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Griffin News

Illuminating the Archive of Arthur Griffin: Photographs 1935-1955, Part II

Posted on March 2, 2021

“When looking at different photographers who have all these different ways of doing it, you can see how they exist in the world. You get a little sense of who they are and how they’re thinking. What’s going on in this person’s head? I want to know more.” Emily Kask, photojournalist

The Art of Photojournalism

By Madison Marone

shooters
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
Outside of Trinity Church on Easter: Boston, Massachusetts

Introduction

The mission of the Griffin Museum of Photography is to encourage a broader understanding and appreciation of the visual, emotional, and social impact of photographic art. As an Exhibitions Assistant for the museum, I’ve been inspired to interpret Arthur Griffin’s photography with a contemporary eye. My intention is to highlight and provide context for his work so viewers may experience it in new and exciting ways.

Illuminating the Archive of Arthur Griffin: Photographs 1935-1955, views the region’s cultural heritage, traditions, and aesthetic through the lens of Griffin’s lesser-known work. The six-part exhibition explores how photography affects the way we relate to and understand the past. Each exhibit features historical, sociological, and creative interpretations of photographs from the museum’s collection. This installment focuses on the relevance of his time as a photojournalist.

AG Archive- shoveling
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
Valentine’s Day Blizzard of 1940, Beacon Hill snow removal: Boston, Massachusetts

Arthur Griffin’s legacy lives on through the Griffin Museum of Photography. He is remembered as a successful photographer for the Boston Globe and a New England photojournalist for Life and Time magazines. Griffin was a pioneer in the use of color film, providing the first color photos to appear in the Saturday Evening Post. His work captures the essence and vibrancy of mid-20th century New England.

The adage, “a picture is worth a thousand words,” encapsulates the basis of photojournalism: the art of telling a story through photographs. Griffin spent many years as a photojournalist covering human interest stories, politics, celebrities, and sports. These photographs were printed in newspapers and magazines distributed locally and across the nation.

The following images are separated into sections covering three major themes present in Griffin’s work: capturing emotion, composing energetic shots, and establishing a sense of place. The exhibit features insights from Emily Kask, a contemporary New Orleans-based photojournalist whose work is featured in papers such as the New York Times and Washington Post. She shares her thoughts on documenting sensitive moments, the creative process, and growing as a photographer. Each section begins with an interview excerpt to gain insight into the perspective of a photojournalist.

Capturing Emotion

Madison: How do you capture emotion in your shots? What do you do to make people feel comfortable?

Emily: In terms of working past those awkward and sensitive moments, it’s really about intention and being honest with people about why you want to be there. Spending and committing that time… Photography can be so socially therapeutic. You get to push past these expectations and norms. I can be sent to rural Mississippi to someone’s house that I don’t know and three hours later we’re crying in their living room together. That’s so weird and I love that. It’s socially challenging and not what we feel like we’re supposed to do as human beings… I want to be able to cry with people. I want to be connected with people from all walks of life.

AG Archive- house demolitionist
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
House demolitionist Abe Boudreau: Enfield, Massachusetts

Photojournalism helps build a connection between the reader and the subject of a story. Images depicting the lives and feelings of others animate news reports, making them compelling and emotionally palpable. Capturing the warmth, excitement, sorrow, or intensity of a moment in a photograph creates empathy and understanding among people. Seeing the humanity of others in this way allows us to transcend time and space. Photojournalism adds vibrancy to current events, historical moments, and the experience of strangers.

Griffin had the ability to capture this vibrancy. His affection for the people and communities he worked with comes across in the following photographs. A lighthouse keeper is seen diligently cleaning the beacon, engaged in his unique line of work. Children gather for a photo that captures the joy and simplicity of youth. A candid and curious moment at the Museum of Natural History is preserved. Actress Gertrude Lawrence beams in her Cape Cod garden. And a Nantucket man smiles benevolently towards the camera. These emotional images help connect readers from all walks of life with the larger stories being told.

AG Archive- lighthouse keeper
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
Boston Light lighthouse keeper: Boston, Massachusetts
AG Archive- Playing in water
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
Playing in the South End: Boston, Massachusetts
AG Archive- Children at the Natural History Museum
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
Natural History Museum 1942: (Berkeley Street) Boston, Massachusetts
AG Archive- Gertrude Lawrence at summer home
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
Actress Gertrude Lawrence at her summer home: East Dennis, Massachusetts
AG Archive- Nantucket man
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
Jim Coffman hosted clam bakes on Nantucket for over 30 years: Siasconset, Massachusetts

Composing Energetic Shots

Madison: How do you energize your photos?

Emily: Back when I was first starting out, Melissa Little said something at a conference like “photograph adjectives, not verbs.” That always stuck with me. It helps put my brain in a new spot. ‘How does this feel’ rather than ‘what is this.’ I can photograph someone walking or singing or riding a horse, but how are they doing it? How is it being done? That’s what is going to resonate rather than just being a fact. Of course, journalism has to be factual, but in order to make it visually compelling, there has to be this level of humanity, this whole other element that is going to draw you in and engage you.

AG Archive- Hurricane of 1938 cleanup
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
Children cleaning after the Hurricane of 1938, inspiring hope: Sommerville, Massachusetts

Photojournalism can relay the energy of a story through the composition of a shot. Excitement is evoked by dramatic lighting, unique camera angles, and catching an important moment. These techniques help convey the movement and thrill of a scene. Photographs show how something feels in addition to what actually happened. They frame the story in a way that words can’t express.

While working as a sports photojournalist, Griffin often attended baseball games, track meets, and boxing matches. He photographed the atmosphere of crowds as they cheered on their favorite teams. Memorable moments, such as hitting a home run, are forever preserved in his work. These images allow people to feel the energy of the game rather than just read about it.

