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What’s Left Behind

Posted on February 2, 2021

Statement
What’s Left Behind is an autobiographical narrative I began creating after my mother’s passing as a means to contemplate, unpack, and sort through her legacy–seeking to discover not only who my mother was, but also what motherhood is, and who I am now without her.

Using the past as a point of reference for navigating and giving meaning to the present, these photographs represent moments in which I am confronted by my mother’s presence and her loss, sometimes simultaneously. Some moments are deeply personal and specific, others universally relatable meant to invite the viewer in as a witness, provoking personal associations. Through my photographic practice, I render the intangible yearning I feel for lost places— both physical and emotional—to which I can no longer return, making visible what is often unseen.

Bio
Sage Brousseau was born and raised in the Boston-area. Her photographs are poetic in nature and are inspired by deeply personal experiences, yet speak a universally relatable language.

Her photographic practice, which explores story, place, and identity as the foundation of personal history, was cultivated by her childhood obsession with old family photos and further developed when she pursued her BFA in Photography.

Her recent projects investigate traces of memory and contemplate emotion and loss through the lens of shared female experience.

Sage also received her M.Ed. from Lesley University where she gained a deep understanding and passion for arts education. Her work has been exhibited in numerous group exhibitions throughout Boston and New England for more than ten years.

View Sage Brousseau’s Website

Photography Atelier 33

Posted on January 23, 2021

Photography Atelier is a 12-session portfolio and project building course for emerging to advanced photographers offered through the Griffin Museum of Photography. Now in its 24th year, the Atelier class 33 was led by photographer Meg Birnbaum with assistance from photographer  Sue D’Arcy Fuller.

Exhibiting photographers of Photography Atelier 33 are: Julia Arstorp, Peter Balentine, Terry Bleser, Sally Bousquet, Lisa Cassell-Arms, Diana Cheren Nygren, Edie Clifford, Sue D’Arcy Fuller, Kathy DeCarlo-Plano, Angela Douglas-Ramsey, Amy Eilertsen, Marc Goldring, Sandy Gotlib, Sandy Hill, Roselle McConnell, Judith Montminy, Bonnie Newman, Karyn Novakowski, Diane Shohet, Anne Smith Duncan, Jim Turner, Amir Viskin and Jeanne Widmer.

Julia Arstorp – Invisible Threads
Invisible Threads is a visual narrative about connections and identity found through family stories and childhood memories.

Peter Balentine – Home Markets
In Home Markets, Peter Balentine discovers an interesting variety of markets in houses in Lynn, MA reflecting the ethnic diversity of this gateway immigrant city.

Terry Bleser –Searching for a Sense of Home
Searching for a Sense of Home in a new place.

Sally Bousquet – All the Fish in the Sea
All the Fish in the Sea explores the troubling consequences of our worldwide reliance on plastic.

Lisa Cassell-Arms – Aide-Memoire (An aid to memory)
A contemplation of gardens: where tended space meets the tangled edges beyond.

Diana Cheren Nygren – Just Another Alice
“In the series “Just Another Alice“, I explore the ways that I have coped with the confinement of the pandemic, and the memories of past travels in which I have taken solace.”

Edie Clifford – The Architect called Light
“My project is to explore the idea of Light as the architect of the forms and spaces of the Carpenter Center for the Visual Arts at Harvard University.”

Sue D’Arcy Fuller – The Stars of Our Days
“During the Covid 19 Pandemic, I taught children about nature at a farm. In those extraordinary times, the chickens were often The Stars of Our Days.”

Kathy DeCarlo-Plano – Revitalize
Seeing how these historic autos have withstood the hardships of the world’s harsh elements has enlightened and revitalized me that the present stress we jointly face, shall soon pass.

Angela Douglas-Ramsey – Carbon Copy
“My daughter Rose: she is of me, like me, and more than me. The ways in which we resemble one another outwardly are echoed in the ways we resemble each other inwardly.”

Amy Eilertsen –Memento Vivere: A study of life
“Retaining underlying intent of momento mori painting in Dutch Realism of the 17th century, I work with live animals in still-life scenes which remind us that life is now, here and in this moment.”

Marc Goldring – Visions of Trees
In his project Visions of Trees, Marc focuses on the stories trees tell: about their own lives, their interactions one another and with humans. His aim to highlight the grace and tenacity of these living beings with which we share the planet.

Sandy Gotlib – Framingham Farms
Framingham Farms captures visual impressions of some of the few remaining farms in Framingham.

Sandy Hill – American Decor
“After a tumultuous year filled with isolation and conflict, I felt the need to search for a connection to people who share my country, regardless of beliefs, views or background they chose to celebrate life during a pandemic.”

Roselle McConnell – In His Shoes
A sequential journey of one boy’s life from infancy to adulthood in his father’s shoes.

Judith Montminy – Dancing Alone
Dancing Alone focuses on the playful performance of unchoreographed dances when water interacts with a variety of elements – air, glass, acrylic ink, food coloring, and oil.

Bonnie Newman – Morning Impressions: Cape Cod
A Personal Vision of Cape Cod Landscapes: Fleeting and Fragile; Serene and Inviting.

