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Griffin News

A Yellow Rose Project Interview with Toni Pepe

Posted on October 7, 2025

Toni Pepe’s Mothercraft is an ongoing body of work that reexamines 20th-century press photographs of motherhood in U.S. media, revealing movement, both socially and politically, as records of the shifting identity of motherhood and women’s liberation, and durationally as physical images that were held, touched and eventually abandoned. This work is currently on display with the traveling exhibition A Yellow Rose Project at the Griffin Museum of Photography at its Winchester galleries from October 2nd through November 30th. We had the opportunity to chat with Toni, and her responses are as follows.


Portrait of Toni Pepe, Courtesy of the Artist

Toni Pepe constructs prints and three-dimensional assemblages from discarded newspaper images, family snapshots, and obsolete photographic equipment to explore how photography shapes our perception of time, space, and self. Her practice considers the layers of information a print can impart to the viewer beyond the image. Whether it is the presence of text, subtle stains, or crop marks, each element offers a glimpse into the photograph’s journey and its significance as an object in the world. Photographic prints are more than static images; they suspend our likenesses and histories beneath surfaces that are continually transformed by the effects of time and physical contact.

Pepe currently serves as the Chair of Photography and Assistant Professor of Art at Boston University. She has exhibited her work nationally and internationally, including at Blue Sky Gallery, the Center for Photography at Woodstock and The Museum of Fine Arts, Boston (MFA). Pepe’s work is in the permanent collections at the MFA; the Boston Athenaeum, Fidelity, the Danforth Art Museum; Candela Books + Gallery; The Magenta Foundation; and many private collections. She received a MacDowell Fellowship in 2024 and completed a residency at Frans Masereel Centrum in 2023.

Follow Toni Pepe on Instagram: @toni.pepe


Allison Huang: When selecting these press photographs, were you seeking specific records of women’s liberation and voting rights? What drew you to each, and is there one that resonated with you the most?

Toni Pepe: I was drawn to photographs that carried both a strong visual charge and a caption that unsettled it—complicated, reframed, revealed something unexpected. My only search word was “vote.” From there, I let the results lead me. What held me was the friction: how an image said one thing, while the text pushed it elsewhere, made the ground shift beneath it.

The richness, for me, isn’t in any single photograph but in the gathering. The way repetition works, the way certain words or images return with slight variation, layering into a longer story about the 19th Amendment and women’s liberation. It’s that build-up—those echoes, those slippages—that give the history its weight.


©Toni Pepe, At Present, From A Yellow Rose Project, All Images Courtesy of the Artist

AH: In Mrs. Nixon, you pin newspaper clippings and backlight them to emphasize the text. Why did you prioritize the text? Was it to reveal the language of the period, expose media bias toward women, or encourage individuals to see history in a new light?

TP: I’m drawn to the text for a few reasons. From a contemporary perspective, it reveals how women’s stories have been framed—what language was acceptable, what was emphasized, what was left unsaid. That language shifts over time, but the structures beneath it often persist. My aim isn’t to look back with judgment; it’s to show how progress isn’t linear or guaranteed. The text exposes the frame through which these stories were filtered and received. A press photograph is often imagined as neutral, free from bias—but once you read the caption, you realize the image is anything but.


©Toni Pepe, Mrs. Nixon, From A Yellow Rose Project, On Display at the Griffin Museum of Photography

AH: Has your understanding of the 19th Amendment, along with its intersections with art, activism, and even motherhood, changed through the process of creating Mothercraft? If so, in what ways has that shift influenced how you approach both your creative practice and your role as an artist and mother?

TP: Mothercraft grew out of my work for A Yellow Rose Project. What began as searching, as following a word—“vote”—turned into the impulse to build an archive. Not one that tells a singular story, but one that exposes the many ways women were pictured, described, and circulated through the twentieth century.

I began to think differently about the photograph—not just as an image, but as an object that holds time in multiple registers: the moment of exposure, the editorial hand, the caption, the years it spent forgotten. The prints I found weren’t preserved in institutional archives; they were drifting on eBay, abandoned, almost lost. That sense of fragility became part of the work.

History, for me, is accumulation, the layering and repetition of what we keep and what slips away. Mothercraft is my attempt to gather those fragments and preserve the traces that might otherwise dissolve into time.


©Toni Pepe, I’d Rather Be, From A Yellow Rose Project

AH: Mrs. Nixon was an entry point for A Yellow Rose Project at Boston University in 2021. Now that it’s showing at the Griffin Museum, does its return to Boston feel like a kind of homecoming, or has the work taken on new dimensions since its original debut?

TP: It does feel like a homecoming, though more in the sense of circling back and finding the work changed. Mrs. Nixon was an entry point, the door that led me deeper into archives, and the path soon opened into the Women and Gender Issues Collection at the Boston Public Library. For the past year I’ve been immersed in that material—press photographs that hold a complex, often contradictory record of women in the public eye. From crime victims and survivors to beauty queens and “exceptional” women in their fields, the images reveal two sides of the same coin, the violent and the celebratory constructed in parallel, often reinforcing one another.

When the piece first showed at BU, it was in the early days of Covid. I was one of the few artists who actually got to stand in front of it. That strangeness—of a show almost without an audience—has stayed with me. So I’m grateful for the Griffin’s return to the work, for the chance to see it again in a space where it can reach a wider audience.


©Toni Pepe, On Tip Toe, From A Yellow Rose Project

AH: Following up on the previous question, how does sharing this work locally enhance your role not just as an artist, but as an educator committed to critical dialogue around gender, politics, and representation?

TP: Showing the work locally means it doesn’t just live in galleries—it enters classrooms, conversations, the rhythms of daily life. It allows my practice and my teaching to overlap, for students to see how research, politics, and lived experience can be held inside an artwork.

The archive is never neutral. Press photographs, clippings, fragments—they show us how women’s stories have been framed, erased, repeated. Sharing this work with students turns the archive into a site of dialogue, a place to ask harder questions about gender, power, representation, then and now.

In that way the local feels essential. The work doesn’t just preserve history, it cultivates a habit of attention—a way of looking I hope my students carry with them.



©Toni Pepe, Vote Here, From A Yellow Rose Project

AH: Finally, Mothercraft explores how photography shapes our understanding of the past. How do you envision it evolving in conversation with archives, activism, and collective memory, especially as new historical narratives and social movements emerge?

TP: I think of Mothercraft less as a closed project than as a living archive, one that keeps changing as new narratives and movements come into view. Photography has always been a way of fixing time, but also of unsettling it—what we choose to preserve, what gets forgotten, what returns in altered form.

As I work with these images, I’m reminded that collective memory isn’t static. It bends, shifts, opens to revision. The archive, too, is porous—shaped by what it holds and what it leaves out. Activism often begins in those gaps, in the insistence that certain lives, certain struggles, be seen.

So I imagine the work evolving alongside those demands. Not as a definitive account, but as a site of dialogue—between past and present, between loss and possibility. A reminder that history is never finished; it’s something we keep remaking together.


Interview by Allison Huang, Curation and Exhibitions Admin Intern

Allison Huang is the Curation and Exhibitions Admin Intern from White Plains, New York. She recently graduated from Boston University with a B.A. in History of Art and Architecture and Biology, along with a minor in Visual Arts. With a passion for storytelling and audience engagement, she is dedicated to collaborating with artists to expand their creative potential while fostering more inclusive and dynamic artistic spaces. Her research interests include the work of lesser-known artists, the representation of marginalized communities in art, and issues of repatriation. In her creative practice, she works primarily with analog photography and oil painting.

Griffin Museum of Photography – Winchester, Massachusetts

Filed Under: Blog, Exhibitions, Griffin State of Mind, Yellow Rose Project

A Yellow Rose Project Interview with Meg Griffiths

Posted on October 6, 2025

The Griffin Museum of Photography is honored to present A Yellow Rose Project, a photographic collaboration of responses, reflections, and reactions to the 19th Amendment from over one hundred women across the United States. This traveling exhibition is on view at the Griffin’s Winchester galleries from October 2nd through November 30th, 2025. We had an opportunity to chat with co-curator and artist Meg Griffiths, and her responses are as follows.


Portrait of Meg Griffiths. Courtesy of the Artist

Meg Griffiths (b. 1980) in Indiana and raised in Texas. She received Bachelor of Arts degrees from the University of Texas in Cultural Anthropology and English Literature and earned her Master of Fine Arts in Photography from Savannah College of Art and Design. She currently lives in Denton, Texas where she is an Assistant Professor of Photography in the Department of Visual Art at Texas Woman’s University.