The following images tell energetically different stories. Spirited cheerleaders are photographed from a sideways angle, emphasizing their excitement. Track star, John Baricom, is seen moments before winning a race, his face filled with determination. A boxer in a spotlit ring recovers between rounds. Baseball fans are viewed from a low angle with the sky as their backdrop. A skier is backlit by the sun, creating an angelic glow as she descends the mountain. Photojournalists have the ability to dramatize and document these kinds of fleeting moments. Their artistic choices enhance our understanding of the scene.

AG Archive- Winchester high school cheerleaders
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
High school cheerleaders rouse the crowd during a game: Winchester, Massachusetts
AG Archive- Dartmouth track star
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
The moment before Dartmouth track star John Baricom breaks his own record and wins the race: Hanover, New Hampshire
AG Archive- Boxer in the ring
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
Golden Gloves boxing match between rounds: Lowell, Massachusetts
AG Archive- baseball fans at Fenway
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
Baseball fans absorbed in the game at Fenway Park: Boston, Massachusetts
AG Archive- Skiing in New Hampshire
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
Gracefully skiing down Cannon Mountain: Franconia, New Hampshire

Establishing Sense of Place

Madison: How have you grown as a photographer?

Emily: I have become a better photographer with the more personal life experiences I’ve had. That’s what’s so key about doing this kind of work, you can find an 18-year-old who makes beautiful photographs, but when it comes to documentary work, you’re not going to be able to achieve the same level of empathy with someone who hasn’t had those life experiences. There’s a tenderness to it you get from getting older.

AG Archive- General Store after Hurricane of 1938
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
General Store after the Hurricane of 1938: Wareham, Massachusetts

Creating a “sense of place” is an essential element of story building. In photojournalism, this involves taking photos of the settings in which the news unfolds. Establishing shots help to set the mood, capturing the aura of a scene. This gives viewers a framework to better understand the context of a story. They are especially effective if the viewer has never been to the location or shared the same experiences.

Griffin lived in Massachusetts, but he was often on assignment across New England. The following photographs establish scenes in a variety of news stories he covered. The first features the silhouette of a lone man walking through Copley Square after a snowstorm. The second is a birds-eye view of a celebratory parade held for Bette Davis’ visit to New Hampshire. The third takes the perspective of onlookers during a fire in the Berkshires. And the final two show the Hurricane of 1938’s devastating aftermath. These establishing shots capture the essence of the larger story being told.

AG Archive- snow in Copley Square
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
Copley Square after the snowstorm: Boston, Massachusetts
AG Archive- parade for Betty Davis
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
Parade for Bette Davis: Littleton, New Hampshire
AG Archive- fire in the Berkshires
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
Fire in the Berkshires: Massachusetts
AG Archive- aftermath of the Hurricane of 1938
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
Hurricane of 1938 aftermath: Wareham, Massachusetts
AG Archive- beach after the Hurricane of 1938
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
Swift’s Beach “where four cottages were” before floating away during the Hurricane of 1938: Wareham, Massachusetts

Final Thoughts

“Photographing and spending time with someone starts to break things down to that human-level… We get used to our lives every day. But your life is important, both the way you exist in the world and the larger issue. I think everyone needs to be reminded of that sometimes.” Emily Kask

AG Archive- painting buoys
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
Painting lobster buoys: Port Clyde, Maine

Photojournalism is an art form that adds a visual element to news stories. It fosters a connection between individuals and communities across the nation. Images that capture emotions, convey energy, and establish a sense of place have the ability to bring current and historical events to life. Griffin’s work allows us to look back on these stories with fresh eyes, illuminating the past one photograph at a time.

Thank you to Emily Kask for taking the time to share insights on the art of photojournalism. Her work and contact info can be found on her website. 

Special thanks to the Boston Public Library for digitizing a large portion of the Arthur Griffin Archive so it may be accessible to the public. If you would like to view more photos and library material, visit the Boston Public Library for the Digital Commonwealth and the Digital Public Library of America.


Madison Marone is an Exhibition Assistant at the Griffin Museum of Photography and a graduate student pursuing her MSc in museum studies at the University of Glasgow. She holds a BA in film studies and sociology from the University of Vermont. Her interests include early to mid-20th-century art history, film theory, and exhibit design.


References:

Kask, Emily. Personal Interview. 22 February 2021.

Kenny, Herbert A., et al. New England in Focus: Through the Eyes of the Boston Globe. A. Griffin, 1995.

All images on this webpage © copyright 2021 by the Griffin Museum of Photography. All rights reserved.  No part of this webpage may be reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission of the museum except in the case of brief quotations from the written material with citation.

Filed Under: Arthur Griffin Tagged With: Photography, black and white, documentary photography, vintage photographs, Photography Education, Portraits, Arthur Griffin Archive, New England

Illuminating the Archive of Arthur Griffin: Photographs 1935-1955, Part I

Posted on February 16, 2021

“The Griffin is the embodiment of founder Arthur Griffin’s passion — to promote an appreciation of photographic art and a broader understanding of its visual, emotional, and social impact. Arthur’s goal was to share with visitors his enthusiasm for a medium that is diverse, imaginative, and informative.” -The Griffin Museum of Photography

Winter Traditions

By Madison Marone

AG Archive - winter barn
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
Stowe, Vermont
AG Archive - winter fence
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
Lincoln, Massachusetts

Introduction

As an Exhibitions Assistant at the Griffin Museum of Photography, I became curious about the stories and situations surrounding Arthur Griffin’s work. After looking through the archives, I noted that his photography has both artistic and historical value. This inspired me to curate the following exhibit reflecting on winter traditions in New England. Engaging with Griffin’s work helps frame our understanding of the past and deepen our appreciation of the present. The intention of this exhibition is to highlight and provide context for his photography so viewers may experience it in new and exciting ways.

Arthur Griffin’s legacy lives on through the Griffin Museum of Photography. He is remembered as a successful photographer for the Boston Globe and a New England photojournalist for Life and Time magazines. Griffin was a pioneer in the use of color film, providing the first color photos to appear in the Saturday Evening Post. His work captures the essence and vibrancy of mid-20th century New England.