Karyn Novakowski – Some Things Remain the Same
“Some Things Remain the Same is an ongoing project documenting how our home became the center of our lives – for safety, for connection, and for entertainment – during Covid-19 pandemic.”

Diane Shohet – An Enduring Place
“An Enduring Place is a collection of portraits that capture my 20 summers in the “Little House” in Wellfleet, MA.”

Anne Smith Duncan – Illusions (Landscape)
The series Illusions (Landscape) plays with our visual perception; photographs of two-dimensional flat concrete surfaces can be perceived as three-dimensional landscapes.

Jim Turner – Seeing in Threes
This collection of botanical triptychs provides a glimpse into the sometimes unseen beauty of the natural world.

Amir Viskin – Ephemeral Abstractions
“In this project I experimented with ephemeral elements in nature to create abstract images meant to ask myself questions regarding the perception of time and place.”

Jeanne Widmer – Dejaview
This series depicts the consequences when a modern office park despoils an adjacent grass and tree-filled wetland.

In addition to guidance and support in the creation of a body of work, the class helps prepare artists to market, exhibit and present their work to industry professionals. Participants engage in supportive critical discussions of each other’s work and leave with a better understanding of how to edit and sequence their own work as well as help others do the same. Instruction in the Atelier includes visual presentations based around 4-5 assignments which are designed to encourage experimentation in both subject matter and approach. Students learn how to prepare for a national or regional portfolio review. Students learn the critical importance of writing an effective artist statement and bio. Any method or medium of image making is welcome although digital photography is recommended for the first half of the class when work is assigned each week. For information about the exhibiting artists of Atelier 33 and to see more of their images visit www.photographyatelier.org.

For information about upcoming classes: www.griffinmuseum.org, under Programs then Education or email crista at griffinmuseum dot org. The Photography Atelier has its own website. You may see all of the ateliers here including Atelier 33.

The Atelier was conceived by Holly Smith Pedlosky around 1996 and later taught by Karen Davis and then Meg Birnbaum. The workshop was previously offered at Radcliffe Seminars, Harvard University and Lesley Seminars and in the Seminar Series in the Arts, The Art Institute of Boston (AIB), both at Lesley University.

Gallery hours by appointment: Tuesday – Sunday: Noon – 4PM

Alyssa Minahan: Notes

Posted on January 21, 2021

From the Photographer – Alyssa Minahan

NOTES
is a visual poem on the impermanence of our lived experiences and the beauty to be found in its acceptance. When I began making this work, I had suffered a profound personal and physical loss. At the same time, I was seeking ways to describe the liminal period in my sons’ lives between boyhood and adolescence, specifically their emotional and physical independence from me as their mother. To give form and meaning to these experiences, I turned to the materiality of the photographic medium, creating objects that question established notions of process and permanence.

The objects in NOTES – emulsion lifts, unfixed and partially fixed photograms, gelatin silver prints, film and chemigrams – continually shift and change, sometimes deteriorating into nothing while other times evolving into something more beautiful. Multiples of the same image – a cloud, inverted as both its positive and negative – reflect notions of chance and potentiality. A fingerprint left on the emulsion of an unfixed chemigram acts as a witness to human presence. These unique photographic objects, with their imperfections and variability, are evidence of the only constant – change.

Book photographs courtesy of Datz Press.

cover

 

2019
18 x 25 cm
46 pages
Soft cover / Pamphlet stitch
Limited Edition of 100 copies. Each copy includes a unique photographic object.
Published by Datz Press (Seoul, South Korea).

 

BIO
Alyssa Minahan utilizes photographic materials, including unfixed gelatin silver paper and large format negatives, in non-traditional ways to express ideas integral to the medium of photography, specifically its complex relationship to time, space and memory. In September 2019, Alyssa released NOTES, a handmade photo book published by Datz Press (Seoul, South Korea). NOTES is held in the collections of The New York Public Library, International Center for Photography Library, Amon Carter Museum of American Art Research Library, Stanford University Library, California College of the Arts Library and Massachusetts College of Art and Design Morton R. Godine Library. Alyssa has exhibited her work at numerous galleries and museums, including the Datz Museum of Art (Seoul, South Korea), Center for Creative Photography (Tucson, Arizona), Pingyao International Photography Festival (Shanxi, China), Photographic Center Northwest (Seattle, Washington) and Boston University Art Galleries (Boston, Massachusetts). In addition, her work has been featured in Harper’s Magazine, Art New England and Phases Magazine. Alyssa is the recipient of the 2017 Massachusetts College of Art and Design Graduate Teaching Fellowship and is currently a Lecturer of Photography in the the Department of Visual and Media Arts at Emerson College, Boston.

View Alyssa Minahan’s web site.

Radius

Posted on January 21, 2021

Statement
For just over a year I photographed as many people within a 5-mile radius of my home in Poughkeepsie, NY as would let me. Many declined my request, but over 750 acquiesced with kindness, support and good humor. Some also shared bits of information about themselves that reveal the strength, diversity and uniqueness of the community that I call home.

