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distressed:memories

Posted on February 6, 2021

Statement
distressed:memories is my personal labor to document my internal world, i.e. to investigate those things that I know, I have seen but that do not really exist. Many of the photographs are from my dreams. These potentials for creation are actualized when they enter consciousness as images. Photography allows them to graduate from my fantasy & enter the real world. They may even cross over & maybe reveal shared visions: mythology, fairy tales, religious rituals, universal Jungian archetypes.

Cloaked in the accoutrements of an era long past, distressed:memories is also about time. How time is as much an illusion as dreams. In Newtonian physics, time can only move in one direction. In the mind, time can fluctuate back & forth. These photographs are documents. They are proof. They challenge our concept of history too, by combining two realities: antique authority & futuristic novelty. Society draws from so many myths that those of yesteryear can be compared to new ones that inform popular culture. The ambiguity is primal. – LJ

Bio
Lou Jones’ eclectic career has evolved from commercial to the personal. It has spanned every format, film type, artistic movement and technological change. He maintains a studio in Boston, Massachusetts and has photographed for Fortune 500 corporations, international companies and local small businesses including Federal Express, Nike and the Barr Foundation; completed assignments for magazines and publishers all over the world such as Time/Life, National Geographic and Paris Match; initiated long term projects on the civilwars in Central America, death row, Olympics Games and pregnancy; and published multiple books.

View Lou Jones’ Website.

book cover

Spirit: Focus on Indigenous Art, Artists and Issues

Posted on February 6, 2021

About Spirit: Focus on Indigenous Art, Artists and Issues
The scope of the work in this exhibition reflects the intricate nature of indigenous identity. Ten artists have created images that reveal expressions of pain, resiliency, resistance, healing, tradition, history and celebration.

The exhibition includes NatGeo photographer, Kiliii Yuyan’s sweeping landscapes, internationally acclaimed artist Meryl McMaster’s dream-like self-portraits, Projects 2020 award recipient Donna Garcia’s historical recreations, and Sundance Film Festival invitee Shelley Niro’s work focused on women and indigenous sovereignty. Canadian documentarian Pat Kane, Fine Art photographer Will Wilson and newcomers, Jeremy Dennis, the collaboration of Kali Spitzer & Bubzee and photojournalist Tonita Cervantes round out the show. Donna Garcia one of the exhibiting photographers has assembled and organized this exhibition. It has been featured on Lenscratch and highlighted at the Atlanta Photography Group in Atlanta Georgia prior to coming to the Griffin Museum Photography.

Spirit: Focus on Indigenous Art, Artists and Issues is an initiative designed to educate the public, through lens-based art, regarding the true history of indigenous people and recruit advocates for indigenous issues everywhere, but with a specific focus on the US and Canada, where native lands and people аre still coming under attack everyday.

Curatorial Statement by Donna Garcia
In 2018, I created my series, Indian Land For Sale. I thought it would be a straightforward conceptual series based on the devastating consequences of the Indian Removal Act of 1830 and the histories that surround it.  As I began my research, I discovered that there was literally no original documentation around this event. I went to local archives, museums, even the area where the Trail of Tears began in Georgia – nothing but apologies.  I was very frustrated, but I am not sure why I expected it to be different, because the ultimate goal of genocide is to wipe out all traces of a culture. That is when my project became about replacing what had been omitted from history.

Indian Land For Sale made me think deeply about the bias of history in North America. So when Aline Smithson asked me to host a week of Indigenous Art, Artists and Issues on LENSCRATCH, my goal was to feature a group of artists who represented a broad scope of lens-based perspectives, from icons to innovators.

As I curated this amazing group of artists, what struck me as strange, was that I hadn’t seen their work previously in my exploration of Contemporary Artists.  Why had I not been introduced to the work of icons like Will Wilson or Shelley Niro?  While all of the artists who will be featured/exhibited make work around indigenous issues, beyond that they need to be included in today’s photographic conversation, their work is compelling, distinctive, imaginative and impeccably executed. It’s important to know what the icons know, what the visionaries see, what the searchers have found and how the innovators create and how, as a collective, they will change the paradigm of history moving forward. You need to know these artists because their visual perspectives have the potential to reshape, retell, and rewrite the history of North America – now is the time. – DG

Kiliii Yuyan
Photographer Kiliii Yuyan illuminates stories of the Arctic and human communities connected to the land. Informed by ancestry that is both Nanai/Hèzhé (East Asian Indigenous) and Chinese-American, he explores the human relationship to the natural world from different cultural perspectives. Kiliii is an award-winning contributor to National Geographic Magazine and other major publications.

Both survival skills and empathy have been critical for Kiliii’s projects in extreme environments and cultures outside his own. On assignment, he has fled collapsing sea ice, weathered botulism from fermented whale blood, and found kinship at the edges of the world. In addition, Kiliii builds traditional kayaks and contributes to the revitalization of Northern Indigenous/East Asian culture.

Kiliii is one of PDN’s 30 Photographers (2019), a National Geographic Explorer, and a member of Indigenous Photograph and Diversify Photo. His work has been exhibited worldwide and received some of photography’s top honors. Kiliii’s public talks inspire others about photographic storytelling, Indigenous perspectives and relationship to land. Kiliii is based out of traditional Duwamish lands (Seattle), but can be found across the circumpolar Arctic much of the year.

