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Griffin News

Spring Education schedule is online!

Posted on January 21, 2022

Spring class registration is now open! Join us to develop your craft with new opportunities for advancement.

Portfolio Development, History of Photography, Alternative Process and Night Photography are among some of the offerings. Take a look at whats coming up this Spring with our new Education Catalog.

We’ve added a new workshop in June! Elin Spring and Suzanne Revy are teaching Writing About Photography . The workshop starts June 4th, 2022 and registration is open now!

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: education

John Chervinsky Emerging Photographer Scholarship Award Winner | Justin Michael Emmanuel

Posted on January 18, 2022

© Justin Michael Emanuel, Celeste

The John Chervinsky Emerging Photographer Scholarship 2022

The Griffin Museum of Photography is pleased to announce the winner of the 2021 John Chervinsky Emerging Photographer Scholarship, Justin Michael Emmanuel. His series A Facefull of Mangos captivated this years jury to earn him a monetary award, an upcoming exhibition and artist talk at the Griffin Museum as well as a volume from the collection of photographer John Chervinsky.

Now in its sixth year, over 171 photographers submitted applications to be considered for the scholarship. The jurors, Tricia Capello, Bruce Myren and Connie and Jerry Rosenthal have selected Justin Michael Emmanuel as the 2021 recipient of the John Chervinsky Emerging Photographer Scholarship.

  • Allyson and Alex
    © Justin Michael Emmanuel, Allyson & Alex
  • cowrie shell jme
    © Justin Michael Emmanuel, Cowrie Shell
  • jme darien and granny
    © Justin Michael Emmanuel, Darien & Granny
  • jme sisters
    © Justin Michael Emmanuel, Sisters

About A Facefull of Mangos –

With this photographic series, I present to the viewer a resistance to systemic racism and also a window into understanding what makes us human. I hope that by showing imagery of touch, warmth, laughter, and love, I may begin to unravel and break down any preconceived notions or ideas that do not give resonance to those qualities in regards to Blackness in the mind of the viewer. I am desperately attempting to declare my own humanity and have it recognized by others. By showing the gentle side of our human nature I am hopeful that the viewers will recognize their own familial behaviors and interactions, thus bridging gaps that are set by race, ethnicity, nationality, culture, and economic social-political forces. This work desires to deconstruct and challenge the mainstream historical imagery that has described Blackness in a light that wasn’t its own. I hope that the importance of these images are not only determined by what they express visually or culturally but also by the fact that they are documents of the human capacity to care for and feel empathy towards one another. Most importantly, the purpose of this work is to create empathy among people by showing the human aptitude to love. In the Bible, it is said that at the tower of Babel, God, frustrated and threatened by the power of human cooperation, fractured our language so that we could no longer understand each other and work together. And while an ancient story that reverberates with myth, the essence of this still rings true. That when we work together, not even the heavens will be the limit of our greatness. That God himself will pale in comparison to the vastness of our achievements. If only we could work together, we could become so much more. It is as the writer Eric Williams once said, “Together we aspire, together we achieve.” – JME

About Justin Michael Emmanuel –

Born in Hartford, CT, in 1995, Justin-Michael Emmanuel is a mixed media artist that primarily uses photography and the written word to explore ideas of family, love, and blackness. Justin was first exposed to photography in 2015 during his time at Hampshire College where he received both the David E. Smith and Elaine Mayes fellowship awards for his photographic work on Afrofuturism. He then completed a master of fine arts degree at the University of Hartford Art School in 2021 where he also won the Stanley Fellman Award for his graduate thesis work A Facefull of Mangos. Photographs from that series have been included in group exhibitions at the Chrysler Museum of Art, The Center for Photographers of Color, and the Joseloff Gallery. Justin currently resides in Quincy, MA, where he continues to make photographs that critically engage with his community. By using the camera to show our human aptitude to love, Justin hopes that his photographs will help give people the tools they need to shape the world around them.

We look forward to showcasing the work of Mr. Emmanuel in 2022, and are excited to watch his progress and an artist and visionary in the field of photography.

About the John Chervinsky Emerging Photographer Scholarship –

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

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

Filed Under: Exhibitions, John Chervinsky Scholarship Award

Susan Irene Correia | Griffin State of Mind

Posted on January 14, 2022

In today’s Griffin State of Mind, we are thrilled to share our conversation with Susan Irene Correia—equine photographer whose work is devoted to capturing the spirit of the horse in her photography. As part of our E.caballus exhibition, Correia’s works include Power – Dance with Beauty, Play with Abandon, and Be Loved. To learn what gets her in the Griffin State of Mind, we asked her a few questions. 

