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2022 Arnold Newman Prize for New Directions in Photographic Portraiture

Posted on September 3, 2022

The Griffin Museum is thrilled to partner with Maine Media Workshops to present the 2022 Arnold Newman Prize winner Lisa Elmaleh, and finalists Anna Grenvenitis, Rania Matar and Andrew Kung. The Arnold Newman Prize for New Directions in Photographic Portraiture is a $20,000 prize awarded annually to a photographer whose work demonstrates a compelling new vision in photographic portraiture. The Prize is generously funded by the Arnold & Augusta Newman Foundation and proudly administered by Maine Media Workshops + College.

Lisa Elmaleh (Promised Land)

Promised Land is a series of portraits of those whose lives have been affected by American policies implemented during the construction of the border wall. In an attempt to shed light on the lives that are impacted, I am photographing along the US/Mexico border from Boca Chica in the Gulf of Mexico to the border of Tijuana on the west coast. I am working with a large format 8×10 camera to create these portraits. Utilizing its slowness as an asset, I am able to spend time with each person who sits in front of my lens, hearing their stories. To create these images, I am volunteering with humanitarian aid groups on either side of the border. I have photographed and worked with migrants, nuns, volunteers, border patrol, groups that leave water on known migrant trails, and groups who search for missing migrants in the desert of the United States.

About Lisa Elmaleh

Lisa Elmaleh is an American visual artist, educator, and documentarian based in Paw Paw, West Virginia. She specializes in large-format work in tintype, glass negative, and celluloid film. Since 2007, she has been traveling across the US documenting American landscapes, life, and culture. Born in Miami, Florida (1984), Lisa completed a BFA at the School of Visual Arts in New York in 2007, during which time she was awarded the Silas Rhodes Scholarship. Upon graduating, she received the prestigious Tierney Fellowship to work on a project that evolved into an in-depth visual documentation of the impact of climate change on the Everglades. The culmination of this project resulted in a book titled Everglades published in 2016 by Zatara Press. Elmaleh’s work has been exhibited nationwide and recognized by the Aaron Siskind Foundation, Puffin Foundation, The Tierney Foundation, among others. Her work has been published by Harper’s Magazine, Smithsonian Magazine, CNN, The New York Times, National Geographic, Oxford American, Garden & Gun, and NPR, among others. Lisa travels in truck containing her bed, and a portable wet plate darkroom. She has a traditional black and white darkroom where she prints in West Virginia.

Anna Grevenitis (Regard)

REGARD /ʁə.ɡaʁ/ verb 1. To consider or think of (someone or something) in a specified way. When my daughter was born, I was told that she had the “physical markers” for Down syndrome. A few days later, the diagnosis of Trisomy 21 was confirmed with a simple blood test. Today, years later, Luigia is a lively teenager, yet these “markers” have grown with her, and her disability remains visible to the outside world. As we try to go about our ordinary lives in our community–getting ice cream after school, going grocery shopping or walking to the local library–I often catch people staring, gawking, or side-glancing at her, at us. Even though their gaze feels invasive, I perceive it as more questioning than judging, at least most of the time. With this on-going series REGARD, I am opening a window into our reality. To emphasize control over my message, these everyday scenes are meticulously set, lit up; they are staged and posed. The performers are my daughter and me. The double self-portraits are purposefully developed in black and white, for by refusing the decorative and emotionally evocative element of color, I aim to maintain a distance between us and them. The composition of the photographs expresses routine, domestic acts in which I address the viewers directly: look at us bathing; look at us grooming; here we are at bedtime; this is us on a random day at the beach. In each scene, the viewers are plunged into the outside perspective. At first glance, it may seem that I am offering us as vulnerable prey to their judgment, yet in fact I am guarding our lives, and the viewers are caught gawking–my direct gaze at the camera. My series is very basic in its concept: it shows a child, it shows a mother, it shows them living at home, performing familial acts. Because I believe in the connective power offered by the depiction of domesticity, I hope that REGARD helps the audience rethink some of their assumptions about people living with disabilities and with this, I hope my series finds a humble spot within the movement that helps people with disabilities gain visibility.