Statement – Masks of Grief and Joy
Photographer Kiliii Yuyan illuminates the hidden stories of Polar Regions, wilderness and Indigenous communities. Informed by ancestry that is both Nanai/Hèzhé (Siberian Native) and Chinese-American, he explores the human relationship to the natural world from different cultural perspectives.

In his series Masks of Grief and Joy, Yuyan takes the viewer to Gambell, located on the northwest cape of St. Lawrence Island in the Bering Sea, about 200 miles southwest of Nome and just 36 miles from the Chukchi Peninsula in the Russian Far East.

Death is not uncommon here on Alaska’s Saint Lawrence Island, whose population is entirely Siberian Yup’ik. The people of Saint Lawrence Island have been ravaged by colonization. In the 1800s American commercial whalers brought disease epidemics, followed by the 1900s when children were forced to leave their parents and attend boarding schools. An entire generation was subjected to the physical/sexual abuse and cultural genocide of those schools. The ensuing trauma has led Alaska Natives to the highest rate of youth suicide in the world  – 13 times higher than that of American youth overall.

Lens-based artist and documentarian Kiliii Yuyan shares the story of Molly:

Molly comes running up to me, snow crunching under her feet as she giggles and tries to catch her breath. The two of us are standing in moonlit snow on an island in the middle of the Bering Sea. It’s Molly’s home. We joke around for a few minutes when she suddenly bursts into nostalgia about her best friend Robert.

 Robert’s dad used to push the kids around the house in suitcases. They’d stare at each other and burst into laughter. As Molly tells me this childhood story, her eyes begin to glisten. She tells me Robert’s father was like a surrogate dad. They would go out on the land for weeks. He’d never let anybody in the village pick on her. The three of them were inseparable.

 But then she pauses, and after a long while, she tells me in a faltering voice that Robert had killed himself, and his dad had died from a heart attack shortly after.

When Yuyan arrived in Gambell, one of the island’s two communities in 2018 with about 700 residents, he took on the task of creating a suicide-prevention program, in collaboration with the art teacher and staff at the Gambell school, as a form of art therapy for the students.  One of the first activities was for the student to create papier-mâché masks. Arctic Indigenous cultures such as the Yup’ik are famously laconic, so this mask-making activity was designed as a socially acceptable way for teenagers to work through suppressed emotions. He asked the students to work on two masks: one representing their internal grief, the other representing their joy. He worked with his students for three weeks, taking cues from both traditional Yup’ik masks and references to pop culture.

The artist’s made portraits of the students wearing their masks in places that brought them closer to their grief and their joys. For grief, several students led him outside. He went to a basketball court, a reminder of a well-loved fellow student and basketball player who they said had recently committed suicide. Standing in that place, Yuyan could feel the pain carried by the students, as well as their fortitude in facing it.  Most of the students wore their grief mask outside and their joy mask inside the comfort of their home.

During their time together, the students reflected on suicide in their community and how it had affected them. It was clear that it affected just about everyone, but there were also deaths from cancer and accidents as well. Despite all of the tragic losses, most of the students seemed to have a healthy approach to life. Their strength stands proves that despite centuries of ongoing trauma, Indigenous communities will continue to heal with each generation by learning to believe in themselves and preparing a way for their communities into a new era.

When one looks at these images what is apparent is the resilience of the individuals who аre wearing them and the compassion with which the pictures are made.  As the world struggles in 2020 to find even a shred of empathy or humanity, both are found here.

View Kiliii Yuyan’s Website.

Meryl McMaster
Meryl McMaster earned her BFA in Photography from the Ontario College of Art and Design University (2010) and is currently based in Ottawa, Canada. McMaster’s work has been the subject of solo exhibitions at Canada House, London (2020), Ikon Gallery, Birmingham (2019), Ryerson Image Centre, Toronto (2019), Glenbow, Calgary (2019), The Room, St. John’s (2018) Momenta Biennale, Montreal (2017), Museum of Contemporary Native Arts, Santa Fe (2015), and Smithsonian National Museum of the American Indian, New York (2015), amongst others. From 2016-2020 her solo exhibition Confluence travelled to nine cities in Canada, including stops at the Richmond Art Gallery (2017), Thunder Bay Art Gallery, Thunder Bay (2017), University of Lethbridge Art Gallery, Lethbridge (2018), and The Judith and Norman Alix Art Gallery, Sarnia (2020). Her work has also appeared in group exhibitions at Carleton University Art Gallery, Ottawa (2020), Australian Centre for Photography, Australia (2019), National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa (2018), Ottawa Art Gallery (2018, 2019), Kitchener Waterloo Art Gallery (2016, 2019), the Musée national des beaux-arts du Québec (2019), Plug In Institute for Contemporary Art, Winnipeg (2017), and Art Gallery of Guelph (2017), amongst others. She was longlisted for the 2016 Sobey Art Award and is the recipient of numerous awards including the Scotiabank New Generation Photography Award, REVEAL Indigenous Art Award, Charles Pachter Prize for Emerging Artists, Canon Canada Prize, Eiteljorg Contemporary Art Fellowship and OCAD U Medal. Her work has been collected by significant Canadian institutions, including the Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto; Montreal Museum of Fine Art; and the National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa.

Statement – As Immense as the Sky
Meryl McMaster uses photography to explore identity and its distinct cultural narratives within lush, spectacular natural landscapes that evoke ancient folklore and myth with extraordinary visual impact. Her cinematic style connects still life, sculpture, narrative and performance.  Meryl draws on her own mixed heritage, her mother being of British/Dutch ancestry and her father a Plains Cree native, to explore important themes and issues of representation.