Bio
A native of Cleveland, Ohio, Julie Mihaly attended Vassar College before earning a BFA & MFA in photography from The San Francisco Art Institute. After teaching photography for more than a decade at schools such as NYC’s School of Visual Arts & Mason Gross School of Art at Rutgers University, Mihaly contributed her talents as a photo director, editor & researcher to magazines such as Vanity Fair, Entertainment Weekly & Garden Design. She also wrote for Martha Stewart Living, Budget Living & Organic Style, et al. before returning to the full-time pursuit of her photography. Mihaly has exhibited her work in the U.S. & Europe winning inclusion in a number of juried exhibitions. She is one of four 2018 recipients of a Working Artists Organization Grant, & won first prize in the SoHo Photo Gallery 2019 Open Competition. Eight books of Mihaly’s work have been published. She currently lives & works in the Hudson River Valley.

View Julie Mihaly’s web site.

Our Mothers’ Gardens

Posted on January 21, 2021

Project Statement
During this past summer I was feeling a bit detached from photographing myself. This was a result of social unrest and the pandemic. In June, I went back home to Alabama for a couple of months to be with family. I spent a lot of time between my Grandmother and my Mom’s home, both of whom I am very close with. We went through photo albums together and loose images hanging around in tubs. It took weeks to go through hundreds of photos from the late 19th century to present. By the time I finished, I winded up scanning over 800 images. I had become very attached to the language of the archive and what it could say about the people in the images. I found it beautiful to see how my family depicted themselves. I enjoyed the conversations with my Nanny and Mom about them all. Yet, this moment was the catalyst to me questioning the stakes when we do not have the power to speak for ourselves.

 My practice is currently revolving around two questions. What can visual art tell us about the depiction of Black women throughout visual art history? How have those negative depictions of Black women led to their lack of mental and physical care? I have spent the last couple of months researching collections. All my images are from the Art Institute of Chicago and the Museum of Contemporary Art. I have re-photographed, re-captioned and re-contextualized the original works I have researched. This is my way of protecting the Black women’s bodies and their humanity.

Statement of Artistic Purpose
My practice considers the gravity of the mental wellbeing of Black people. Especially based off of their environmental and geographical locations. In my interdisciplinary practice, I examine the harsh realities and complexities of being a Black American. As a product of Alabama, it was evident that the color of my skin alone was more offensive than any words I could say. The very possession of my black body alone served to be quite traumatic. It shaped the person who I am today, for better or for worse. It wasn’t until I reached adolescence, that I realized that I was far from being alone. There is a wear and tear on the Black body as a result of stress due to constant exposure to racism, sexism and classism. This weathering effects generations, not individuals. Photography is often used as a tool to silence or mischaracterize marginalized people. This is why it is important to me to consider the realities of others with compassion and respect. In every body of work I create, I attempt to create a space for healthy dialogue to occur.

Bio
Alayna N. Pernell (b. 1996) was born and raised in rural Alabama, USA. In May 2019, she graduated from The University of Alabama where she received her Bachelor of Arts in Studio Art with a concentration in Photography and a minor in African American Studies. She is currently an MFA Photography candidate at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. Pernell has had her work published in the 2020-2021 School of the Art Institute of Chicago MFA Catalogue, the 2020- 2021 School of the Art Institute Department Photography Department Catalogue and the 1st and 2nd editions of Todo, a graduate student zine. Her work has also been exhibited in various cities across the United States.

Alayna N Pernell is a recent finalist for the John Chervinsky Scholarship 2020.

View Alayna N Pernell’s Website

CV

 

The Last Rose of Summer

Posted on January 17, 2021

The 2020 jurors for the Chervinsky Scholarship awardee have chosen Tavon Taylor to receive the Chervinsky scholarship. The jurors would like to acknowledge their shortlist as well.

“We propose the opportunity to have a longer short-list so that we have a larger group of emerging artists who receive the encouragement of being short-listed for the award. As we discovered a larger pool of individuals who deserve to be finalists and have equally impressive work. We thought this would be a wonderful opportunity for more emerging artists to add this accolade to their CV’s and receive the acknowledgement that their work deserves.”

Logan Bellew
Becky Behar
Maria Contreras-Coll 
Dylan Everett
Alayna N. Pernell
Kendall Pestana
Daniel Seiffert

2020 Jurors and their websites:

Michelle Rogers-Pritzl

Jennifer Georgescu

Rachel Fein-Smolinski


The 2020 award for the John Chervinsky Emerging Scholarship went to photographer Tavon Taylor. View Tavon Taylor’s  website.

The judges said, “Tavon Taylor shows an already robust practice as a recent MFA recipient with a collection of rich, cinematic imagery. He presents a powerful voice that communicates the complexities and intimacies of the artists experience as a queer Black artist. A look at the larger bodies of work solidified the world that he has built where tenderness and vulnerability reign supreme. Kinship, intimacy, and community runs through this work and Taylor both stitches together and unties these concepts with each shared interaction between photographer and subject.”