About Anna Grevenitis

Originally from France, Anna Grevenitis is a photographer based in Brooklyn, NY. Drawing on the experiences of the domestic to inform her daily practice, she uses her home as a stage and her body and the body of others in her familial sphere as characters to deliver, in the photographs, the essence of what she wants to express about family and the self. For her work, the act of performing is an important step in image making. Nowadays she divides her time between research and creation, and she is interested in building long term projects in photography as an act of establishing visual memory and engaging in social visibility. Grevenitis has been exhibited in the United States and internationally. Her series REGARD has been featured in The New Yorker and more recently has been recognized by the Critic’s Choice Award of Lensculture and the Black and White Award of the Lucie Foundation.

Rania Matar (Where Do I Go?)

As a Lebanese-born American artist and mother, my work explores personal and collective identity through photographs of female adolescence and womanhood in the United States where I live, and Lebanon where I am from. However, the past three years have been extremely difficult in Lebanon, starting with the 2019 uprising protesting corruption and inflation, to the coronavirus and months of lockdown that proved disastrous for the country, and finally to the August 4, 2020 Port of Beirut explosions, that caused further catastrophic damage. The country has been spiraling into the abyss since, with shortages of cash, gas, electricity, medicine, and water. My focus shifted to Lebanon. During recent trips to Lebanon, I found hope and inspiration through the younger generation of women. Instead of focusing on destruction, I found myself in awe of them, their creativity, strength, beauty, and resilience, despite all. I felt a sense of urgency in collaborating with them, giving them a voice, and the opportunity and power to express themselves. I found myself focusing on their majestic presence. Every encounter was intense, urgent, and meaningful. The need to hold on to creativity and self-expression felt more important than ever. We were creating the stage together to tell the story – her individual story and our collective story. I saw graffiti on the wall that said in Arabic: “Where do I go” (lawen ruh لوين روح)? These women are at that crossroad. Where do they go? I was their age when I left Lebanon in 1984 during the Civil War. Some are leaving; others cannot afford to go anywhere. I want to empower them and tell their story through collaborative portraiture. This work is in progress. Looking at the images I have made so far, I am absolutely convinced that, despite the current very tough situation, the creativity and resilience of this young generation of women will prevail. This project is for them and for us: the ones who are staying and the ones who have left.

About Rania Matar

Born and raised in Lebanon, Rania Matar moved to the U.S. in 1984. As a Lebanese-born American woman and mother, her cross-cultural experience and personal narrative inform her photography. Matar’s work has been widely exhibited in museums worldwide in solo and group exhibitions, including the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Carnegie Museum of Art, National Museum of Women in the Arts, Minneapolis Institute of Art, Fotografiska, and more. It is part of the permanent collections of several museums, institutions, and private collections. A mid-career retrospective of her work was recently on view at Cleveland Museum of Art, Amon Carter Museum of American Art, and the American University of Beirut Museum. In 2023, she will have 2 solo museum exhibitions of her recently published series SHE at the Huntsville Museum of Art and the Fitchburg Museum of Art. Her images will also be part of a traveling exhibition about Women Artists from the Middle East that opens at LACMA (Los Angeles County Museum of Art). Matar received 2022 Leica Women Foto Project Award, 2018 Guggenheim Fellowship, 2017 Mellon Foundation artist-in-residency grant, 2021, 2011, 2007 Massachusetts Cultural Council Artist Fellowships, 2011 Griffin Museum of Photography Legacy Award. She is a finalist for the Outwin Boochever Portrait Competition with an exhibition at the Smithsonian National Gallery of Art. In 2008 she was a finalist for the Foster Award at the ICA/Boston, with an accompanying solo exhibition. She published four books: SHE, 2021; L’Enfant-Femme, 2016; A Girl and Her Room, 2012; Ordinary Lives, 2009.

