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Home Sweet Home

Posted on April 16, 2020

Statement
I first became fascinated by the complexity of the home as I observed rows and rows of old Dutch colonial structures, while working on my first book, Pabean Passage. These old colonial structures showed a distinct East-Indies architecture, an adaptation of European architecture to the tropical climate of Indonesia, which gained its popularity in the mid 18th century.

Growing up in two major cities contributed a lot to this project. Born in Makassar, I also live in Surabaya for the most part of my life. What makes this project special is that I tried to capture those places from my experiences of growing up in the two cities.

Built in the early 1900s by Chinese immigrants and based on a European design, these buildings show distinct East-Indies characteristics on the outside, while being infused with an assimilation of Chinese and Indonesian culture.

As I entered those houses, I felt the air of familiarity, a connection with the harmonious combination of two distinctive cultures that I was brought up under. Born as a third-generation Chinese-Indonesian, I was raised under the influence of the Chinese culture that my grandparents brought from the old world, while at the same time being schooled in a mainly Indonesian setting by my Indonesian-born parents.

Walking into those historic houses sparked my interest to discover more about the roots of my own cultural heritage. I felt my amazement turned into an aspiration to comprehend the lives of these Chinese- Indonesians, along with the challenges they faced to preserve their own culture while living in a whole new world. In Indonesia, there is this notion of family home, a place where history, culture, and tradition still live for generations. Just as the proverb says, “A house is built with boards and beams, a home is built with love and dreams,” these family homes have become a testimony of the evolution of Chinese-Indonesian cultures and traditions.

For many Chinese-Indonesians, their family home was (or still is) a place for business. Packed with merchandise, and various items collected over the years by the owners, these family homes silently tell their stories. They tell the stories about love and dreams, opportunities and challenges, laughter and tears of those who have called them home.

Home Sweet Home is a one-year journey into the evolution of the Chinese-Indonesian culture. It is the story of a harmonious marriage of two beautiful cultures, three centuries in-the-making. It was not a journey without obstacles, but it certainly was one with countless rewards. What began as a challenge to obtain the owners’ consent to photograph their homes has later proved to be a beginning of new friendships. The challenge to find the appropriate houses to shoot had presented me with the privilege of listening to countless stories that offer valuable lessons in life.

As I embarked on this journey, I have discovered that there is more to a home than what meets the eyes. Beyond the evidence of economical, functional, or sentimental hoarding. Beyond the cluttered halls or the neatly- organized storage rooms. Beyond the simplicity of aging and the glitters of luxury.

There is a story in each frame, hope and dreams embedded and encrypted beneath the layers of objects that fill the space. Walls displaying pictures of joyous achievements and traumatic miseries, the good-old days and the modern reality that stole their thunder.

A home is more than merely a dwelling place, it is a monument where stories are carved and histories are made. Whether it is an aging third-generation family home or a modern private home, there is this air of familiarity, a connection, a deep sense of longing. A pride in calling it a Home Sweet Home. -AG

Bio
Anton Gautama began taking pictures with a mobile phone. Since 2015 he has been working professionally as photographer with a passionate focus on documentary photography. He believes that the essence of the medium is the ability to help us understand life. Gautama seeks unique moments that generate powerful emotional responses. With patience and determination, the photographer often immerses himself for months at a single location pursuing his photographic observations.

The photographs from Anton Gautama have been featured in several online and printed magazine platforms since 2016, such as “LensCulture” and “National Geographic Travel.” His works have been exhibited solo at the Goethe Institute – Jakarta, Indonesian Institute of Art – Jogjakarta. Gautama’s photographs have received numerous international awards, including in international photo festivals. His first monograph Pabean Passage, published in 2016, reveals the milieu of traditional Indonesian spice markets through intimate colour street photography.

In October 2015 Anton Gautama opened a private photo gallery in Malang in order to share his passion of photography. In keeping with his interest in exploring and preserving Indonesian culture, he also restored a full set of Javanese gamelan and placed it inside the gallery.

Born as a fourth son in 1969 in Makassar, South Sulawesi, Indonesia, Anton Gautama is based in Surabaya, Master in Business Administration from Hawaii Pacific University, USA, and is also the founder of ALFALINK, a prominent overseas education consultancy with branches throughout Indonesia.

CV

Essay by Celina Lunsford Artistic
Director of Fotografie Forum Frankfurt, Frankfurt, Germany

View Anton Gautama’s website.

The Land Beyond the Forest

Posted on March 14, 2020

Statement
The Land Beyond the Forest is an ongoing series depicting a fading way of life in rural Transylvania. This mountainous and remote region of Eastern Europe is steeped in history and lore. The rugged Carpathian Mountains kept invaders at bay and kept the remote villages isolated from the passage of time.

I am drawn time and again to this region and these people because it reminds me of a way of life that I experienced at my grandparent’s village in Hungary every summer. As a child, I was oblivious to the hardships that people faced and experienced only kindness and warmth. With my camera I work to recapture this feeling of storybook wonder and show domestic tableaux and rural people as I remember them.

For this exhibition I am focusing on the last generation of women who live this traditional rural life. My hope is to show the magic and poetry of the women who inhabit the “The Land Beyond the Forest.”