Tavon Taylor submitted The Last Rose of Summer for consideration for the scholarship. Taylor says of the body of work:

“The Last Rose of Summer was Inspired much by the injustice shown within the media in 2020. Over the last few months, I’ve focused on creating images of the people closest to me. I’ve started with single portraits of my loved ones, then I grew curious about photographs before my time. I came across a photo album stored deep within my childhood home. Full of ceremonies, the city, all the people I didn’t know, and all the stories untold, the richness spilled through each image. This compelled me to dive more into my own family’s history. Through stories from my elders and found images, I’m navigating ways to dissect my own family dynamics.”

Tavon Taylor’s Statement of Purpose:

“Within the last few months, I’ve started my photo and video-based project, The Last Rose of Summer. In this body of work, I am discovering my family’s history within the DC and Maryland areas. So far, I’ve done interviews, filed archived images, make images of my loved ones, photographed our surroundings, and more. There’s so much that I’m thinking about and planning for the blossoming of this project. I’m excited to get to know more about my ancestry. I would love to be able to properly document the richness and depth that branches back far before myself. Through discovering and sharing my own lineage, I hope to create inspiring imagery celebrating the lives and legacy of those who’ve once walked this earth. In this process of discovering moments that have come before me, I am discovering myself. The last rose of summer gives me the chance to proudly and boldly take control of my own narrative as a queer black man navigating in today’s social climate. In this process, I am celebrating the people in my family that I love and those that we’ve lost. In sharing these stories, with a larger audience, I hope to inspire people to value those closest to them.”

Read Mark Feeney of the Boston Globe’s Review.

Digits: A Parallel Universe

Posted on January 9, 2021

This exhibition all started in one of my classes last August. Numerous students presented work that challenged the planes and layers of everyday living. In particular, the works by Bill Gore and Dennis Geller spurred on the shaping of this exhibition. At first look, I found their photographs confusing yet very exciting. I quickly tried to unravel the cause of my off-kilter posture, as I am not one to ever dismiss digital intervention or novel pathways.

Since I’ve known Bill Gore, he has produced work grounded in real life and often spiced with wryness and serendipity. He would vacillate between photographing open land and city scenes through to commercial retail lots; all places we inhabit. His Life could Be A Dream series was definitely a departure from his familiar and mine. Bill was recalibrating and to grasp his reasons, it was time for me to turn the dial towards “I” for “insight” as well. His artist statement I share here, was a beginning step.

“These photographic works are assemblages of images that are drawn from my everyday life.  My process uses digital imagery to deconstruct photographs into 0’s and 1’s, mix them into a digital bardo, and bring forth a new vision with abstract forms that carry the secret narratives of their ancestor images.  I am drawn to the possibilities of everyday subjects mingling in a space where the present and the past are compressed into the moment.  While the means is digital, I see the outcome as physical prints that celebrate color and form together with literal narrative.  I search for models and metaphors in ordinary subjects with which I have a long acquaintance as I explore my own fragile and aging relationship with my environment.” 

“The Land bears constant witness and reveals itself as an endless stream of images. But the conscious mind is selective, and memory illusive. ‘My Life Could Be a Dream’ series works in the realm of perception and illusion and explores our mental processes of combining new and remembered visual inputs while we create our own realities…” – Bill Gore

Dennis Geller’s path began in exploring representational subjects in his photographs.  He honed his perception in the studio and then the forest. Deeper dives into the language of photography brought him to explore the presence of light in the everyday as well as articulating the physicality of emotions in the abstract, the science of vision and the dimensions of time and change.

For many of us, over the course of the past twelve months, time has been irrelevant. Days blend. Memories shift. In “Coronaland” the interpretation and measurement of time passing seems not an exact science. Exploring Geller’s and Gore’s photographs prompted my thinking of our present-day experience in a pandemic, sheltered for safety, isolated yet stimulated by the imagination and our impressions of what is seen and felt.

But even in normal times, reality is tied to fantasy. A dream state can give way to inquiry upon waking as to whether one’s memories were fact or fiction. Reading a book or watching a movie leads to an altered mindset. The characters in any story are authentic only until the very last page, the credits roll or they are recalled from memory. At “the end” we grieve for the loss of characters we have come to know and the worlds they inhabit as if we were participants in the stories with them.

Digits: A Parallel Universe is intended as a conjectured and separate plane of reality, that co-exists with the photographer’s own here and now. Each photographer has invented her or his own fiction. There is digital intervention in every photograph in the exhibition yet the methods vary as to how the altered results are manufactured. The viewer is reminded of what it might feel like to be in a changing state, time or dimension.

There are eleven photographers in Digits: A Parallel Universe. The photographers are: Debe Arlook, Diana Cheren Nygren, Najee Dorsey, Cathy Cone, Miren Etcheverry, Dennis Geller, Bill Gore, Marcy Juran, Deborah Kaplan, Lisa Ryan and Gordon Saperia.

Debe Arlook photographs landscapes of the American West. She hoped that through her images in Forseeable Cache she could communicate the experience of how the resultant energy of meditation feels and looks. She has spent a lifetime pursuing spiritual growth.

Diana Cheren Nygren’s photographs in When the Trees are Gone, come straight from her imagination as a cautionary tale. Each of the six photographs depict city living in crisis. Told through the veil of humor and prophesy, we see high hopes that art can be an impetus for change.