Andrew Kung (The All-American)

The All-American II is a photo series that recontextualizes traditional notions of masculinity and belonging. I imagine and construct scenes of strength, intimacy, togetherness between Asian men that I’ve rarely witnessed in an American context – showcasing tender moments that rebel against monolithic constructs of masculinity that have “other-ed” them as weak, undesirable, and not American enough. 

I portray my family, friends, self in spaces deeply personal to me – my current bedroom, my bedroom growing up, parks I used to visit growing up, my current neighborhood – and often times in my own wardrobe, to ultimately reinforce a connectedness with my subjects, my memories, and my journey of self-discovery. The images center on the dignity and diversity of my subjects, my relationship with my subjects, and ultimately my relationship with my own masculinity, all in an attempt to humanize the desexualized Asian American man.

About Andrew Kung

Andrew Kung is a Brooklyn based photographer working across genres to explore themes of race, identity, and belonging. His work imagines tender and intimate moments and recontextualizes how Asian American life is viewed and represented. Andrew’s bodies of work have been featured on Dazed, i-D, Vogue, Artsy, AnOther, NOWNESS, CNN, NBC, and The New York Times and he has worked with selected clients such as Glossier, The New Yorker, L’Officiel, Paper Magazine, Beats by Dre, and HBO. In 2021, he was one of Adobe’s Rising Stars of Photography, an Adobe Creative Residency Fund Recipient, and a Young Guns 19 Finalist; in 2022, he was a Communication Arts Photography Annual Winner and The One Club for Creativity’s COLORFUL Winner. Outside of making images, Andrew has spoken on ABC Live and has guest lectured at various universities, from School of Visual Arts (SVA) to Fashion Institute of Technology (FIT), Williams College, American University, Smith College, and The School of The New York Times. Prior to his photography journey, he attended UC Berkeley’s business school and worked in Silicon Valley at LinkedIn.

Lyn Swett Miller | Compost in Community

Posted on August 21, 2022

When I dump compost into the bin behind our garage, avocado peels, orange rinds and eggshells mix and mingle, creating textured and colorful tapestries. How can food waste be so beautiful? I am in awe of the kaleidoscope of nitrogen and carbon rich materials that nourish the soil and the soul.
While a single bucket of compost can feel inconsequential, when I keep showing up, this weekly ‘chore’ impacts not just the waste stream and my inner climate activist, but also my sense of personal equilibrium in uncertain times. The images are square, like the bin itself. There are no hierarchies. Each one reveals a necessary reciprocity and balance between the diverse materials as well as between
me and the natural world.
Over the course of twelve years, I’ve processed three tons of my family’s food waste, one bucket-full at a time as well as ten tons from a local cafe. In the process, compost became my muse and metaphor, inspiring me to explore the detritus of our lives. Objects, like a vintage Shakespeare and my mother-in-law’s thesaurus found new meaning when mixed with food scraps, inspiring questions about not just food waste and consumption, but also about privilege and the power of narrative.
I live in Hanover, NH where I have spent the past fifteen years trying to figure out what it takes for a suburban family of four to live sustainably. In response to profound climate grief, practical actions like composting gave me a sense of purpose. I am a founding member of the Sustainable Hanover Committee and have found a voice for my activism through photography.
As the climate reaches a tipping point, composting enriches the soil and these images educate, inspire and provide meditations on the power of regeneration, transformation and renewal.

About Lyn Swett Miller

I am an emerging climate photographer happiest mucking around with the detritus of life. While investigating compost, landfills and other aspects of our material world, I create visual meditations on the power of regeneration, transformation and renewal.

For the past two decades, I have been exploring what it takes for a suburban family of four to live sustainably. While my early work focused on documenting the beauty and power of all those actions on climate ‘to do’ lists, I now explore the dynamic relationship between myself and the material world. “Subjects” are no longer “taken,” but are instead collaborators with whom I learn to cultivate kinship

Compost is my muse and metaphor and is where I go to make sense of the world. Photography enables me to share the beauty I see in our waste and the possibilities for joy embodied in the apparent mess. My work offers deeply personal narratives that inspire conversation about consumption and our relationships to people, place and possessions.