Meg’s photographic research currently deals with domestic, economic, historical and cultural relationships across the Southern United States and Cuba. Her work has travelled nationally as well as internationally, and is placed in collections such as Center for Creative Photography, Capitol One Collection, and the Museum of Fine Arts Houston, and Center for Fine Art Photography.

Her book projects, both monographs as well as collaborative projects have been acquired by various institutions around the country such as the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Duke University Libraries, Museum of Modern Art, University of Virginia, University of Iowa, Clemson, Maryland Institute College of Art, Ringling College of Art, and Washington and Lee University, to name a few.

She was honored as one of PDN 30’s : New and Emerging Photographers in 2012, named one of eight Emerging Photographers at Blue Spiral Gallery in 2015, Atlanta Celebrates Photography’s Ones to Watch in 2016, was awarded the Julia Margaret Cameron for Best Fine Art Series in 2017 and awarded the 2nd Place Prize at PhotoNola in 2019.

She is represented by Photographs Do Not Bend in Dallas, TX and Candela Books + Gallery in Richmond, VA.

Follow Meg Griffiths on Instagram: @megsheagriffiths
Follow A Yellow Rose Project on Instagram: @ayellowroseproject


Allison Huang: What initially inspired both you and your co-curator, Frances Jakubek, to co-found A Yellow Rose Project? 

Meg Griffiths: Honestly, for my part, I was inspired by the mission of Texas Woman’s University, the nation’s largest public university primarily for women. It is a place where you are surrounded by women working and collaborating together. Where the goal is to support and empower each person to use their voices through their chosen fields. It is an incredibly special university. I always knew I wanted to do something larger than myself and collaborate with women to make photographic work. However, it was not until I met Frances that I knew who I wanted to generate and launch this project with. We knew the centennial of the 19th Amendment was coming up and we thought this would be the perfect charge for women to make work in response, reflection and reaction to. 


©Meg Griffiths, Stone message, 1920, From A Yellow Rose Project, All Images Courtesy of the Artist

AH: How has your understanding of the 19th Amendment and the intersection of art and activism changed throughout the process of curating the work of all these women photographers for this
exhibition?

MG: Art and more specifically photography is such a powerful way to engage people. To create an opportunity for viewers to encounter what is happening in the world. It also has a lasting way of connecting us to key moments in history. It is the photograph that we use to reflect, respond and react to culture and politics. Many of those images stick with us. I believe the work in this project will too. We thoughtfully considered all the images submitted for the project, all of which were accepted and are housed on our website, and we chose images for the exhibition and for the book that showed the full scope of those thoughts by women in the U.S. concerning this moment in time 

What I learned from looking through all the submissions, was just how varied the responses to this call could be. These artists went to places my mind would never have gone. This is exactly what we wanted. We chose to work with women of all ages, stages in their careers, as well as cultural backgrounds. We wanted a kaleidoscope of viewpoints. Each artist also chose to express those ideas through various modes of research, genres and material choices. As Lisa Volpe writes in the introduction of our book, “each stands as a yellow rose.” Each of the submissions is unique. It has been a complete delight to revisit the work every time there is a show. Each show sequenced and presented differently to create a new conversation. There are many layers of meaning here and those keep changing over time. 


©Meg Griffiths, Subtle fusion of time, From A Yellow Rose Project, On Display at the Griffin Museum of Photography

AH: In your still life images, you discuss how your work draws upon the written accounts of
suffragists from the 1920s and your own personal history. Is there a specific still life that resonates with you the most?

MG: In doing research to make work for this project I came across one story that struck me, and as such, was the inspiration for the photograph I constructed entitled, Ethel Byrne, 185 hours, 1917. It references an experience had by a political prisoner during the movement. Ethel Byrne was a suffragist, Irish-American, nurse, sister to Margaret Sanger and one of the three Mother’s of what is known as Planned Parenthood. She was arrested in 1917 for distributing pamphlets on birth control and sentenced to jail for 30 days at Blackwell Island workhouse in New York City. Advocating for the legalization of birth control Byrne went on a hunger strike for 185 days. Authorities quickly put a stop to it and Ethel Byrne became the first woman force fed in the United States. Raw eggs were commonly used as food to push protein into the body, usually through a tube down the throat or the nose. If you go online and search you will find a few photos and illustrations of women being held down by several people, many women, while a man pushes food down her throat. By no means was this one of the worst things to happen to a woman fighting for reproductive rights in history, but it was upsetting to say the least. Often women were given flowers and pins when they were released, a show of care and respect for the time earned in prison for the cause. The story resonated with me as my ancestors came from Ireland in the early 1900’s. Many pioneers of the suffrage movement were immigrants too. I also felt drawn to make work around this topic as so many women, including myself, have benefitted from the support and care that Planned Parenthood has given women through the years. This photo was generated as an homage to this remarkable woman and to all the immigrant women in history who bore great sacrifice for the greater whole. 


©Meg Griffiths, Just, 2020, From A Yellow Rose Project

AH: Previously, A Yellow Rose Project was exhibited at Texas Woman’s University in November
2020 and again with all 105 images in August of 2025. What did it mean to you to show this work in Texas — both as your home institution and a place where the yellow rose carries additional cultural significance?

MG: There are a number of reasons that it has and still means a lot to show the work in Texas. For one, it is my home state, I grew up here, came of age to vote here, and now live, raise a child and teach here. Like I mentioned before, Texas Woman’s is a unique school, not only predominantly for women, however the student body is incredibly diverse. Having the work here for this student body, alumni, faculty and staff to engage with this work nowhas meant so much to me and to them. Beyond this, it is a state where I feel literally all the policies and laws that have been made affect every aspect of my life as well as the lives of those around me. For this reason, I actively vote and stay involved. I have always said that creating and touring this project is activism for me. It is a way to remind us all that rights, once hard fought, are not to be taken for granted. It is through the act of standing up and showing up, in that long tradition of women before us, that we must participate and have the tough conversations, and make the choice to voice our truths, either through the photograph or the ballot box.

We are aware of the similarity in the name between The Yellow Rose of Texas, the song as well as the woman given the name for her role in the Battle at San Jacinto between General Santa Anna and Sam Houston. We have been asked if there is any overlap in why we chose to name this project A Yellow Rose Project with The Yellow Rose of Texas, however there is no connection for us. The name we placed upon the project is solely derived from the yellow rose as one of the suffrage symbols across all states and the roses women and men wore at the Tennessee State House back in August 20, 1920. The yellow rose being the pro-suffrage symbol and the red rose the anti-suffrage one. 


©Meg Griffiths, Ethel Byrne, 185 hours, 1917, From A Yellow Rose Project

AH: Following up on the next question, how does the project magnify, challenge, or illuminate specific issues to this region?

MG: There are only a handful of artists in the project that are from Texas, and of those, many are not making work about the issues we are facing here specifically. However we here in Texas have experienced major injustices and inequalities. There are policies that have been created to hinder voting, women’s issues, lgbtqia+ rights and gender affirming care, educational freedoms as well as immigration rights. There are a number of artists in this project as a whole speaking to these issues being faced, to some degree, in all states across the U.S.. I do believe that those images magnify these particular human rights struggles. 


©Meg Griffiths, Bell Jar and Bluebird, From A Yellow Rose Project

AH: What parallels do you see between the suffragists’ fight for voting rights and the challenges women and marginalized communities are still confronting in 2025?

MG: There are many parallels. The suffrage movement and today’s issues include the ongoing fight against voter suppression as well as the failure to recognize the rights of women of color, which is still persistent today. We had discriminatory laws such as poll taxes, literacy tests, and grandfather clauses to keep them from voting. We have modern day versions of this. A weakened Voting Rights Act of 1965, redistricting, ending mail in ballots, and laws such as the SAVE Act which recently passed the House. Beyond this though, this discrimination affects the ability to participate in making choices on how to protect other freedoms, such as reproductive rights, economic justice, pay equity, protection against violence, child education, and safety for lgbtqia+ communities, families and children. Not to mention the weaponization of the military against its own people and in particular marginalized communities. 

AH: What do you hope audiences, especially younger generations, take away from this show, and how do you see the role of art in remembering our shared history and inspiring activism today?

MG: My hope is that it engages and incites young people. Yes, we have come so far. Let’s not forget that it was not that long ago a woman could not own a house, a credit card, or get a loan. However, that pendulum of progress, for however far it has swung forward, is moving quickly in the opposite direction. So I hope it educates, creates conversation, community, and hopefully action. I want young audiences to find their own place in history as it is being written right now!