Tell us how you first connected to the Griffin Museum. 

It’s a fairy godmother story.  At the end of a long day of reviewing portfolios for the Seacoast Camera Club, with one more to go and a long drive home Griffin Museum Executive Director and Curator Paula Tognarelli walked into the library room and reviewed my work. It ended up with an invitation to exhibit at the Griffin. I am so grateful to Paula for this introduction into the Griffin family. 

© Susan Irene Correia, Halt at X

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 try to spend some time reviewing other types of work and be inspired by their journeys and successes. I was fascinated this year by the intense creativity of Kathleen Clemons and was able to organize a local workshop for a small group of photography friends. It was a pleasure to just absorb the joy of working up-close with flowers and learning how to use certain specialty lens. It gave me greater respect for looking for the beauty in the details that I can also apply to with horses. And not to worry about horses stepping on my many times broken toes!

 

correia - peeking

© Susan Irene Correia

Please tell us a little about your series Power, and how it was conceived.

A horse is an animal of flight – integrated into their brain to survive and to do so they must be intelligent and fit. Under saddle if they are respected and asked to work as a partner they comply to accept the direction of the human hand and beautifully work as one. But the spirit of the horse always yearns for the freedom of the body to move and play. That is what inspired me with the theme of Power broken up into the three areas. But most important to me is to have the viewer give thought to our fast moving society which is reflected in the last piece of the series titled “Three Brands Too Many”.  I want the viewer to enjoy seeing their power but also reflect on their fragility. Including my present dressage horse, all of the horses that I have owned were in troubled situations prior to my intervention so I connected deeply with this horse I photographed.

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

I really love the Griffin Member Artist exhibits because its a whirlwind of incredible creativity and thought. Its so inspirational. I am obsessed with “Flight” by  Anne Piessens because it represents so clearly to me the dreams I had as a child.

girl with wing
© Anne Piessens, Flight

My [other] choice would be “Among the Aspen Trees” by Mary Aiu. It inspires me because not only does it capture the spirit of this horse but utilizes so many other sensory elements and techniques.

What is your favorite place to escape to?

That’s an easy one. Alone with my horse, to groom him, to feel the wind in my face riding him. No other thoughts can get into my mind at that time. The nicker, the nuzzling, his dependency of knowing where I am for his security – healing for me that can not be described.  

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

Tina Turner “Simply the Best”  Timeless creation and there is even a horse in it!

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

My mom who caught covid two weeks before her first vaccination was scheduled and passed many months later from post covid complications. To be sure she heard me tell her how much she was loved by all. Please get fully vaccinated and encourage others.

Filed Under: Blog, Exhibitions, Griffin State of Mind

E-blasts

Posted on December 16, 2021

E-Blasts

Check out our latest e-blast by date.  Catch up on the latest from the Griffin. To receive our E-blast by email, subscribe for e-news above.

2021

December 28, 2021 E-Blast Griffin Museum

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2020

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2019

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2018

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2017

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2016

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Filed Under: Blog

Griffin State of Mind | Home Views – Melanie Walker

Posted on December 4, 2021

As a practicing artist for over 50 years, Melanie Walker’s work focuses on alternative photographic processes, digital and mixed media as well as large scale photographic installations. Featured in our Home Views show, her exhibition Wanderlust is rooted in memory and dreams as her works are drawn from images that she has taken over the years during her wanderings. With her series exploring the fragile nature of time, place, and memory, we were fascinated to hear more from Melanie and her art-making. 

 

Tell us how you first connected to the Griffin Museum.

            I have known about the Griffin for so many years, it’s difficult to recall when I first heard about it. It might have been through Mary Virginia Swanson but I am not sure. It was always a place where I wanted to exhibit my work and through becoming a   member, that finally occurred. There have been a few opportunities since, including a single person show last year during shut down.

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 have been connected to photography since birth as my father was a photographer and I

portrait of a woman

© Román Anaya

learned early on the power of images and their ability to convey stories. I teach photography at the University of Colorado at Boulder and am constantly researching everything photography from new artists, old favorites, new ways of working, historical processes and more. I am as involved in photography and image making as I am in breathing. The medium is my best friend. 

