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atelier 33

Atelier 33 | Amy Eilertsen

Posted on March 22, 2021

In today’s highlight of the Atelier 33 exhibition, we interviewed Amy Eilertsen about her series Memento Vivere: A Study of Life. Amy’s collection of images puts an interesting spin on seventeenth century masters paintings. Scenes of her domestic fowl have become sweet memories, and reminders to live.

chicken on book with flowers

© Amy Eilertsen – Apocalypse

Why did Dutch masters’ paintings become such a great inspiration to you? How has this project helped you preserve the memories of your beloved animals?

I studied art history for a few years in college and fell in love with the Dutch masters because of the depth of color and shadow, the rendering of complex and the exotic still life. Historically, during the time the still lifes were rendered, Europe was recovering from the decimation of the Black Plague, and the upper middle class became infatuated with the exotic foods that they were now able to purchase. It was a time of plenty- and a celebration of beauty. Several of the animal actors featured in this series have passed away and I love the memories that I have captured in these images. 

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

I hope that viewers will be taken in by the painterly tones and classic composition of the works, and be intrigued by the appearance of the fowl.  The meta message of this project is “remember that you are alive” and I hope that the viewers sense the secondary message regarding animal cruelty. 

duck in basket on table with flowers and fruit

© Amy Eilertsen – Mads 2

Tell us what is next for you creatively.

I am in the cusp of deciding among a few projects- and will continue collaborating with my feathered friends.

To see the full collection of Memento Vivere: A Study of Life, visit the Atelier website.

Filed Under: Blog, Atelier, Uncategorized Tagged With: Artist Talk, Photographers on Photography, atelier 33

Atelier 33 | Terry Bleser

Posted on March 20, 2021

Terry Bleser‘s collection Searching for a Sense of Home, part of the Atelier 33 exhibition, is on display in the Griffin Main Gallery until March 26, 2021. Terry’s series explores the idea of trying to find comfort in a new place through understanding one’s relationship with the land. We asked the artist some questions to hear more about her collection.

forest with trees and grass

© Terry Bleser – Fairyland

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

The image called Fairyland was one of the initial photographs in the series. The marshes often present as thorny bristly places that resist exploration, but this small circle of green grasses surrounded by trees was an invitation to conjure up the fairies to play. It made me think about our age old conflicting feelings about nature.

 

How has your photography changed since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic? Has the Atelier been a motivator to persevere through these trying times?

stairs in grass

© Terry Bleser – Solitude Bridge

After 25 years of living outside of Boston I relocated farther south in
Maryland. This was a month before COVID-19 began its spread around the country. It made seeking out new friends and finding all the usual
essentials of daily life difficult. Landscape photography gave me the joy of exploring the area and getting to experience at least one aspect of this
new place. The Atelier was a wonderful opportunity to connect with other photographers and continue to grow in my art.

Has photographing your new home in this context changed your perception of what “home” can mean?

When I arrived here I focussed on moving in and arranging a comfortable nest. Not able to socialize with people, I started exploring the front porches and lawns of the neighborhood to glean a sense of the community from the way they presented themselves through their houses and landscaping. But I longed for a different kind of connection. I realized that in my old home place there were natural areas that I frequented and became familiar with. That gave me a broader sense of home that extended beyond the house and city to the natural world. It was a larger sense of place on the planet that I missed. So I began to explore with my camera, looking for a place.

House behind trees

© Terry Bleser – Home

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

I would hope that we as a species could be more mindful in our treatment of the land. Wetlands have often in the past been considered pest ridden, mucky, thorny, impenetrable places that need to be drained and filled in. But the marshes are more complicated than that. They protect us and provide resources for industries.

 

 

Tell us what is next for you creatively.

I have found two places that I want to get to know well, to spend time developing an awareness of the lives that transpire there. I will carry my camera there and spend some time watching and learning.

Visit Terry Bleser’s website to see more of her work.

