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Landscape

Illuminating the Archive of Arthur Griffin: Photographs 1935-1955, Part V

Posted on April 20, 2021

“Use a little imagination and create something that will not be just a record of a beautiful place. The extra effort and thought will result in something with some of you in it. Something you and only you created.” -Arthur Griffin

Landscape Photography

By Madison Marone

Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
Mount Washington: Coös County, New Hampshire

Introduction

Arthur Griffin’s legacy lives on through the Griffin Museum of Photography. Our mission is to encourage a broader understanding and appreciation of the visual, emotional, and social impact of photographic art. I’ve created this exhibition to align with these goals and values. My intention is to highlight and provide context for Griffin’s work so viewers may experience it in new and exciting ways.

Illuminating the Archive of Arthur Griffin: Photographs 1935-1955, views the region’s cultural heritage, traditions, and aesthetic through the lens of Griffin’s lesser-known work. The six-part exhibition explores how photography affects the way we relate to and understand the past. Each exhibit features historical, sociological, and creative interpretations of photographs from the museum’s collection. This installment focuses on landscape photography. It is separated into three sections: natural landscapes, seascapes, and cityscapes. Each section begins with a quote from Griffin to better understand his artistic perspective.

AG Archive- Cape Cod bridge
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
Bridge over the Canal: Cape Cod, Massachusetts

Natural Landscapes

“New England offers more for artists, photographers, and lovers of beauty than any other section of its size in the world. We really have just about everything… Where is fall more colorful? Coastline more interesting? Spring more awakening? Summer more delightful and changeable? Winter pore photogenic (and cold)?” –Arthur Griffin

AG Archive- Swift River
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
Swift River: Conway, New Hampshire

New England’s geography is remarkably beautiful and diverse. In the southeast, the land consists of coastal plains and beaches. Rolling hills, jagged coastlines, and mountain ranges are found in the western and northern regions. The Appalachian Mountains extend past western New England into Maine and Canada, adding texture to the wondrous landscape.

Griffin enjoyed photographing and exploring the natural world. His admiration for the land comes across in the following photographs. In the first image, a tree is backlit by the sun, creating an angelic glow. The second is a dramatic aerial photograph of Mount Washington. The third photograph depicts a rural New Hampshire town contrasted with the expansiveness of the land. In the following image, Mount Lafayette’s peaks are framed among the clouds, creating a metaphorical connection between elements of the natural world. The final photograph is a serene, snowy Vermont landscape. 

AG Archive- tree and clouds
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
Cape Porpoise: Kennebunkport, Maine
AG Archive- Mt Washington aerial view
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
Mount Washington: Coös County, New Hampshire
AG Archive- Ammonoosuc River
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
Ammonoosuc River: Coös County, New Hampshire
AG Archive- Mt Lafayette
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
Mount Lafayette: Franconia, New Hampshire
AG Archive- VT mountain
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
Pownal, Vermont

Seascapes

“New England’s ocean shore is lined with dramatic rocks against which the waves play an obliging discordant ballet, while but a short distance away, the water washes more politely against sand dunes and gentle beaches. Just round the corner, the boats of the fishing fleet, or the yachts of the leisured, invite a still further fascinating investigation.” -Arthur Griffin

AG Archive- sea and clouds
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
Biddeford, Maine

Coastal New England is framed by the Atlantic Ocean. From southwestern Connecticut to northeastern Maine, the coast varies between beaches, marshes, wetlands, and hillsides. The ocean has long been regarded as a mysterious and adventurous terrain. Griffin’s images express these sentiments. His photographs capture the energy of the sea, framing it as a character in its own geographical story. If you would like to see more of Griffin’s maritime photographs, please visit Part IV of the exhibition: New England & the Sea.

In the first photograph, waves are seen crashing over rocks as the water rushes towards the shore. The second image is a serene shot with colors progressing from the darkness of the sea to the brightness of the sky. The following photo features a Cape Cod town and the vast ocean that surrounds it. The final two photographs lay in contrast to one another. One was taken at sunrise, while the other was taken under a full moon.