In terms of artists and images that I have been thinking about recently, I would say that Alanna Airitam is someone whose work I so admire. She has such an extraordinary sense of light and the images she makes are so critical to the troubled times we are living in. Her Golden Age project tells a more inclusive history of humanity that is so important, especially now. I am glad that she has been receiving so much attention for her beautiful work recently.

Another artist is one of our former graduate students who I worked with closely over the last couple of years. Roman Anaya was going to be a star I believe. He was the first in his family to receive an MFA and his grandfather migrated from Mexico in the 1950’s as a part of the bracero program. Roman had health issues and we lost him last spring. He was making incredible work incorporating his photographic portraits with papier mache and his mother’s crochet work in their collaboration. I wish there was a way to share his work with the world. I think about him nearly every day…

Please tell us a little about your series, Wanderlust and how it was conceived.

The work on display at the Griffin is part of an ongoing long term project that keeps circling around and evolving addressing notions surrounding the idea of home. It began with a dream many years ago after I had spent time with a Hopi family on the reservation. In the dream there was a person who watched over me who had a house for a head.  

The pieces that are part of Wanderlust are the houses and the puppets. These works have been made over the last two or three years and are very raw in response to my anxieties over the reckoning and the divisions I see going on in this country. The puppets are the sleepwalkers and the houses began with the scrap wood I acquired from a neighbor’s remodel of their house. I have long been concerned with environmental issues and using things that would be sent to landfill is a part of my practice. The puppet heads are made with junk mail. All of the works incorporate encaustic wax. 

I’ve often though about photography as being the great equalizer in that when photographed, the monumental can take on the same scale as the miniature. With some of the wooden houses I have photographed them and printed them very large scale on silk fabric to create immersive installations. In some cases where I have had the opportunity I have exhibited both the miniature encaustic wood houses along with the large scale fabric pieces. 

In terms of the puppets, I have long been enamored with the political history associated with puppetry. Puppets have been a part of my practice for many years, long before the word started being tossed around during the last several years. Generally I have included the use of toys in a lot of my work. I think it’s all valid in terms of encouraging people to engage with ideas in a multisensory manner.  

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

picture of silk installation

© Alanna Airitam

This is such a difficult question to answer since there has been stellar programming over the years and I have never had the opportunity to visit the Griffin in person. So many important exhibitions with great programming to accompany each show. I found the recent Spirit exhibition that gave voice to many indigenous artists. I really appreciate that the programming at the Griffin has been so diverse giving opportunities to a range of approaches to photography. 

What is your favorite place to escape to? 

I love being at places with edges. The edge of the plains where they intersect with the mountains, on a coast where water and land meet but mostly I love just looking at the sky. I make kites and it’s really just an excuse to spend time looking at the sky…it’s such a place of wonder and awe.

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

I have to admit that my recent obsession of late has been trying to spare the life of someone on death row in Oklahoma. Julius Jones is scheduled to be executed later in November and there is so much new evidence that he never received a fair trial and the jury was biased. Another person has bragged about committing the murder that Julius may pay for with his life and it was only this week that he was given the opportunity to speak on his behalf. He has been on death row for more than half his life. 

In terms of books, I think that The Life a Plants: A Metaphysics of Mixture by Emanuele Coccia has been inspiring to me of late.  Plants created the atmosphere that has sustained us for millenia. It has been instrumental in the thoughts behind some of my recent installations thinking about the air that we all share, especially through the pandemic. Are we breathing the same air that the ancestors once inhaled? It’s just such a thoughtful book. So inspiring…

I have also been fairly obsessed with the series on Netflix called High on the Hog that was put together by food writer Stephen Satterfield and traces so much of American cuisine back to slavery and Africa. It’s a fascinating history. I think that if I hadn’t pursued a career in art I probably would have been a food anthropologist. It’s a mind altering series and will soon begin a new season that I am looking forward to. 

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

So many possibilities but I suppose that the person I would probably choose would be my father, Todd Walker who was my mentor, role model and best friend. We lost him in 1998 and I miss him daily. He set an example for me and worked daily even though he never really received the attention I think he deserved being such a pioneer on so many levels. I don’t know what we would talk about but I imagine I would just want to be in the moment without an agenda and would treasure every word exchanged. 