Illuminating the Archive of Arthur Griffin: Photographs 1935-1955, views the region’s cultural heritage, traditions, and aesthetic through the lens of Griffin’s lesser-known work. This six-part exhibition explores how photography enhances our relationship with and understanding of the past. Each exhibit features historical, sociological, and creative interpretations of photographs from the museum’s collection.

AG Archive - sugar sap buckets
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
Collecting maple sap: Wilmington, Vermont

This installment focuses on the history of winter traditions in New England. The following photographs depict specific situations where people came together to work and celebrate the season. In the first section, farmers and their families gather to create maple syrup. The second section explores the trend of “sugaring-off parties,” while the third details the annual Dartmouth Winter Carnival. Griffin’s work captures the spirit of these communities as they persevere through the coldest months and find joy in their traditions. Griffin’s photos do more than document moments gone by, they invite us to see ourselves in them.

Maple Sugaring

Collecting sap and turning it into maple products remains one of the oldest traditions in New England’s history. Indigenous North Americans discovered the process long before Europeans arrived in the region. It has continued to evolve and grow into the industry we know today.

Maple sugaring became a way for farmers to supplement their income over the winter months. They could sell syrup, candies, and sugary treats both locally and nationwide. The whole family would partake in the maple sugaring process. It involved tapping maple trees, hanging buckets, gathering sap, and retrieving it with animal-drawn sleds. The sap was boiled down into syrup, filtered, and bottled for storage or sale.

Griffin often visited Vermont and New Hampshire to document these farmers. His work provides a sense of connection with these communities as they labor to create income from this culinary treat. Photographs of children accentuate the fact that this duty is often inherited and passed down through generations. The last portrait of this section humanizes and honors an individual farmer in a style reminiscent of Dorthea Lange.

AG Archive - tree sap
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
Tapping trees: New London, New Hampshire
AG Archive - buckets of sap
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
Gathering maple sap: Marlboro, Vermont
AG Archive - cow pulling syrup
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
Gathering maple sap: Wilmington, Vermont
AG Archive - pouring sap
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
Gathering maple sap: New Hampshire
AG Archive - sap to syrup
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
Boiling sap into syrup: Vermont
AG Archive - drinking syrup
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
Testing the syrup: West Brattleboro, Vermont

Sugaring-Off Party: 1941

Sap harvesting season in New England ranges from February to April, coinciding with the coming of spring. One of the ways to celebrate this seasonal change is a “sugaring-off” party. These parties often include music, dancing, and of course, eating syrup-based sweets. Variations of sugaring-off parties have been held since maple sugaring began. Certain indigenous tribes developed sacred rituals and maple dances to honor the first full moon of spring, known as the Sugar Moon. The tradition of hosting sugaring-off parties is still alive today.

On April 5th, 1941, Griffin visited Franconia, New Hampshire. Bette Davis was in town for the world premiere of her movie “The Great Lie” and to celebrate her birthday. The day began with a sugaring-off party hosted by Wilfred “Sugar Bill” Dexter and his wife Polly. Celebrities and writers gathered to take part in the festivities.

Griffin documented the setting of the party as well as those in attendance. Establishing shots show sugar being prepared in big kettles while crowds gather around. Medium shots of buffet lines feature people tasting treats and conversing. Through these images, this vintage scene comes alive. They enable viewers to sense the joyous energy of a sugaring-off party.

AG Archive - snow syrup candy
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
Drizzling hot syrup on packed snow to make “sugar snow”: Franconia, New Hampshire
AG Archive snow syrup
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
Wilfred “Sugar Bill” Dexter (right): Franconia, New Hampshire
AG Archive - sap pouring
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
Fresh maple sugar heated in kettles: Franconia, New Hampshire
AG Archive - Sap tasting
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
Treats included doughnuts, sugar snow, pickles, maple taffy, and coffee: Franconia, New Hampshire
AG Archive - maple candy
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
Sugaring-off party: Franconia, New Hampshire

Dartmouth Winter Carnival: 1939

Meanwhile, another form of winter festivities was taking place in New Hampshire: the annual Dartmouth Winter Carnival. The carnival was created in 1910 and is still going strong. What began as a weekend to promote winter sports on campus quickly turned into what National Geographic Magazine called the “Mardi Gras of the North.” Over the years, specific activities included ice sculpture contests, beauty pageants, slalom races, dances, polar plunges, and ice skating shows. Due to COVID-19 restrictions, 2021’s “Level Up: Carnival Rebooted” takes place online in the form of videos and virtual gaming. The carnival continues to be a celebratory part of Dartmouth’s identity. 

Griffin attended the carnival of 1939, the same year F. Scott Fitzgerald visited with Budd Schulberg to work on a screenplay for the movie “Winter Carnival.” Dartmouth was still an all-male college at that time. In an effort to attract female attendees, the school held a “Queen of Snows” beauty pageant from 1923 to 1973. Students were encouraged to bring dates from their hometown and neighboring colleges. On Friday afternoon, Hanover station would be bustling with reuniting couples, aspiring movie stars, and performers. The weekend was full of outdoor activities during the day and parties at night.

The following photographs capture the exciting atmosphere of the Winter Carnival. Griffin’s work depicts a sense of vitality, movement, and youthful enthusiasm. These images show a community coming together in celebration of friendship and the winter season.

AG Archive - couple travel
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
Friday at Hanover Station: Hanover, New Hampshire
AG Archive - couples hanging out
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
Friday night fraternity party: Hanover, New Hampshire
AG Archive - slope skiing
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
Saturday morning slalom Race: Hanover, New Hampshire
AG Archive - winter dancing
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
Dance at the Delta Tau Delta house: Hanover, New Hampshire
AG Archive - snow queen
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
The 1939 “Queen of Snows” Dorothy Gardner: Hanover, New Hampshire
AG Archive - snow queen and court
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
The “Queen of Snows” and her court: Hanover, New Hampshire
AG Archive - snow sculpture
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
Prize-Winning Snow Sculpture: Hanover, New Hampshire
AG Archive - kiss
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
A goodbye kiss: Hanover, New Hampshire

Final Thoughts

In the year 2021, we may feel extra nostalgic for big gatherings and celebrations. We have had to alter and revise our own traditions and make sacrifices for the greater good. But, we will persevere. Through this experience, we will find even deeper meaning in the connections we have with one another. Engaging with Griffin’s work can help us celebrate our communities, remember our history, and keep traditions alive in our hearts.