AG Archive- Schoodic Point
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
Schoodic Point: Acadia National Park, Maine
AG Archive- New Harbor, Maine
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
New Harbor, Maine
AG Archive- Cape Cod
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
Cape Cod: Dennis, Massachusetts
AG Archive- Sunrise
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
Sunrise: Maine
AG Archive- full moon over the water
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
Full moon over the ocean: Marblehead, Massachusetts

Cityscapes

“Most buildings are not very photogenic or interesting unless you can get unusual lighting, frame the picture effectively, or get personalities in the scene… You can’t get the best angles and views by always staying on the ground. I took some of the pictures from a plane. To get the grasshopper on top of the cupola of Faneuil Hall, I had to climb countless stairs and ladders, open a skylight, and trust a muscular janitor to hold my legs while I leaned out and shot skyward.” –Arthur Griffin

AG Archive- grasshopper
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
Cupola on Faneuil Hall: Boston, Massachusetts

The metropolitan areas of New England feature an interesting mixture of historic and modern architecture. From industrial factories to bustling neighborhoods, these cities provide rich material for a curious photographer to work with. Arthur Griffin was as enthusiastic about documenting urban landscapes as he was natural landscapes. He photographed cities from unconventional perspectives, finding unique angles and lighting.

The following photos showcase Griffin’s creativity. The first image is an aerial view of Boston’s parks, skyscrapers, and bay. The second looks up at an industrial building engulfed in steam. The next photo emphasizes the bright energy of Harvard’s campus, dramatically framed with dark plants in the foreground. The fourth image features the steaming Golden Teapot, which serves as an advertisement for the bustling city. In the final photo, a mill’s bright lights illuminate the night, reflecting upon the Merrimack river.

AG Archive- aerial view of Boston
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
Aerial view of the city: Boston, Massachusetts
AG Archive- Waterfront industrial
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
Waterfront industrial: Boston, Massachusetts
AG Archive- Harvard
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
Harvard: Boston, Massachusetts
AG Archive- Golden Teapot
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
The Oriental Tea Company’s Golden Teapot: Boston, Massachusetts
AG Archive- Mills at night
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
Mills at night: Lawrence, Massachusetts

Final Thoughts

“With the changing of the seasons, every scene presents a different picture. A person can devote a lifetime to New England and never cover half of the possibilities. I know. I have.” –Arthur Griffin

AG Archive- sea and sky
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
Nantucket, Massachusetts

Griffin’s admiration for the outdoors and passion for photography resulted in photographs that do more than just record how a place looks. His photographs inspire emotional responses. Landscape photography has the ability to guide viewers to spaces they have never been, or long to return to. Each photograph offers an opportunity for us to travel to new places in our hearts and minds.

Special thanks to the Boston Public Library for digitizing a large portion of the Arthur Griffin Archive so it may be accessible to the public. If you would like to view more photos and library material, visit the Boston Public Library for the Digital Commonwealth and the Digital Public Library of America.


Madison Marone is an Exhibition Assistant at the Griffin Museum of Photography and a graduate student pursuing her MSc in museum studies at the University of Glasgow. She holds a BA in film studies and sociology from the University of Vermont. Her interests include early to mid-20th-century art history, film theory, and exhibit design.


References:

Griffin, Arthur, and McCord David Thompson Watson. New England Revisited. The Author, 1966.

Kenny, Herbert A., et al. New England in Focus: the Arthur Griffin Story. A. Griffin, 1995.

All images on this webpage © copyright 2021 by the Griffin Museum of Photography. All rights reserved.  No part of this webpage may be reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission of the museum except in the case of brief quotations from the written material with citation.