Hand Painted Photographs by Cathy Cone is a blending of two worlds. First, the final imagery is pulled from the past to rise transformed in the present. The tintypes change from standalone antique portraits to objects infused by a modern breath and brush. Rather than relying just on the photographic image or just a painted artifact, Cone’s amalgam of mediums shapes her unique narrative.

Najee Dorsey digitally collages narratives of Black life in history and present day that must be retold and remembered. Two of his artworks in Digits: A Parallel Universe feature prominent African American artists; Kara Walker and Basquiat. Walker is famous for her cut paper silhouetted narratives haunted by the atrocities of slavery. Basquiat’s work has been attributed to elevating graffiti artists to the art scene. In 1982, the sale of Basquiat’s art set a record for the highest price ever paid at auction for an American artist’s work.

Miren Etcheverry uses family photographs and digital assemblage to create portrait tributes to the female family members and friends who have influenced her life. She calls these digital creations her “goddesses”. The title of her compilation of all this work is called Oh My Goddess! Most of Etcheverry’s family live across the Atlantic in France but in her studio they all are a “desktop” away.

Marcy Juran blends digital processes and family photographs in Family History | Family Mystery, her altered reality where generations of her family can gather in one place.

Deborah Kaplan creates her own language from photographs she’s made in nature in Syllabary for a Natural World. These natural symbols are true digits. As Kaplan mentions in her statement, she “aims to recreate a language that never was, but which ought to be”.

Lisa Ryan’s family was constantly on the move. As a result she says she was always trying to orient herself in new environments. She uses infrared photography to show her anomalous perspective as a “stranger in a strange land”. *  Infrared light lies beyond the visible light spectrum and can’t be seen by the human eye.

Gordon Saperia looks for the grand landscapes as he travels the world. He is not shy in using digital manipulation to augment the original photograph to represent his emotional response to a scene. Sometimes it is minor color shifts or contrast moves. Other times he combines elements to shape a “brave new world.” **

Imagining has been an important pastime for me over the course of my personal life and work life. It was integral for my parents as well. They provided creative outlets in our daily lives. As an example, they made my brother and I a playroom in our home where we could create whatever we wished to spark creativity. My brother hammered nail upon nail into the wooden floor boards until it was a continuous sheet of metal nail heads. And now as an adult, he is an inventor. I chose to paint the ceilings and walls with scenes recalled from dreams or the books I read. Once out of school, I painted murals in peoples’ homes to make a very modest living.

In my youth, science fiction and fantasy were my favorite books. Arthur C. Clarke was a favorite author. His science fiction stories were great fodder for the imagination. Clarke dreamed of possibilities that came to be fifty years into his future. He saw “imagination, coupled with science, technology and the arts, care of our planet and humanity as precious and essential elements of our future survival.” ***

Carl Sagan was another favorite dreamer. He is known as an American astronomer, planetary scientist, cosmologist, astrophysicist, astrobiologist, author, poet, and science communicator. He also wrote the science fiction novel Contact, that was the basis for a 1997 film of the same name. He is credited with saying, “Imagination will often carry us to the worlds that never were, but without it we go nowhere.” ****

From all these things, the germ of the idea for this exhibition was born. My gratitude to the artists for their enthusiasm and their very forward and creative thinking.

May we all now “Live Long and prosper.” *****    – PFT

Footnotes

*Stranger in a Strange Land is a 1961 science fiction novel by American author Robert A. Heinlein.

** Brave New World is a dystopian social science fiction novel by English author Aldous Huxley.
*** From Arthur C. Clarke Foundation
****  Carl Sagan
*****A catch phrase and hand gesture made famous by Star Trek, the tv series. When two Vulcans greeted each other or said good-bye they would make a Vulcan salute by holding up a hand and moving the pointer and middle finger to form a V and they would say the phrase “Live long and prosper” at the same time.

 

The Photographers of Digits: A Parallel Universe:
Debe Arlook
Standing on sacred Native American land surrounded by sandstone buttes and rock formations, I felt a whoosh of indescribable energy that reverberated within me. In stillness I hovered between an alternate awareness and the presence of my surroundings. With closed eyes, the landscape left a colorful imprint on my eyelids. Foreseeable Cache began here, in the sublime beauty of the American West, where spiritually minded practices and Native American beliefs teach us that land is sacred and body, mind, spirit and heart are connected.

Having studied, practiced and taught ideas of spiritual growth and meditation for years, I wanted to share what meditation feels like to me. The title refers to awakening the soul’s memory and the banding marks represent the constant thoughts and noises that arise during meditation. Compositions are made in-camera, visually blending a meditative attention to time, space and awareness. Colors draw from elements of the chakras embracing grounding to oneness.
This series is inspired by 19th-century painters and photographers of the American West including Albert Bierstadt, Thomas Moran, Eadweard Muybridge and Carlton Watkins. Their interpretations of sublime and idyllic landscapes communicate a connection with the sometimes harsh yet exquisite and mystical lands. Using the external landscape as a metaphor for the internal landscape of the mind and soul, each image offers a glimpse into moments of mindfulness.