Bio
Katalina Simon is a British/Hungarian photographer whose work centers on the passage of time and cultural memory. Her interest in photography began when, as a child, she was told that taking pictures was not allowed in many public spaces in communist Hungary and she observed how precious photographs were to her family separated by the Iron Curtain.

Simon’s photography emphasizes her strong connection with history and the mood of the environments she photographs. Her image making is only part of a larger goal of experiencing a place, learning about a new culture or community.

Katalina holds a BA in Russian from the University of Bristol in England and is a graduate of the Professional Photography Program at the New York Institute of Photography. She is an exhibited member of the Griffin Museum of Photography in Winchester, MA, PhotoPlace Gallery in Middlebury, Vermont and Fountain Street Gallery in Boston, MA.

CV

Education

BA, Russian, University of Bristol, Bristol, England 1991

Photography Education

Professional Photography Certificate, New York Institute of Photography, NY, 2017
Photography Atelier, Griffin Museum of Photography, Winchester MA, 2017
Photography Atelier, Griffin Museum of Photography, Winchester MA –2019
MassArt Post Baccalaureate in Photography 2019-2020

Exhibitions

2018

Industrial Grace – Atelier 27, Griffin Museum of Photography, Winchester, MA (March ‘18)

Maria – Environmental Portraits, PhotoPlace Gallery, Middlebury, VT – Juror, Elizabeth Avedon (Sept ‘18)

Ana’s Kitchen – Travel: Places and Faces, PhotoPlace Gallery, Middlebury, VT – Juror, Krista Rossow (Nov ‘18)

2019

Rugaciuni – Sanctuary, PhotoPlace Gallery, Middlebury, VT – Juror, Laura Valenti

The Land Beyond the Forest, (3 person show) Fountain Street Gallery, Boston MA (April ’19)

The Land Beyond the Forest – Atelier 30, Griffin Museum of Photography, Winchester, MA (Sept ’19)

Waiting – Blue, Cambridge Art Association, Cambridge MA – juror, Sarah Montross (Dec 2019)

2020

Time with Bunica – The Poetry of the Ordinary, Middlebury, VT – Juror Sarah Sudhoff

The Land Beyond the Forest (solo show) Griffin Museum of Photography, Winchester MA (April-July)

The Land Beyond the Forest (solo show) Cambridge Public Library, Cambridge MA (April)

Capture the Moment (group show) Budapest, Hungary (Sept 2020)

2021

The Land Beyond the Forest (solo show) Acton Public Library, Acton MA (Jan)

Professional History

1992-1996 PR Manager Hill & Knowlton, Budapest, Hungary

1997-2002 Manager of International Media Relations for IBM Software, New York, NY

View Katalina Simon’s website.

Artist talk on August 20, 2020 at 7 PM

Katalina Simon is a British/Hungarian photographer whose work centers on the passage of time and cultural memory. Her interest in photography began when, as a child, she was told that taking pictures was not allowed in many public spaces in communist Hungary and she observed how precious photographs were to her family separated by the Iron Curtain.

We are thrilled to present an online conversation with Katalina about her exhibition, Land Beyond the Forest,  hanging at our Griffin @ WinCam satellite gallery.

woman at the door of the kitchen

© Katalina Simon, “Ana’s Kitchen“

Join us online in the Griffin Zoom Room on  August 20th, 2020 at 7pm Eastern Time for a overview of her work, her creativity and what is next for her pho

Return to Riverrun

Posted on March 12, 2020

The exhibition Return to Riverrun at the Griffin Museum of Photography currently on view is the first major exhibition of John Brook’s photographs since the 1970s.

Below you will find an essay by John Brook himself that describes his ideas behind his photography and book, A Long the Riverrun. In addition, two essays by Jessica Roscio, executive director and curator at the Danforth Museum at Framingham State University provide information on John Brook’s life and Roscio’s thoughts on John Brook’s photographs. Following is information on the portfolio of photographs and a single color photograph produced by the John Brook Archive for purchase.

Join us for two very special panel discussions about the life and work of John Brook.

January 31, 2021 at 4pm – Panel with Lou Jones, Gary Samson, Jessica Roscio and Thom Adams

February 14, 2021 at 4pm – Panel with Thom Adams, Szari Lewis Bourque, Jean Gilbran, David Herwaldt and Pat Nelson.

Preface to A Long the Riverrun by John Brook

Nature dooms us to lives of solitude. One body holds one mind – one set of fears, joys, wounds, needs – and no matter how we try we can never ache, laugh, shudder or yearn in exact unison with another being. We are alone.

But solitude is not loneliness. It is one of the terms on which we accept life. (Another is that our lives have limits in time as well as space.) Solitude is a fact, without emotional color except that which we give it. Some beings accept their oneness and guard against unwelcomed invaders, creating their own ambience, spending their solitude wisely and thriftily, choosing carefully those with whom solitude may be blissfully shared. Those who in terror try to flee from solitude are desperately lonely; they spend their lives in crowds.