Filed Under: Arthur Griffin Tagged With: Photography Education, Arthur Griffin Archive, New England, Photography, black and white, documentary photography, Landscape, vintage photographs

Illuminating the Archive of Arthur Griffin: Photographs 1935-1955, Part I

Posted on February 16, 2021

“The Griffin is the embodiment of founder Arthur Griffin’s passion — to promote an appreciation of photographic art and a broader understanding of its visual, emotional, and social impact. Arthur’s goal was to share with visitors his enthusiasm for a medium that is diverse, imaginative, and informative.” -The Griffin Museum of Photography

Winter Traditions

By Madison Marone

AG Archive - winter barn
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
Stowe, Vermont
AG Archive - winter fence
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
Lincoln, Massachusetts

Introduction

As an Exhibitions Assistant at the Griffin Museum of Photography, I became curious about the stories and situations surrounding Arthur Griffin’s work. After looking through the archives, I noted that his photography has both artistic and historical value. This inspired me to curate the following exhibit reflecting on winter traditions in New England. Engaging with Griffin’s work helps frame our understanding of the past and deepen our appreciation of the present. The intention of this exhibition is to highlight and provide context for his photography so viewers may experience it in new and exciting ways.

Arthur Griffin’s legacy lives on through the Griffin Museum of Photography. He is remembered as a successful photographer for the Boston Globe and a New England photojournalist for Life and Time magazines. Griffin was a pioneer in the use of color film, providing the first color photos to appear in the Saturday Evening Post. His work captures the essence and vibrancy of mid-20th century New England.

Illuminating the Archive of Arthur Griffin: Photographs 1935-1955, views the region’s cultural heritage, traditions, and aesthetic through the lens of Griffin’s lesser-known work. This six-part exhibition explores how photography enhances our relationship with and understanding of the past. Each exhibit features historical, sociological, and creative interpretations of photographs from the museum’s collection.

AG Archive - sugar sap buckets
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
Collecting maple sap: Wilmington, Vermont

This installment focuses on the history of winter traditions in New England. The following photographs depict specific situations where people came together to work and celebrate the season. In the first section, farmers and their families gather to create maple syrup. The second section explores the trend of “sugaring-off parties,” while the third details the annual Dartmouth Winter Carnival. Griffin’s work captures the spirit of these communities as they persevere through the coldest months and find joy in their traditions. Griffin’s photos do more than document moments gone by, they invite us to see ourselves in them.

Maple Sugaring

Collecting sap and turning it into maple products remains one of the oldest traditions in New England’s history. Indigenous North Americans discovered the process long before Europeans arrived in the region. It has continued to evolve and grow into the industry we know today.

Maple sugaring became a way for farmers to supplement their income over the winter months. They could sell syrup, candies, and sugary treats both locally and nationwide. The whole family would partake in the maple sugaring process. It involved tapping maple trees, hanging buckets, gathering sap, and retrieving it with animal-drawn sleds. The sap was boiled down into syrup, filtered, and bottled for storage or sale.

Griffin often visited Vermont and New Hampshire to document these farmers. His work provides a sense of connection with these communities as they labor to create income from this culinary treat. Photographs of children accentuate the fact that this duty is often inherited and passed down through generations. The last portrait of this section humanizes and honors an individual farmer in a style reminiscent of Dorthea Lange.

AG Archive - tree sap
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
Tapping trees: New London, New Hampshire
AG Archive - buckets of sap
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
Gathering maple sap: Marlboro, Vermont
AG Archive - cow pulling syrup
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
Gathering maple sap: Wilmington, Vermont
AG Archive - pouring sap
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
Gathering maple sap: New Hampshire
AG Archive - sap to syrup
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
Boiling sap into syrup: Vermont
AG Archive - drinking syrup
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
Testing the syrup: West Brattleboro, Vermont

Sugaring-Off Party: 1941

Sap harvesting season in New England ranges from February to April, coinciding with the coming of spring. One of the ways to celebrate this seasonal change is a “sugaring-off” party. These parties often include music, dancing, and of course, eating syrup-based sweets. Variations of sugaring-off parties have been held since maple sugaring began. Certain indigenous tribes developed sacred rituals and maple dances to honor the first full moon of spring, known as the Sugar Moon. The tradition of hosting sugaring-off parties is still alive today.