Interview by Allison Huang, Curation and Exhibitions Admin Intern

Allison Huang is the Curation and Exhibitions Admin Intern from White Plains, New York. She recently graduated from Boston University with a B.A. in History of Art and Architecture and Biology, along with a minor in Visual Arts. With a passion for storytelling and audience engagement, she is dedicated to collaborating with artists to expand their creative potential while fostering more inclusive and dynamic artistic spaces. Her research interests include the work of lesser-known artists, the representation of marginalized communities in art, and issues of repatriation. In her creative practice, she works primarily with analog photography and oil painting.

Griffin Museum of Photography – Winchester, Massachusetts

Filed Under: Yellow Rose Project, Curator Spotlight, Blog, Exhibitions, Griffin State of Mind

A Yellow Rose Project Interview with Frances Jakubek

Posted on September 30, 2025

The Griffin Museum of Photography is honored to present A Yellow Rose Project, a photographic collaboration of responses, reflections, and reactions to the 19th Amendment from over one hundred women across the United States. This traveling exhibition is on view at the Griffin’s Winchester galleries from October 2nd through November 30th, 2025. We had an opportunity to chat with co-curator and artist Frances Jakubek, and her responses are as follows.


Portrait of Frances Jakubek. Courtesy of the Artist

Frances Jakubek is a photographer, curator and advocate for photography. She is the Director of Bruce Silverstein Gallery in New York City and past Associate Curator of the Griffin Museum of Photography in Winchester, Massachusetts. Recent curatorial appointments include I Surrender, Dear at Umbrella Arts Gallery, New York; Drawing the Line at Bruce Silverstein Gallery, New York; Grief on NY Photo Curator, and The RefridgeCurator in Boston, Massachusetts. Her personal work focuses on self-portraiture and how the body is perceived within different contexts. Her photographs have been exhibited at The Southern Contemporary Art Gallery in Charleston, SC; Filter Space; Chicago, IL; Camera Commons in Dover, NH; and The Hess Gallery at Pine Manor College, MA. She has been a guest writer for various publications and for artist monographs including Serrah Russell’s tears, tears. Jakubek has been a panelist for the Massachusetts Cultural Council’s Photography fellowships, speaker for The Photo Brigade and juror for exhibitions throughout the US including United Photo Industry’s ‘The Fence’ and PDN’s ‘The Curator Awards’.

Follow Frances Jakubek on Instagram: @franciepants
Follow A Yellow Rose Project on Instagram: @ayellowroseproject


Allison Huang: What inspired you and your co-curator, Meg Griffiths, to conceptualize and co-curate A Yellow Rose Project, and how has that vision evolved since then?

Frances Jakubek: The centennial felt like a moment of pure celebration…one hundred years of women’s right to vote. But as we learned more, we couldn’t ignore the inequality and erasure that still shape that history. Inspired by books like Odette England’s Keeper of the Hearth and Women of Vision, we invited a community of artists to join us in creating a collective voice through photography. Our aim was not only to honor the past, but to insist, right now, that women’s voices must be recorded and remembered, with hopes that is will be accessed in another 100 years.


©Frances Jakubek, Alabama Voter Registration Form, From A Yellow Rose Project, All Images Courtesy of the Artist

AH: A Yellow Rose Project brings together over 100 female and nonbinary photographers. What challenges and rewards came with curating such a large and diverse body of work?

FJ: It has been an incredible gift to have over 100 artists commit their time and work to this project. From the beginning, we promised to create awareness for the work at no cost to participants, recognizing the frequent imbalances in labor and compensation that women in this field often face. The greatest reward has been the expansion of our community, connecting artists to one another, to us, and to audiences, even when many of us have yet to meet in person. Of course, with 100 contributors come logistical challenges, contracts, managing image files, and communications, but the camaraderie and support shared among this group make it all worthwhile.


©Frances Jakubek, Georgia Voter Registration Form, From A Yellow Rose Project

AH: Do you think the symbolism of the yellow rose still resonates with contemporary audiences? Has its meaning evolved as new rights movements emerge?

FJ: The yellow rose remains a powerful symbol of justice and democracy. Yellow has long carried dual meanings like tenderness and femininity, as well as caution and hazard. In suffrage, it marked women who stood at the edge of safety to have their voices heard. Today, that history persists, reminding us that in a political climate not built in our best interests, we must continue to stand up for ourselves.


©Frances Jakubek, Nevada Voter Registration Form, From A Yellow Rose Project

AH: In your contribution to A Yellow Rose Project, what inspired your use of image distortion to reflect the confusion and frustration caused by voter suppression?

FJ: These images are meant to mirror the barriers that continue to restrict voter registration. The distortion of the forms symbolizes the confusion and frustration created by suppression tactics, both past and present. Referencing the impossible literacy tests and timed exams of the past to today’s obstacles, such as redistricting, documentation hurdles, and rejected mail-in ballots, the obfuscation is intentional, reflecting how these measures are designed to discourage participation and silence voices.


©Frances Jakubek, New Jersey Voter Registration Form, From A Yellow Rose Project, On Display at the Griffin Museum of Photography

AH: Five years after the 19th Amendment centennial, what does it mean to you to see A Yellow Rose Project still touring in 2025, and what does that say about the current state of women’s rights?

FJ: Each time we speak about this project, we confront the reality that the very right we set out to celebrate is now under active threat. When the work first launched in 2020, at the height of the pandemic, only a few exhibitions were possible, and many people were unable to experience them in person. In some ways, the book’s arrival five years later feels like perfect timing. We’ve been able to gather essays that situate the project in a moment when rights once assumed to be secure are being eroded. Presenting it now, in 2025, allows the work to be seen not only as a commemoration of suffrage but also as part of an urgent historical continuum of women standing up for their voices and futures.


©Frances Jakubek, Texas Voter Registration Form, From A Yellow Rose Project

AH: If this show were restaged in another 100 years, what do you hope future curators and audiences will see in it?

FJ: I hope they see the importance of community and the power of a collective voice. Creating images that are both personal and political is no small feat and sharing them publicly is an act of courage. At a time when so much history, especially the voices of women and people of color, is being erased, I want this exhibition to stand as proof that humanity shone through some of our country’s darkest moments. In a world often driven by greed and indifference, may future audiences recognize that artmaking itself is a form of protest, resilience, and healing.


Interview by Allison Huang, Curation and Exhibitions Admin Intern

Allison Huang is the Curation and Exhibitions Admin Intern from White Plains, New York. She recently graduated from Boston University with a B.A. in History of Art and Architecture and Biology, along with a minor in Visual Arts. With a passion for storytelling and audience engagement, she is dedicated to collaborating with artists to expand their creative potential while fostering more inclusive and dynamic artistic spaces. Her research interests include the work of lesser-known artists, the representation of marginalized communities in art, and issues of repatriation. In her creative practice, she works primarily with analog photography and oil painting.

Griffin Museum of Photography – Winchester, Massachusetts

Filed Under: Exhibitions, Griffin State of Mind, Yellow Rose Project, Curator Spotlight, Blog

Griffin State of Mind: Yulia Spiridonova

Posted on June 18, 2025

We had the opportunity to chat with artist Yulia Spiridonova, whose project Unseen Presence: Homeland Hues is being exhibited in our Virtual Gallery, through June 30th. Utilizing a language of visual displacement and visibility, the project chronicles the lives of Russian expats in the Greater Boston area, following the aftermath of the war with Ukraine. A Q&A with the artist follows.

Yulia Spiridonova is a multimedia, lens-based artist working across photography, collage, and installation. With over a decade of experience as a photo editor and commercial photographer, she has collaborated with clients such as PORT Magazine, Esquire Russia, RBC Magazine, and L’Officiel. Her work has been exhibited internationally and featured in publications including Dazed Digital, The Calvert Journal, and A New Nothing. Yulia holds a Post-Baccalaureate Certificate and an MFA in Photography from the Massachusetts College of Art and Design. She is the recipient of the Anderson Ranch MassArt Fellowship (2023), the Abelardo Morell MassArt Photography Thesis Prize (2024), and the MASS MoCA Studios MassArt Fellowship (2024). She is currently based in Boston, Massachusetts, and works as a Teaching Assistant at Harvard University’s Department of Art, Film, and Visual Studies.

© Yulia Spiridonova, 5Rhythms

Follow Yulia Spiridonova on Instagram: @liver_lovers


Can you develop the title of the series for us?