It is in loving and in making love that we come as close as we ever can to joining one being with another’s. If we cannot quite achieve identity and unison with another solitude, we can extend the limits of our own. The mind receives another set of senses, the heart another cupful of sorrow and joy. In becoming a half, we become more than a whole. In living beyond ourselves we also live beyond time; each half becomes a third, and our being enters yet another body that will outlive the two halves that made it.

Fantasy is the difference between what we have and what we want. We all dream constantly and we try only a little less constantly to make our dreams a part of what we call reality. We usually succeed; reality is merely the sum of dreams that have been made to come true. (That many of the dreams were bad ones means that the world needs not fewer dreamers but better ones!) Few of us settle for less than we want, although sometimes we confuse what we want with what others have. Why does anyone want less than a world of love?

Coleridge asked: “If a man could pass through Paradise in a dream, and have a flower presented to him as a pledge that his soul had really been there, and if he found that flower in his hand when he woke – Ay! – and what then?”

Here are some of the flowers I have gathered in twenty years of traveling between the world others have dreamt and the paradise of my own dreams.

John Brook, 1924-2016

John Brook was born in Woonsocket, Rhode Island, on August 29, 1924. His interest in photography manifested early. Entirely self-taught, Brook began taking and developing photographs when he was twelve years old, encouraged by his father. His first portrait was published in Mademoiselle in 1940.

After graduating from Harvard, Brook officially started his photographic career, opening a portrait studio on Newbury Street in 1946, where he lived for the next 40-plus years. This was a significant step for photography in Boston, a medium that was steadily increasing its presence in museum and gallery exhibitions and collections. Brook began showing his work in Boston’s Sidney Kanegis Gallery in 1955, and exhibited in galleries and museums across the United States and Europe in the first decades of his career.

In 1966 Brook was one of several photographers, including Jules Aarons, Harry Callahan, Paul Caponigro, and Minor White, to exhibit work in a group show at the reopening of the Carl Siembab Gallery on Newbury Street, where Brook showed frequently.

Brook was the inaugural exhibition in a newly designed gallery at the George Eastman House in 1961 and one of twenty photographers shown at the Kodak Pavilion of the 1970 World’s Fair in Osaka, Japan.

He served as the staff photographer for the Boston Symphony Orchestra, and received numerous portrait commissions, including Thelonious Monk, Duke Ellington, Dave Brubeck, Igor Stravinsky, Walter Gropius, and Eleanor Roosevelt, among many others. His photography appeared in Art in America, Modern Photography, Newsweek, LIFE, Vita Fotografica, Camera, among others, and won awards, including the gold medal at the 3rd International Biennial in Milan.

In 1966, the thirtieth anniversary issue of LIFE magazine included the work of twenty of the world’s major photographers, including Brook. He published two books, A Long the Riverrun (1970) and Hold Me (1977), featuring his timeless, romantic, pictorialist views – many shot with lenses that he constructed himself.

Brook’s later years were spent in relative obscurity, full of colorful anecdotes that cannot be verified. However, by all accounts, he lost touch with friends and artists who had known him during his earlier years in Boston. He moved into a rehabilitation center in Brighton, Massachusetts, after an accident in the late 1980s, and died there on July 29, 2016, at the age of 91. – Jessica Roscio

Introduction to John Brook’s Photographs

Brook captured the era in photographs of friends and their families in a style that was independent of trends and distinctively his – soft-focused, with enhanced attention to light and shadow, an emotional connection to the subject, overt symbolism, and a profound consideration of human relationships – which all visually translated to a work of art. His attentiveness to the technical innovations of the photographic process is apparent across multiple series and subjects, in both personal works and commissions. A chance optical aberration in a portrait of a father and child led to his experimentation with lenses, which he would often construct himself. Commissioned portraits have a distinctive soft-focused flair to them, with props reminiscent of an earlier time.

Brook seemed to relish the idea of being of another time. In an anecdote regarding an exhibition at the Carl Siembab Gallery, Brook recalled that Siembab described him as a photographer who took “100-year-old pictures every day.” He often described his work in otherworldly terms, as illustrations of thoughts and fantasies, and not necessarily grounded in reality. In a 1969 exhibition statement, Siembab described Brook’s photographs as images that “confront us with a world that the photographer has dreamt and thereby willed into existence.” Brook wrote of seeking beauty in his works in a way that placed his philosophy in the realm of the social and cultural mores of the late nineteenth-century Aesthetic Movement, whose artists asserted the authority of beauty as the force behind all aspects of daily life.

Brook’s works, in both subject matter and style, are also closely aligned with the Pictorialist movement of the turn of the twentieth century. Pictorialists sought to establish photography as a fine art through carefully chosen and idealized subject matter, soft focus, and low tonal gradation. A pictorial landscape was a romantic pastoral escape, and figures symbolized ideals of beauty. Brook’s veneration of the human form closely aligns him with pictorial photography, and he is perhaps most known for his soft-focused representations of the nude. Works appearing in A Long the Riverrun include male and female figures, both alone and together, posed in sun-dappled natural settings. Brook unabashedly sought the beautiful in his work, describing a process where he “found beautiful people, places, and moments in a world that was getting uglier every day.”