Special thanks to the Boston Public Library for digitizing a large portion of the Arthur Griffin Archive so it may be accessible to the public. If you would like to view more photos and library material, visit the Boston Public Library for the Digital Commonwealth and the Digital Public Library of America.


Madison Marone is an Exhibition Assistant at the Griffin Museum of Photography and a graduate student pursuing her MSc in museum studies at the University of Glasgow. She holds a BA in film studies and sociology from the University of Vermont. Her interests include early to mid-20th-century art history, film theory, and exhibit design.


References:

 Pickert, Kate. “A Brief History of Maple Syrup.” Time, Time, 16 Apr. 2009, time.com/3958051/history-of-maple-syrup/.

 “Maple Sugaring History.” New England Maple Museum, 14 Mar. 2020, www.maplemuseum.com/maple-syrup-history/.

 Ely, Christina. “Maple Sugaring During a Full Sap Moon.” The Farmers’ Museum, 2011, thefarmersmuseum.blogspot.com/2011/02/maple-sugaring-during-full-sap-moon.html.

 Kelly, George. “Bette Davis Eyes Sugar Hill.” New Hampshire Magazine, 1 Mar. 2012, www.nhmagazine.com/bette-davis-eyes-sugar-hill-2/.

 Bald, Barbra. The North Star: Bette Davis, 4 Nov. 2008, newhampshireadventures.blogspot.com/2008/11/north-star-bette-davis.html.

 Rhodes, Jennie. “‘The Broken Country and Long Winter’: The History of the Winter Carnival.” The Dartmouth, 8 Feb. 2019, www.thedartmouth.com/article/2019/02/rhodes-carnival-history.

 Desai, Nicholas. “Fitzgerald Visits Hanover.” The Dartmouth Review, dartreview.com/fitzgerald-visits-hanover/.

All images on this webpage © copyright 2021 by the Griffin Museum of Photography. All rights reserved.  No part of this webpage may be reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission of the museum except in the case of brief quotations from the written material with citation.

Filed Under: Arthur Griffin Tagged With: Photography, black and white, documentary photography, Landscape, vintage photographs, Photography Education, Portraits, winter, Arthur Griffin Archive, New England

A Tribute to photographer David Pace

Posted on October 23, 2020

man in hat and hand on chinYesterday Diane Jonte-Pace, David Pace’s wife let us all know that David had passed away after 6 weeks of hospitalization to bring his leukemia into remission. David had hopes of a bone marrow transplant. What a tragic loss for his family and friends and our photography community.

Here is Diane’s message about David’s passing.

Dear friends,
This is Diane Jonte-Pace, David’s wife. I write with sad news. After more than 6 weeks of hospitalization at Stanford, David passed away this morning. The chemotherapy was ineffective at bringing his leukemia into remission – a requirement for the bone marrow transplant he had hoped to receive. On Monday morning David told me and our daughters that he loved us, and asked the medical team to end the interventions. He requested palliative care for a peaceful death. He spent his final day at home. Our daughters and I were by his side. I know how much he appreciated the support he received from you, his Facebook community. I thank you all for being part of his life. I will continue to monitor his Facebook account periodically. With sorrow and gratitude for your friendship. – Diane

In a few days we open with a collaborative exhibition between David Pace and Stephen Wirtz called WIREPHOTO. David was to do an upcoming exhibition talk and book signing. He called to ask if he could do the talk from the hospital but we told him to focus on getting well and we rescheduled the talk for much later. One never knows what is around the corner.

WIREPHOTO wouldn’t be the first exhibition for David at the Griffin Museum. We exhibited his Burkina Faso: Night and Day in January to March of 2013. David came to Winchester to share his experiences of the brickyards of Karaba and dancing under the stars in the darkness of night in Bereba where the camera flash is the only light. It was a full audience. Those guests still tell stories about his spirited lecture and photographs.

We are committed to keeping David’s photography and spirit of community alive for future audiences. We will speak his name, of his photos and of his journey often, to celebrate this man who danced to life under the stars to a West African Pop beat.

 

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: David Pace, WIREPHOTO, Burkina Faso, Karaba, Bereba

Michael Darough | Finalist, Arnold Newman Prize

Posted on October 15, 2020

As one of Maine Media’s finalists for the 2020 Arnold Newman Award for New Directions in Portraiture, Michael Darough‘s powerful series, The Talk, is on the walls of the Griffin until October 23rd. We wanted to know more about Michael and the work, so we asked him a few questions.

md- talk

Installation view of Michael Darough‘s The Talk on the walls of the Grffin.

Tell us about what inspired the body of work? What was the first image in the series?

The Talk was inspired by the lives of different men and women that I would see on TV.  These ideas for my photographs came from conversations I have had with family and friends when I was younger and within the last few years.  The issue of systemic racial inequality, especially in regard to the criminal justice system, is not new.  It felt like an appropriate time for me to begin to visually articulate those discussions and personal thoughts.

md talk 1

© Michael Darough – Remembering Gordon, from series The Talk

I believe one of the first images in my series was Remembering Gordon.  This image was based on the photograph of Gordon or Whipped Peter, as he is commonly known, an enslaved African American man who escaped captivity in 1863.  The image depicts lash marks across Gordon’s back; his head is turned profile while his hand is positioned on his hip.  Although my photograph does not completely mirror the original material, I considered the composition and his body language when arranging my image.

Thinking about how this has been an ongoing problem in our country, I started looking at the root of this issue and how I might use historical imagery as a reference point to begin this work.  I then transitioned to contemporary figures in the news to help guide how I was photographing myself.