Yulia Spiridonova: Unseen Presence: Homeland Hues serves as a glimpse into the broader ideas at the heart of the series—namely, the difficulty of portraying a community that simultaneously blends into the social fabric of Massachusetts while remaining only vaguely identifiable. The title gestures toward this visual and existential ambiguity. Unseen Presence speaks to a state of partial visibility: individuals navigating displacement while negotiating their safety, identity, and belonging in silence or restraint. Homeland Hues references the subtle yet persistent traces of origin—emotional, political, and aesthetic—that surface in exile. Together, the title suggests a quiet tension between presence and erasure, visibility and opacity, memory and performance.


© Yulia Spiridonova, G III

© Yulia Spiridonova, iPhone

Can you expand on your use of flash and composition to obscure the identities of your subjects?

YS: I began the series without a fixed visual strategy, letting the language of the work emerge through process and collaboration. Since I often meet my subjects for the first time right before photographing them—usually after connecting through social media—I quickly realized that many were deeply anxious about showing their faces. This hesitation, rooted in real concerns around safety, became both conceptually and visually compelling to me.

From that point, the visual approach began to take shape around the question of concealment. I explored various techniques—deep shadows, obstructing elements within the frame, motion blur, and flash that intentionally overexposes or “washes out” parts of the image. These gestures are not only aesthetic choices, but also acts of protection and reflection, emphasizing the precariousness of visibility for many of my subjects.


© Yulia Spiridonova, Rainstorm
© Yulia Spiridonova, XXX

What’s the significance of photographing these subjects in neutral settings?

YS: Photographing in neutral, often anonymous settings—like empty streets, parks, parking lots, or sparse studios—reflects the liminal and precarious state that many in the Russian diaspora currently inhabit. These are not places of permanence or belonging, but rather transitional zones that echo the uncertainty of their legal and emotional status. By avoiding specific or familiar backdrops, I remove immediate markers of place or context, allowing the focus to rest on the subtle presence of the subjects themselves. These spaces also function as a kind of visual camouflage: the subjects are there, but always on the verge of blending into their surroundings—mirroring the ways in which they navigate daily life, trying to remain both present and unremarkable. The neutrality of the environment underscores a shared, displaced condition and resists easy categorization, just as their identities remain partially withheld or obscured.


© Yulia Spiridonova, Park

Is there something particular that sets the Russian diaspora of the Greater Boston Area apart?

YS: The Russian diaspora in the Greater Boston Area is notably large. In Brookline, where I live, there’s a well-established Russian-Jewish community, with stores like Bazar and Berezka, and even a Russian-language newspaper. Yet being immersed in a community can sometimes mute your sensitivity to its specific nuances. What became more noticeable to me was not the existence of the diaspora itself, but the quiet ways in which people gravitate toward one another—how a longing for home manifests as a subtle search for familiarity.

My project focuses less on ethnicity or nationality and more on the conditions of migration, displacement, and the psychological pull to find kinship. People don’t always consciously seek out community, but emotional and linguistic familiarity becomes a compass. Whether through living in the same neighborhoods or attending small events like the Russian Trivia nights I started going to, many of the people I’ve photographed came into my life through these loose, almost accidental networks.


© Yulia Spiridonova, Stairs

Do you encounter a different significance to your photographs in color versus in black and white?

The decision to work in black and white holds particular significance for this series. It helps shift the viewer’s attention away from surface detail or aesthetic appeal, and instead situates the images within a more archival or documentary context. The absence of color creates a sense of distance and historical weight—anchoring the work more firmly in themes of record, displacement, and collective memory, rather than visual indulgence or saturation.


© Yulia Spiridonova, Pillar

In terms of composition, how you approach directing or posing your subjects? Is it a more active approach or an intuitive one?

I approach image-making as a collaboration, inviting my characters to share their interests, personal rhythms, and inner preoccupations. I never fully anticipate what will unfold during a session—what will be revealed, offered, or transformed. Apparent surfaces often give way to unexpected depth once a sense of trust is established. My focus is on creating an environment in which those I photograph feel both secure and emboldened to take imaginative risks. In 5Rhythms, for instance, a casual conversation about hobbies led to an impromptu dance—an expressive gesture that emerged spontaneously and became central to the work. I give my characters the freedom to inhabit the frame on their own terms, while I remain attuned to light, timing, and composition.


© Yulia Spiridonova, Bubbles

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Griffin State of Mind: Julia Whitney Barnes Interview

Posted on May 13, 2025

Julia Whitney Barnes‘ enchantment with the plant world is on full display in her work, Planting Utopia, which is currently on display at the Griffin Museum of Photography’s exhibition Elemental Blues at the Griffin’s satellite gallery at Lafayette City Center from April 1st through June 30th. We had the wonderful opportunity to sit down and chat with her via email about her flora-inspired cyanotypes this week, and her responses are as follows.

Please join us next week on Wednesday, May 21st, and Wednesday, May 28th, for our Artists’ Talk accompanying our Elemental Blues exhibition at the Lafayette City Center in Boston, MA. May 21st will feature artists Sally Chapman, Julia Whitney Barnes, and Anna Leigh Clem. May 28th will feature Brett Windham, Bryan Whitney, and Cynthia Katz.

Portrait of Julia Whitney Barnes

Julia Whiney Barnes (Born in Newbury, VT) spent two decades in Brooklyn/NYC before moving to the Hudson Valley in 2015. She received a BFA from Parsons School of Design and MFA from Hunter College. Whitney Barnes works in a variety of media from cyanotypes, watercolor, combined media works on paper, oil paintings, glass, ceramic sculptures, murals, site-specific installations, and limited-edition prints. She has exhibited widely in the United States and internationally including the Albany International Airport /Shaker Heritage Society, Albany, New York; Dorksy Museum, New Paltz, NY; Ely Center of Contemporary Art, New Haven, CT; Hancock Shaker Museum, Berkshires, MA; Woodstock Artists Association & Museum (WAAM), Woodstock, NY; Institute of Contemporary Art, Portland, ME; Carrie Haddad Gallery, Hudson, NY; Kenise Barnes Fine Art, Kent, CT; Garvey|Simon NY, New York, NY and Galerie Julian Sander, Cologne, Germany.  Her work is in numerous private and public collections.
Whitney Barnes is the recipient of fellowships from the New York State Council on the Arts, Lower Manhattan Cultural Council, Arts Mid-Hudson, Abbey Memorial Fund for Mural Painting/National Academy of Fine Arts, and the Gowanus Public Art Initiative, among others. She completed two significant commissions in 2024 including an immersive double sided glass artwork for Public Art for Public Schools/NYC Percent for Art in Brooklyn, NY and a room-wide mural for the new Vassar College Institute in Poughkeepsie, NY in 2024.

©Julia Whitnes Barnes, Plant Crown, All Images Courtesy of the Artist

Follow Julia Whitney Barnes | Instagram: @


You’ve mentioned that the most alluring aspect of cyanotyping is capturing something ephemeral and representing it in a way that can last forever. What motivates you to address issues of nature and permanence?

Julia Whitney Barnes: Nature has always been my muse. I collect inspiration from my forays into the natural world with the intent of bringing those experiences and feelings directly back to my studio. I approach each growing thing with equal importance regardless of whether it is a weed, rare species, wildflower, or cultivated flower. Through my use of the cyanotype medium, I manipulate physical impressions of plants grown locally in my Hudson Valley garden and other nearby areas, along with intricately cutout photographic negatives. Each selected flower is preserved through a pressing process in which I dissect and shape each form—akin to a specimen from a natural history museum—and then lay everything out in massive flat files in my attic studio. Most works have several species fused into one composition, often to the point where the exact plants depicted are open to interpretation. Given that sunlight starts the exposure process with cyanotype chemistry, I carefully arrange elaborate compositions at night and utilize long exposures under natural or UV light to create the final prints. Once the unique cyan imagery is fused, I meticulously paint the exposed surface with multiple layers of watercolor, ink, acrylic, and gouache. Each cyanotype is created by the power of light, inspiring viewers to look at these very recognizable images in new and different ways. I want each composition to be familiar yet slightly outside of time.

You’ve completed numerous murals and large prints in your personal collection—as well as some at PS 523 in New York city. What about large print is artistically fulfilling to you?

JWB: Scale has a significant impact on how people interact with art. When I create larger works, it envelops the viewer in a complete environment. In contrast, smaller pieces often function like a “window” into a different world. Each location also presents unique challenges. In a home setting, smaller artworks can feel more intimate and personal, while larger pieces in public spaces allow for many individuals to engage with the artwork at once.