In interviews, Brook stated that his work did not have any photographic influences, but it is difficult not to read some photographic history into his subjects, settings, and aesthetics. Besides the formal elements of Pictorialism, there is edginess in his subject matter, particularly in his treatment of the nude, which is immediately reminiscent of F. Holland Day. Brook’s work can be challenging, and he asks us to look beyond the subject that he often provocatively captured with the camera. His use of the symbolic and allegorical tenets of Pictorialism speak to his philosophy that subjects appear as they are found, and represent more than can be seen with the naked eye. He confirmed this for the Boston Review of Photography: “I use whatever optical technique seems best suited to what I happen to be doing, but the character of the image is determined at the moment of exposure and not altered later in the darkroom.” His interest in capturing the unseen places him among the science and mysticism that drove a number of artists working mid-century in Boston, as well as connecting him to a long photographic tradition espousing a desire to visualize the unseen. – Jessica Roscio

 On the occasion of the exhibition Return to Riverrun, the first major exhibition of Brook’s work since the 1970s, the John Brook Archive assembled a portfolio of six of Brook’s photographs from his book A Long the Riverrun available for purchase. The portfolio of six archival pigment prints is accompanied by texts setting the work of John Brook in context. In addition a special color print by John Brook is offered for sale as well. Use the  links below to see more info on John Brook, the John Brook Archive, the portfolio and the special John Brook color print available for purchase.

 

portfolioautumn picture

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

View the Photographs of the Portfolio and Information for Sale and the Special Color Print for Sale.

Colophon Preface

John Brook Portfolio Biography

John Brook Portfolio Introduction

John Brook Portfolio Acknowledgements

John Brook Portfolio Colophon

Description of the Portfolio

Life Magazine Anniversary Photography issue Dec. 23rd

John Brook Archive

26th Annual Juried Members’ Exhibition

Posted on February 15, 2020

The sixty photographers that will participate in the 26th Juried Exhibition are:
Terry Barczak, Ken Beckles, Anne Berry, Jen Bilodeau, Christa Blackwood, Sally Bousquet, Cody Bratt, Judy Brown, Annette Burke, Jo Ann Chaus, Sarah Christianson, Richard Cohen, Cathy Cone, Margo Cooper, Benjamin Dimmitt, Yvette Marie Dostani, Yorgos Efthymiadis, Madge Evers, Nicholas Fedak II, Fehmida Chipty, Dennis Geller, Carol Glauber, Kylie Harrigan, Bootsy Holler, Leslie Jean-Bart, Rachel Jessen, Paul Johnson, Loli Kantor, BK Kelley, Lee Kilpatrick, Sandra Klein, David Kulik, Eric Kunsman, Molly Lamb, Jeff Larason, JK Lavin, Rhonda Lopez, Margaret McCarthy, Lisa McCord, Yvette Meltzer, Nancy Nichols, Dale Niles, George Nobechi, Scott Offen, Karen Olson, David Oxton, Astrid Reischwitz, Eleonora Ronconi, Susan Rosenberg Jones, Claudia Ruiz Gustafson, Sara J. Winston, Geralyn Shukwit, Aline Smithson, Neelakantan Sunder, Jerry Takigawa, JP Terlizzi, Sandra Chen Weinstein, Bruce Wilson, Caren Winnall and Dianne Yudelson.See a video of the Gallery Walk ThroughAWARDS:
$1,500 Arthur Griffin Legacy Award – Leslie Jean-Bart
$1000 Griffin Award – Astrid Reischwitz
$500 Richards Family Trust Award – Bruce Wilson
$100 Honorable Mentions (10) – Ken Beckles, Christa Blackwood, Cody Bratt, Dennis Geller, Rachel Jessen, Margaret McCarthy, Nancy Nichols, Dale Niles, Eleonora Ronconi and Jerry TakigawaWe will award 4 exhibitions that will take place next June and July 2021 – Vicky Stromee and Stefanie Timmerman/ Vaune Trachtman and Jacqueline Walters
We will award 1 Director’s prize that will result in a catalog and exhibition –  Sarah Schorr
We will produce a catalog of the 26th Juried Exhibition. – View catalog here.
We will produce an online exhibition from photographs not chosen by the juror and it will run on Instagram as well. It will also run on a computer in the gallery during the exhibition.  View here.
We will award a Member in Focus – Nancy A. Scherl
We will award one Purchase Prize – Scott Offen.

JUROR: Alexa Dilworth

JUROR’S STATEMENT
I was honored to be asked to jury the 26th annual exhibition at the Griffin Museum of Photography, and what a deep pleasure, especially in these unusual times, it has been to lose myself in looking at and thinking about photographs. And what a hard task to select so few images—only sixty. There were so many striking, engaging, and just plain beautiful photos; it hurt to eliminate images with which I’d formed an attachment. In the end, I think the times influenced my eye, as well as an interest in having photographs by different artists be in conversation with each other: some of that back and forth happened through echoes/resonances of composition, tone, light, and some through interconnected relationships to historical or conceptual image making. A theme that emerged for me in looking, and looking again (each day brings new insights right now), was the notion of presence.