Did your ideas about the work change over the course of creating the images? What did you learn from creating the series?

md - talk 4

© Michael Darough, It was a Cell Phone, from series The Talk

This project went through a couple variations before arriving at the current group of images.  Conceptually, ,the idea did not change.  I knew I wanted to create work about people who were victims of excessive force.  Visually it was different at the start of the project in comparison to the photographs that are on exhibit at the Griffin Museum of Photography.   When I started taking photos, all of them were in color and focused more on objects and less on the person.  After constant re-shoots I arrived at a version that felt comfortable for the subject matter.  I think what I learned most was how to work with lighting, explore storytelling and figuring out a way to direct my viewer through subtle changes.

While all of these situations pictured in the talk are of others, the images are self-portraits. How did your sense of self change when shooting the work? 

Previously, I had explored self-portraiture in my work but those images were illustrating stories and memories from my life; these photos are addressing the lives of others.  Considering the Information surrounding my portraits, it’s frustrating.  I spend my time looking at the details surrounding the deaths of these men at the hands of law enforcement. By the time I would finish shooting and editing there would be another incident.  Sometimes during this process, I would find another individual that I overlooked.  Although I felt compelled to take on these roles and photograph myself, the cycle of violence feels frustrating.

md - talk cycle

© Michael Darough – The Cycle, N. 1 from series The Talk

What would you like us as viewers to take away from seeing The Talk? 

This systemic issue within our criminal justice system has been affecting the black community for years.  The talk is not something new, it is just a discussion that is currently being had in mainstream culture.  I want individuals to look at the work and recognize this problem and feel compelled to have the necessary and uncomfortable conversations needed to fix it.

Can you talk a bit about what being a finalist in the Newman Awards means to you?

This was a great exhibition that I am happy to be a part of.  The jurors selected a diverse group of work from talented photographers, addressing their respective content in creative ways.  I think that each of us strived to explore new ways to work with portraiture.  The imagery, while different, that emerged from our individual bodies of work came together nicely.  I’m happy that I was selected as one of the finalists for the Arnold Newman Prize.

md talk 3

© Michael Darough – Hands on Your Head, Lock Your Fingers, from series The Talk

What is next for you creatively?

I’m going to explore this idea a little further.  While I don’t see this project going on for several years, I do have a few more stories and perspectives to share.  I am hopeful that through people marching in the streets, artists addressing this issue and individuals pushing for legislation to help protect individuals, there won’t be a reason for me to make this work.  I’m not sure about all the details surrounding my next series but I do have plans to continue to pursue portraiture; probably photographing other’s, not myself.

To see more of Michael Darough‘s powerful work, log onto his website. You can follow him on Instagram @michaeldarough

Filed Under: Arthur Newman Awards, Exhibitions Tagged With: Griffin Exhibitions, Arnold Newman Prize, current events, black and white, Photographers on Photography

Ruben Salgado Escudero | Finalist, Arnold Newman Prize

Posted on October 8, 2020

The Arnold Newman Prize for New Directions in Photographic Portraiture for 2020 is on the walls of the Griffin. Today we highlight one of the finalists, Ruben Salgado Escudero. We wanted to know more about his beautiful series, Solar Portraits, so we asked him a few questions.

rse - cow

© Ruben Salgado Escudero – Mg Ko, a Shan farmer poses with his cow in Lui Pan Sone Village, Kayah State. Only 26% of Myanmar has access to electricity, at least half of whom live in cities. In rural areas, of the estimated 68,000 villages in the country, just 3,000 or so have any sort of access to power. Solar power is a viable source of energy which can rapidly improve lives overnight.

Tell us about what inspired the body of work? What was the first image in the series?

The people of rural Myanmar who mostly live without access to electricity inspired me to begin this project. When I moved there in 2013 to begin my photography career, I was stunned when traveling outside of the main cities and saw that most people had to light candles and kerosene lamps after the sun fell. The first solar portrait I took was a farmer and his cow in a rural area about 250km from Yangon, where I used to live. He told me his story of how, thanks to his small solar panel, he was able to milk his cow earlier in the day and later at night, giving him more time to spend on the field and with his family. I asked if I could take a photo of him with his favorite cow. He agreed and as it was night time, I used the only source of light that was available- his solar powered led bulb.

rse - boat

© Ruben Salgado Escudero – Cristobal Cespedes Lorenzo (51) sits on his raft while carrying coconuts across the river to his home in Copala, on the coast of Mexico’s state of Guerrero.
Cristobal and Francisco Manzanares Cagua (16) both work picking coconuts which they then sell to a company which makes coconut butter and oil.

Did your ideas about the work change over the course of creating the images? What did you learn from creating the series?

I try to have Ideas for projects flow organically, so in this case, and after working on the project for the last five years, it has become much more than a photography project. Solar Portraits has foundation support with registered non-profit (501(c)3) status for its growing social impact initiative. The series has become an educational tool, bringing workshops and creative programming to the youngest members of communities I visit, which leads to collaboration with reciprocity. Students build a simple solar lamp or solar art project, with a focus on opening the door for bright young minds to learn about themes of solar energy innovation, global citizenship, and personal empowerment.

rse - barber

© Ruben Salgado Escudero – (May 31st, 2015) Denis Okiror (30) began using solar lights at his barbershop in Kayunga in 2013, he says most of his customers prefer to visit him in the evening. Uganda has one of the lowest electrification rates in Africa. In urban areas, 55 percent of Ugandans have access to electricity, however, access drops to 10 percent in rural areas, and is only 19 percent nationwide.

Tell us about what inspired the body of work? What was the first image in the series?

This project isn’t quite finished yet. I have been working on it on and off for the last five years. I’m still excited to tell a few more stories for it and eventually make a book. At the same time, I have a couple of other projects I’m working on simultaneously in Mexico, where I have lived for three years.

rse - couple

© Ruben Salgado Escudero – Faustina Flores Carranza (68) and her husband Juan Astudillo Jesus (65) sit in their solar-lit home in San Luis Acatlan, Guerrero, Mexico. Faustina and Juan have seven children and are together since 50 years. Like many members of the Mextica Indigenous Community, they have never had access to electricity.
When asked how having solar has impacted their lives, Faustina said, ”For the first time, we are able to look at each in the eyes in our moments of intimacy.”