On April 5th, 1941, Griffin visited Franconia, New Hampshire. Bette Davis was in town for the world premiere of her movie “The Great Lie” and to celebrate her birthday. The day began with a sugaring-off party hosted by Wilfred “Sugar Bill” Dexter and his wife Polly. Celebrities and writers gathered to take part in the festivities.

Griffin documented the setting of the party as well as those in attendance. Establishing shots show sugar being prepared in big kettles while crowds gather around. Medium shots of buffet lines feature people tasting treats and conversing. Through these images, this vintage scene comes alive. They enable viewers to sense the joyous energy of a sugaring-off party.

AG Archive - snow syrup candy
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
Drizzling hot syrup on packed snow to make “sugar snow”: Franconia, New Hampshire
AG Archive snow syrup
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
Wilfred “Sugar Bill” Dexter (right): Franconia, New Hampshire
AG Archive - sap pouring
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
Fresh maple sugar heated in kettles: Franconia, New Hampshire
AG Archive - Sap tasting
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
Treats included doughnuts, sugar snow, pickles, maple taffy, and coffee: Franconia, New Hampshire
AG Archive - maple candy
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
Sugaring-off party: Franconia, New Hampshire

Dartmouth Winter Carnival: 1939

Meanwhile, another form of winter festivities was taking place in New Hampshire: the annual Dartmouth Winter Carnival. The carnival was created in 1910 and is still going strong. What began as a weekend to promote winter sports on campus quickly turned into what National Geographic Magazine called the “Mardi Gras of the North.” Over the years, specific activities included ice sculpture contests, beauty pageants, slalom races, dances, polar plunges, and ice skating shows. Due to COVID-19 restrictions, 2021’s “Level Up: Carnival Rebooted” takes place online in the form of videos and virtual gaming. The carnival continues to be a celebratory part of Dartmouth’s identity. 

Griffin attended the carnival of 1939, the same year F. Scott Fitzgerald visited with Budd Schulberg to work on a screenplay for the movie “Winter Carnival.” Dartmouth was still an all-male college at that time. In an effort to attract female attendees, the school held a “Queen of Snows” beauty pageant from 1923 to 1973. Students were encouraged to bring dates from their hometown and neighboring colleges. On Friday afternoon, Hanover station would be bustling with reuniting couples, aspiring movie stars, and performers. The weekend was full of outdoor activities during the day and parties at night.

The following photographs capture the exciting atmosphere of the Winter Carnival. Griffin’s work depicts a sense of vitality, movement, and youthful enthusiasm. These images show a community coming together in celebration of friendship and the winter season.

AG Archive - couple travel
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
Friday at Hanover Station: Hanover, New Hampshire
AG Archive - couples hanging out
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
Friday night fraternity party: Hanover, New Hampshire
AG Archive - slope skiing
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
Saturday morning slalom Race: Hanover, New Hampshire
AG Archive - winter dancing
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
Dance at the Delta Tau Delta house: Hanover, New Hampshire
AG Archive - snow queen
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
The 1939 “Queen of Snows” Dorothy Gardner: Hanover, New Hampshire
AG Archive - snow queen and court
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
The “Queen of Snows” and her court: Hanover, New Hampshire
AG Archive - snow sculpture
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
Prize-Winning Snow Sculpture: Hanover, New Hampshire
AG Archive - kiss
Photo by Arthur Griffin, © Griffin Museum of Photography, All rights reserved
A goodbye kiss: Hanover, New Hampshire

Final Thoughts

In the year 2021, we may feel extra nostalgic for big gatherings and celebrations. We have had to alter and revise our own traditions and make sacrifices for the greater good. But, we will persevere. Through this experience, we will find even deeper meaning in the connections we have with one another. Engaging with Griffin’s work can help us celebrate our communities, remember our history, and keep traditions alive in our hearts.