I chose Leslie Jean-Bart’s photograph, “The Prayer,” for the Arthur Griffin Legacy Award, because it spoke to reality and imagination, and to presence, how tenuous it is. The image reveals something that only the camera can see—the “pink” figure is being erased by movement and time. Here and also not here. The solid figure in the foreground isn’t firmly fixed, as prominent, as set, as it seems. The wind is agitating the man’s robe; he isn’t stable either.

Astrid Reischwitz’s diptych from her series Inheritance is the Griffin Award recipient. I was taken by the way the images at left and right speak to modes of existence—how the most seemingly prosaic exteriors are beautiful if seen with a certain sympathy, and how they shelter lives both lyrical and ordinary, like all of ours. Lives that contain (house) private histories and profound feelings, of loss, regret, loneliness, that often go unshared.

“For Larry” by Bruce Wilson receives the Richards Family Trust Award, as it encapsulates so much of our new, unprepared for, reality of social distance as necessity. The image is full of warmth, and what’s now so (chillingly?) familiar: the bottle of hand sanitizer, the bag left on a table. Here, presence is absence.

The photographs and photographers that I’ve named as honorable mentions look to the past and are strangely prescient, speak to the raw and the sublime, and require careful consideration as images—they call our attention to not only what they mean but how they’re made, how they mean.

I cannot thank enough the many artists who submitted photographs for the competition. Their images soothed my soul and gave me much to ponder. I learned a lot about how context influences how we see and understand pictures, and how single images by different artists have the ability to create new narratives, so many possible conversations. And I especially thank Paula Tognarelli for the privilege.

JUROR BIO: Alexa Dilworth is publishing director and senior editor at the Center for Documentary Studies (CDS) at Duke University, where she also directs the awards program, which includes the CDS Documentary Essay Prize in Writing and Photography and the Dorothea Lange–Paul Taylor Prize, and the DocX lab. In 1995 she was hired by CDS to work on the editorial staff for DoubleTake magazine. She was also hired as editor of the CDS books program at that time and has coordinated the publishing efforts for every CDS book, including the recent and forthcoming books Road Through Midnight: A Civil Rights Memorial by Jessica Ingram; Where We Find Ourselves: The Photographs of Hugh Mangum, 1897–1922, edited by Margaret Sartor and Alex Harris; Test of Faith: Signs, Serpents, Salvation: Photographs by Lauren Pond; Reality Radio: Telling True Stories in Sound, Second Edition, edited by John Biewen and Alexa Dilworth; and Aunties: The Seven Summers of Alevtina and Ludmila: Photographs by Nadia Sablin. Dilworth has a BA and an MA, both in English, from the University of Florida, and an MFA in creative writing (poetry) from the Iowa Writers’ Workshop at the University of Iowa.

PROGRAMMING: Alongside the Juried Exhibition, the Griffin Museum will organize a series of professional development workshops presented by a diverse range of thought leaders. These workshops will share instrumental ideas, methods and tools to help build the business and legal foundation of a thriving artistic practice.

The gallery exhibition at the Griffin Museum is from July 18 – August 30, 2020

The opening reception is Saturday, July 18, 2020 @ 5 PM (It will be a virtual reception.)

Info to come on what our programming will be. See our website for details in programming/events.

Photography Atelier 31 Exhibition

Posted on February 2, 2020

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

The Photography Atelier 31 exhibiton features the photographs by Diana Cheren Nygren, Kathleen DeCarlo-Plano, Gabriel Garay, Cynthia Johnston, Sheryl Kalis, Naohiro Maeda, William Morse, Fern Nesson, Anne Piessens, Darrell Roak, Tony Schwartz and Jeanne Widmer.

Diana Cheren Nygren
Project title: When the Trees Are Gone

“This series imagines city dwellers searching for moments of release in a world shaped by climate change, and the struggle to find a balance between an environment in crisis and manmade structures.”

Kathleen DeCarlo-Plano
Project title: Urban Awareness

“I feel passion for blending scale and geometry, while using available light, shadows, and leading lines to draw the viewer into looking at a city in a more deliberate manner.”

Gabriel Garay
Project title: Chasing Memory

“The connection that I’ve lost with the place I have spent all my life in, with all the change that has happened and is happening in Everett, MA and almost running from this place to grow as a person. I had lost a sense of the place I grew up in – so I found myself chasing what the town used to be to me.”

Cynthia Johnston
Project title: Somewhere in the Middle

“These works are a continuation of an ongoing project exploring the Midwestern geographical and political landscape.”

Sheryl Kalis
Project title: Still

“Still is a study of the unexpected moments I see when no one else is at home.”

Naohiro Maeda
Project title: Origami-Gram

“These photographs are portraits of origami as memory keepers. I bent, tore, arranged and rearranged origamis and became aware that they held the memory of my actions in their delicate physical shapes. The resulting images can appear both two- and three- dimensional, playing with the viewer’s perceptions of flatness and space in both the subject and picture plane.”

William Morse
Project title: Eruptions and Other Patterns

“A tree falls in the forest, followed by an explosion of new life in its shadow.”

Fern Nesson
Project title: All here, all now

“Here, now is all we have. We bring all of our past to the present moment and within us is all of the potential for the future.”