Bio/CV
Title Sheet


Diana Cheren Nygren

Surroundings play a dominant role in shaping experience. Born out of three series, this project imagines city dwellers searching for moments of relief in a world shaped by climate change, and the struggle to find a balance between an environment in crisis and manmade structures. The beach becomes rising tides, threatening the very foundation of the city. The clash of nature and city results in an absurd profusion of visual noise and little relief. The resulting images lay bare challenges to city planners, and the problematic nature of the future that lies ahead for humanity and the planet. My work as a photographer is the culmination of a life-long investment in the power of art and visual culture to shape and influence social change. These compositions challenge the viewer to question the images. It is not reality, and not the future, but one possible future. While the images in the series When the Trees are Gone have an apocalyptic tone, they are inspired also by humor. Ultimately, this work is not pessimistic. I am hopeful that, as many urban planners and landscape architects already are, we can find new approaches to urban design.

Bio/CV
Title Sheet


Cathy Cone
Hand Painted Photographs
My grandmother raised me. She was born with a large birthmark in the shape of a fish that covered her chin and neck. She referred to it as her purple stain. When I was young she would often tell me the story of how it happened repeatedly throughout my childhood. She told me her mother cut her finger cleaning fish when she was pregnant with her. Her mother put her finger up to her mouth immediately to stop the bleeding and according to my grandmother, “marked her”. Her mother died as a result of my grandmother’s birth several weeks later. Had she explained it any other way I would be a very different person today. I saw it a beautiful pattern imbued with magic not an imperfection. My grandmother suffered through stares and pointing fingers often as I was holding her hand. These kinds of folk stories and explanations were part of my childhood and nurtured my imagination. They held a transformative power as a kind of magical soul medicine.

I begin by scanning tintypes that I started collecting in the late seventies. The printed photograph then becomes a contemplative ground for painting. They are independent of each other physically, historically and on many other levels. The painted photograph essentially is a duet in which two mediums may contribute towards a whole. The integrity of both exists simultaneously in a shared physicality through and on the photographic print. The composition is essentially a duet where both mediums of equal importance. I’m interested in the translation of these found tintypes by reanimating or resuscitating the portrait. I think of the portraits as time travelers while painting late night seances. With the help of technology, the scanned tintypes often lead to new clues perceptually. It provides a field for painting and mark making. Perhaps they’re tarot cards from outer space. It’s my way of re-touching history.

CV
Title Sheet


Najee Dorsey

As an artist, Najee Dorsey has developed much in his craft over the years, and has become known for his mixed media collage, digital media collaged images of little known and unsung historical figures, as well as nostalgic scenes from African American life in the southern United States. In his work, as Najee chronicles moments in Black life throughout history, he maintains that, “stories untold are stories forgotten”.

Bio/CV
Title Sheet


Miren Etcheverry

My Oh My Goddess! series celebrates the women who have influenced me.  Most of these women are part of my extended family, and are living full and active lives in southern France, where I am from.   A few of these women have now passed, but their memories live on.  Among these women are my mother, my grandmother, my mother-in-law and other relatives.

During the recent period of the pandemic and its associated restrictions, the distance between me, my family of origin and friends has never seemed so great.  Knowing that I am no longer just a simple airplane flight away from visiting them saddens me. 

These playful depictions of these women reflect happy moments spent with them, while I am here and they are far away.  During my period of confinement, I revisited my personal collection of photographs and transformed these ordinary women, giving them a breath of new life, and capturing their lively spirits and dynamism.  I mean to convey what is most beautiful about them, reinterpreting that beauty, even transforming them into goddesses.  

I come from a long line of strong women.  During my life, I have continued to surround myself with strong women.  They are my role models and the source of my own strength and feminist spirit. Indeed, they are my goddesses.

Bio 
Title Sheet


Dennis Geller
These images, grouped under the title Visual Pathways, encompass two themes, both motivated by the mechanics of our visual system. The images on our retinas are not like stills of a movie. A spot on the retina shows chemical activation based on all the images it has seen recently, not just the light that it is seeing “right now”; later in the brain these successive smears of chemical activation are refined to the movies that we “see.” Some of the images here tease out that effect by showing the changes in a scene as a few moments pass, letting the parts that remained the same fade into the background.  Elsewhere in the brain, the processing of color and tonality are handled by separate pathways; others of these images invite us to imagine what we would see if one of those pathways were handled differently. All the images in the group play on the difference between what we see and how we see it.

Bio/CV
Title Sheet


Bill Gore
The Land bears constant witness and reveals itself as an endless stream of images. But the conscious mind is selective, and memory illusive. My Life Could Be a Dream series works in the realm of perception and illusion and explores our mental processes of combining new and remembered visual inputs while we create our own realities.

These photographic works are assemblages of images that are drawn from my camera.  My processes use digital imagery to go beyond the camera and deconstruct images into 0’s and 1’s and mix them into a digital bardo where the present and the past are compressed into the moment.  While the means is digital, I see the outcome as physical prints that combine abstract elements of color and form together with literal narrative.

I am drawn to the possibilities of digital imagery as an artistic avenue into questions about the conscious mind and the formation of belief. I search for models and metaphors in ordinary subjects as I explore my own fragile and aging relationship with our uniquely American culture.