Can you talk a bit about what being a finalist in the Newman Awards means to you?

As an artist, anytime that your work is recognized, it gives a push of motivation. It means that all of the hard work and the risks that one takes when creating a long-term creative project is worth it because it resonates with people and especially with seasoned talented photographers like the jury panel. I’m very excited to continue the growth of the project.

You mention Solar Portraits is a 501c3. How do we find out more information about your Non Profit?

Solar Portraits has 501(c)3 status under Blue Earth Alliance, which has allowed us to receive foundation sponsorship for the educational initiative which we are continually working to expand. It is important to me that this project is more than just the documentation. The work we do with young people empowers them to look towards a better future for themselves, their community and our planet.

To see more of Ruben Salgado Escudero‘s work, log onto his website. You can also find him on Instagram. Follow him @rubensalgadoescudero

Filed Under: Exhibitions, Arthur Newman Awards Tagged With: Arnold Newman Prize, Solar Portraits, Portraits, Maine Media Workshops, color, Griffin Artist Talks, Photographers on Photography, Griffin Exhibitions

Atelier 32 | Shelby Meyerhoff

Posted on September 25, 2020

We close out our Atelier 32 artist series with Shelby Meyerhoff. Shelby’s series Paper Playroom is her newest work created during the pandemic, and now on the walls during the Griffin’s Atelier 32 exhibition. We are thrilled to have Shelby as a member of our Griffin artist community showcasing her work here at the Atelier. We are also pleased to announce her upcoming exhibition in October at our satellite venue, Griffin @ WinCam. Her Zoomorphics exhibition will open on September 28th and run through November 5th, 2020.  We talked to this prolific multidisciplinary artist about Paper Playroom and how the Atelier is an incubator for creativity. 

Which of these images was the impetus for this series? How did it inform how you completed the series?

under the bed

© Shelby Meyerhoff – Under the Bed

When the coronavirus pandemic arrived in Boston, I started taking care of my toddler daughter Moxie for much of the workday. Before COVID, my artistic practice had been to paint intricate designs on my own face and body, and then photograph myself. The whole process required hours of uninterrupted time. It had been my plan to do a new face and body painting series over the course of the spring Atelier. But with Moxie by my side, I knew I’d need to find a different way of making art.

sm - song wind

© Shelby Meyerhoff – A Song to the Wind

One afternoon, we painted with washable paints and cheap printer paper, which crumpled as it dried. Looking at the peaks and valleys, illuminated by the sunlight streaming into the playroom, I was inspired to create sculptures out of ordinary paper products.

I took this photograph, “A Song to the Wind,” early in the semester. I was struck by the liveliness of this image, and the way the paper bag looked almost like a classical sculptural medium. Seeing this piqued my curiosity about the possibilities of paper.

Over the weeks that followed, I experimented with other ways of photographing the sculptures I was making. In particular, I tried backgrounds with loud patterns and bold colors, which were speaking to me at the time, but didn’t ultimately work well for this series. 

Towards the end of the program, I circled back to the approach shown in “A Song to the Wind,” limiting the backgrounds for the series to blacks and greys. With fewer competing elements, the emphasis of the images was on light and form. It was a simple and elegant approach, but sometimes those can be the most daunting to undertake. I don’t think I would have arrived there without the encouragement of our instructor Meg Birnbaum and our Atelier group, who gave thoughtful feedback on every iteration of this project.

How has Atelier helped you hone your vision as an artist?

sm - forgooten language

© Shelby Meyerhoff – Forgotten Language

The Atelier was the perfect space to experiment with different ideas for how the project could go. Meg gave excellent feedback at every step in the process – not only during the regular class meetings, but also throughout the summer as further questions arose. 

I was also blown away by the talent and experience of my classmates. Seeing their weekly submissions made me want to bring my very best work to class. And every week they were able to identify what was working well in my photographs and where I needed to improve, always in the spirit of helping me make the series stronger. 

I felt safe bringing experimental work to class, but at the same time, I moved faster towards a completed series than I would have expected, because of the quality of our weekly conversations. 

Tell us what is next for you creatively.

I’m looking forward to finding out! One of the strengths of the Atelier program is that it takes students all the way through the lifecycle of a project: trying out various possibilities, honing the work into a series and developing the series further, and then producing, marketing, and showing the work. Now that our show is up, I’m excited to begin experimenting again this fall.

sm - paper years are short

© Shelby Meyerhoff – The Years are Short

I’ll start by picking up paper again, folding and twisting, and seeing where that leads. I’m also interested in doing more painting. And I’m curious if I can find a successful way to combine painting, sculpture, and photography in a new body of work.

duck

© Shelby Meyerhoff, “Zoomorphic #1 (Mallard Duck)”

At the same time, this fall also marks the culmination of my series of photographs created through face and body painting. The solo show for my Zoomorphics series is opening at the Griffin’s WinCAM gallery on September 28. I am thrilled about the opportunity to show and discuss that work, and it will be all the more fun to do so while in the midst of creating something new.

Join us on October 1st at 7pm Eastern for an engaging conversation with Shelby about creativity and Zoomorphics. 

About Shelby Meyerhoff – 

Shelby Meyerhoff is a multidisciplinary artist based in the Boston area. She works with a variety of media, including photography, painting, sculpture, and body art, often combining multiple techniques to create her images. Meyerhoff’s work has been exhibited at venues across the country, including the Griffin Museum of Photography (MA), the Mosesian Center for the Arts (MA), the Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport (GA), and the LH Horton Jr. Gallery at San Joaquin Delta College (CA). Her Zoomorphics series has also been featured in UU World, the national magazine of the Unitarian Universalist Association.

She has studied visual arts at the Griffin Museum of Photography, the New England School of Photography, and MassArt. Before becoming a fine artist, Meyerhoff worked in nonprofit communications, promoting environmental initiatives.