My hope is that this work inspires you to reframe how you think about the climate crisis. Perhaps the images of compost on this site will make you smile and see that there is joy in re-imagining our relationships to just about everything.

WinCam is located in Winchester, at 32 Swanton Road, Winchester, MA 01890

The WinCam Gallery hours are Monday: 11am – 7pmTuesday: 11am – 7pm Wednesday: 11am – 7pm Thursday: 1pm – 9pm Friday: 1pm – 7pm Saturday: 10am – 3pm select Saturdays. Call for availability. (781) 721-2050

Photography Atelier 36

Posted on August 17, 2022

We are pleased to present the portfolios of the Photography Atelier 36 creative artists.

Photography Atelier is a portfolio and project building course for emerging to advanced photographers taught by Elizabeth Buckley. Participants engage in supportive critical discussions of each other’s work and leave with a better understanding of the industry and an ability to edit and sequence their own work.

Instruction in the Atelier includes visual presentations based around an assignment which is designed to encourage experimentation in both subject matter and approach. Students learn the basics of how to approach industry professionals to show their work and how to prepare for a national or regional portfolio review. There is discussion of marketing materials, do-it-yourself websites, DIY book publishing and the importance of social media. Students learn the critical art of writing an artist’s statement and bio.

The students here were part of our Spring 2022 program and we are thrilled to see their work on the walls of the Lafayette City Center Passageway.

Scot Langdon – Finding Home

Ann Peters – In the Shadows

Anne Piessens  – Origin Stories

Vanessa R Thompson – The Spoils

Michael Rodriguez Torrent – Short Stories

Sean Sullivan – Eighty-Sixed

Heather Walsh – Breathwork

Rachel Portesi | Standing Still

Posted on July 17, 2022

These images address fertility, sexuality, creativity, nurturing, harmony, and discord. They’re a response–part intuitive, part deliberate–to a time when the scaffolding of my life seemed to disappear. Does this happen to everyone? I think some of us assume that the same woman will reemerge on the other side of motherhood. I think I did. But suddenly my kids didn’t need me like they had and the Rachel I’d before becoming a parent was irrelevant, gone. I experienced this as a loss, and grieving it raised questions. Who had I become? Which parts of my old self were best left behind? How did I want to grow? 

I was drawn to early photography and its particularly Victorian interest in loss and death. Commemorative portraits honoring the dead were fashionable and in demand. Another peculiar fixation of the era struck me: hair.  Art, sculpture, even mementos of the time consistently used tresses of hair as both object and subject.
Early photography. Loss. Growth. Hair. I’d discovered a fertile new direction to explore.

These photographs are part of an ongoing series of “hair portraits”. They use wet plate collodion tintype, Polaroids, film, and 3-d imagery to explore the nuanced transitions in female identity related to motherhood, aging, and choice as well as the intersection of identity and femininity with the physical world.  As I engaged with this new mode, my models became conduits of self-reflection–a way to look at the confines of my chosen female role from the outside. And there I observed a post-maternal kind of strength wholly different from the role I’d inhabited before motherhood. Looking at them now, these images on the wall, photographs of elaborate hair sculptures constructed in my studio to change. Parts of myself I choose to leave behind. Others I bring with me.

Rachel Portesi, August 2022

Then and There Mardi Gras 1979

Posted on July 17, 2022

In Then and There, I document a crucial aspect of public street behavior at the 1979 New Orleans Mardi Gras. Shooting with an instant SX-70 Polaroid camera, the process allowed me to directly interact with my subjects who perform, observe, and even share in the photographic process. The portraits are made just feet away from each person, mostly at dusk, and who are sharply revealed by the light of the camera’s flash bar. The subjects creatively present themselves in diverse colorful masks, makeup, and revelry. Each portrait is a glimpse into a layered and hidden personal identity made possible by the collaborative choices of the photographer and the subject acting in front of the camera. The raw excitement of Mardi Gras flows through each portrait with the people physically filling the entire frame of the Polaroid as if the print itself were a stage just for them. Mardi Gras allows both the subject and myself a moment of freedom to observe a transformation into another reality of being. As I see it, the major themes of the work, whether subtle or overt, are: mask, Carnaval, past time, memory, identity, creativity, fun and abandon, reverie, costume, altered realities and transformation.