Bio/CV
Title Sheet


Marcy Juran

What is the truth of a family’s history?

This question has often occured to me as I examine the nine boxes of family photos and albums entrusted to me after my mother’s death in 2016.

Many of the images were familiar, as they were pasted into the family albums that my sister and I had poured over as a child, my first introduction to photography. My mother captioned and dated many of them in her loopy left-handed cursive. I was fascinated with the stories as well, tales of both my mother’s and my father’s extended families who had come to America in the early 1900s from Russia, a few steps ahead of the Czar’s pogroms.

But other images were new to me, as they had been given to my mother when other family members had passed away. Memories and mysteries rose from the musty boxes as I sifted through time, over 100 years of my maternal and paternal families. Many of these photos were unlabeled and not dated. With the loss of my mother, there were questions unanswered with no one left to ask.

As I considered what to do with this legacy, I saw recurring threads across the generations – faces, gestures, locations – and a narrative began to emerge. In this body of work, Family History | Family Mystery, I have chosen to explore the story  of my mother’s maternal family through the lens of five generations of women, from my great-grandmother, Jenny, who arrived here in 1905, through my daughter Sara, born in 1990.

In digitally layering and blending these images, I mix photos across decades – vintage studio images, snapshots from the thirties through the nineties, and more recent digital captures. I have also incorporated some of my own landscape and botanical images from Connecticut, where the family settled after arriving at Ellis Island; many of these marry with the settings where the original photos were made. In creating these images, I have chosen to disregard time and place, instead imagining events and conversations that might have occurred, in locations which are also layered and blended.

Personal and family memories are told and retold, becoming a collective family history which may or may not be “true”. But this history becomes the truth as we know it. And in the oft-quoted words of Emily Dickinson, “Tell all the truth but tell it slant.”

Bio/CV
Title Sheet


Deborah Kaplan
Mark making. Symbols. These are some of the earliest efforts of human beings. This series, Syllabary for a Natural World, reaches back to prehistoric expressions of mark making to explore the innate complexity and language of the natural world, to restart a process of abstraction and understanding. Through photographs of everyday woodlands, by means of digital modification and mark making, I aim to recreate a language that never was, but which ought to be.

It has been said that if we do not have a word for something, it is unacknowledged, hard to bring into consciousness as an actual thing in the world.

I examine the linear forms of tree trunk and branches, of leaf and stem, as they reframe themselves into an infinite set of almost repeating, but ever-changing patterns. The physical recording of years of growth and eons of evolved complexity balanced and whole is visually palpable. And here the language arises.

May we bring the complexity and balance fully to consciousness.  May we develop a language as deep as nature itself.

Bio/CV
Title Sheet


Lisa Ryan
Finding My Way
My family moved around a lot.  Rarely was everyone on the same continent, much less in the same country. I was always trying to orient myself to the new environments. My sense of direction remains challenged, but I have found many diverging paths, wonderful places along the way. Infrared photography, a different wavelength of light, shows us more detail and fascinates with false color.

Bio
Title Sheet


Gordon Saperia
The Painted Pixel
I am honored to be part of the Griffin Museum of Photography group show “Digits: A Parallel Universe”. Much of what I attempt to accomplish as a photographer is consistent with the vision for this exhibition.

The grand landscape has always been my preferred subject. Mountains, sea, plains, and deserts all bring me joy and allows me to express myself through image making. Photographing landscape in low light allows for wonderful visual opportunities.

Creating unique landscape images is a challenge. Digital manipulation and significant post -processing afford me the opportunity to meet that challenge; I’m able inject some of my emotions present at the moment of capture. The result is an altered reality using techniques I like to call “pixel painting”.

The six images chosen by the curator, taken in the Atacama Desert (Chile), White Pocket (Arizona), Provincetown Dunes (Massachusetts), Santa Fe, New Mexico, and the Tibetan and Bolivian Plateaus, are representative of my interpretation of the world’s natural beauty.

Bio/CV
Title Sheet

 

Purchase the catalog.

What Will You Remember‘s review of Digits

What Will You Remember’s Best Photo Picks June 2021

Euclidean Dreams

Posted on January 7, 2021

Statement
From the first day I began to make photographs seriously, I was drawn to creating abstract images.  Using black and white film, I initially photographed in the manner of Aaron Siskind and Harry Callahan, seeking the abstract in reality:  weatherworn rocks, torn bits of paper stapled to telephone poles, bare twigs breaching deep snow.  I must have succeeded in this endeavor because people often did not recognize the thing I had photographed. This was satisfying because I had helped them see something in a different way.

In the past several years, however, I found I’d grown restless; no longer content hunting abstracts in the real world, I wanted to create them myself.  Photograms and cliché-verre prints, where my drawings serve as negatives in the darkroom, seemed the perfect photographic processes for this pursuit.  I could play and experiment with objects, lines, papers, shapes, light, shadow, texture, size, and depth in the darkroom to construct my own abstract creations. To paraphrase one of my heroes, the artist Dorothea Rockburne, I wanted to create images that were of themselves and not about something else.