 

Filed Under: 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 – Judi Iranyi

Posted on December 3, 2021

Judi Iranyi was born in Hungary, and lived in several places before coming to San Francisco in 1971. After her retirement, she dedicated her time to photography, and her work includes street and travel photography, portraits, documentary work, still life photography, and botanicals. Her solo exhibition, Mantel, looks at the symbolism of mantels and fireplaces.

Mantel is part of the Griffin’s Home Views exhibition. You can see Judi’s work on the walls of our Founder’s gallery until December 5th. We asked Judi some questions about her background and her artistic process, and we are excited to share what she had to say.

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

portrait of a boy

© Judi Iranyi

I live in San Francisco , CA. I have never been to the the Museum, only online. This year I became a member and I was fortunate to have a phone conversation with Paula Tognarelli, who kindly critiqued some of my work and choose eight images for the “Home views” exhibition.

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?

For the last 50+ years, I have always had a small camera with me at all times. I photograph images that caught my attention and added them to my archives, to be used later. I was lucky to be able to travel all around the world and in the United States. I also photograph my family and friends. I use photography as a record for memories, when I look at an image it brings back all the details related to the image. I photographed my son
during his whole life and was able to make a monogram with his images.
Recently I have admired images made by Janet Milhome, Sheila Metzner, Olivia Parker,
Marie Cosindas, Michael Kenna, Don Worth, Fran Forman, Maggie Taylor, Nick Brandt,
Michael Eastman, Josephine Sacabo , Brigite Carnochan, Abelardo Morell and many
others.

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

ruins of Bam, Iran

© Judi Iranyi

This has been a difficult year of sheltering-in-place and not being able to socialize in person with my community. This has forced me to rethink how I go about making new work. I feel that I am in a time of transition. I am not sure where it will take me. Home has become very important during the pandemic. I have been interested in mantels and fireplaces and the symbolism they represent. Some cultures believe them to be a shrine, idols or images of deities were placed on the mantle, a fire was lit, prayers were offered and some times offerings were
made by burning possessions or trinkets of a departed person. This past year having time, I started making composites using images from my archives and new images of botanicals created during my walks in Golden Gate Park and my garden.

4. Has there been a Griffin Museum exhibition that has particularly engaged or moved
you?
Historias fragmentadas by Claudia Ruiz Gustafson, because I am also an immigrant.

trees in black and white

© Judi Iranyi

5. What is your favorite place to escape to?

Mendocino County in California

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

The song “Imagine” by John Lennon, the lyrics are so powerful in contrast to the cur-
rent world situation. If it was only possible.

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

Carlo Levi, who was an Italian painter, writer, Medical Doctor and activist (Nov 1902-
January 1975). We would talk about his book !Christ stopped at Eboli” and the time and experiences he had while in exile in the poorest undeveloped region of Basilicata, Italy. We

succulent in black and white

© Judi Iranyi

would also talk about his paintings of the peasants of the region.

Filed Under: Griffin State of Mind

Griffin State of Mind | Home Views – Roberta Neidigh

Posted on November 26, 2021

Roberta Neidigh grew up on a farm in the rural Midwest. Her current work “explores the ways in which we cultivate our public and private spaces”. Her exhibition Property Line looks at the visual dialogue between two plots of suburban land: “This point of contact,
on the property line, reveals communication between neighbors through landscape as
an extension of the self. There is no margin here. Are we connected or divided by the
place our land touches the land of another? How is this line drawn? In this body of
work, I explore the way we protect our boundaries by creating a buffer in a place that
has none, and how we cling more strongly to our own identity as our space nears
its edge. “

Property Line is part of the Griffin’s Home Views exhibition. You can find Roberta’s work on the walls of our Main gallery until December 5th. We asked Roberta some questions about her inspirations and artistic processes, and here is what she had to say:

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

house with pink car and line of stones

© Roberta Neidigh

Property Line was juried into the Brooklyn and Boston Fence exhibition Paula Tognarelli was one of the judges. I was then able to meet her in person at the Center Santa Fe portfolio review. I had been aware of the Griffin Museum but after meeting with Paula, I followed it more closely.

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?

Recently I enjoyed reading and viewing Aline Smithson’s piece in Lenscratch on Douglas Stockdale’s work, “Middle Ground”. I was taken with his ability to see something new in the landscape while he was trapped in bumper to bumper traffic.

On a daily basis I am recording, making images of what I encounter and using these studies to further understand what it is about the person, place or thing that resonates with me.

It is a daily practice.