Anne Piessans
Project title: Meliorations

“In her mixed-media series titled Meliorations, Anne Piessens imagines ways to heal damaged landscapes.”

Darrell Roak
Project title: Noble Waterfalls

“Darrell Roak makes platinum photos of secluded waterfalls from around the world.”

Tony Schwartz
Project title: Boston’s Chinatown

“Chinatown is the only true immigrant-derived ethnic enclave left in Boston. My interest in this community was sparked by witnessing street scenes identical to those I experienced while visiting China.”

Jeanne Widmer
Project title: An Ode to a Town Village

“This series is my attempt to capture the clash of history and cultures, the textures and mood, and the simple poetic dignity and warmth of an intimate community which can and will be lost.”

 

See Photography Atelier 31 portfolios. In the meantime see previous years’ Atelier students work.

 

 

 

 

10th Annual Self-Published Photobook Exhibition

Posted on February 1, 2020

10th Annual Self-Published Photobook Exhibition is an annual competition open to photographers in the United States and abroad who have self-published a photobook. This competition is offered by Davis Orton Gallery in Hudson NY for the tenth year. The competition results were exhibited at Davis Orton Gallery and 30 photobooks are now traveling to the Griffin Museum of Photography. Karen Davis, co-director of the Davis Orton Gallery in Hudson, NY and Paula Tognarelli, executive director and curator of the Griffin Museum of Photography were the jurors for the 10th Annual Self-Published Photobook Exhibition.

10th Annual Self-Published Photobook Exhibition  will be featured in the Atelier Gallery at the Griffin Museum March 5 – March 27, 2020. An opening reception with the artists takes place on March 15, 4 – 6 p.m.

For the 10th Annual Self-Published Photobook Exhibition, jurors Karen Davis and Paula Tognarelli chose 30 Photobooks to be exhibited at the Griffin Museum. The photobook authors are:

Steve Anderson…..Faces.  Surrealism.   book 3
Mike Callaghan…..circling and finding
James Collins…..Patio Life
Pamela Connolly…..Cabriole
Melissa Eder…..The Beauty of Bodega Flowers
Mark Erickson…..Other Streets:  Scenes from a Life in Vietnam not Lived
Joe Greene…..Don’t Shoot
Bootsy Holler…..Treasures:  Objects I’ve known all my life
Roslyn Julia…..Imperfect
Oliver Klink…..Cultures In Transition: Spirit – Heart – Soul
Kent Krugh…..Speciation: Still a Camera
Dan McCormack…..Photograms
Julie Mihaly…..The Attic, One Year  Five Miles
Kate Miller-Wilson…..Look Me in the Lens:  Photographs to Reach Across the Spectrum
Tetsuro Miyazaki….. Hāfu2Hāfu – a Worldwide Photography Project about Mixed Japanese Identity
Linda Morrow…..Caught In The Looking Glass
Fern L Nesson…..Signet of Eternity
Nancy Oliveri…..Flora and Fauna, Scorched Earth
Robert Pacheco…..Downtown L.A. Who Needs It ? Street Story Of A Fading Era – Early 1970’s
Nick Pedersen…..ULTIMA
Mark Peterman…..These Years Gone Bye
Thomas Pickarski…..Snow, Sand, Ice
John Puffer…..Album of a Photographer
Judy Robinson-Cox…..Finding Lilliput
Tony Schwatz…..Stories of the Batwa Pygmies of  Buhoma, Uganda
Lisa Seidenberg…..Dark Pools: Historic Swimming Pools of Berlin
Ellen Slotnick…..Apparition
Ellen Wallenstein…..NYC Diptychs – Art: Sanctioned or Found
Thomas Whitworth…..Constructed Scenarios
Sharon Wickham…..Cuba Skin

View Davis Orton Gallery website

View online catalog

View Prospectus for the 11th Annual Self-Published Photobook Exhibition

There are growing options available for self-publishing a book such as on-demand (blurb, lulu, viovio, iphoto, etc.); small run offset or web printing/publishing firms, binderies. For the competition if photobooks submitted had been hand-made/bound, they had to be available in multiples of at least 25. Entrants could submit up to three different titles that are self-published photography books of any size, format, or style: hard cover, soft cover, case-wraps, landscape, portrait, square, color, black and white. Submissions were judged on the basis of: cover design, strength of the photography, subject matter of the book, page layouts, editing and sequencing and emotional impact of the overall book. All Submissions had to be original works of authorship created by the photographer who submitted the book.

“A photobook relies on the image to form visual sentences,” says Paula Tognarelli, executive director and curator of the Griffin Museum of Photography. “A photobook that is produced well can transport us in time and place just as any book produced with the written word.”

Not Waving But Drowning

Posted on February 1, 2020

Artist Statement
Not Waving But Drowning is a look inside an Evangelical marriage. These images show the truth of a life lived in the confines of oppressive gender roles, cult-like manipulation, and the isolation of Fundamentalism. 

Each image is equivalence for the unseen, for the reality behind facade. Despite the smiles and appearance of perfection, Complementarianism is an abusive system in which a wife serves her husband as a helpmeet, remains silent, and prays for her spouse to become a better man.