The mysterious ability of abstraction to move the human heart and mind has always fascinated me.  When I photograph a beautiful tree I understand why people respond.  After all, it’s a beautiful tree.  When I create a photographic image of a simple circle bisected by a line I have no understanding why it moves me or others, but it can.  I love the cryptic nature of the conversation between art and human emotion.  Agnes Martin spent a lifetime creating her simple, mesmerizing, rectangular grid paintings in an effort to depict happiness on a canvas.  What a glorious pursuit, and she captured it with a simple rectangle!

In the work shown here, all created in the past two years, I have been exploring geometric abstraction, trying to figure out what I might create with just lines, circles, triangles and squares.  The process is completely intuitive.  I add and subtract shapes and layers, lines and forms, patterns and textures, until somehow it seems right.  When the image feels complete I stop and move on.  The exciting and wonderful thing about creating geometric abstracts is the possibilities are infinite. A simple circle can spawn endless images.  I guess I’ll be at this for some time to come. Patricia A. Bender ~ January 2021

Bio
Patricia A. Bender is a photo-based visual artist living and working in New Jersey and Michigan. She began studying photography in the early 2000s, and was hooked from the moment she shot and developed her first image. She works exclusively in the darkroom with black and white media, and personally creates each image from the moment it is conceived through the finished gelatin silver print.  She has recently added drawing to her artistic practice, and often uses her drawings as paper negatives in the darkroom to create unique cliché-verre prints.

Bender has exhibited in solo and group exhibitions throughout the United States and internationally.  She is an artist on the curated White Columns artist registry, and is the recipient of numerous awards for her work, including being named to the 2018 Critical Mass Top 50 and as a 2020 Critical Mass Finalist.  Her work has been published in Harper’s Magazine, The Hand Magazine, Lenscratch, The O/D Review and Analog Forever Magazine, among others.  Her work is held in the permanent collection of the Philadelphia Museum of Art and Michigan State University, as well as many other public, corporate, and private collections.

View Patricia A. Bender’s website.

Motion/Still

Posted on December 25, 2020

The 68 photographs in this exhibition Motion/Still are culled from a selection of over 300 photographs submitted by 66 photographers of the Boston Camera Club (BCC). The photographers included in this exhibition are:

Ron Abramov, Nancy Ahmadifar, Richard Avis, Paul Baron, Bruce Barry, Kathy Barry, Erik Beck, Cliff Berger, Julie Berson, Hannah Cai, Susan Clare, Eldad Cohen, Matt Conti, Christopher de Souza, Alison Doherty, Thea Dougenik, Yair Egozy, Cindy Esposito, Ed Esposito, Laura Ferraguto, Fern Fisher, Marc Fogel, Erik Gehring, Murielle Gerard, Marc Goldring, Anna Golitsyna, Louise Halstead, Bert Halstead, Michael Hamilton, Suki Hanfling, Nadia Haq, Lucas Hill, Tom Hill, Moti Hodis, Eli Hollander, Christine Huvos, Yehuda Inbar, Diane Kaiser, Dan Koretz, William Korn, Linda Lacroix, Joni Lohr, Beth Luchner, Rob MacIntosh, Christina Maiorano, Morgane Mathews, Paul McLaughlin, Yair Melamed, Emory Petrack, Susana Rey Alvarez, David Roberts, Charlie Rosenberg, Andrea Rosenthal, Lisa Ryan, Gordon Saperia, Ilya Schiller, Roman Schwartz, Tony Schwartz, Erica Sloan, Andrea Stone, Matthew Temple, Wayne Troy, Elif Usuloglu, Ender Usuloglu, Jeffrey Weinstein, Bruce Wilson and Albert Zabin.

See Boston Camera Club’s Website.

Dana Fritz: Views Removed Artist Books

Posted on December 20, 2020

Dana Fritz: Views Removed Limited Edition Artist Books

Signed, limited edition, hand bound accordion book with embossed outer cover, vellum inner cover, 14 images, title page, colophon and short text describing the work. This self-published artist’s book by Dana Fritz, bound by Datz Press, brings the vertical images from Views Removed into an accordion format reminiscent of Japanese folding screens.

folded bookon its sideThe photographs in Views Removed render trees, stones and other natural materials in ways that their scale and perspective become ambiguous, combining more than one negative to create a “landscape view” that exists only in the final print. The composition and contrast in the resulting gelatin silver prints emulate the white paper background and equivocal space in ink painting traditions that are free from the technical constraints of photography. The photographs are inspired by questions about Eastern and Western pictorial space, landscape as construct, and the inherent tension between the real and ideal. (This edition is sold out.)

Signed, limited edition handscroll with ten 4″x10″ images, title, and short text describing the work printed on Murakumo Kozo paper.
scroll

rolled scrollThis self-published artist’s book bound by the artist brings the horizontal images from Views Removed into an handscroll format that encourages the viewer to choose the landscape view at arm’s length, even combining multiple images into new landscapes.

boxedViews Removed  I

Views Removed II

box for scroll

 

 

 

 

 

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 23
  • Page 24
  • Page 25
  • Page 26
  • Page 27
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 70
  • Go to Next Page »

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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