Creating symbolic, sculptural garments and props, McMaster assumes diverse personas, such as a dream catcher or wanderer, often transforming herself into hybrid animal-human creatures. Her performative self-portraits present themes around memory and self, which are both actual and imaginative, and allow the viewer into the realms of her ancestors. Each tableau contains references to a multitude of stories and traditions from diverse Indigenous communities. These scenes often recall the Romantic tradition of the solitary figure in nature from traditional literature and painting.

Through the process of self-portraiture, McMaster also embodies the “shifts” of her subjects depending on the natural environment and the costumes. She does not do public performances. In one solitary moment, she creates a story, which may look like its part of a film, part of a dream sequence, a storybook or recounting history. She describes her pictures as “private performances that are responding to memory and to emotion in different ways.”

These captivating images аre captured across ancestral sites in Saskatchewan, where Meryl father’s ancestors are from as members of the Red Pheasant First Nation, and have lived for many hundreds of years, and the area is very significant to her family. Also, early settlements in Ontario and Newfoundland, where the artist interprets, and re- stages collected patrimonial stories from relatives and community knowledge keepers.

Acknowledging the personal and social history and effects of colonization, McMaster contemplates how ancestral stories are imprinted into the landscape by the people who once lived there, as well as those who still reside there. Meryl states, “These are very powerful, overwhelming places, with all kinds of history buried within these landforms that predates human existence.”

McMaster presents herself in nature, viewing the environment and seasons as an integral part of the cultural context while addressing the environmental consequences of colonization. She warns of the dangers of unsustainable land usage and the eradication of key species within ancestral ecosystems.

View Meryl McMaster’s Website.

Donna Garcia
Donna Garcia’s work illustrate a semiotic dislocation that has been organically reconstructed in a way that gives her subjects a voice in the present moment; something they didn’t have in the past.  Her images rise above what they actually are and become empathetic recreations in a fine art narrative. She has an MFA in Photography from Savannah College of Art and Design and her work has been exhibited internationally. She is a 2019 nominee of reGENERATION 4: The Challenges of Photography and the Museum of Tomorrow. Musee de l’Elysee, Lausanne, Switzerland. Emerging Artists to Watch, Fine Art Photography, Nomination (only 250 lens-based emerging artists nominated worldwide).

Statement – Indian Land for Sale
In 1830 the Indian Removal Act was enacted along the East Coast of America.

President Jackson declared that Indian removal would “…Incalculably strengthen the southwestern frontier. Clearing Alabama, Georgia and Mississippi of their Indian populations would enable those states to advance rapidly in population, wealth, and power.”

Systematic hunts were made to force indigenous people from their ancestral land.

A Georgia volunteer, later a Colonel in the Confederate service, said, “I fought through the civil war and have seen men shot to pieces and slaughtered by the thousands, but the Indian removal was the cruelest work I ever knew.”

Following the signing of the Indian Removal Act of 1830 the American government began forcibly relocating East Coast tribes across the Mississippi. The removal included many members of the Cherokee, Muscogee (Creek), Seminole, Chickasaw and Choctaw nations from their homelands to “Indian Territory” in eastern sections of the present-day Oklahoma. It was a 1,000-mile walk and took 116 days from Georgia, walking all day and only being allowed to stop at night to bury their dead.  This is what we now know as the start of the Trail of Tears.

Not all indigenous people left in 1830, specifically the Cherokee. Many stayed, thinking that they would be allowed to live peacefully or have the ability to fight back (actually winning several legal battles against the removal order).  However, the Georgia State government and Andrew Jackson, had plans for their land. Flyers began to circulate hailing “Indian Land For Sale”.  White farmers flocked in droves to auctions of indigenous, ancestral land that was still, up to 1838, being occupied by its native people.

It was in 1838 that 7,000 US soldiers in Georgia enforced a final evacuation.  The Cherokee, Creek, Shawnee and Choctaw villages were invaded and the people were forced to leave, at gunpoint, with only the clothing on their backs.

For the few who resisted, approximately 1,800, died while imprisoned for refusing to leave.

Historians such as David Stannard and Barbara Mann have noted that the army deliberately routed the march of the Cherokee to pass through areas of known cholera epidemics, such as Vicksburg. Stannard estimates that during the forced removal from their homelands, 8000 Cherokee died, about half the total population.  Half of the Choctaw nation was wiped out and 1 in 4 Creek.

A Cherokee survivor of the trail told her granddaughter, “The winter was very harsh and many of us no longer had shoes. Our feet froze and burst, as we left bloody footprints in the snow. We were not allowed to stop to bury our dead. Many mothers carried their dead children, miles, until we stopped at nightfall. All night you could only hear digging.”

View Donna Garcia’s Website.

Shelley Niro
Shelley Niro was born in Niagara Falls, NY. Currently, she lives in Brantford Ontario. Niro is a member of the Six Nations Reserve, Bay of Quinte Mohawk, Turtle Clan. Shelley Niro is a multi-media artist. Her work involves photography, painting, beadwork and film.

Niro is conscious of the impact post-colonial mediums have had on Indigenous people. Like many artists from different Native communities, she works relentlessly presenting people in realistic and explorative portrayals. Photo series such as Mohawks in Beehives, This Land is Mime Land  and M: Stories of Women are a few of the genre of artwork. Films include: Honey Moccasin, It Starts with a Whisper, The Shirt, Kissed by Lighning and Robert’s Paintings. Recently she finished her film The Incredible 25th Year of Mitzi Bearclaw.