I use self-portraiture to share my own experience within the Fundamentalist Lifestyle without being explicitly autobiographical. My chosen medium of collodion used with contemporary digital media represents the outdated behaviors and rules imposed on women by Fundamentalism. 

The image titles come from The Awakening by Kate Chopin and are sequenced by their titles’ place within the story. Unlike the character of Mrs. Pontellier, I choose to thrive in my freedom. I seek to unmask, to reveal truth. Growing up in Fundamentalist Christianity, I endured the cognitive dissonance of wearing the smiling facade to mask the oppressive truth. By unmasking that truth, I set myself free from the burden of my silence. This is my protest. I will no longer be silent. I choose to live. – MRP

Artist’s Statement of Purpose as submitted to the John Chervinsky Scholarship
Since I began graduate school in Boston in 2012 I have been on a journey of deconstruction of faith and reclaimation of my life for myself which catapulted me into a divorce in 2014.  I knew then that I would eventually tell the story of this final step in leaving behind the faith I was raised in and an abusive situation. Not Waving But Drowning tells the story of my marriage and my escape.  It is my own stand against oppression of any people by religion or other factors.

Although my work has been about my own journey I believe in the power of photography to change and empower people.  I feel that it is more important than ever to stand up and tell my story openly.  When I left my husband many people believed I should run away and hide in shame.  Instead, living the life that is right for me, free from the stifles of religion has brought me joy I never imagined.

I want to share my photography with a larger audience, and to continue developing my career as an emerging photographer.  The grant money would allow me to finish printing and framing this series, which would enable me to exhibit the series in its’ entirety. -MRP

Bio
Michelle Rogers Pritzl was born and raised Southern Baptist in Washington DC area.  She fell in love with photography in a high school darkroom and has been making images ever since.  Pritzl received a BFA from the Corcoran College of Art and Design in 2001, a MA in Art Education from California State University in 2010, and a MFA in Photography from Lesley University College of Art, where she studied with Christopher James, in 2014.   Her work explores the tension between past and present in our psychological lives as well as the photographic medium itself, often working in a digital/analogue hybrid and using historic alternative processes.

Pritzl has been widely exhibited in New York, New Orleans, Fort Collins, Boston and Washington DC, as well as internationally.  Pritzl was a Critical Mass Top 250 finalist in 2013, 2014, and 2017; she has been featured in Lenscratch, Fraction Magazine, Diffusion Magazine, Lumen Magazine, Shots Magazine, Your Daily Photograph via the Duncan Miller Gallery amongst others. 

Pritzl has taught photography and drawing in both high school and college for the last 12 years, including as an adjunct instructor at Lesley University College of Art, and leading workshops at the Griffin Museum of Photography and Vermont Center for Photography.  She lives on a farm in the Finger Lakes with her husband John and their son. 

View Michelle Rogers-Pritzl’s website.

Single Figure

Posted on January 15, 2020

Artist Statement
The news stories and famous faces that I photographed number in the thousands. I had a front row seat on life itself. I covered the great and near great, and the homeless eating out of dumpsters. I filmed kings and queens, presidents, and princes of the church. I recorded militants and pacifists, and great revelations in medicine. My camera and I were witness to the wise counsel of the experts of our time. I had a great passion for covering television news during the journalistically exciting period of the 50’s through the 80’s, a time that produced a constant flood of headline stories. You never knew what the next phone call would bring.

However, artists, sculptors, photographers, and other creators of art, can hold their work in their hands or stand back and behold it with their eyes. That’s not the case for a photojournalist or producer of television news. Our work is so fleeting. Unless it is a story of a very unusual news event that gets played over and over, once the film or tape runs on the news—it’s gone forever. Great effort and creativity vanishes, for the most part never to be seen again—only remembered. Knowing this motivated me, if possible, to try and capture the essence of the moment with my still camera.

Although miles and miles of film and videotape have traveled through my motion picture cameras recording the great and the extraordinary, I have actually gained a deeper sense of satisfaction of my life’s work through the still camera. If I was fortunate enough to have the time or presence of mind while filming for television to also make an image or two with my Leica or Nikon, either a portrait, landscape, or some other related image, I could eventually make a memorable print, hang it on the wall and say, “I did that—I was there!” – DM

Bio
David Marlin’s career in broadcast television spanned 4 decades filming the faces and events of our time.  As a photojournalist for both television and print, he has won dozens of awards, principally for CBS News and 60 Minutes.

David learned his photographic skills in Boston’s old black and white studios of the 40’s and 50’s and as a Signal Corps photographer during the Korean War. Television news and documentaries influenced his style, and for years he was considered New England’s top network cameraman.

Covering television news also gave David many opportunities to use his skills as a still photographer. He made hundreds of portraits of newsmakers and well-known personalities while on network assignments. Five of Marlin’s portraits have recently been acquired by the National Portrait Gallery at the Smithsonian in Washington, DC.