At the Griffin, we love the harmonious aesthetic of your works. Where does your interest in geometry and harmony stem from?

JWB: The three works on view for this exhibition are from my Planting Utopia series. I photographed and collected specimens from over 150 plants in the herb garden at Shaker Heritage Society, in Albany, NY. The Society is located at the site of the Shakers’ first settlement in the United States, known as Watervliet. Its herb garden pays homage to the significance of the Shakers’ herb cultivation, and seed and medicinal herb industries. I developed this series of works on paper and canvas with plants collected from the Shaker herb garden. Their compositions were based upon nineteenth-century Shaker Gift Drawings that were complex, divinely inspired revelations of spiritual perfection, often symmetrical and incorporating botanical elements.

©Julia Whitney Barnes, Hummingbirds’ Moons

Are there any other cyanotype artists whose work inspires you?

JWB: So many! I love the concept of this exhibition highlighting artists working with the medium. Anna Atkins has been a major influence on us all, and my guess is that more people are making cyanotypes worldwide than ever before. I first saw Susan Weil and Robert Rauschenberg’s cyanotypes many years ago, and it was one of the things that led me to create cyanotypes. I have worked with the medium for about a dozen years (besides summer camp “sun prints” decades ago). At first, I mainly used the technique along with other forms of printmaking. Arthur Wesley Dow was another early influence. Annette Golaz and Angela Chalmers have written wonderful books on cyanotype that I always recommend.

You’ve bounced around a lot in your life, having spent time in Central Vermont, Brooklyn, and most recently, in the Hudson Valley, a well-known artists’ haven. How has your shifting environment impacted your sense of home and belonging in your art?

JWB: I spent the first 18 years of my life all over New England, then the next 18 years in New York City (mostly Brooklyn). We moved to the Hudson Valley almost a decade ago, right before the birth of our first child. I would come visit the Hudson Valley as often as I could while living in NYC and knew that the eventual plan was to move here. It was no small achievement for two self-employed artists to qualify for a mortgage, so we were thrilled to make that dream a reality. We live in a 100+ year-old house and make the most out of our quarter-acre garden.

©Julia Whitney Barnes, Celestial Garden

What piece is most important to you (in this exhibition) that you want to highlight/spotlight?

JWB: This whole series gains meaning from being seen together. My works in this show are limited edition signed prints since the original works were too large to fit in this space. A dozen pieces from this series were on view last year at the Hancock Shaker Museum in the Berkshires, MA, alongside some of the historic Shaker Gift Drawings that inspired them, so that was a proud moment. All of the 19th-century works then traveled to the American Folk Art Museum for a fantastic show highlighting the Shaker works.

Looking at the other artists in the exhibition, what artworks have caught your attention, and why?

JBW: I am looking forward to seeing Bryan Whitney’s work in person. We are not related (that I know of) but clearly share a love of plants, the ephemeral, and frames. His series cyanotyping the wood for his frames is wonderfully expansive. I put a lot of thought into all my frames and use a deep blue on many that has gone through an intensive dying, staining, and lacquering process. Another standout is the seaweed works of Brett Windham Day. It’s fun to think about a pairing of Anna Atkins’ 19th-century seaweed blue and white prints with the contemporary full-color works.


Willow Simon (b. June 28th, 2005)

Willow Simon is a rising sophomore at Wesleyan University, currently majoring in English and History, and planning on minoring in Middle Eastern Studies. She specializes in journalism and creative writing and has a passion for working in audio.

Griffin Museum of Photography – Winchester, Massachusetts

The Griffin Museum @ Lafayette City Center Passageway – Boston, Massachusetts

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Griffin State of Mind: Sally Chapman Interview

Posted on May 13, 2025

Sally Chapman‘s project Living in the Bubble is set during the recent COVID-19 pandemic and demands that we slow down and take our time, whether in art or elsewhere. This project is currently on display at the Griffin Museum of Photography’s exhibition Elemental Blues at the Griffin’s satellite gallery at Lafayette City Center from April 1st through June 30th. We had the fantastic opportunity to sit down and chat about his fascinating cyanotypes via email this week, and his responses are as follows.

Please join us on the following dates for an online conversation with the artists:
May 21st Panel: Sally Chapman, Julia Whitney Barnes, and Anna Leigh Clem.
May 28th Panel: Brett Windham, Bryan Whitney, and Cynthia Katz.

Portrait of Sally Chapman

Artist Bio:

Sally Chapman is a photographer living in Lowell, MA. After earning a BFA in ceramics and photography from Michigan State University, she worked for over twenty years as a ceramic artist exhibiting widely. When she returned to photography ten years ago, she gravitated towards tactile methods of printing. She discovered 19th century photographic process of cyanotype and the flexibility that hand done processes invite a constant experimentation. She exhibited in the Griffin Museum 30th Annual Juried Members Show 2024 with Honorable Mention; Soho Photo Gallery National Competition 2023, Honorable Mention; Texas Photographic Society, By Hand: Alternative Processes, Honorable Mention; The Halide Project, Living Image, Grand Prize Winner; A Smith Gallery, Directors Award; 18th Julia Margaret Cameron Awards, Honorable Mention; and Rockport Art Association and Museum National Show. Excellence in Photography Award. She has had solo shows at the Soho Photo Gallery, New York, NY; The Halide Project, Philadelphia, PA; Three Stones Gallery, Concord, MA; MIT Rotch Architectural Library, Cambridge, MA; Gallery 93, Brookline, MA; The Sanctuary in Medford, MA; and the Arts League of Lowell, Lowell, MA. She has been included in many group shows including at the Griffin Museum, Winchester, MA; Image Flow Gallery, Mill Valley, CA; Soho Photo Gallery, New York, NY; Art Intersection, Gilbert, AZ; Light Space, Silver City, NM; Photo Place Gallery, Middlebury, VT; and the Danforth Museum, Framingham, MA.

©Sally Chapman, Untitled, All Images Courtesy of the Artist

Follow Sally Chapman | Instagram: @


We’d like to start delving more into the significance of the objects you choose in your still life composition. Can you tell us more about their significance?

Sally Chapman: The series Living In the Bubble was created during the pandemic when we were all in our home and cut off from our usual lives. I found myself at home surrounded by all my stuff—some of the items are precious and sentimental, but many are just mundane tools. But when it comes down to it, it is all just stuff.

©Sally Chapman, Bubble #2

In terms of laying out these objects in your photographs, is there a certain randomness in their order, or are there any considerations you make beforehand?

SC: In laying out the objects, the main considerations were making interesting arrangements. I did a wash of vinegar water over parts of the image to give it a more ethereal feeling to the works, highlighting the strangeness of the situation that we found ourselves in living under lockdown. In doing that, the objects take on a sameness in value, but in viewing the pieces, it’s intriguing to look at all the different items. Adding the oil pastel lines gives a colorful contrast to the blue of cyanotype.

You’ve been a long-time supporter of the e Griffin, with your cyanotypes previously displayed at the museum’s 30th Annual Juried Members’ Exhibition in the summer of 2024 and featured in the museum’s 26th Annual Juried Members’ Exhibition in previous years. How has your art grown and changed since these experiences?

SC: My art is constantly evolving. I like to experiment with different processes, materials, and techniques. It’s wonderful to have the support of the museum as a place where that experimentation is encouraged and celebrated.

You’re not only educated in the world of photography but also have expertise in Ceramics, having obtained your BFA in the art at Michigan State University alongside a photography degree. Has your experience with ceramics and still life influenced your cyanotype prints today?

SC: I worked in ceramics for over 20 years and switched to photography about 15 years ago. Working in clay, you are totally and physically immersed in your materials. And the last few years that impulse has been brought into my photographic work. I’ve been turning the photography pieces into 3-dimensional work. And discovering the world of handmade artist books has given me the vocabulary that I was looking for to do that.

©Sally Chapman, Bubble #3

What piece is most important to you (in this collection) that you want to highlight/spotlight, and why?

SC: I did this series 5 years ago and it’s interesting to look at it again with some distance. It’s like asking for a favorite child, which is hard to do. But for the sake of discussion, let’s say Bubble #5. I usually give titles to my work, but this series has numbers as I wasn’t working with different images for each piece. Each one is an experiment in exploring different variations. In Bubble #5 the selected items are ones that generally have a verticality to them. They are laid out in a shape that is like a hook or an incomplete oval. That the general shape is open, there is a sense of invitation in it. Or it can be seen as a hook, as we were all caught in the whole situation of the pandemic.