Shelley graduated from the Ontario College of Art, Honours and received her Master of Fine Art from the University of Western Ontario.

Niro was the inaugural recipient of the Aboriginal Arts Award presented through the Ontario Arts Council in 2012. In 2017 Niro received the Governor General’s Award For The Arts from the Canada Council, The Scotiabank Photography Award and also received the Hnatyshyn Foundation REVEAL Award.

Niro was honored with an honorary doctorate from the Ontario College of Art and Design University in 2019.

In March of 2020 Niro received The Paul de Hueck and Norman Walford Career Achievement Award from the Ontario Arts Foundation.

Statement – The Shirt
The Shirt is a compelling series of photographs by Shelley Niro that create a narrative of Indigenous sovereignty where women are central.

Although best known for her award-winning filmmaking, Nero’s photographic works often involve performance work by people who she knows as a way of rejecting the clichéd interpretations of Indigenous people in the media. In the series The Shirt, Niro’s friend and fellow photographer Hulleah J. Tsinhnahjinnie of the Taskigi Nation and Diné Nation, faces the lens and directly confronts the viewer. Photographed in a landscape, Hulleah is wearing a series of five T-shirts that sequentially say: “The Shirt”; “My ancestors were annihilated exterminated murdered and massacred”; “They were lied to cheated tricked and deceived”; “Attempts were made to assimilate colonize enslave and displace them”; “And all’s I get is this shirt.” In the sixth image, she appears without any shirt; in the seventh, a smiling white woman wears the final shirt of the series.

Niro twists the archetypal tourist tee shirt from the point of view of First Nations Peoples as an exploration into the lasting effects of European colonialism in North America. According to Niro, The Shirt series came about as she flew over the Texas landscape. Looking out her window, she recalls the way the land below was partitioned, indicating ownership, and how it reminded her of the complex history that took place on that land.

“I looked out of my window and saw the land below chopped up into squares, each square neatly fenced off from the other. I thought about the ‘Indians’ who fought for that land, as well as the sacrifices made by tribes and nations in their efforts to keep away the settlers from their land and communities.” says Niro

Each photograph in the series is set within a literal and conceptual landscape that underscores the importance of land rights to the Indigenous struggles for self-determination. The powerful images show the progression of the shirt from one frame to the next until the Indigenous woman has the shirt literally taken from her back. The shirt becomes a metaphoric remnant of colonization, ripped off the backs of Indigenous women who live there.

The presence of a Diné woman in this terrain also draws attention to the connection between violence against Indigenous women and the land. In an extraction-based economy, sites of temporary worker housing are common, and as a result there is a rising level of violence against the local Indigenous women living there.

Historically, colonization has specifically targeted women, reducing them to the property of men under many policies and laws, including the 1876 Indian Act in Canada. Niro’s work demands viewers to be present and engaged, to place themselves in relation to the narrative as perpetrators or survivors of colonialism.

Shelley Niro challenges the clichés and stereotypes associated with the Indigenous community, especially women, through bold imagery and words that resonate across various cultural backgrounds. And through performance, she has exposed history and taken it into extraordinary dimensions where healing can hopefully begin.

View Shelley Niro’s Website.

Pat Kane
Pat is a photographer in Yellowknife, Northwest Territories, Canada. Pat takes a documentary approach to stories about people, life and environment in Northern Canada with a special focus on Indigenous issues, and the relationship between land and identity. He’s a grantee of the National Geographic Society’s Covid-19 Emergency Fund for Journalists, and an alumni of the World Press Photo Joop Swart Masterclass.

Mentorship is important to Pat. He offers free training opportunities to promising photographers in rural Northern communities, and is the co-founder and president of the Far North Photo Festival — a platform to help elevate the work of visual storytellers across the Arctic. He’s also a mentor with Room Up Front, a program for emerging BIPOC Canadian photojournalists.

Pat is part of the photo collectives Indigenous Photograph and Boreal Collective. Pat identifies as mixed Indigenous/settler and is a proud Algonquin Anishinaabe member of the Timiskaming First Nation (Quebec). His work has appeared in: National Geographic, The New York Times, The Atlantic, Harper’s Magazine, World Press Photo among others. His photos have been exhibited at Photoville (New York), Contact Photography Festival (Toronto) and Atlanta Celebrates Photography (Atlanta).

Statement – Here is Where We Should Stay
For generations, Indigenous people in Canada have lived under the laws and values of European settlers through forced assimilation. The introduction of residential schools, formed by the federal government and instituted by the Catholic and Anglican Church, pulled Indigenous children away from their lands, families, languages and identities. The goal was to bring “civilization to the savage people who could never civilize themselves” (Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada, Final Report, 2015). This project focuses on how Indigenous people in my region are moving towards meaningful self-determination by resetting the past. The act of reclaiming culture and identity is ongoing, and my friends here are resilient in a place where symbols and systems of colonization loom large. We can hear colonization when Dene families pray to the Virgin Mary, but we see Indigenization when a young woman holds the hide of a caribou in her arms. In Catholicism we are Children of God, but in the Dene worldview we are One with the Land. There is a tragic and complex tension between the way of the church and the way of the ancestors. While it may be impossible to break free of the colonizers, the subtle, defiant and beautiful acts of resistance gives strength to say “we are still here; here is where we shall stay”.