Special thanks to the Boston Public Library for digitizing a large portion of the Arthur Griffin Archive so it may be accessible to the public. If you would like to view more photos and library material, visit the Boston Public Library for the Digital Commonwealth and the Digital Public Library of America.


Madison Marone is an Exhibition Assistant at the Griffin Museum of Photography and a graduate student pursuing her MSc in museum studies at the University of Glasgow. She holds a BA in film studies and sociology from the University of Vermont. Her interests include early to mid-20th-century art history, film theory, and exhibit design.


References:

 Pickert, Kate. “A Brief History of Maple Syrup.” Time, Time, 16 Apr. 2009, time.com/3958051/history-of-maple-syrup/.

 “Maple Sugaring History.” New England Maple Museum, 14 Mar. 2020, www.maplemuseum.com/maple-syrup-history/.

 Ely, Christina. “Maple Sugaring During a Full Sap Moon.” The Farmers’ Museum, 2011, thefarmersmuseum.blogspot.com/2011/02/maple-sugaring-during-full-sap-moon.html.

 Kelly, George. “Bette Davis Eyes Sugar Hill.” New Hampshire Magazine, 1 Mar. 2012, www.nhmagazine.com/bette-davis-eyes-sugar-hill-2/.

 Bald, Barbra. The North Star: Bette Davis, 4 Nov. 2008, newhampshireadventures.blogspot.com/2008/11/north-star-bette-davis.html.

 Rhodes, Jennie. “‘The Broken Country and Long Winter’: The History of the Winter Carnival.” The Dartmouth, 8 Feb. 2019, www.thedartmouth.com/article/2019/02/rhodes-carnival-history.

 Desai, Nicholas. “Fitzgerald Visits Hanover.” The Dartmouth Review, dartreview.com/fitzgerald-visits-hanover/.

All images on this webpage © copyright 2021 by the Griffin Museum of Photography. All rights reserved.  No part of this webpage may be reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission of the museum except in the case of brief quotations from the written material with citation.

Filed Under: Arthur Griffin Tagged With: Photography Education, Portraits, winter, Arthur Griffin Archive, New England, Photography, black and white, documentary photography, Landscape, vintage photographs

Atelier 32 | Jeanne Widmer

Posted on September 22, 2020

We have had the pleasure of featuring Jeanne Widmer‘s work from past Atelier classes, and this series, Grace Notes, is our creative vision today. Jeanne’s lovely quiet images stem from the quiet isolation of COVID and the ability see more clearly and look more deeply at the world that surrounds us. Her work is on the walls of the Atelier 32 exhibition, and on our blog today. For more background on Grace Notes, we asked her a few questions.

 

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

Like everyone, I squirreled myself indoors in mid-March, just after the Atelier 32 began, only venturing out cautiously with my camera on long daily walks in the neighborhoods of my town. Since I had previously spent three years taking photos of a large local town village development project, I was looking to challenge myself differently. Like many photographers,

jw - spider

© Jeanne Widmer – Spider

I was first struck by the starkness of  nearly empty streets, closed shops, buttoned up houses, and empty schoolyards, which reminded me of Todd Hido’s beautiful, often haunting work. But those photos were not enough. I began looking into the spaces for signs of life, details which made the scene come alive in a different way. I studied Helen Levitt’s precise detailed views of New York City and Matt Roberts, who, in his street photography, spoke of becoming more observant and open to the beauty of everyday scenes, finding some of his shots more powerful as diptychs or triptychs. When I first looked at my photo entitled “Spider,” reflections of intertwined tree limbs on a wet, red concrete, I knew it was the direction I wanted to follow.  My eyes focused differently. I began noticing a trail of light on pavement, interesting petal filled puddles or drops of night rain on a floral leaf. I marveled at the reality that while we were all pausing and waiting in place, nature, never docile, continued its rainy march into spring.