Harvey Stein is a professional photographer, teacher, lecturer, author, and curator based in New York City.

He currently teaches at the International Center of Photography and the Los Angeles Center of Photography. Stein is a frequent lecturer on photography both in the United States and abroad. He was the Director of Photography at Umbrella Arts Gallery, located in the East Village of Manhattan, from 2009 until 2019 when it lost its lease and closed. He has also been a member of the faculty of the School of Visual Arts, New School University, Drew University, Rochester Institute of Technology and the University of Bridgeport. A recipient of a Creative Arts Public Service (CAPS) fellowship and numerous artist in residency grants, Stein’s ninth and latest book Then and There: Mardi Gras 1979 was published by Zatara Press in October of 2020. Other books of Stein’s photographs are Parallels: A Look at Twins, E.P. Dutton (1978); Artists Observed, Harry Abrams, Inc. (1986); Coney Island, W.W. Norton, Inc. (1998); Movimento: Glimpses of Italian Street Life, Gangemi Editore, Rome (2006); Coney Island 40 Years, Schiffer Publishing, (2011); Harlem Street Portraits, Schiffer Publishing (2013); Briefly Seen New York Street Life, Schiffer Publishing (2015), and Mexico Between Life and Death, Kehrer Verlag (Germany, 2018). Stein’s photographs and portfolios have been published in such periodicals as The New Yorker, Time, Life, Esquire, American Heritage, Smithsonian, The New York Times, Reader’s Digest, Glamour, GQ Magazine (Mexico), Forbes, Psychology Today, Playboy, Harpers, Connoisseur, Art News, American Artist, New York, People, Der Spiegel, Die Zeit, The Hopkins Review (cover), Sun Magazine (cover)and all the major photo magazines, including Camera Arts, Black & White Magazine (cover), Shutterbug, Popular Photography, American Photo, Camera, Afterimage, PDN, Zoom, Rangefinder, Photo Metro, fotoMagazine (Germany), photo technique, Zeke and View Camera Magazine.

Stein’s photographs have been widely exhibited in the United States and Europe — 89 one-person and over 166 group shows to date.

He has curated 67 exhibits since 2007. His photographs are in 59 permanent collections, including the George Eastman Museum, Bibliotheque Nationale, the Art Institute of Chicago, the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, the Brooklyn Museum of Art, the New Orleans Museum of Art, the International Center of Photography, the Denver Museum of Art, the Carnegie Museum of Art (Pittsburgh), the Portland (Oregon) Museum of Art, the Museum of the City of New York, Museet for Fotokunst (Odense, Denmark), Musee De La Photographie (Charleroi, Belguim), the Portland (Maine) Museum of Art, the American Museum of Natural History, the Santa Barbara Museum of Art, the Addison Gallery of American Art, The New York Historical Society and Museum, The Brooklyn Historical Society, and among others, the corporate collections of Johnson & Johnson, Hewlett Packard, LaSalle Bank (Chicago), Barclay Bank and Credit Suisse. Stein’s work is represented by Sous Les Etoiles Gallery, New York City.

Shootapalooza | A Mumuration of Artists

Posted on July 16, 2022

Connecting Art and Community, the group Shootapalooza is in the Main Gallery highlighting the diversity of craft, the unique perspectives of each of its members and celebrating the art of photography.

The theme for this collection of works is Enlighten, and each artist is speaking to the light and life that creativity brings to each of us.