The title of this project is from the final story of “The Book of Dene”, a collection of parables from various Indigenous groups in Northern Canada. In the legend titled, “The Two Brothers”, two young siblings sneak away in a canoe and become lost. They travel west, south and east, visiting many different lands but suffering tremendous hardships. Some of the people they meet ridicule and take advantage of them. After many years, they make their way to the North and are welcomed and fed and clothed by the people there. One brother says to the other, “Here is where we shall stay.” An elderly couple asks who they are and the brothers tell their incredible story. It is revealed that these are the boy’s parents, and they are finally reunited as a family in their homeland.

This project was created for the World Press Photo 2020 Joop Swart Masterclass.

View Pat Kane’s Website

Will Wilson
Will Wilson’s art projects center around the continuation and transformation of customary indigenous cultural practice.  He is a Diné photographer and trans-customary artist who spent his formative years living on the Navajo Nation.  Wilson studied photography, sculpture, and art history at the University of New Mexico (MFA, Photography, 2002) and Oberlin College (BA, Studio Art and Art History, 1993).  In 2007, Wilson won the Native American Fine Art Fellowship from the Eiteljorg Museum, in 2010 the Joan Mitchell Foundation Award for Sculpture, and in 2016 the Pollock-Krasner Foundation Grant for Photography.  Wilson has held visiting professorships at the Institute of American Indian Arts (1999-2000), Oberlin College (2000-01), and the University of Arizona (2006-08). In 2017, Wilson’s received the NM Governor’s Award for Excellence in the Arts. His work is exhibited and collected nationally and internationally.  Wilson is Program Head of Photography, Santa Fe Community College.

Statement – Autoimmune Response (AIR)
Photographer and installation artist, Will Wilson (Diné/Bilagaana) creates a deliberate counter narrative to the romantic visions of Indigenous people living in an unchanging past. Though born in San Francisco, he draws inspiration from the many years he spent living on the Navajo Reservation as a child.

Wilson creates tension in his photography and installations, as the artist believes that Indigenous people remain responsible for protecting the environment and its future for all species.  This story underlies the “quixotic relationship between a post-apocalyptic Diné (Navajo) man and the devastatingly beautiful, but toxic environment he inhabits.” This setting includes familiar symbols of cultural persistence, such as a Hogan (a traditional Navajo dwelling), coexisting with computers, wires, and futuristic furnishings.

Wilson describes AIR (Auto Immune Response) as a dialogue with “a post-apocalyptic Navajo man’s journey through an uninhabited landscape.” The artist’s use of self-portraits as the main character searching for answers about survival: “Where has everyone gone? What has occurred to transform the familiar and strange landscape that he wanders? Why has the land become toxic to him? How will he respond, survive, reconnect to the earth?”

For native tribes like the Diné, “toxic environment” encompasses not only the physical environment (the much larger Navajo Homeland, Dinétah, which was mined heavily for Uranium throughout the 20th Century), but also a historical environment of colonial resource extraction, arbitrary borders, and Federal Indian Policy which sought to “civilize the Indian” on reservations, for the more lucrative purpose of a land grab, for either mineral resources or agriculture. Wilson’s character resists arbitrary borders by existing in both, and yet his ever-present gas mask demonstrates that environmental contamination also ignores arbitrary borders. The result of this has been increased cases of cancer and autoimmune diseases among the people inhabiting these areas, destruction of ancestral land, and a continued history of “slow violence” against indigenous people.

Even though Wilson started this work in 2004, what is interesting to me is that it is more relevant than ever in 2020. As the world currently fights the devastating effects of climate change, and tries to push back on government’s irresponsibility around the decimation of our planet for profit, AIR reflects how native people have been fighting this for over a CENTURY.

Although this work focus’s on complex social and environmental issues, the result is a collection of dreamy yet powerful photomontages, in which the main subject merges with his environment creating poetic images that reflect dissolved states of time and space. The performative power of this work lies in the use of photography as an action for expressing feeling, not just for documentation.

View Will Wilson’s Website.

Jeremy Dennis 
(b. 1990) is a contemporary fine art photographer and a tribal member of the Shinnecock Indian Nation in Southampton, NY. In his work, he explores indigenous identity, culture, and assimilation.

Dennis was one of 10 recipients of a 2016 Dreamstarter Grant from the national non-profit organization Running Strong for American Indian Youth. He was awarded $10,000 to pursue his project, On This Site, which uses photography and an interactive online map to showcase culturally significant Native American sites on Long Island, a topic of special meaning for Dennis, who was raised on the Shinnecock Nation Reservation. He also created a book and exhibition from this project. Most recently, Dennis received the Creative Bursar Award from Getty Images in 2018 to continue his series Stories.

In 2013, Dennis began working on the series, Stories—Indigenous Oral Stories, Dreams and Myths. Inspired by North American indigenous stories, the artist staged supernatural images that transform these myths and legends to depictions of an actual experience in a photograph.

Residencies: Yaddo (2019), Byrdcliffe Artist Colony (2017), North Mountain Residency, Shanghai, WV (2018), MDOC Storytellers’ Institute, Saratoga Springs, NY (2018). Eyes on Main Street Residency & Festival, Wilson, NC (2018), Watermill Center, Watermill, NY (2017) and the Vermont Studio Center hosted by the Harpo Foundation(2016).