Looking at the other artists in the exhibition, what artworks have caught your attention, and why?

SC: It’s wonderful to show with this group of artists. Cyanotype is such a flexible medium. I love seeing all the different ways that it has been used here. I’m struck by the X-ray images of Bryan Whitney, perhaps because they are so clean and precise, which is the opposite of my work, which is loose and intuitive. And the subtle textures that come out in the work of Anna Leigh Clems through her toning techniques are incredible. I think it’s interesting to see that a number of us are adding colors to the work to go beyond cyanotype blue. Julia Whitney Barnes with her colorful painting of designs over the cyanotype backgrounds and Brett Day Windham’s vibrant colors delicately added to the prints. I have long admired Cynthia Katz and her grids of small prints combined into wonderful compositions.


Willow Simon (b. June 28th, 2005)

Willow Simon is a rising sophomore at Wesleyan University, currently majoring in English and History, and planning on minoring in Middle Eastern Studies. She specializes in journalism and creative writing and is passionate about working in audio.

Griffin Museum of Photography – Winchester, Massachusetts

The Griffin Museum @ Lafayette City Center Passageway – Boston, Massachusetts

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Griffin State of Mind: Cynthia Katz

Posted on May 13, 2025

Cynthia Katz‘s work takes the wildness of nature to the next level, breaking down recognizable images into individual puzzle pieces. This project is currently on display at the Griffin Museum of Photography’s exhibition Elemental Blues at the Griffin’s satellite gallery at Lafayette City Center, from April 1st through June 30th. We had the enlightening opportunity to sit down and chat about her peculiar cyanotypes via email this week, and her responses are as follows.

Please join us on the following dates for an online conversation with the artists:
May 21st Panel: Sally Chapman, Julia Whitney Barnes, and Anna Leigh Clem.
May 28th Panel: Brett Windham, Bryan Whitney, and Cynthia Katz.

Portrait of Cynthia Katz, All Images Courtesy of the Artist

Cynthia Katz is an award-winning photo-based artist working in the Boston area. Her cyanotypes, one of the earliest forms of photographic technology dating back to 1842, are created in a way that is relevant and meaningful in current times. Process and discovery have been guiding forces that link all her work. This work has been described as being both mysterious and familiar, has been shown regionally and nationally, most recently at Three Stones Gallery, Jessica Hagen Gallery, The Danforth Art Museum, The Fitchburg Art Museum, and Soho Photo Gallery in NYC. In 2024 Katz was recognized by LensCulture’s Art Photography Awards as a finalist and a juror’s pick. She was awarded the Photography Prize at the 2024 Fitchburg Art Museum’s Exhibition of Art and Craft and was the first prize recipient in Soho Photo Gallery’s 2024 Alternative Process Competition. Her work is published in journals, books and blogs, including Manifest’s International Photography Annual 3, SlowSpace.org and LensCulture. Cynthia’s recent presentations include “Handmade Photographs” at the Photographic Resource Center in Boston, Three Stones Gallery and at Concord Art. She is represented by Jessica Hagen Gallery in Newport, RI. Her work is housed in private collections. Cynthia earned a BFA in Photography from the University of New Hampshire and an MFA in Photography from Bennington College. She maintains a studio at The Umbrella Arts Center in Concord, MA, and she lives in West Concord. Cynthia has been around photographs and photography her whole life. Her father was a NYC free-lance advertising photographer. Pictured here, Cynthia, her brothers and her Dad, DAKA, on a shoot. Her father used family members as models whenever possible.

©Cynthia Katz, Cyanotype on Paper

Follow Cynthia Katz | Instagram: @cynthiakatzstudio


Your cyanotype prints are typically arranged in a grid format and reconnected in a mismatched manner. What draws you to abstract photography, and more specifically, the grid format?

Cynthia Katz: The grid format you refer to is from a body of work entitled Almost Gone. In Elemental Blues the piece from that series is entitled New. The series’ origin came from mining an overflowing box of failures that were about to go into a bonfire. As I was ripping up pieces, I noticed elements I liked/thought they worked and selected a photographic format that I’ve used a lot (645), and began to cut out rectangular segments. Hence, the work was “Almost Gone” to ashes. In this series, I RECLAIM, REIMAGINE and RESTORE visual elements, creating new narratives that reference the earth, the world under the sea and the cosmic world. I’ve always loved grids, and I have used them to put together disparate parts, creating new wholes. I love forms, lines, shapes, texture and pattern and the way abstraction can still carry meaning.

©Cynthia Katz, Blue Lightning

Walk us through the process of creating one of these grid systems? What parts are you most methodical?

CK: All of my work is very process oriented. I don’t map things out ahead of time. I cut out rectangles (I’m also using squares now), RECLAIMING parts I like. When I have a stack to draw from, I start searching for visual connections—REIMAGINING how new forms come together, and then work from there. There is a lot of moving pieces around and exchanging pieces, even up to the actual adhering of the segments onto the background paper (using a piece of 2 ply board to give it some lift), changing parts to find the best way to move the viewer’s eye through the composition. I’m mindful of needed pauses to balance busy areas, and the way the different colors flow is important. After all is said and done, I hopefully have RESTORED the parts into a new whole that is read both in totality and for its details.

©Cynthia Katz, Blue Moons

Regarding the content of your work, many of them appear to feature negatives of botanicals as well as families. What about these two categories of subjects makes them a fascinating reference for your work?

CK: The only parts that are from negatives are the families. And they are MY FAMILY. I found old family negatives, so these are my ancestors. Some I know (my mom, my grandparents, aunts and uncles) but many are just part of my history… unfortunately I’ve lost the information of who they are.

The rest of the imagery is from objects (flowers, stones, seeds, etc.) around my yard and gardens. Cyanotypes are a contact print process, so it’s a 1:1 relationship for scale. Thus both the negatives and the objects are actual size.

I’ve been a gardener since I was little. I learned by my mom’s side helping her. I often plant flowers that I want to photograph, or use in these cyanotypes. And my garden comes together in the same way as these grids… little by little, plant by plant. I’ve photographed people and places for a long time, so this is an outgrowth of that other part of my practice.

©Cynthia Katz, Red, White, and Very Blue

In your artist’s statement, you describe your process as methodical and slow, mentioning that your prints include a “dose of politics and news.” How do these aspects of your creative process influence your cyanotype prints?

CK: I am a news junkie (which has been tough in these times) but it wasn’t until the first T-administration that I started using topics of immigration or war as impetus for my work. Kids in cages, border crossings, or the Ukraine War (I found out I am not Russian but Ukrainian during the war from a cousin who is researching our family) became subtle points of departure for making work. The piece Red, White and Very Blue in the show was referencing the way that the flag has become weaponized, but also the way our country has been divided and polarized, which makes me really sad. I don’t know that someone would look at the work without a statement or title, or hearing me talk about it and see political content. When I am printing cyanotypes now, I’m often thinking about our origin stories, our paths, our search for ourselves in the universe and on this blue planet.

©Cynthia Katz, Which Path

What piece is most important to you (in this collection) that you want to highlight/spotlight?

CK: It’s funny that the three pieces in the exhibition are each from a different series, yet share a color palette that is based on straight cyanotypes. Hopefully they also are united by a consistent feel. The piece New One from the series Almost Gone is quite different from the rest of that work, being more minimal in color range and forms. Here, I worked with a color palette that was consistent and forms that were bold and repeat, vs. having a wide range of color, tonalities, and image forms. Almost Gone as a body of work has been pivotal to my growth and practice as an artist. It’s allowed me to consider failure in new ways and draw on abstraction in a medium (photography) that is typically representative and referential. Not to dilute the importance of New One, the other two pieces in the exhibit hold an important place for me in my current practice representing the two other ways I’m currently working.

©Cynthia Katz, Blue Moons

Looking at the other artists in the exhibition, what artworks have caught your attention, and why?

CK: I’ve been familiar with the work of some of the artists in this show, all of whom I’m grateful to be sharing space with. I think our different approaches using cyanotypes enlarges the conversations about photography and historic forms. I love the way Bryan Whitney’s work is both simple and complex, and the luminosity is striking. There is an elegance and a majesty to his pieces. We were in a show together a couple years ago at Soho Photo Gallery in NYC, and I was captivated by his work from the start.