To see more of Shelby Meyerhoff‘s work, log onto her website. Find her on Instagram at @shelbymeyerhoff

Filed Under: Blog, Atelier, WinCam, Exhibitions Tagged With: Self Portrait, WinCam, Atelier, Atelier 32, Griffin Exhibitions, Still life, Paper, Zoomorphics

Atelier 32 | Simone Brogini

Posted on September 24, 2020

In today’s highlight of our Atelier 32 exhibition, we look at the work of Simone Brogini, featured here and tonight in our Artist Talk in conversation with Miren Etcheverry and Conrad Gees. Join us for a discussion about creativity in a pandemic, learning online, and the creativity that can come from life under a new normal. In order for us to learn more about Simone’s creativity, we asked him a few questions.

Which of these images was the impetus for this series? How did it inform how you completed the series?

House through distorted lens

© Simone Brogini

As the pandemic kept us all home, I was looking at my empty street with no activity from us or our neighbors. I wanted to capture this emptiness and I started to photograph the homes around us. At first I just took images from my camera showing the surrounding neighborhood. Then, as we were living in isolation it was almost like being in a bubble, so I started to experiment taking the same kind of images through an empty glass. I was intrigued by the results and liked the rounded vision that represents the new world seen from within this imaginary bubble. From then I started to represents in the same way our life as a family living in this imaginary bubble, so I introduced moment of our life from inside our home such as smart working, remote school learning, moment of fun, and fear to get out even wearing a mask.

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

woman in face mask

© Simone Brogini

We are living in this weird moment of our life with a worldwide pandemic which changed our reality. This imaginary bubble wants to represent the emptiness and the silence we have been living in for so long. No noise on the street, no cars, no children screaming, parks were empty. The images want to represent this but also passing from the fear of getting out of the house wearing masks, to the hope of being able to get back to our normal life soon. This hope is represented from the images showing some color of nature and looking at blossoming flowers.

 

 

How the Atelier has helped you hone your vision as an artist?

sb - covid 4

© Simone Brogini

I have been taking images for a long time but probably have never seen them from a fine art point of view. This happened through the classes and the feedbacks I received from Meg and my other colleagues who pushed me to step out from my comfort zone and experiment with something different. In fact, my first attempt to a project was to photograph the emptiness of our cities with B&W images. I really liked those images, but I received comments of being a theme already seen. From then I started to work with a new  mindset using some ideas I had through the class assignment, which was the abstract theme when I started to shoot through a glass. It was a complete change, but pointed me into the right direction.

Tell us what is next for you creatively.

sb - glass 2

© Simone Brogini

For my next step, I am certainly using what I have learned with the Atelier, which is to identify a project and stick with it. I don’t know yet what this next project will be for me, have few ideas but are not yet defined. For sure I will retrying from taking random images not linked to a defined project or not linked into any type of stories I would like to tell. The Atelier had surely taught me how to see through my camera in a different way.

You can see more of Simone Brogini‘s work on his website. Find him on Instagram  at @simonebrogini

Filed Under: Blog, Atelier Tagged With: Atelier 32, Portfolio Development, Griffin Museum Education, Photography Education, COVID, New Normal, Thru the lens, corona, Atelier

Atelier 32 | Kevin Belanger

Posted on September 23, 2020

In today’s view of our Atelier 32 artists, we look at the work of Kevin Belanger. His series, A Long Desire, was inspired by our current pandemic and its new reality. After retiring from the Postal Service into a world of anxiety and longing, Belanger worked during the Atelier to visualize this new reality by crafting a project that helps him cope with our new normal. 

Which of these images was the impetus for this series? How did it inform how you completed the series?

kb - long night 1

© Kevin Belanger – Flight

The one of the family which I titled “Flight”for the exhibition was seminal. It lead me to shoot for empty or “safe” spaces. The church is titled “Sanctuary”. I suppose the family was”fleeing” to the imagined safety of the city, “A Long Desire”. Or a safety that was past and only to be hoped for.

 

How the Atelier has helped you hone your vision as an artist?

kb - skyline

© Kevin Belanger – A Long Desire

The greatest benefit of the Atelier was in sharpening my focus as I discovered my project. The exercises were extremely beneficial when it came to telling a story and establishing and crafting a series.

 

 

kb - church

© Kevin Belanger – Sanctuary

Tell us what is next for you creatively.

I plan to take the Atelier in the, I hope, not too distant future and perhaps continue my photographic education. 

Filed Under: Blog, Atelier

Atelier 32 | Jeanne Widmer

Posted on September 22, 2020

We have had the pleasure of featuring Jeanne Widmer‘s work from past Atelier classes, and this series, Grace Notes, is our creative vision today. Jeanne’s lovely quiet images stem from the quiet isolation of COVID and the ability see more clearly and look more deeply at the world that surrounds us. Her work is on the walls of the Atelier 32 exhibition, and on our blog today. For more background on Grace Notes, we asked her a few questions.

 

Which of these images was the impetus for this series? How did it inform how you completed the series?

Like everyone, I squirreled myself indoors in mid-March, just after the Atelier 32 began, only venturing out cautiously with my camera on long daily walks in the neighborhoods of my town. Since I had previously spent three years taking photos of a large local town village development project, I was looking to challenge myself differently. Like many photographers,

jw - spider

© Jeanne Widmer – Spider

I was first struck by the starkness of  nearly empty streets, closed shops, buttoned up houses, and empty schoolyards, which reminded me of Todd Hido’s beautiful, often haunting work. But those photos were not enough. I began looking into the spaces for signs of life, details which made the scene come alive in a different way. I studied Helen Levitt’s precise detailed views of New York City and Matt Roberts, who, in his street photography, spoke of becoming more observant and open to the beauty of everyday scenes, finding some of his shots more powerful as diptychs or triptychs. When I first looked at my photo entitled “Spider,” reflections of intertwined tree limbs on a wet, red concrete, I knew it was the direction I wanted to follow.  My eyes focused differently. I began noticing a trail of light on pavement, interesting petal filled puddles or drops of night rain on a floral leaf. I marveled at the reality that while we were all pausing and waiting in place, nature, never docile, continued its rainy march into spring.