He has been part of several group and solo exhibitions, including Stories—Dreams, Myths, and Experiences, for The Parrish Art Museum’s Road Show (2018), Stories, From Where We Came,The Department of Art Gallery, Stony Brook University (2018); Trees Also Speak,Amelie A. Wallace Gallery, SUNY College at Old Westbury, NY (2018); Nothing Happened Here, Flecker Gallery at Suffolk County Community College, Selden, NY (2018);On This Site: Indigenous People of Suffolk County, Suffolk County Historical Society, Riverhead, NY (2017); Pauppukkeewis, Zoller Gallery, State College, PA (2016); and Dreams, Tabler Gallery, Stony Brook, NY (2012).

Dennis holds an MFA from Pennsylvania State University, State College, PA, and a BA in Studio Art from Stony Brook University, NY.

He currently lives and works in Southampton, New York on the Shinnecock Indian Reservation.

Statement –Nothing Happened Here
Nothing Happened Here illustrates the shared trauma of living on indigenous lands without rectification. Reflecting upon his experiences and observations in his community on the Shinnecock Reservation in Southampton, New York, Dennis illustrates the burden of loss of culture through assimilation, omission of Native history, loss of land, and resulting economic disadvantage.

Dennis’s photography often explores indigenous identity, cultural assimilation and the ancestral traditional practices of his tribe, the Shinnecock Indian Nation. This photo series explores the violence/non-violence of post-colonial Native American psychology. Though science has solved many questions about natural phenomena, questions of identity are more abstract, the answers more nuanced. His work is a means of examining his personal identity and the identity of his community, specifically the unique experience of living on a sovereign Indian reservation and the problems that are faced.

In Nothing Happened Here, the artist captures surreal, almost cinematic production in the stillness of one picture.Through the use of digital photography, these images have a haunted urgency and profound dislocation from their landscape, which is uncomfortable yet familiar. The arrows in each image act as a symbol of an everlasting indigenous presence in each scene.  Dennis’s decision to place non-natives subjects in these tableaux creates a tension that forces the viewer to consider the idea that there is a shared burden and poses the question, how do we overcome our troubled past?

As more truth about the early contact-period between colonists and indigenous groups, comes to light, it is difficult not to link the current dilemma of power, gained or lost, with that disturbing history.

By looking to the past, Dennis traces issues that plague indigenous people back to their source. For example, centuries of treaties, land grabs and colonialist efforts to whitewash indigenous communities have led to the ways that indigenous communities interact with their environments today, and the constant struggle to maintain autonomy over culture, identity and place.

Nothing Happened Here is a nuanced interpretation around the reality of the “white guilt” that many Americans have carried through generations, and the inconvenience of co-existing with people their ancestors tried to destroy. These stylized portraits of non-indigenous people impaled by arrows focuses on the most dramatic emotions and complex moments of silence and thought for the subject around these issues. With racial divisions and pressures reaching a nationwide fever pitch, it is more important than ever, according to Dennis, to offer accurate and compelling representation of indigenous people.

“I like making use of the cinema’s tools, the same tools that movie directors have always turned against us (curiously familiar representations, clothing that makes a statement, pleasing lighting), to create conversations about uncomfortable aspects of post-colonialism.”

Jeremy Dennis’s lens-based work strives to preserve the indigenous mythology that influences it; these stories grant him access to the minds of his ancestors, including the value they placed on sacred lands that, despite four hundred years of colonization, they remain anchored through the tradition of storytelling.

When asked about assuming this role as storyteller Dennis says, “Our ancient stories showcase the sanctity of our land, elevating its worth beyond a prize for the highest bidder.”

View Jeremy Dennis’ Website.

Kali Spitzer is a photographer living on the Traditional Unceded Lands of the Tsleil-Waututh, Skxwú7mesh and Musqueam peoples. The work of Kali embraces the stories of contemporary BIPOC, queer and trans bodies, creating representation that is self determined. Kali’s collaborative process is informed by the desire to rewrite the visual histories of indigenous bodies beyond a colonial lens. Kali is Kaska Dena from Daylu (Lower Post, British Columbia) on her father’s. Kali’s father is a survivor of residential schools and Canadian genocide. On her Mother’s side and Jewish from Transylvania, Romania. Kali’s heritage deeply influences her work as she focuses on cultural revitalization through her art, whether in the medium of photography, ceramics, tanning hides or hunting.

Her partner, Bubzee, is a mixed media artist who was raised by the river of the Slocan Valley settled on Sinixt land. Bubzee creates magic in many forms. She is a weaver pulling together past, present, future and all of the stories they hold, maiden mother, crone, all the creatures on earth. There is nostalgia unraveling here, something ancient and familiar that stem from her creations like remembering a dream -all the light, balanced by dark -all the life, communing with death. Every story told and echoed from the marrow of bones, carried through and brought to life by every piece that she creates.  .

Statement – Braiding Wounds
Body as site
carrying blood memory forward.
Interrupted by colonial acts.
Relationships revive
Weaving together the strength of ancestors.
(Excerpts from the writing of Mariah Curry)

Through generative collaboration, Kali Spitzer (Jewish and Kaska Dena) and Bubzee (European settler) hold space for one another braiding their ancestral connections to heal colonial wounds. Created on the unceded lands ofMusqueam, Skwxwú7mesh, Tsleil-Waututh, Sinixt and Mi’kmaq Nation, Braiding Wounds is a series of Tintype images with digital drawings that speak to the restorative labor of caring, deep listening, witnessing, and remembering.

Over the past 15 years, Kali and Bubzee’s kinship grew over their love for art and its capacity to create space for resurgences. Created in the last couple of years, this is a first of a series of collaborations that reveal points of connectivity between them, the continuums of their ancestral strength, and the land towards a deep love and kinship that holds space for one another. Where sites of colonial trauma shift into restorative acts of caring, witnessing and decolonial love.