Participating Artists –

Aline Smithson,  Amanda Smith, Amy Jasek, Angela Johnson, Anne Berry, Ann George, Anne Connor, Aubrey Guthrie, Carolyn Knorr,  Cecilia Broder, Christa Blackwood, DB Waltrip, Diane Fenster,  Donna Moore, DorRae Stevens,  Ellie Ivanova,  Fran Forman,  S. Gayle Stevens, Gina Costa, Ingrid Lundquist,  Jane Fulton Alt,  Jackie Stoken, Jennifer Shaw, Justin Bitner, Kevin James Tully, Kimberly Chiaris, Ky Lewis, Laura Husar Garcia,  Liese Ricketts, Marcy Palmer, Marti Corn,  Melanie Walker, Patricia Delker,  Patricia Bender, Paula Riff,  Rita Koehler, Ronna Schary, Sandra Klein,  Sara Silks,  Shari Rhode Trennert,  Susan Huber, Socorro Mucino,  Tami Bone, Theresa Tarara, Valerie Burke,  Vicki Reed, Vicky Stromee and Yvette Meltzer

28th Annual Members Moving Image Exhibition

Posted on July 14, 2022

We are excited to bring two artists to your attention, Lucia Ravens and Steven Parisi Gentile as part of our 28th Annual Members Exhibition. Traditionally just stills, we have expanded our gaze to moving image and this particular selection focused on water and how we see, experience and surround ourselves with this precious resource.

Lucia Ravens Flow takes us into a fanciful world designed by imagination. Using LIDAR and light, we float through sculpture of her design.

still from Flow

Lucia Ravens is an image-maker, storyteller, and international award-winning photographer, her work presently focuses on our planet’s natural resources by developing creative initiatives that address and illuminate environmental issues. She has cultivated a diverse practice ranging from photography, installations, sculptural photography, performance, and ‘art with purpose’ projects which encourage her audience to question societal norms about the stewardship of the natural environment and to develop an awareness to champion solutions.



Her endeavors draw upon the philosophy of ecology to explore intersections between issues of ecological and social sustainability, examining the impact of sense of place, dissolution of form, and displacement on the contemporary cultural dynamic. Ravens inspirits the viewer’s perceptions and expectations, resignifying cultural cursors, and re-calibrating the day-to-day with the extraordinary.  Her lens-based sculptures ‘Portrait of Peace and ‘Cut’ reveal the evolution of her artistic praxis. Focusing on the camera as a tool she draws attention to the relations between photography, sculpture, and art history of the 20th and 21st centuries. Lucia acknowledges the influence of photography with its technical possibilities and its potential for discerning the condition of objects and space, contributes vastly and will continue to contribute to the change in the aesthetic of sculpture.

An Alumna of Rutgers University she holds a Bachelor of Science in Biology and attended UCLA  for Post Bac studies. Combining her love of science with the arts she acquired a certificate from the University of Oxford Balliol College in England in the affiliate BADA program sponsored by The Juilliard School. She received a merit scholarship to pursue her graduate studies at TUFTS University, The School of Museum of Fine Art in Boston; while undertaking her MFA, she was endowed The SMFA Presidential Research Award, the MIT CAMIT grant from the Council of the Arts at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and curated into Boston’s Museum of Fine Art Annual Medal Award Event.  In 2016, her work was a select finalist for the ‘Biomimicry’ themed Amsterdam Light Festival in the Netherlands.  The summer of 2018 designated her installation ‘Forest Canopy‘, which was designed for the Museum Serralves Gardens in Porto, Portugal, as a select finalist in Portugal’s OPP Initiative.   In November 2019, she was selected by Tufts University Institute of the Environment of Boston to be a delegate at the Climate Summit in Madrid, thus nominated by the United Nations to attend the United Nations Climate Change Conference of the Parties 25.  Her installation concept ‘Forest Canopy‘was presentedat the Tufts / MIT booth in Madrid, Spain in December 2019.  The artist’s project ‘FLOW‘was presented at The Venice International Art Fair in Venice, Italy during the Venice Biennale Architecture 2021 from June through November.   Subsequently, 2021 concluded with her work being recognized for the Olympic Art Prize in Rome, Italy and the Lenardo da Vinci Art Prize in Florence, Italy which included select highlights in Art International Contemporary Magazine*.  In April 2022, she was a recipient of the Caravaggio Art Prize in Milan, Italy at The Museum of Science and Technology.