 

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

jw - pip

© Jeanne Widmer – Petals in Puddle

The Covid 19 virus has destroyed many lives, robbed others of livelihoods or homes, and put families and individuals under intense pressure. At the same time, it has provided the opportunity for us to appreciate the human connections, routines and experiences which bring grace and joy into our lives. The pandemic has allowed us to pause and look closely at what essentially matters to us. Whether we look is our choice. By focusing with me on some of the smallest details in nature—in which a close up angle of an otherwise average scene is either unexpectedly satisfying and hopeful or can darken a mood by looking like the virus itself (“Molten Salmon Puddle”), I hope viewers can share and absorb a deep appreciation for the tiny moments—often hidden– that grace our lives.

How the Atelier has helped you hone your vision as an artist?

jw - wet petals

© Jeanne Widmer – Wet Petals

Having a 12-week course with a skilled photographer and teacher as well as talented classmates is a real motivator to develop a body of work. The challenging photographic exercises, the weekly feedback, the guest artist, and the encouragement and support in trying something new makes a real difference in developing confidence and focus. I hope to continue stretching my vision to see my world differently, whether in landscape, portrait or documentary photography. I am deeply appreciative for the Griffin professional staff’s continued dedication to excellence in its programs and exhibits supporting both established and aspiring photographers.

About Jeanne Widmer – 

Growing up in Rhode Island shaped Jeanne Widmer’s attraction to worn urban locations and friendly, neighborhood businesses. An educator, counselor and writer, Widmer, from Belmont, Massachusetts, has studied photography at the Arlington Center for the Arts, the Griffin Museum and the New England School of Photography. Besides many group exhibits, she has had two solo exhibits, one which captured the vibrancy, color and dark expectancy of a single screen movie theater and another which highlighted the subtle drama and dignity of an historic, working class group of businesses. She exhibited with the Atelier 29th class at the Griffin Museum of Photography focusing on portraits.

Find her online on Instagram @WidmerJeanne

Filed Under: Blog, Atelier Tagged With: Portfolio Development, Griffin Museum Education, macro vision, close up, abstract, Landscape, Atelier, Atelier 32

Corona | Dawn Watson

Posted on June 15, 2020

We close out our features on our online Corona exhibition with the powerful and graphic work of Dawn Watson. Message from Grace is a beautiful and unique vision of landscape with a call to action. Her work implores us to look, to experience, to take time and see what is around us. We asked her to be part of our online exhibition because her work shines a light both externally into the world around us, and emotionally radiates the soul of who we are in it. We asked her a few questions about her work, and what is next for her.

 

Purple petals

© Dawn Watson, “Moment’s Meditation”

How does light play in your work?

I’m drawn to the play at the edge where light and shadow meet. My still life work takes advantage of the natural light that enters my home studio. The incremental, constant change of angle and intensity of direct sunlight or the softer fill of an overcast day means I need to be ever aware and responsive to what will best serve the mood or message. Being outside in the landscape requires the same intuitive presence as I am at the mercy of multiple elements but light is always the first defining aspect that I seek.

 

 

The Griffin featured Message from Grace in 2018. Your series plays on light and a new way of seeing our natural world. How did you find your palette to showcase the world around us?

Abstract image

© Dawn Watson, “Glacial Slide”

While doing some research, I saw in a photo the color combination of brilliant blues and golds used for the external skin of the Mission satellites orbiting in space. By inverting my photographic image, these same tones appeared in the inverted field with little to no deeper adjustment to the color tone in the images. The reveal of the color negative upended my understanding of the natural elements. Sky became ground, sand a glacier, reflection a galaxy, invasive plant species delicate lacy delights, the brilliant sun a black hole.