“Indigenous Femme Queer Photographer Kali Spitzer ignites the spirit of our current unbound human experience with all the complex histories we exist in, passed down through the trauma inflicted/received by our ancestors. Kali’s photographs are intimate, unapologetic and make room for growth and forgiveness, while creating a space where we may share the vulnerable and broken parts of our stories which are often overlooked or not easy to digest for ourselves or society”, according to Ginger Dunnill, Creator and Producer of Broken Boxes Podcast (which features interviews with indigenous and other engaged artists).

View Kali Spitzer & Bubzee’s Website.

View Bubzee’s website

Tonita Cervantes

Statement and Bio- Standing Rock: Water Protectors
My work focuses on the common thread that binds people together: their humanity, and the dreams they have for a better life.

I am a social documentary photographer. In my childhood, I was always attracted to the underdog, the invisible – perhaps because of my own overwhelming feeling of not belonging.

After years of working in Hollywood as a Casting Director and feeling spiritually unfulfilled, I walked out of the studio and picked up a camera. It was time to tell the stories of people who don’t have a voice, rather than casting for commercial advertising and consumer products that nobody needs.

I am fascinated by the resilience and community ties that are created out of a lack of resources. Witnessing the human spirit and the will to survive against all odds is humbling.

I was a witness to the historical and Indigenous-led movement that occurred on the Standing Rock Reservation in North Dakota in 2016-2017. For six months I lived and documented the abuses of militarized law enforcement agencies, interviewed elders and Water Protectors, and photographed head-to-head confrontations from the frontlines.

My images are some of the people who inspired an indomitable, but peaceful movement, protesting the illegal construction of a pipeline that failed to conduct an environmental impact study or honor the sacred lands and treaties between the Lakota people and the US government.

The images of these notable Native Americans are living proof that the legacy of artists, warriors, Chiefs and medicine men have prevailed despite an ungrateful nations attempt to rid the land – their land – of their existence.

Today the country feels like it is barreling at an accelerated pace in an unknown and dangerous direction; but prophecies from the ancestors encourage us to not give up, to have faith in the Creator, and to continue the fight for a sustainable future.

In 1877 Chief Crazy Horse of the Lakota people, a mystic and fierce warrior, had a vision:

” I see a time of seven generations, when all the colors of mankind will gather under the sacred tree of life and the whole earth will become one circle again.” – Crazy Horse

I dedicate my part of the Griffin Museum of Photography exhibit to LaDonna Brave Bull Allard, Tamakawastewin, Good Earth Woman.

LaDonna, matriarch of the Indigenous-led movement at Standing Rock, made the journey on April 9, 2021. She is now in the arms of Creator and her beloved husband, Miles Allard. She quietly passed away surrounded by family, friends and Water Protectors. – Tonita Cervantes

“This movement – Defend the Sacred-No DAPL – is not just about a pipeline. We are not fighting for a reroute, or a better process in the white man’s courts. We are fighting for our rights as the indigenous peoples of this land; we are fighting for our liberation, and the liberation of Unci Maka, Mother Earth. We want every last oil and gas pipe removed from her body. We want healing. We want clean water. We want to determine our own future.” – LaDonna

View Tonita Cervantes’ Website.

Mark Feeney, photo critic of The Boston Globe reviews our current exhibitions at the Griffin.

Lenscratch

All About Photo

What Will You Remember

What Will You Remember 6.15.2021

Balancing Cultures

Posted on February 6, 2021

Statement
Initially an identity project, Balancing Cultures gives voice to a story suffered in silence by my immigrant grandparents and American-born parents. My mother’s passing left my brother and me with boxes of photographs. Among them were photos of family members taken in camp that we had never seen. In my family, when anyone spoke of camp, they weren’t referring to a pine-scented summer retreat—they were referring to the WWII American concentration camps sanctioned in 1942 by President Roosevelt’s Executive Order 9066.

Piecing together a historical puzzle of photographs, memories, and artifacts, I began an exploration into my family’s undisclosed past. For the first time, the hardships my family endured in the camps were illuminated to me. EO 9066 caused 110,000 Japanese Americans economic loss, the pain of prejudice and imprisonment, and the repercussions of re-integration into post-war America.

Although racism is deeply woven into our institutional and social fabric, there is no scientific basis for race. Race and racism are social constructs. This project is a testimony to the shame and indignation my family kept hidden due to their cultural stoicism and fear of retribution. Left untold, their experience would remain buried, a casualty of the country they loved and fought for. Balancing Cultures is especially relevant as long as America continues to incarcerate people—not for crimes they’ve committed, but simply because of whom they are.

Bio
Jerry Takigawa is an independent photographer, designer, and writer. He studied photography with Don Worth and is the recipient of many honors and awards including: the Imogen Cunningham Award (1982), the Clarence J. Laughlin Award, New Orleans, LA (2017), Photolucida’s Critical Mass Top 50 (2017, 2020), CENTER Awards, Curator’s Choice First Place, Santa Fe, NM (2018), and the Rhonda Wilson Award, Brooklyn, NY (2020). His work is in the collections of San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, Brooklyn Museum, Crocker Art Museum, Santa Barbara Museum of Art, Monterey Museum of Art, and the Library of Congress. Takigawa lives and works in Carmel Valley, California.

View Jerry Takigawa’s website.

View Mark Feeney of the Boston Globe’s Review.