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

line of trees

© Roberta Neidigh

My interest in this project began close to my home while I was on walks. Soon I began scoping out other neighborhoods by car, and if I found an interesting pattern of expression or a sense of inherited design in the choice of house color or method of grooming the landscape, I would park and walk the streets. That is when the compositions started to reveal themselves.

These designs seem like a reflection of the owners’ identity, often in a charming or humorous way, and I began to see property lines as quiet visual punctuation between the statements made by each homeowner. I’d driven by many of these homes near my own for years, not really seeing them and their borders until I started exploring on foot. I discovered that we tend to edit out the property line when we observe suburban landscapes; we’re focused on our own space, mostly ignoring the place it intersects with another. Because of this, I’ve found great delight in discovering what goes mostly unseen despite being in plain sight.

My background in the fiber arts definitely influences how I see. The groomed, well cultivated landscapes I’m drawn to are made of careful arrangements of color, texture, and pattern. Where things get really interesting is when these patterns collide in the property line space. I think of the images as portraits — of place, community, and of the residents themselves.

The public self we project in our own property is often carefully cultivated, but we don’t spend nearly as much time considering how it touches our neighbor’s yard. We don’t really scrutinize the property line, and by giving it less consideration, we allow for unexpected — and often humorous — interactions to take place.

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

I would say most recently, “Spirit: Focus on Indigenous Art, Artists and Issues”, and “Balancing Cultures”, Jerry Takigawa

5. What is your favorite place to escape to?

cactus with a white flower

© Roberta Neidigh

Either the California coast or my own garden, immersing myself in the open air surrounded with my favorite plants feeds my soul. In fact I’m sitting on the protected terrace now with the heater during our first major rain storm of the season. I love experiencing a good drenching rain after so much drought. The colors and textures of my cactus and succulents with the quality of light and rain is intoxicating!

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

cactus with little red flowers

© Roberta Neidigh

I’m very interested in how we use our own outdoor spaces, no matter how small or large. In California we are facing extreme weather conditions with drought and fires taking place. For my own space I am focusing on a hybrid type of planting, drought tolerant succulents and cacti combined with California natives. There is so much to know about the land, plants, insects and wildlife and how they are all interdependent. It keeps me intellectually stimulated while engaging in physicality. It’s a perfect marriage for me. I also use photography to help me explore this environment and all it’s magical secrets.

The work of Entomologist Doug Tallamy, “Homegrown NationalPark”, is of great interest to me. It’s an initiative to create conservation corridors that provide wildlife habitats on private property across the U.S. with a goal of 20 million acres of native planting in the U.S., which represents approximately ½ of the green lawns of privately-owned properties.

And the work of artist Fritz Haeg and his book, “Edible Estates: Attack On The Front Lawn.”

The idea of restructuring the concept of the front lawn.

Filed Under: Griffin State of Mind, Exhibitions

Griffin State of Mind | Home Views – Ira Wagner

Posted on November 26, 2021

After working on Wall Street for more than 25 years, Ira Wagner began studying photography in 2008, with specific focus on the urban landscape. Currently the Executive Director of the Montclair Art Museum in Montclair, NJ, Ira has been evolving his photographic practice through various projects including Superior Apartments and Houseraising. Featured in our Home Views exhibition, Ira’s interest in urban history and design marks his Twinhouses of the Great Northeast as a powerful addition to the show. Exploring themes of a common border, the American Dream, and the human inclination to mark and delineate one’s space, Ira’s series is a must see. To learn more from Ira about his art-making practice and source of inspiration, we asked him a few questions.

Tell us how you first connected to the Griffin Museum.

I connected with the Griffin Museum through meeting Paula at Review Santa Fe in 2019.   She is a wonderful and responsive reviewer and it was a pleasure to speak with her.  I was thrilled that she had an immediate response to my project and wanted to include it in an exhibition at the Griffin.

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 has been very important to me since I retired from Wall Street in 2008.  Actually, I had been interested in photography since I was young.  I delivered the newspaper in junior high school and saved my nickel and dime tips and bought my first camera.  But after retiring, I began classes at ICP in New York which led me to get an MFA degree in the Limited Residency Program at the University of Hartford, graduating in 2013.  From there, I continued working on my own projects and also taught at Monmouth University.  At the same time, I made frequent expeditions as part of my exploration of the urban landscape.   Since Covid, staying closer to home, I’ve focused on frequent walks in the woods in my neighborhood.  My experience with photography also led me to my current position as the Executive Director of the Montclair Art Museum.  Through that, I recently had the experience of looking through a large archive of prints by Joel Meyrowitz which was being offered to us as a donation – it was an incredible experience.  I’ve also been able to participate in acquisitions of photographs for the Museum’s collection.