Filed Under: Blog, Atelier Tagged With: Artist Talk, Photographers on Photography, atelier 33

Atelier 33 | Judith Montminy

Posted on March 19, 2021

Judith Montminy‘s collection Dancing Alone is on the walls of the Griffin Main Gallery until March 26, 2021, as a part of the Atelier 33 exhibition. Her work represents a departure from her usual subject matter due to COVID-19 restrictions and lockdown. For more insight into the Dancing Alone series, we asked Judith a few questions.

How has your photography changed since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic? Has the Atelier been a motivator to persevere through these trying times?

bubbles in black, blue, and pink liquid

© Judith Montminy – Anatomy of Escape

Worlds apart from my typical street photography, the abstract water-centric images of “Dancing Alone” grew out of a quest for sweet visual lemonade diametrically opposed to the bitter and lonely emotional landscape of COVID-19. 

In March 2020, the pandemic cut me off from the creative urban energy that had powered my art during regular visits with family and friends in Dublin and cities along the East Coast. Then the virus infected my 94-year-old mother; in early April she died. 

As I ached from the rawness of those profound losses, photography offered little solace. 

Yet in the spring, abstract patterns partially hidden outdoors near my home unexpectedly caught my attention. By fall, constructive critiques and encouragement from [instructor] Meg Birnbaum and fellow Atelier 33ers helped nudge my photography in a new direction – one where non-figurative imagery takes center stage and close-up filters help heighten the playful interaction between water and a variety of elements, including air, glass, acrylic ink, food coloring, and oil.

How delightful to discover these unchoreographed dances while traveling a new photographic path forward, even within the confines of a still uncertain future.

distorted rainbow

© Judith Montminy – Dancing Alone II

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

My hope is that viewers connect with the uninhibited joy and dynamic movement that’s fundamental to the work in “Dancing Alone.”

Tell us what is next for you creatively.

My immediate next creative adventure is Griffin Museum’s “Deepening Your Photographic Practice” course taught this spring by Emily Belz. 

opalescent liquid substance

© Judith Montminy – Opaline Wave

To see more of Judith Montminy’s work, visit her website and her Facebook, @Judith.Montminy.

Filed Under: Blog, Atelier Tagged With: Artist Talk, Photographers on Photography, atelier 33

Atelier 33 | Anne Smith Duncan

Posted on March 18, 2021

Anne Smith Duncan‘s collection Illusions (Landscape) is on display in the Griffin Main Gallery until March 26, 2021, as a part of the Atelier 33 exhibition. Interested to know more about her inspiration and process for capturing these abstract landscapes, we asked Anne a few questions.

trees and sky

© Anne Smith Duncan

What can be said about finding inspiration in unconventional places?

I was sitting at my table eating lunch one day and looking out the window. I noticed my neighbor’s concrete foundation with the stains from the soil, water, weather and the colors brought out by the light, and it reminded me of a landscape. Lunch uneaten, I went to make images. This series evolved from that singular day, and subsequently, I made many images of the foundations of my neighbors’ homes and my own. Inspiration comes from looking and being open to possibilities — and then picking up the camera and not waiting until “later.” 

 

How has your photography changed since the beginning of the

tall trees and sky

© Anne Smith Duncan

COVID-19 pandemic?

I have been more creative than ever with the restrictions of the pandemic. With all my other activities eliminated,  I feel very productive with my photography, having much more focused time. The absence of travel, however, has been a loss.

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

I hope the viewer brings their own experience and expectations to make meaning of each image. In discussions with others,  I have found that what I see is not the same “landscape” or idea that they see, so I intentionally have not titled any of the images, allowing each person to find their own meaning.

night sky and trees

© Anne Smith Duncan

Tell us what is next for you creatively.

I have been reviewing my image archives and editing projects into little books, primarily for myself as a way to complete those projects. I am also exploring family photo archives going back to the 1920s and thinking about possibilities there. I don’t yet know where that might be going.