©Cynthia Katz, Gathering Solstice

Willow Simon (b. June 28th, 2005)

Willow Simon is a rising sophomore at Wesleyan University, currently majoring in English and History, and planning on minoring in Middle Eastern Studies. She specializes in journalism and creative writing and is passionate about working in audio.

Griffin Museum of Photography – Winchester, Massachusetts

The Griffin Museum @ Lafayette City Center Passageway – Boston, Massachusetts

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Griffin State of Mind: Anna Leigh Clem

Posted on May 13, 2025

Anna Leigh Clem‘s work Dreamland, a project exploring nature throughout the barren shores of Canada’s Prince Edward Island, is currently on display at the Griffin Museum of Photography’s exhibition Elemental Blues at the Griffin’s satellite gallery at Lafayette City Center, from April 1st through June 30th. We had the fantastic opportunity to sit down and chat with her via email this week about her misty, dream-like cyanotypes, and her responses are as follows.

Please join us on the following dates for an online conversation with the artists:
May 21st Panel: Sally Chapman, Julia Whitney Barnes, and Anna Leigh Clem.
May 28th Panel: Brett Windham, Bryan Whitney, and Cynthia Katz.

Portrait of Anna Leigh Clem

Anna Leigh Clem (1990, NY) is an artist and educator working in photography, text, book arts, video, and other media to investigate the nature of ephemerality. Compelled by the ineffable secrets embedded in memories, dreams, and the natural world, her work makes tangible these otherwise invisible realms. Clem currently lives and works on the North Shore of Boston and holds a Master of Fine-Arts in photography and integrated media from Lesley University (2021) and a Bachelor of Fine-Arts in photography from Rochester Institute of Technology (2012). She received a Grant for Creative Individuals from Mass Cultural Council in 2025. Her work has been shown both nationally and internationally, at venues such as Bromfield Gallery, the Center for Photography at Woodstock, Foley Gallery, Visual Studies Workshop, and Elysium Gallery. She has published both trade edition books and artist’s books, several of which are held in collections at The Griffin Museum of Photography, Yale University, SMFA, SVA, and Pratt Institute. She has taught college-level courses at Northeastern University, Lesley University, Endicott College, and Montserrat College of Art.

©Anna Leigh Clem, Skull and Bones

Follow Anna Leigh Clem | Instagram: @aapertura


You work on the North Shore of Massachusetts and in Prince Edward Island on Canada’s Atlantic coast. Has both areas’ proximity to the ocean and far-Northeastern seaside culture influenced your work?

Anna Leigh Clem: Wherever I live, I am held by that place and immerse myself in it through my work. That being said, the ocean is such a mysterious and unpredictable being, I can’t help but be in awe of it. While it is not often the subject of my work, working near the ocean has energized and inspired me. It is most directly linked to the Dreamland series because the ocean helped create the dune system that the project is centered around.

©Anna Leigh Clem, Crows Cache

Given that the 1880 Meachams Atlas labeled this region as “Barren Land,” how does your work subvert colonial or extractive cartographic narratives? In what ways do you see Dreamland functioning as a kind of “counter-map”?

ALC: Being “useful” has, in the western sense, hardly ever included beauty for its own sake. Dreamland, while visually strange, is mysterious, awe-inspiring, and full of life. My cyanotypes seek to portray this point of view through imagery and tonality. Because Dreamland was spared from resource extraction, it is now one of the more ecologically diverse and sensationally interesting places on the island, which is priceless considering how much has been lost to extraction and exploitation.

Since your work physically incorporates the place (through foraged toners and objects), how does that make the photographic image more directly connected to the real world or the subject it represents, strengthening or even challenging its indexicality?

ALC: With the toned prints, we can see an image of place and we know the plant matter sourced from this place is embedded in the fibers of the print, also visible in the color shift. The unframed prints also allow you to touch this place, and in some cases even smell it. This multi-faceted indexicality bridges the gap created by the inclusion of digital processes (scanning the film and making the large digital negatives for cyanotype printing) and creates a more immersive experience. The prints feel alive and no two are the same.

©Anna Leigh Clem, Impasse

Have you developed a personal brew for toning your photographs, and if so, can you guide us through the process?

ALC: Yes—I particularly like the results I have gotten with strawberry leaf, which, depending on the temperature and pH level of the water and where the plant is collected from, among other factors, can yield a blue-green, dusty blue, grey, black, or brown print. Collect 15–30g of fresh strawberry leaves, often found in human-disturbed areas, and steep them in 2–4L of boiling hot water for 20+ minutes. Quantities depend on the size of the print tray. Strain the brew into the tray and steep your print for 10 minutes to several hours, checking regularly until you are pleased with the results. Rinse well.

©Anna Leigh Clem, Foredune

What piece is most important to you (in this collection) that you want to highlight/spotlight?

ALC: Teeth Grow in the Heathland was an exciting image to make because of the thrill of finding this boneyard in the middle of a thicket in Dreamland. I enjoy the life / death duality depicted in the image.

©Anna Leigh Clem, Teeth Grow in the Heathland, All Images Courtesy of the Artist

Looking at the other artists in the exhibition, what artworks have caught your attention, and why?

ALC: I love Cynthia Katz’s multi-paneled pieces, where the forms are disjointed and come back together in unexpected ways. The work is enigmatic, and I want to keep looking.


Willow Simon (b. June 28th, 2005)

Willow Simon is a rising sophomore at Wesleyan University, currently majoring in English and History, and planning on minoring in Middle Eastern Studies. She specializes in journalism and creative writing and is passionate about working in audio.

Griffin Museum of Photography – Winchester, Massachusetts

The Griffin Museum @ Lafayette City Center Passageway – Boston, Massachusetts

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Griffin State of Mind: Bryan Whitney

Posted on May 13, 2025

Bryan Whitney‘s images use X-ray scans of everyday flora to examine nature from the inside out. This project is currently on display at the Griffin Museum of Photography’s exhibition Elemental Blues at the Griffin’s satellite gallery at Lafayette City Center from April 1st through June 30th. We had the fantastic opportunity to sit down and chat about his fascinating cyanotypes via email this week, and his responses are as follows.

Please join us on the following dates for an online conversation with the artists:
May 21st Panel: Sally Chapman, Julia Whitney Barnes, and Anna Leigh Clem.
May 28th Panel: Brett Windham, Bryan Whitney, and Cynthia Katz.

Portrait of Bryan Whitney, All Images Courtesy of the Artist

Bryan Whitney is a photographer and artist in New York City whose work involves experimental imaging techniques including x-rays, lensless imaging and alternative processes such as cyanotype. Whitney holds an MFA in Photography from the Tyler School of Art and a BA in the Psychology of Art from University of Michigan. He has taught photography at Rutgers University and currently teaches at the International Center of Photography in New York City and the New York Botanical Garden. A recipient of a Fulbright Grant for lectures on American Photography he has exhibited across the United States and internationally. His work has appeared in magazines such as Harpers Bazaar, Fortune, the New York Times, as well as being featured in books, posters and billboards. His X-ray botanical images have recently been acquired as a stamp designs by the US Postal Service.  

©Bryan Whitney, Lotus X-Ray Cyanotype Postcard (2024)

Follow Bryan Whitney | Instagram: @temporarypedestal


As an X-ray artist, your work involves revealing the hidden intricacies of the natural world. Metaphorically and symbolically speaking, why does transparency reveal to you artistically?

Bryan Whitney: Symbolically and metaphorically, transparency represents an understanding of the tru nature of reality. We tend to perceive the world as composed of discrete objects including ourselves, yet energy flows continuously through all things—x-rays, radio waves, and more—hinting at a deeper unity. Transparency becomes a metaphor for this unseen, interconnected reality.

©Bryan Whitney, Iris X-Ray Cyanotype (2024)

You’re using very technological techniques for your imaging process; where does your interest in science and botany come from, and how did you discover the world of x-ray photography?

BW: I discovered X-ray imaging through my wife who works as a conservator at the Metropolitan Museum of Art where x-rays are used along with other scientific tools are used to study artworks. Intrigued by all forms of image-making, I received permission to experiment with unexpected objects. Over the past 20 years, I’ve continued this practice—now independently—using extra-large sheets of film (17 x 22”), developed by hand in trays. You might call it “X-tra large format.”

©Bryan Whitney, Chrysanthemum X-Ray Cyanotype (2024)

Addressing the material aspect of your work, you create your frames for your work. Considering your work is focused on the unknown interiors of objects, why focus on the outside of your work as well?