Please tell us a little about your series, Twinhouses of the Great Northeast and how it was conceived.

I was photographing in Philadelphia as part of an exploration of the area around the Northeast Corridor rail line between New York and Washington and wandered into Northeast Philadelphia, also known as the Great Northeast.  I noticed the twinhouse structures and how each side had slight variations; I was particularly struck by one where the lawn was carefully mowed on one side but overgrown on the other.  As someone who is interested in urban history and development I began to look further into this area and this type of housing and found that it was a common form of housing built for people moving out of center city Philadelphia.  It became clear that these houses were built over an extended period of time, some pre-WW II and all the way through the 1970s.  They had varying materials, sizes and architectural styles.  I made numerous trips to the area and walked around many different neighborhoods, noticing the distinguishing characteristics of each.  I looked for the best examples of how one side contrasted with the other.  Some of my favorites include one where the entire front yard of the house is blocked by a tall hedge while on the other side, the front yard has a patio table, umbrella and chairs.  In another, a huge motorboat is parked in one of the driveways.  How people demarcate their own space is an underlying theme of this work.

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

I quite like the current exhibition A Place I Never Knew by Tira Khan.  The images create a compelling portrait of a place in which few travelers would stop.   I feel connected to that urge to photograph places like that.  I had one opportunity to travel to India and would love to spend more time photographing there.  I spent one day photographing art deco apartment buildings in Mumbai – a surprising find.  For my MFA thesis, I included art deco buildings on the Grand Concourse in the Bronx, another place that not many travelers explore!

What is your favorite place to escape to?

I don’t really have a favorite single place to escape to.  Instead, my escape is traveling some place new and getting to explore.  I like getting beyond the sights that most travelers see and find a place off the beaten track that feels like I’ve discovered the essence of the location; then I love capturing it with a photograph.

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

Visually, I love ruins of any sort.  I recently acquired the book Ruins by Koudelka which I frequently return to.  I also love the work of German photographer Ursula Schulz-Dornburg.  She has several projects focusing on ruins in the Middle East and Asia; one I particularly like is a series of photographs of a rail line built by the Germans in Saudi Arabia.   A few years ago, I used a grant from the New Jersey State Arts Council to visit the Anasazi ruins at Chaco Canyon in New Mexico.  Although it is a National Park Service site, it is quite remote with no food or services; the road to the site is unpaved.  I stayed in a rented RV and got to explore and photograph for several days – it was truly magical.

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

I would love to have had the opportunity to meet and study with the Bechers.  It was exciting for me when I first learned about their work and then all the photographers that learned from them, including one of my favorites, Elger Esser.

 

Filed Under: Exhibitions, Griffin State of Mind

Griffin State of Mind | Home Views – Joy Bush

Posted on November 19, 2021

“The series Places I Never Lived is an exploration of the way that people put their mark on the world. While photographing the facade of each house in a sleuth-like fashion, I fantasize about who lives there and what life is like on the inside. It is not spying or voyeurism. It is about imagining my life in a different place.”

Joy Bush is a fine arts photographer based in Hamden, CT. She finds that she is drawn to photographing the echoes of the presence of people rather than people themselves. Her series Places I Never Lived will be exhibited in the Main gallery as part of the Griffin’s Home Views Exhibition until December 5th. We asked Joy a few questions to get a feel of her artistic process and inspirations, and we are excited to share the answers she gave us. 

Tell us how you first connected to the Griffin Museum.

The Griffin Museum was off my radar until an art critic in my home state of Connecticut asked me what I knew about the museum. From that time forward, I stayed on top of what was going on there. Although I don’t make frequent trips given its distance from my home, I watch what is happening there and have been a member for many years.


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 always have my camera or my phone with me so that I can document an image. It is my

pine tree

© Joy Bush

practice to make a photograph every day. On my daily walks I find images that grab my attention. It’s a way of recording my life, paying attention to those things that most of us overlook, giving things a chance to be seen. This is very different from simply going out and shooting randomly. I post a daily picture to Instagram: it is a practice that keeps me aware of the world as well as a game that appeases the frustrated writer in me. Putting a title to the work
demands that I be more thoughtful about what I am doing and stretches my imagination, bringing humor and insight to the picture. Combining the images with words feels like a meditative process.