 

In all of your images the combination of science, nature and visual engagement really invites us as viewers to experience and be thoughtful about our shared inhabited spaces. What is your hope for us as viewers to take away from your work?

Abstract image

© Dawn Watson, ” Mustard Marsh”

There is this conversation of call and response in and with the natural world, each other, and the larger human community. How we respond now directly affects our future. Due to excessive human activity, weather intensifies, the world shape shifts and the familiar disappears. What is our relationship to loss, inequities, constant change? Where do we find shelter, sustenance and solace? How do we define beauty? What is its worth as the natural world morphs from the familiar to the unrecognizable and uninhabitable? My hope is this work inspires reflection that motivates action.

 

In this time of Corona, how do you find light in your day?

dw - rere 41

© Dawn Watson, ReRe N. 41

 

Forced confinement has been both a difficult challenge and, paradoxically, a gift granting me the chance to be still, to be quiet. Different each day, I track the passage of time as the sunlight makes it’s marks along the walls, ceiling, floors and furniture. I step outside often, turning towards the sun watching how it catches in the trees, how wind plays with the light.

 

 

 

What is next for you creatively? What are you working on?

dw db2

© Dawn Watson, Drift/Bound N. 2

Two new series have been gestating for a while. I was unsure of what I wanted to say and thought it best to let things be for a bit. Not until very recently did I reach some clarity. Drift/Bound visually translates my visceral response to how disconnected we feel as recent events have rocked our world. The crumpled, misshapen forms in my prints drift against fields of light and dark, unmoored, as we are, from any familiar world. ReRe is a still life series using saved plastic packaging material, natural elements and found or collected objects. It asks do we repurpose, recycle, redirect, reform and renew or let go of what remains?

 

About Dawn Watson –

After twenty-five years as a professional dancer, Dawn Watson shifted her artistic practice to photography, finding affinity in the visual storytelling offered by both live performance and the captured image. Watson’s photographic renderings continue to explore form, space, light, movement and storytelling, as she did as a performer.  Nature serves as her muse, her subject of concern, a source of solace and healing.

dw db1

© Dawn Watson, Drift / Bound N. 1

Watson studied photography at the Maine Media Workshop, the ICP (International Center of Photography), as well as the Santa Fe Workshop. Her work has been featured online and in print, including in Lenscratch and The Hand magazine. She has exhibited her photographs and artist books throughout the United States and Europe including the Albrecht-Kemper Museum, A Smith Gallery, Center for Fine Art Photography, PhotoPlace Gallery, Ph21 Gallery, Tilt Gallery, Tang Teaching Museum, and in solo exhibitions at The Griffin Museum of Photography at Greater Boston Stage Company, the Los Angeles Center for Photography and Rhode Island Center for Photographic Arts. Her work is held in private collections and at The Lodge at Woodloch.

 

To see more of Dawn Watson‘s work log onto her website. Follow her on Instagram here.

Filed Under: Blog, Online Exhibitions Tagged With: online exhibition, Griffin Museum Online, Landscape, Corona Exhibition, call to action, color

Corona | Kevin Hoth

Posted on June 8, 2020

Holding a mirror up to our surroundings isn’t just an idea for Kevin Hoth. In his series Everywhere and All at Once, shown at the Griffin in 2018, Hoth uses a mirror to give us that fuller view. Reflection is important, especially now, in so many ways. In seeing the landscape as a fully sensory lived and shared experience, Kevin has given us a way to experience light and life in a new way.  His image highlighted in our Corona exhibition, Overdub, is a perfect example of light and the ideas of Corona.

 

How does light play in your work?