 

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

jw - pip

© Jeanne Widmer – Petals in Puddle

The Covid 19 virus has destroyed many lives, robbed others of livelihoods or homes, and put families and individuals under intense pressure. At the same time, it has provided the opportunity for us to appreciate the human connections, routines and experiences which bring grace and joy into our lives. The pandemic has allowed us to pause and look closely at what essentially matters to us. Whether we look is our choice. By focusing with me on some of the smallest details in nature—in which a close up angle of an otherwise average scene is either unexpectedly satisfying and hopeful or can darken a mood by looking like the virus itself (“Molten Salmon Puddle”), I hope viewers can share and absorb a deep appreciation for the tiny moments—often hidden– that grace our lives.

How the Atelier has helped you hone your vision as an artist?

jw - wet petals

© Jeanne Widmer – Wet Petals

Having a 12-week course with a skilled photographer and teacher as well as talented classmates is a real motivator to develop a body of work. The challenging photographic exercises, the weekly feedback, the guest artist, and the encouragement and support in trying something new makes a real difference in developing confidence and focus. I hope to continue stretching my vision to see my world differently, whether in landscape, portrait or documentary photography. I am deeply appreciative for the Griffin professional staff’s continued dedication to excellence in its programs and exhibits supporting both established and aspiring photographers.

About Jeanne Widmer – 

Growing up in Rhode Island shaped Jeanne Widmer’s attraction to worn urban locations and friendly, neighborhood businesses. An educator, counselor and writer, Widmer, from Belmont, Massachusetts, has studied photography at the Arlington Center for the Arts, the Griffin Museum and the New England School of Photography. Besides many group exhibits, she has had two solo exhibits, one which captured the vibrancy, color and dark expectancy of a single screen movie theater and another which highlighted the subtle drama and dignity of an historic, working class group of businesses. She exhibited with the Atelier 29th class at the Griffin Museum of Photography focusing on portraits.

Find her online on Instagram @WidmerJeanne

Filed Under: Blog, Atelier Tagged With: Atelier 32, Portfolio Development, Griffin Museum Education, macro vision, close up, abstract, Landscape, Atelier

Atelier 32 | Edie Clifford

Posted on September 21, 2020

Next up in our series on Atelier 32 artists, Edie Clifford. Her series, Walter Baker Chocolate Mills has a long memory for Edie and the surrounding Milton, Massachusetts community. Exploring not only her community, but a new camera during the pandemic times we live in gave Edie a new view of how to document the world we now find ourselves in. We asked Edie about her work and experience in the Atelier.

 

Which of these images was the impetus for this series? How did it inform how you completed the series?

ec-wbcm 1

© Edie Clifford – Walter Baker Chocolate Mills

 

This was the first image I took with my new infrared camera in spring 2019.  It showed me how I could photograph the mills with a different look.

 

 

 

About the Walter Baker Chocolate Mills –

Architecture is to be regarded by
Us with the most serious thought.
We may live without her and
Worship without her, but we
Cannot remember without her.
John Ruskin

When I walk through the Walter Baker Chocolate Mill Complex in Milton/Dorchester Lower Mills, MA, my memories are filled with the smell of chocolate. I grew up in Milton in the 1940s-1960s and these imposing brick buildings that were built by my great great uncle in the late 19th century along the Lower Falls of the Neponset River were part of my childhood adventures.

eg wbcm 2

© Edie Clifford

I remember the taste of the broken chocolate pieces that were left in pots outside the Webb and Pierce Mills. I remember the rushing sound of the river as it tumbled over the dam and transformed into millraces, the water channels that led to the former water wheels. And I remember the sight of the trolley as it came around the bend to Milton station that was opposite the storehouses. I now understand that this complex was the beginning of my appreciation for architecture and how it anchors me in my life. The mills not only help me to remember but offer a sense of place today.

ec - wbcm 4

© Edie Clifford

I photographed the complex during the spring of 2019 and 2020. I chose black and white infrared to capture the beauty of these architect-designed buildings within their river environment. Infrared allows for deeply contrasted images. It creates an otherworldly feeling with dark sky and water and white foliage and clouds, offering an alternative interpretation of this historic complex as it stands today converted to condominiums.

How the Atelier has helped you hone your vision as an artist?

eg - wmbc

© Edie Clifford

 

The Atelier offered me a creative and supportive atmosphere to become aware  .. of what I most love to photograph, the techniques I want to use and how to put the resulting images into panel or story.  All this in COVID spring … I am grateful!

 

 

Tell us what is next for you creatively.

I will continue to photograph the man-made environment with my infrared camera but also with my new Fuji X4 which offers multiple-exposure and blending mode features.

About Edie Clifford –

Edie Clifford is a Boston-based photographer grounded in the man-made environment, from a fence lining a country road to historic and contemporary structures to architectural abstracts.  Her photography has been influenced by her work in the field of historical preservation and her love of travel.  She is drawn to studying the built environment developed by a variety of cultures both at home and abroad.

 Edie shoots both in color and black and white.  She uses photography as a mindful practice and enjoys experimenting with infrared, multiple exposures and abstracts to become aware of the present.  Recent series include: Baker Chocolate Mills, Modernist and Brutalist Architecture, Massachusetts and London, and The Telegraph Road: A Journey through the deserts and mountains of California, Nevada and Arizona.

Her work has been included at exhibitions at the Oxo Gallery (London), Plymouth Center for the Arts (Plymouth, MA), and Tower Hill Botanical Garden (Boylston, MA).

You can find more of Edie Clifford‘s work her website and on Instagram @egclifford

Filed Under: Blog, Atelier Tagged With: Portfolio Development, Griffin Exhibitions, Chocolate, infrared, architecture, Atelier, Atelier 32

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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