I would be hard put to name all the artists who have attracted my attention. I find them mostly on Instagram and especially through #flakphoto (Andy Adams does an amazing job of posting images of photographers). There are images that seem similar to mine and so many that aren’t. It is a great network to open your eyes to other people’s vision. Lenscratch also is a place that does an excellent job of introducing photographers to each other. A plus side of the pandemic was having access to online exhibitions and seeing the work of photographers I might have otherwise missed.


Please tell us a little about your series Places I Never Lived, and how it was conceived.

wall

© Joy Bush

The series is an exploration of the way that people put their mark on the world. While photographing the facade of each house in a covert fashion, I fantasize about who lives there and what life is like on the inside. It is not spying or voyeurism. It is about imagining my life in a different place. At the same time what draws me to these places is the echo of a human presence, even though people themselves are absent. Inevitably, a barrier exists between each house and me. Carefully groomed landscaping and fencing can block my way as completely as a cluster of trees or untrimmed hedges. This, however, only adds to the seductiveness of the place. And that only reinforces my questions: Who lives in these houses? And who would I be if I lived there?

How the series was conceived is not as simple as what I have written. It evolved from a long series of coincidences. Over many years I did a number of images of peoples’ yards paying particular attention to the landscaping. Then I started paying attention just to the shrubbery. Then to pools—in ground, above ground, children’s pools. And this was not simply a record-taking exercise; I made pictures. One day, on a walk with a friend, I saw this house that had a huge hedge around it, so tall, in fact, that all I could see from the street were two chimneys..and my heart took a leap. I knew then that a new series or direction was opening up to me. While the house is a facade, it suggests a story to me. And while I am photographing, the story more often than not begins “once upon a time.” These are real places but they transform into imaginary ones for me because I have no factual details on those people who live there.


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

I have not been to many exhibitions in person. I was delighted to see the Griffin exhibited
Isa Leshko’s “Allowed to Grow Old. I have been involved in animal rights for over 30 years
and was impressed and moved that the Griffin was giving exposure to this topic while not
compromising an aesthetic sense. While I did not see “False Food” by Jerry Takigawa in
person, I’ve been able to follow what he does to draw attention to social and environmental
issues in a completely compelling way. Again, that was an important issue that the Griffin did
not shy away from. Recently, I was able to see Lou Jones “distressed:memories.” The
mystery and fantasy work as visual realities was fascinating and multilayered.

What is your favorite place to escape to?

A tough question because the two places that come up for me are so completely

house with pool

© Joy Bush


different. New York City, absolutely. I never get tired of the city. Physically or visually or sensory wise. And the ocean..or any place near the water. The calm and the serenity. Just recently I came back from a brief trip to Maine. It was early morning and I was walking and photographing water and clouds. I turned in a circle and it felt like I was inside one of those snow globes. Three hundred and sixty degrees all around me…very few cottage or trees breaking the horizon. And I remembered hearing Sam Abell talk about a photo while he was on assignment for the National Geographic and how he spent a great deal of time getting a shot at sunset, paying attention to the setting first and then waiting for the subject. After he made his photo, he turned around and saw, as I recall the story, elephants walking across the horizon, and that was the photo that was used for publication. What I took away from this was that after making a picture, turn around, there is another, and often better, photo behind you. (No elephants on this trip—or ever—but always a picture.)

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

I wish I had an answer for this and am forcing myself to find something to write here. I
found it difficult to stay focused on reading anything other than mysteries this last year and a
half— and even that was hard for me. A song: anything by the Beatles. My friend, the folk
singer, Lara Herscovitch’s “Wingspan” keeps me moving along as does the sound of MaMuse’s
“Glorious.” Visually, well, whatever is in front of me.


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

Teji Cole books

© Joy Bush

Teju Cole. I started reading his work about photography in the New York Times years
back, and I follow his books closely. I like the way his words and images work together. While I
don’t think of myself as a talker, I would want to talk about his take on words and images used
together or near each other. I want to know what he thinks about, how he approaches his world,
how he integrates what he knows about other photographers and artists and writers and how
they influence the way he interprets his world.
Mostly, though, I think it would also be nice to just be in his presence. And be quiet. I would learn a lot.

Filed Under: Exhibitions, Griffin State of Mind

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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