In addition to traveling throughout New England to photograph many of the nature studies seen on the network’s “Sunday Morning” program, some of the most memorable stories that Marlin filmed include the Andrea Doria lying on it’s side before it sank in the Atlantic, presidential candidate Edmund Muskie weeping in the New Hampshire snow, President John F. Kennedy at the Summer White House in Hyannisport, and Ted Williams hitting a memorable home run in his final at bat for the Red Sox.

David Marlin’s filming career has been wide-ranging, starting at the end of the newsreel era and continuing through the production of images on videotape and computers. As a film editor, lighting director, and wire service photographer, his work has been used to communicate and inform. As a Director of Photography he has filmed, produced, and directed corporate, educational, and documentary programs for a blue-chip client list including the Harvard Business School, Polaroid, Charrette, Cross Country Group, Institute of Contemporary Art, and the Alfred P. Sloane Foundation.

 

Haven’t We Met?

Posted on December 17, 2019

Curator’s Statement:

Haven’t We Met?

These photographs possess a dreamlike, other-worldly sensibility. In dreams, where they begin and end, and what takes place, is often imperceptible. There is an element of peculiarity and also beauty. But as in dreams, and in waking life, circumstances and people shift, appear and disappear in an instant.

We don’t know these people or places, though they could easily be characters who play in any of our lives. Some of the realities are found, some are constructed. The ambiguous nature of the photographs makes them unrecognizable or foreign, but in many ways there is a relatability that implies we may have all been in these places with these figures before.

The more specific imagery is peppered with slivers of moments and action invoking fear, nostalgia, thoughts around memory, and an alternate world that the human mind may be incapable of interpreting.

Including the work of: Harlan Crichton, Alexa Cushing, Amy Fink, Ross Kiah, Vanessa Leroy, Jaclyn Lowe, Caterina Maina, Kevin Moore, Evan Perkins, Kendall Pestana, Tavon Taylor, and Ronghao Zhang.

By Ben Carroll, Curator

This online exhibition was featured on our Instagram, @GriffinMuseum.

 

Ben Carroll is a photographer based in Boston. He is the recipient of a residency from Arteles Creative Center in Hämeenkyrö, Finland where he will spend the month of January. Rooted in ideas of perception, memory and emotionality, Ben’s work centers on domestic life with his husband of 17 years and the impact of mental illness. He was a finalist for the City of Boston’s Fay Chandler Emerging Artist Award, and received the Jury’s Choice Award at the Small Stones Festival of the Arts in Grafton, MA. In 2020, Ben will earn his B.F.A. in photography from Massachusetts College of Art and Design in Boston.

Industrial Gothic The Seattle Gas Works

Posted on December 9, 2019

Statement
I have always been drawn to the monumentality of structures such as these; initially to the magnificent grain elevators that rise above the plains of the mid-west and now more recently to these stunning industrial forms in Seattle. The Seattle Gas Works are structural marvels that have an enduring visual interest for me on two scales, for their sheer enormity and for their careful attention to minute detail.

These structures are the sole survivors of this era of gas works in the United States. As well, they are a unique landmark for the City of Seattle. They are well-known in the preservation community as outstanding examples of industrial archeology, adaptive reuse and urban landscape design.

In 1975 Paul Goldberger wrote in the New York Times that “Seattle is about to have one of the nation’s most advanced pieces of urban landscape design. The complex array of towers, tanks and pipes of the gas works forms a powerful industrial still life … serving both as a visual focus for the park and as a monument to the city’s industrial past. The park represents a complete reversal from a period when industrial monuments were regarded, even by preservationists, as ugly intrusions on the landscape, to a time when such structures as the gas works are recognized for their potential ability to enhance the urban experience.” (NY Times, 8/30/75)

Bio
Lee Cott studied architecture at Pratt Institute and Harvard University.  After a 45-year career as a founding principal at Bruner/Cott & Assoc., Architects in Cambridge, Massachusetts and professor at Harvard’s Graduate School of Design, he now devotes his creative energies to his life-long involvement with photography. Lee’s recent photographs of barn structures, farm stands, iconic Boston buildings and the industrial constructions at the Seattle Gas Works are all crafted with the same sense of delicacy to portray extraordinary beauty in familiar, ordinary and conventional structures.

Cott has photographed throughout the United States, Europe, Asia and South America. Images from an early travel portfolio, Prairie Vernacular, were published in Design and Environment magazine. Lee has lectured on architecture and urban design at Harvard University, The Boston Museum of Fine Arts, The Peabody Essex Museum, The Graham Foundation and The Boston Public Library using color images made over the course of his lifetime. He has exhibited at juried shows at the Concord Art Association and the Chautauqua Annual Exhibition of Contemporary Art as well as the Griffin Museum. This year, Homage to Serra #3, was included in the Krakow Witkin Gallery’s annual AID’S Benefit Auction. In January, 2020 a photograph of Lee’s will be included in the Cambridge Art Association’s Broken Beauty invited exhibition and in March 2020 he will have a solo exhibit of his recent work at the Concord Public Library.

Lee is a self-taught photographer. He has recently studied at the New England School of Photography, The Maine Media Workshops and at the Griffin Museum of Photography’s Ateliers 28 & 30 with Meg Birnbaum and the Advanced Critique with Emily Belz

View Lee Cott’s website.

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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