View What Will You Remember’s Review.

27th Annual Juried Members’ Exhibition

Posted on February 6, 2021

The results are in. Arnika Dawkins has selected the Griffin’s 27th Juried Exhibition.

The exhibitors are Karen Bell, Diane Bennett, Barry Berman, Meg Birnbaum, Joan Lobis Brown, Angela C. Brown, Diana Cheren Nygren, Tash Damjanovic, Steven Edson, Carol Eisenberg, Pippi Ellison, Jo Fields, Danielle Goldstein, Carol Isaak, Jane Ivory, Jeremy Janus, Leslie Jean-Bart, Robert Johnson, Marcy Juran, Robbie Kaye, Michael King, Carolyn Knorr, Teresa Kruszewski, Nadine Levin, Mark Levinson, Calli McCaw, Ralph Mercer, Olga Merrill, Janet Milhomme, Lisa Mossel Vietze, Lake Newton, Xuan-Hui Ng, Charlotte Niel, Dale Niles, Dorothy O’Connor, Angela Ramsey, Astrid Reischwitz, Eleonora Ronconi, Rosalie Rosenthal, Ellen Royalty, Rebecca Sexton Larson, Skip Smith, Leland Smith, Larry Smukler, Vicky Stromee, Neelakantan Sunder, Joshua Tann, Tokie Taylor, JP Terlizzi, Donna Tramontozzi, Julia Vandenoever, Nina Weinberg Doran, Sandra Chen Weinstein, Joyce Wilson, Torrance York and Dianne Yudelson.

man in stars

© Aline Smithson, “Fugue State, Part 2, #12,” Director’s Prize

The Director’s Prize (chosen from full submissions) is awarded to Aline Smithson. Ms. Smithson will receive a solo exhibition and an exhibition catalog for her solo exhibition. The date of her exhibition is in the Fall of 2022. The Director’s Prize photograph will be included in the 27th Juried Exhibition along with juror Arnika Dawkins’ selections.

The Juror’s awards are:
Arthur Griffin Legacy Award – Tokie Taylor
Griffin Award – Ralph Mercer
Honorable Mentions – Meg Birnbaum, Steven Edson, Danielle Goldstein, Leslie Jean-Bart, Nadine Levin, Olga Merrill, Ellen Royalty, JP Terlizzi, Donna Tramontozzi and Nina Weinberg Doran

Exhibition awards: Donna Dangott, Olga Merrill and Gail Samuelson

Member in Focus: CE Morse

Purchase Prize: Mark Levinson

The digital exhibition on computer in gallery/virtual gallery from all submissions (minus work of those photographers in the  27th Juried Exhibition) can be viewed here.

Thank you to all for sharing your work with us. Below is Arnika’s Juror’s statement.

Beauty as Refuge/Arnika Dawkins

I wish to thank Executive Director Paula Tognarelli and the Griffin Museum for inviting me to participate in their annual 27th Juried Exhibition. It is a real honor. I also wish thank all of the artists that submitted their work for consideration.

It was hard to winnow down to a select few images; however, the select few in this exhibition are a grand statement of my personal aesthetic. I am interested in photography; in fact, I love it and have a passion for it. More specifically, I am interested in fine art photography. I am captivated to know what the artist’s work conveys to me, and I am curious to know how engaged I am in a visual dialogue. This exhibition, Beauty as Refuge, is a reflection of that. I believe that the works on view expose conceptual ideas that are transformative in significant and subtle ways. This exhibition evokes calm, peace, and serenity, and beauty.

I believe that artists are dialed to a different level of sensitivity, seeing the world in ways that astonish, capturing moments of contemplation, and interested in ideas that they wish to convey. I am interested in the intention behind their capture.

Beauty is in the eye of the beholder; serenity is in the chaotic landscape of culture. This country and many countries around the world are in a reckoning, going through an identity crisis, the antithesis of tranquility and harmony. I am interested in fine art photography that makes me feel something, a reason to pause and reflect. A visual refuge from the current volatile times we live in, the global pandemic, and suffering. This exhibition provides a chorus of images that come together to provide the respite that we need to reflect, to consume striking beauty amid the hectic and frenetic world.

The visual dialogue that we experience by viewing these images takes us along a journey. A journey of humanity, of our place in the world, of our environment, and microcosm. If we look, we can find beauty in the unexpected and find solace in our hope in the future. It is the human condition. Beauty, strength, and acknowledgment that we were here; how we fit in the world, in the environment, and with each other.

Pensive moments that provide an opportunity to pause for reflection are what I believe the world needs now, reflecting on where we have been, the present, and the future. Imagining what it could be full of beauty and compassion firmly rooted in our uniqueness. It’s our varied past and ever-present that creates the beautiful tapestry of life, knowing that there is tension but navigating our way through to the future. Beauty surrounds us if we take a moment to stop, reflect, and take it all in, reflections that reveal who we are and  who we can be.

Beauty as a Refuge  is a place where thoughts can be considered, minds can be opened, perspectives can be changed, and hearts can be warmed. The works in this exhibition revel in an appreciation for light, simplicity, abstraction, serenity and provide a feast for the eyes. A way to immerse the viewer into a total experience!

I hope you enjoy  the view.    – AD

Curator’s Viewpoint Arnika Dawkins by What Will You Remember.

Read the review by What Will You Remember.

Read the review by Mark Feeney of the Boston Globe.

Read the “Artscope” article.

27th juried members catalog

 

 

 

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.

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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