To see Anne Smith Duncan’s Illusions (Landscape) collection, visit the Atelier website.

Filed Under: Atelier, Uncategorized, Blog Tagged With: Artist Talk, Photographers on Photography, atelier 33

Atelier 33 | Sandy Hill

Posted on March 17, 2021

Atelier 33 artist Sandy Hill created her series American Decor during the COVID-19 pandemic as a way to create a connection with the people in her community despite the way our country has been physically and ideologically divided over the past year. Her work is on display in the Griffin Main Gallery until March 26, 2021. We asked Sandy a few questions to learn more about her collection.

woman with horse statue

© Sandy Hill – Untitled 10

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

I would say the image of the woman with the horse statue was probably the one that captured my heart photographically and got the ball rolling. It was   partially hidden by the bushes and seemed humble and worn, like a toy well loved. I also enjoyed the little skeletons and the angel nearby. It is a spot and a house I’ve driven past many times without noticing the horse and it kind of captured my curiosity. While the initial impetus for taking the photos was a purely visual response to interesting items, it became more about  the people who lived there.

How has your photography changed since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic? Has the Atelier been a motivator to persevere through these trying times?

I’ve become more cautious about approaching people safely and conscious about keeping distant physically while taking portraits. I knock on the door or ring the bell and step far back and I also don’t spend as much time doing portraits for safety purposes. The Atelier has really been a light for me in difficult times. It made me examine different styles and stretch my visual skills. I had been struggling to find a way to start a project I’m excited about, and thanks to this class, I have.

woman with colorful house decorations

© Sandy Hill – Untitled 1

How is this method of photographing the scenery and people around you different in our current world?

I’ve felt since last spring that people are pausing more, stopping to chat during walks, not as busy and preoccupied. Appreciative of the opportunity to talk to someone in person, something we’ve perhaps taken for granted. Most agreed to my request for a portrait and even those who did not want to be photographed would spend time telling me about their decorations. Many were proud or excited to talk about their art. One man opened his garage to show me his woodworking set up, a mom and daughter told me how they were able to collect free doors to replace the fence that had been falling down, a woman in an apartment in Haverhill had a little Christmas tree and decorations set up on the sidewalk and explained that she does it for the children in the area. The stories were wonderful and varied.

children in front of a barn

© Sandy Hill – Untitled 8

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

That we can find connections even during times that seem to be driving us apart. That even if it’s something as simple as a lawn decoration we can find ways to appreciate one another.

Tell us what is next for you creatively.

I hope to continue with this project for awhile—it’s kind of a treasure hunt of sorts! I have a few people who I will photograph soon and once Covid restrictions aren’t a concern I would like to explore NH and maybe other states too looking for other unique decorations and people. After that—lots of ideas! (Thank you Atelier!)

To see more of Sandy Hill, be sure to visit her website and her Instagram, @Sandy_Hill_Photography.

Filed Under: Uncategorized, Blog, Atelier Tagged With: Artist Talk, Photographers on Photography, atelier 33

Atelier 33 | Diana Cheren Nygren

Posted on March 16, 2021

In this highlight of the Atelier 33 exhibition, we took a closer look at Diana Cheren Nygren‘s series, Just Another Alice. Diana’s collection is on display in the Griffin Main Gallery until March 26, 2021, and we are also pleased to be featuring Diana’s work in the upcoming exhibition Digits: A Parallel Universe at the Lafayette Citer Center Passageway. Just Another Alice is an imaginative series that reminisces on the lives we all enjoyed prior to being affected by COVID-19. We asked the artists a few questions for some insight into her work.

window looking at two people

© Diana Cheren Nygren – I Dreamed of a Couple in the Tuileries

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

Unlike series that develop from an image or group of images, this series started with a concept. I started by building my room with a window. The concept and the images are deceptively simple. Figuring out which furniture, the balance of consistency and change, of complexity and simplicity, that would effectively convey the concept, took an enormous amount of trial and error, experimentation, and continuous redesign. The images themselves fell easily into place, like a child playing with a dollhouse, once the format was established.