She has exhibited at such venues as; The MIT Museum Studio in Cambridge, MA., The Illinois Institute of Art, Chicago, The Palm Springs Contemporary Art Museum, The Smithsonian Affiliate Hubbard Museum in New Mexico, The Museum of Botany and the Arts at Selby Botanical Gardens in Sarasota, Florida, The Woodmere Museum in Philadelphia, PA. – to name a few.  Also, her work has shown at numerous galleries in the USA.  A landmark exhibition in her career includes the invitation to exhibit at ‘The Cultural Exchange’, ‘Newark Between Us’.  An International Artworks and Installation Show held in Metro NY, alongside numerous established master artists such as Yoko Ono and Jasper Johns. Moreover, Lucia’s work was recognized at the International Photographer of the Year IPA Lucie Awards with an ‘honorable mention’ in the Deeper Perspective category.  An award venue held annually at Lincoln Center in NYC.  As an image-maker she has worked on the cutting edge of the digital media frontier with her limited edition fine art photography collections and photographic art installations; as well as, spending numerous years working as a creative on Hollywood’s top commercial films and TV shows.  The influences which informed her art practice during her fortuitous creative experiences on the stages of Hollywood and TV studios of New York to International art venues, have played a paramount role in the cultivation of her visions and inspirations.  Living and experiencing the flora, fauna, and culture from the Peruvian Amazon jungle of her heritage to the fertile South Pacific tropical rain-forests and beaches of Hawaii, has enriched her with a unique global and artistic sensitivity.  Her works are in private and public collections.

Steven Parisi Gentile takes us to a zen place.

His beautiful video cause + effect is a moment for us all to breathe and take a moment to be quiet.

still from cause + effect

Steve Parisi Gentile is a fine art photographer and filmmaker with strong story-telling and documentary leanings. A self-described accidental photographer, he discovered still photography at age 10 as a shy but curious kid. 

A graduate of New York University’s Tisch School of the Arts, post graduate professional work followed in film and video production, documentary production, commercial and corporate communications, advertising, qualitative consumer and ethnographic research. His portfolio is in still and moving image formats.

Steve has exhibited in group photography shows at the Center for Photography at Woodstock (Woodstock NY), Crohn Gallery – Saugerties Public Library (solo show)(Saugerties, NY), Davis Orton Gallery (Hudson NY), Dorsky Museum of Art (New Paltz NY), Emerge Gallery (Saugerties NY), Griffin Museum of Photography (Winchester / Boston MA), Howland Cultural Center (Beacon NY), Intima Gallery (Saugerties NY), South by SouthEast Gallery (Molena GA), and Wired Gallery (High Falls NY). His work is collected by individual and corporate clients.


Please take a look at these two very different ideas about water.

Lucia Ravens
Steven Parisi Gentile

28th Annual Members Online Exhibition

Posted on July 9, 2022

We are pleased to be able to showcase the creativity of our Griffin Artist Community in this online exhibition. Earlier this year, over 2,000 images were submitted from over 200 artists, and our jurors Frances Jakubek and Iaritza Menjivar selected sixty to be on the walls of the Griffin’s Main Gallery in Winchester.

After review of the work that had been submitted, Executive Director Crista Dix selected an additional 60 artists to be part of an online exhibition. All 120 selected works for the museum and online exhibition are seen in the Members Exhibition Catalog.

