art. As an institution, we are committed to insuring that our mindset, our practice, our outreach, our programming and our exhibitions set a framework with priorities for building programs and exhibitions that consider diversity, equity, accessibility, and inclusion through our mission that is centered around the photograph.

We look forward to seeing all of you share your work, words and creativity here online. 

This creative space will give you first hand looks at events, calls for entry and exhibitions happening at the Griffin and with members of our community. 

Thank you for joining us here online and we look forward to seeing you here and in person at the museum soon!

Here at the Griffin we always try to keep our community connected, with us and to one another. Offering engaging and novel programming, showcasing thought-provoking exhibitions and providing opportunities for dialogue are some of the ways we build community. Most of all, we want to shape a place of belonging where all are welcome. Our move to providing a community space for our members is aimed at making your engagement with us an even better experience for all. 

As we’ve grown, we’ve become encumbered by data. Automation of our record systems and workflows will provide more accuracy and time savings so that we can spend more of our time planning for you. Please be patient with us as we transition to updated membership processes and a community space just for you, our valued members.

With gratitude to all of you,

Paula Tognarelli
Executive Director and Curator
Griffin Museum of Photography

Filed Under: Uncategorized, About the Griffin

Atelier 33 | Amy Eilertsen

Posted on March 22, 2021

In today’s highlight of the Atelier 33 exhibition, we interviewed Amy Eilertsen about her series Memento Vivere: A Study of Life. Amy’s collection of images puts an interesting spin on seventeenth century masters paintings. Scenes of her domestic fowl have become sweet memories, and reminders to live.

chicken on book with flowers

© Amy Eilertsen – Apocalypse

Why did Dutch masters’ paintings become such a great inspiration to you? How has this project helped you preserve the memories of your beloved animals?

I studied art history for a few years in college and fell in love with the Dutch masters because of the depth of color and shadow, the rendering of complex and the exotic still life. Historically, during the time the still lifes were rendered, Europe was recovering from the decimation of the Black Plague, and the upper middle class became infatuated with the exotic foods that they were now able to purchase. It was a time of plenty- and a celebration of beauty. Several of the animal actors featured in this series have passed away and I love the memories that I have captured in these images. 

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

I hope that viewers will be taken in by the painterly tones and classic composition of the works, and be intrigued by the appearance of the fowl.  The meta message of this project is “remember that you are alive” and I hope that the viewers sense the secondary message regarding animal cruelty. 

duck in basket on table with flowers and fruit

© Amy Eilertsen – Mads 2

Tell us what is next for you creatively.

I am in the cusp of deciding among a few projects- and will continue collaborating with my feathered friends.

To see the full collection of Memento Vivere: A Study of Life, visit the Atelier website.

Filed Under: Uncategorized, Blog, Atelier Tagged With: Artist Talk, Photographers on Photography, atelier 33

Atelier 33 | Anne Smith Duncan

Posted on March 18, 2021

Anne Smith Duncan‘s collection Illusions (Landscape) is on display in the Griffin Main Gallery until March 26, 2021, as a part of the Atelier 33 exhibition. Interested to know more about her inspiration and process for capturing these abstract landscapes, we asked Anne a few questions.

trees and sky

© Anne Smith Duncan

What can be said about finding inspiration in unconventional places?

I was sitting at my table eating lunch one day and looking out the window. I noticed my neighbor’s concrete foundation with the stains from the soil, water, weather and the colors brought out by the light, and it reminded me of a landscape. Lunch uneaten, I went to make images. This series evolved from that singular day, and subsequently, I made many images of the foundations of my neighbors’ homes and my own. Inspiration comes from looking and being open to possibilities — and then picking up the camera and not waiting until “later.” 

 

How has your photography changed since the beginning of the

tall trees and sky

© Anne Smith Duncan

COVID-19 pandemic?

I have been more creative than ever with the restrictions of the pandemic. With all my other activities eliminated,  I feel very productive with my photography, having much more focused time. The absence of travel, however, has been a loss.

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

I hope the viewer brings their own experience and expectations to make meaning of each image. In discussions with others,  I have found that what I see is not the same “landscape” or idea that they see, so I intentionally have not titled any of the images, allowing each person to find their own meaning.

night sky and trees

© Anne Smith Duncan

Tell us what is next for you creatively.

I have been reviewing my image archives and editing projects into little books, primarily for myself as a way to complete those projects. I am also exploring family photo archives going back to the 1920s and thinking about possibilities there. I don’t yet know where that might be going.

To see Anne Smith Duncan’s Illusions (Landscape) collection, visit the Atelier website.

Filed Under: Uncategorized, Blog, Atelier Tagged With: Artist Talk, Photographers on Photography, atelier 33

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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