How has your photography changed since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic? Has the Atelier been a motivator to persevere through these trying times?

The pandemic forced me to take a completely different approach to my photography.  Although, it was also the logical extension of where my work had been heading in the months just before the pandemic.  While most of my work has been candid, street photography, and landscapes, at the end of 2019 I was working on a compositing project which I began while taking the Atelier class that fall.  Being largely stuck in my house forced me to focus on more personal projects, and on making work using photographs I had already taken and the objects around me.  I played a lot with compositing as a way of telling visual stories using the materials available to me. Irrespective of the pandemic, the Atelier has motivated me to experiment with new subjects and techniques that have been critical to pushing me forward as an artist.

window looking at a church

© Diana Cheren Nygren – I Dreamed I Was in a Church

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

With this project, as with most of my work, I hope the viewer sees both the humor and something that resonates at a deeper level.  It has been an incredibly strange year.  I think it will take us all some time to get our minds around what it has meant for us.  But while I hope the viewer can identify with the feeling of confinement portrayed in these images, at the end of the day, this is a playful project. I had fun working on it and I want it to bee fun for the viewer as well.

What is the significance of playing with perception and a fictionalized reality in the way you have done here?

I think if it had been a real room in the pictures, the space would have been too specific and too personal. By creating a simulation of a room, I want it to have the potential to speak in a more universal way so that viewers can relate to the space and feel themselves in it. The project is also about imagination and our abilities to transport ourselves. We have very concrete coping mechanisms in difficult times, but psychological ones too. These constructions give concrete form to the process of imagining, but hopefully in a way that doesn’t feel fantastical but maintains some grounding in experience of the world. One thing I have discovered through the last year, both with the experience of relative isolation and with the political turmoil and the ubiquity of the notion of fake news in the United States, is how easy it is to become disconnected from reality, and how quickly you can start to question your own ability to judge what is real. I hope that some of that tension, and some of the surreal quality of this year, comes through in the images.

window looking on to a street

© Diana Cheren Nygren – I Dreamed I Walked the Streets of Paris

Tell us what is next for you creatively.

 Honestly I don’t know what comes next. I am still working on a couple of ongoing projects. I have been playing around with hand coloring and with different kinds of paper, and I imagine whatever I do it will have a mixed media dimension. I love straight photography. But for now I am definitely getting pulled further and further into ways the artist’s hand can intervene in the image. I’d like to play with varnishes, different modes of presentation, and possibly staged imagery. That all might change, however, once things open up and I get out into the world more.

For more of Diana Cheren Nygren’s work, visit her website, her Facebook, and her Instagram, @DianaCherenNygrenPhotography.

Filed Under: Atelier, Uncategorized, Blog Tagged With: Artist Talk, Photographers on Photography, atelier 33

Atelier 33 | Diane Shohet

Posted on March 15, 2021

In this highlight of the Atelier 33 exhibition, we interviewed Diane Shohet to hear about her collection, currently on view in the Griffin Main gallery until March 26, 2021. For the Atelier show, Diane captured images of her “little house” in Wellfleet, Massachusetts as a way to reminisce on past summer memories.

blue chairs and table

© Diane Shohet – The Blue Chairs

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

The Blue Chairs inspired the rest of the series in a number of ways. It focused on a space touched by human presence, yet connected to the natural world. The colors of the chairs, pale and faded, as if dimmed by the memory, inspired the colors in the rest of the series. The emerald of the trees and the summer light also infused the rest of the series.

How has your photography changed since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic? Has the Atelier been a motivator to persevere through these trying times?

At first, the pandemic made it difficult for me to find inspiration and to take photos. I spent time re-envisioning images taken during different times. My annual visit to the Cape this past summer inspired me to photograph again. The Atelier started in the Fall and weekly assignments forced me to explore my new and more restricted world. It motivated me to keep taking pictures. And then, in preparation for the show, I stretched myself in new areas: Photoshop, printing, and presenting for exhibit. Great learning experience.

lamp over bed and pillows

© Diane Shohet – At Night

What can be said about the idea of portraiture captured through objects, as opposed to people?