Artists featured here –

Golnaz Abdoli, Eliot Allen, Linda Alschuler, Robert Avakian, Gary Beeber, Bremner Benedict, Adrien Bisson, Edward Boches, Sara Jane Boyers, Krystle Brown, Joy Bush, Ronald Butler, Jo Ann Chaus, Diana Cheren-Nygren, David Comora, Pamela Connolly, Ashley Craig, Sam Deaner, Adrienne Defendi, Susan DeLeo, Yvette Marie Dostatni, Dara Durost, Carol Eisenberg, Jennifer Erbe, Maureen Haldeman, Sandy Hill, Robert Johnson, Cynthia Katz, Constance Keller, Tira Khan, Sandra Klein, Ray Koh, Anne Kornfeld, Ana Leal, Randy Matusow, Joetta Maue, Ralph Mercer, Sue Michlovitz, Xuan Yui Ng, Dale Niles, Catherine Panebianco, Hank Paper, Abby Raeder, Jason Reblando, Susan Rosenberg Jones, Stephen Sheffield, Sara Silks, Larry Smukler, Vera Sprunt, Sandra Sugawara, Tokie Taylor, JP Terlizzi, Vaune Trachtman, Donna Tramontozzi, Jacqueline Walters, Suzanne White, Jeff Wiles, Jenn Wood, Mitsu Yoshikawa

America’s Pastime

Posted on June 24, 2022

America loves baseball, the boys of summer and our days in the sun. This exhibition features the timeless photography created by Winchester native Arthur Griffin, out of his archives housed at the Griffin Museum. Images of the Boston Braves, Red Sox and the crowds that celebrate the wins and losses of their favorite teams.

First Generation: Raíces | Iaritza Menjivar

Posted on June 24, 2022

“First Generation” is a long term series that documents the daily life of three generations of my immigrant family— my parents who arrived from Guatemala and El Salvador, and the generations that followed, born in the U.S. As “First Gens,” we have access to privileges that come with being born in the United States.  At the same time, we also navigate the particular pressures on our immigrant families, whose lives are marginalized by a society that limits access based on names, status and skin color.  The steps on our journey to move up in the world are colored by a goal to honor our family’s hard work and show them their sacrifices were worthy ones. 

The exhibition, First Generation: Raíces (Roots), is a branch from the First Generation series. In this body of work, photographs were taken at my mother’s childhood home in Mazatenango, Guatemala.  My mother left her home at age sixteen and has only returned once ever since. This is my grandmother’s home. My grandfather passed at fifty and my mother and aunt took on the role of caretakers for the family.  Their hard work in the United States has helped fix the infrastructure of this place, to name a few: adding electricity and lights, a floor, ceilings, working water and toilet, and an extra family room. My mother and aunt have fed my grandmother, aunts and cousins for more than 30 years. My mother jokes that their family’s back home will never know how much they break their backs to support them, but all joking aside, they do not wish to return to their casita in Mazate. 

In this cultural conversation, I show complexities that we experience with our own identities as members of an immigrant family: engagement, gratitude, devotion and self-determination.

About Iaritza –

Iaritza Menjivar is a documentary photographer whose long term projects aim to empower and represent her immigrant family and community. In 2016 through 2019, she was awarded the presidential scholarship for the “Advanced Mentorship Program in Documentary Projects” at the Anderson Ranch Arts Center in Colorado . First Generation can be viewed in the New York Times publication, Honoring a Debt to Immigrant Parents and in the recently premiered documentary film, We Are Here Too. Iaritza is an active freelance photographer; her clients include the Washington Post, Maine Media Workshops + College, and LISC among others. 

In her role as Events Coordinator at the Somerville Arts Council in Somerville, MA, Iaritza has shaped the focus of the Council’s work to create grant opportunities and event production support for local BIPOC artists. She coordinates festivals, assists with open calls, curation, and public art installations, and builds relationships with organizations and businesses in the local area. Iaritza is a member of the Arts and Cultural Plan Task Force focusing on creating a sustainable plan for equity and inclusion, space risk assessments and accessibility within the arts in the city. 

Before joining the Arts Council, Iaritza served as the Associate Director at the Griffin Museum of Photography from mid 2017 through 2020. Iaritza has also served as a panel judge for the Massachusetts Cultural Council’s Photography Fellowships, a guest curator for The Fence competition, and participated as a panelist on “Photographing Family: the Personal Becomes Political” at the AIPAD Talk series, “The Photography Show” in New York. 

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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