BW: For me, the artwork is more than an image—it’s a physical embodiment of ideas, emotions, and perceptions. Materials carry expressive weight through texture, color, and form, even in abstract work. I craft my blue frames from raw lumber to integrate fully with the cyanotypes, creating a unified whole—a Gesamtkunstwerk, as the Germans say.

Describe your photography process in the studio to make one of these prints as if you were in the studio with you.

BW: My botanical x-rays are made using a 1:1 imaging technique, akin to a photogram—no lens involved, and the film must match the object in size. After hand-developing and drying the film, I scan it and digitally adjust the image, carefully isolating the subject by using a digital pen, which is much like drawing. I then print an internegative on transparent film at the final print size. A high-quality watercolor sheet is coated with cyanotype solution using a Japanese hake brush, dried, and exposed under UV light in contact with the internegative. The image is developed in water which washes away the unexposed cyanotype solution and is dried. I mill, stain, and assemble hard maple frames, finishing with museum-grade UV-protective plexiglass.

©Bryan Whitney, Proteus X-Ray Cyanotype (2024)

Working in the Hudson Valley, have you had the opportunity or interest in working with the native flora in the region?

BW: Yes, I’ve used ferns from the Hudson Valley in my work. I often retreat to my off-grid cabins in the Catskills, which keep me closely connected to the local landscape and flora.

Some of your previous work has focused on portraiture-style photography rather than botany. How do you determine the subjects of your photographs, and what inspired you to work with the natural world?

BW: Like many artists the Covid time caused a realignment in my work. I was hiking everyday in the Catskills and started doing “portraits” of trees using a fisheye lens. I created a body of work called “Enchanted Forest” which I installed as a popup exhibition in a laundromat (!) and subsequently showed in a gallery. Fascinated by art history, I created “re-portraits” of Roman busts using a tilt-shift lens, and a series called“GAZE,” featuring thumbnail size19th-century tintypes enlarged onto fabric and installed in immersive circular form that you walked inside.

What piece is most important to you (in this collection) that you want to highlight/spotlight?

BW: The Lotus is a favorite—both for its symbolism and the tiny, Brueghel-like figures that many see dancing in its center. My botanical x-rays are not portraits of specific specimens; they serve as votive images, evoking the archetype of each plant.


Willow Simon (b. June 28th, 2005)

Willow Simon is a rising sophomore at Wesleyan University, currently majoring in English and History, and planning on minoring in Middle Eastern Studies. She specializes in journalism and creative writing and is passionate about working in audio.

Griffin Museum of Photography – Winchester, Massachusetts

The Griffin Museum @ Lafayette City Center Passageway – Boston, Massachusetts

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Griffin State of Mind: Brett Day Windham

Posted on May 12, 2025

Brett Day Windham‘s fascination with the mysteries of aquatic life is on full display in her work, currently on display at the Griffin Museum of Photography‘s exhibition Elemental Blues at our Lafayette City Center satellite gallery (April 1 – June 30, 2025). We had the wonderful opportunity to sit down and chat about her sea-life cyanotypes via email this week, and her responses are as follows.

Please join us on the following dates for an online conversation with the artists:
May 21st Panel: Sally Chapman, Julia Whitney Barnes, and Anna Leigh Clem.
May 28th Panel: Brett Windham, Bryan Whitney, and Cynthia Katz.

Portrait of Brett Day Windham

Brett Day Windham (born Cambridge, England, raised Providence, Rhode Island) is a multidisciplinary artist currently working with cyanotype. She received a BFA from Hampshire College, a certificate in painting from SACI in Florence, Italy, and an MFA in Sculpture from RISD. Her work has been collected internationally and has been included in shows around the US, including The Barnes Foundation (Philadelphia), Smack Mellon (New York), the RISD Museum (Providence), University of Maine Museum of Art (Bangor), and RMCAD (Denver). Windham received a Dean’s fellowship at RISD and was nominated for the Joan Mitchell MFA Grant. Residencies include The Select Fair Residency (Brooklyn, New York), The Chrysler Museum Glass Studio (Norfolk, Virginia), TSKW (Key West, Florida), Cascina Remondenca (Chiaverano, Italy), and Penland School of Craft. (Penland, North Carolina). Her work has been cited in Art New England, Elle Decor, V Magazine, Hyperallergic, The New York Times, Providence Phoenix, Whitewall Magazine, and The Bangor Daily News. 

Follow Brett Day Windham on Instagram: @brettwindham

©Brett Day Windham, Aqualife I. All Images Courtesy the Artist

In your artist’s statement, you describe your project as unveiling the “unseen rhythms of marine life,” and your cyanotypes are composed of numerous pieces of coral and shell. Is there significance in where these pieces of sea life are obtained?

Brett Day Windham: The impulse to collect is a driving force in my practice. Initially, I aimed to replicate my installation work by gathering a collection of objects on one beach, printing them all together, and naming the piece accordingly. There are also series based on flowers grown in my garden, walks in the woods, objects found on the street, and birds who’ve died in the landscape. I relaxed my rules as I improved at recognizing objects that could create interesting prints, and as the importance of painting the prints grew. The fan corals were given to me by a retired librarian, who’d had them in her collection forever. I could immediately see connections with arteries, breasts, roots, and volcanoes, which excited me.

©Brett Day Windham, Jacob’s Point Constellation

How is your artmaking speaking to sustainable modes of production, and how does it relate to a sense of place?

BDW: Sustainability is a major concern, and has almost stopped me from working at times. My installations and collages are primarily made from found objects, and I find cyanotypes satisfying because I can usually return the specimens to the landscape. Cyanotype has a relatively low environmental impact, and I love using Indian cotton rag paper when I can afford it. The paper is repurposed from waste in Indian textile production and has been made in the same way for centuries.

©Brett Day Windham, Aqualife II

In your showcase titled Collections Hybridized: Imagined and Real, when demonstrating your cyanotype process on an orchid, you asked the question: “How can I reinvent the orchid that we see so often?” to force the viewer to lay new eyes on something common. What draws you to reinvent—almost tame—nature in your art?

BDW: I think you are referring to a virtual lecture hosted by the Barry Art Museum during the COVID-19 lockdown. The video series was created in support of Orchids: Attraction and Deception, a group exhibition which I participated in. That conversation, available on YouTube, paired me with an expert orchid breeder and was fascinating. I imagine the urge to reinvent imagery and objects is pretty common among artists. For me, it stems from years of transforming found objects from the streets into installations and collages. I wanted to make connections between them and use them to tell stories about our culture. I also find it surprising when the general public doesn’t see the beauty in everyday things and insists on creating ugly, thoughtless, and wasteful objects. I would never presume to tame nature—banish the thought.

©Brett Day Windham, Arterial I (detail)

Your pieces featured in Elemental Blues contain detailed watercolor on top of the cyanotype prints. As an artist, how do you use this mixed media approach to your advantage?

BDW: The impulse began on a trip to Narrowsburg, New York, where I admired an antique hand-tinted photograph in a shop. It was a bit overdone; the woman had silly pink rouge circles on her cheeks, and the whole palette was charmingly off. I couldn’t afford it, and so it lodged in my memory. At some point, the memory clicked into place, and I figured out how to incorporate it. I also realized that my love of color could help set me apart from other artists working with cyanotype.

©Brett Day Windham, Mildred’s Lane I

You also often use bright, saturated tones for your overall practice. What draws you to these vibrant, almost unnatural, colors? What piece is most important to you (in this collection) that you want to highlight/spotlight, and why?

BDW: The colors are incredibly important. When I’m painting, I vacillate between intention and intuition. At a certain point, I have to let the color take me where it needs to go; that’s the sweet spot, when I’m in the zone. Combining natural and unnatural colors allows a picture to drift in and out of reality, giving me the opportunity to reintroduce—and personalize—somewhat everyday objects. Cyanotype is a Victorian process that produces prints with a timeless quality. Combining neon and pastel colors with more traditional hues firmly establishes the work within a contemporary context, or further obfuscates that notion of time, depending on one’s perspective. The works have equal importance.

©Brett Day Windham, Studio of the artist.
©Brett Day Windham, Barney’s Joy

Willow Simon (b. June 28th, 2005) is a rising sophomore at Wesleyan University, currently majoring in English and History, and planning on minoring in Middle Eastern Studies. She specializes in journalism and creative writing and has a passion for working in audio.

Griffin Museum of Photography – Winchester, Massachusetts

The Griffin Museum @ Lafayette City Center Passageway – Boston, Massachusetts

Filed Under: Uncategorized

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    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.

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    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

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