I love taking pictures of people. The pandemic put people out of reach. It was then that I realized that certain objects and spaces held their presence. So, the objects and spaces became portraits of where they had been.

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

Their own memories of summer.

white towel hanging outside

© Diane Shohet – Showering

 

Tell us what is next for you creatively.

Right now, my creativity is going into writing for my job. I hope to start another photography project soon.

To see more of Diane Shohet’s work, visit her website.

Filed Under: Uncategorized, Blog, Atelier Tagged With: Artist Talk, Photographers on Photography, atelier 33

Atelier 33 | Peter Balentine

Posted on March 13, 2021

In this highlight of the Atelier 33 exhibition, we interviewed Peter Balentine about his series Home Markets, which can be seen in the Griffin Main Gallery until March 26, 2021. This collection documents the many family owned markets that can be found around the city of Lynn, Massachusetts, where Peter is a pastor at an immigrant church. He has taken an interest in celebrating the culture that these many stores have brought to his city.

La Familia Market

© Peter Balentine – Summer and Burns

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

Actually, the impetus for this series was the work of Bernd and Hilla Becher who catalogued water towers, barns and other architectural features in Eastern Europe for over 40 years. I took a MOMA class last spring, “Seeing Through Photography”, and their work was featured. During a drive in my new city of Lynn one day this fall, the markets begin popping out at me. La Familia, a grocery store on Summer and Burns was my first “home market” I photographed. I love the orange color of the awning combined with the purple trim, and the long steps that went up to the front door above the market. This market then drew me to look for others to photograph. I am up to 37 markets now in the home market typology in Lynn.

How has your photography changed since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic? Has the Atelier been a motivator to persevere through these trying times?

The pandemic actually gave me some extra time at home to study photography, work on my craft and skills, and take several classes online. Atelier was an amazing supportive environment that helped me stay focused on this project, and also experiment with other class assignments as well. The every Thursday a.m. routine of showing work was very helpful to stay disciplined in making work regularly.

Cibao Market

© Peter Balentine – South Common and Shepard

What drew you to want to represent the stories of immigrant families creating lives in your community?

I am a pastor of an immigrant church in Lynn and desire to know more about the lives of people coming from other countries, but now living in our city. Home markets get one right down to the grass roots of everyday life: markets are where you go to get what you need to live and raise a family. I wanted to better understand people. In a small way, I thought also that a catalog of these markets might contribute to the history of the city of Lynn.

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

I hope people will have fun viewing the variety of colors, shapes, and ethnic
backgrounds of these markets. I hope it will cause them to look for uniqueness and beauty in their own communities, especially as offered by people coming from other parts of the world.

Caribbean Choice & Variety market

© Peter Balentine – Lynnway and Washington

Tell us what is next for you creatively.

I would like to work on portraits of people at my church and living in the surrounding neighborhoods of the church. This can be challenging due to the fact that we are a gateway city of immigrants. The first step is to just build relationships and get to know people. The camera will come out later and only if people are okay with it.

For more of Peter Balentine’s work, check out his website and visit his Instagram, @PeterJeremyBalentine.

Filed Under: Uncategorized, Blog, Atelier Tagged With: Artist Talk, Photographers on Photography, atelier 33

Atelier 33 | Sandy Gotlib

Posted on March 12, 2021

In this highlight of the Atelier 33 exhibition, we’ll look at Sandy Gotlib‘s ongoing collection, Framingham Farms. Sandy’s current work, showing in the Griffin Main Gallery until March 26, 2021, belongs to a year-long project documenting the surviving farms of Framingham, Massachusetts. To hear more about Sandy’s work, we asked him some questions.

greenhouse in field

© Sandy Gotlib – Greenhouse #5

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

While my intent was to continue to document an entire year – a full agricultural cycle – on the farms,  initially I found myself drawn to these plastic-sheathed, light-filled  greenhouses which grounds the series of images on display.

 

 

How has your photography changed since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic? Has the Atelier been a motivator through these trying times?

I found that the restrictions imposed by COVID and the effects on my own motivation to work caused me to set aside photography in the early months of the pandemic. The Atelier was a huge help in providing structure and motivation to get my practice re-started.

inside a greenhouse

© Sandy Gotlib – Greenhouse #3

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

I hope that viewers take away the realization that there is beauty and wonder to be found in these humble lands and simple structures and that one does need to go far to find it. Additionally, I hope to provide another view of the place that I live for those who only know Framingham as a city of shopping malls and industry.

Why was it important for you to preserve these farms photographically? 

While some of these farms are “protected space” others are constantly under the threat of development; once developed, the space is gone forever and while I’d like to think that they will ultimately be physically preserved at the very least I’m wanting to preserve them photographically.

dead flowers

© Sandy Gotlib – Gone to Seed

Tell us what is next for you creatively.

I am planning to continue this project and document the farms (or a farm) through a full year agricultural cycle. At the same time I plan to continue to work on another long-term project that documents the many aspects of  “life on the Framingham Common.”

To see Sandy Gotlib’s work and follow along as he completes Framingham Farms, check out his website and his Instagram, @SandyG_Photo.

Filed Under: Uncategorized, Blog, Atelier Tagged With: atelier 33, Artist Talk, Photographers on Photography

Atelier 33 | Marc Goldring

Posted on March 11, 2021

In this highlight of the Atelier 33 exhibition, we interviewed Marc Goldring about his current collection, Vision of Trees. Marc’s work, on view in the Griffin Main Gallery until March 26, 2021, documents the sculptural forms of trees and the stories that theses ancient beings can tell.

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

MG - two trees

© Marc Goldring – Two Trees

I walk around Jamaica Pond just about every day and generally walk past an amazing beech trees and two glorious sycamore trees. I have dozens of shots of both of those trees and I’ve been honing my ability to capture what I see in them. Most of my work tends toward abstraction – enigmatic images where you need to look long and hard to understand what you’re looking at. The image called “Two Trees” was the first time I really was able to create an image that worked in that way. After that, with the impetus of Atelier, I worked to flesh out a series, some of which are more narrative and portrait-like than my work usually is.

How has your photography changed since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic?

I’m still interested in the same sort of images that always attracted me but I have so much more time to work that I’m spending a lot more time shooting and processing. The other shift is that I don’t print as much – jpegs are the name of the game more often than not. Thing is, you can get away with a lot more with an image on a screen as opposed to paper! So I think it’s made me be a bit more adventurous in my post-processing.

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

I find these ancient trees inspiring. They live slow lives which I imagine allows for greater intention and reflection, at least it would for me, if I could slow down! I would like people to look more carefully at trees, at the ways in which our human lives intersect and interact with trees and the rest of the natural world.

MG - tree by the river

© Marc Goldring – Tree by the River

How has your inspiration for photography changed throughout your life changed as your surroundings changed?

I started out shooting to supplement the narrative reports I wrote on my consulting projects, working with arts organizations. Mostly people shots and the odd interesting perspective to make the reports less dense with words.
It’s only been 4-5 years since I stopped consulting, that I’ve really focused on themes and series of images that work together as a group. Much more challenging, more fun!

MG - sycamore tree

© Marc Goldring – Sycamore

 

Tell us what is next for you creatively.

I have several on-going projects, one of which is this portfolio of trees. I also am working on a series of shots of my grandson with whom I hope, once again, I will get to spend a great deal of time with. Beyond that, who knows!

Find more of Marc Goldring‘s work on his website and on his Facebook.

Filed Under: Blog, Atelier Tagged With: Artist Talk, Photographers on Photography, Atelier, atelier 33

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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