Abstract rock

Mohawk © Kevin Hoth

It’s funny, I almost never think about it but that is because I am so intimately involved with it on a daily basis. Light is always the raw material in my work, of course, though I don’t generally make work about it unless it relates to a particular project I am working on. During this time of coronavirus I have indeed been tracking the shadows in my home as a way to trace time. There is an arrangement of oblique light that falls on my daughter’s piano that I jokingly call “cubist piano time.” I’ve thought about making an image every time it falls like this and then create a tiled image of all of these fractured pianos. Some plant shadows have featured in some of my work but it usually is just for play or observational practice with an instant film camera. We are also creatures borne of light. All the sustenance that we require comes from sunlight.

We are featuring your image Overdub, from your series Everywhere and All at Once. Your creation of a visual landscape that incorporates multiple directions showcases a unique way of seeing. How did you find your vision? What was the first image in the series that pushed you forward to work that way?

rocks with orb shape

Overdub, © Kevin Hoth

I have always enjoyed noticing other spaces in reflections. About ten years ago I made some images looking into windows and I thought about how there were three spaces represented: the surface of the glass (a flat space but still a space to be rendered), what was inside the building, and what was behind me. So I think the consciousness of multiple spaces within one frame, from one vantage point was a growing seed inside me. The Everywhere And All At Once project really came from a mix of play and accident which is where all great discoveries come from. I was experimenting with mirrors back in 2012 for about a year and then set it aside as I didn’t know where it was going. Later a friend asked about the series so I picked up the mirror again and took it with me on hikes and road trips. I made an image of a mountain side connecting to a cloud, then one horizon line connecting into another and that is where my “ah-ha moment” occurred. As a photographic observer I often feel like I can see everything at once at one time. It’s almost a physical sensation. This project is a way for me to evoke that sensation. I also feel most alive in open, natural spaces and the expansiveness is something I am trying to show albeit from my singular vantage point.

Does the use of the mirror also hold a metaphorical gaze for you? In how we look at landscapes? What would you like viewers of your work to walk away with after seeing your photographs?

abstract lake

Cloud and Rock © Kevin Hoth

I suppose I’d like people to see what I see or at least feel some sensation of how I observe. I want the gaze here to be almost a disembodied or maybe a universal one. Although I am conscious that not all people have the same comfort level or privilege of being alone in a landscape. Some have noted a visual fragmentation in these images which one could liken to a Cubist viewpoint. Again, the idea here is merging several angles of view into one image even though I am combining them in one instant. I have made more of a conceptual connection to the way people often view landscapes through a phone screen. I’ve made a fair amount of this work in National Parks and when you stop at a prescribed viewpoint you see the phenomenon of the quick phone grab. We often are too busy looking through our phones to frame the right shot. Of course, I am also “guilty” as I am meditating my view through a camera.

In this time of Corona, how do you find light in your day?

hoth landscape

© Kevin Hoth

I appreciate small things maybe in the same way a child would. Light falling on the floor from my skylight, shadows from a tree shifting on my window shades in the afternoon. A red-orange poppy coming up in my yard is a celebration for me. Color fills me up in extremely energizing ways. My current work is around flowers and I am endlessly fascinated by them. My daughter is also a constant source of joy and light for me. I’m not sure how I would be doing without long hugs with her.

hoth flowers

© Kevin Hoth

 

 

What is next for you creatively? What are you working on?

I have been experimenting with instant film for quite some time and am currently working on a series called Immortal Chromatic. I photograph flowers that keep their color even after dying and then I create large instant film mosaics from these source images. I cut and burn the instant film “tiles” as they develop. The theme of creation and destruction has been part of this work with flowers across multiple projects. I am also integrating paint and thread into these physical pieces as well. They are photographs but they are also sculptural objects.

 

 

about Kevin Hoth – 

Kevin Hoth is an artist working with photography, video and performance. His current work deals with perception and the manner in which multiple spaces can be formed into a singular frame. Kevin also works heavily with deconstructed instant film to explore themes of creation/destruction, truth as it is represented in photography, as well as beauty and transience.

hoth studio

Kevin Hoth in his studio

Kevin has shown work in over one hundred exhibitions nationally and internationally, including recent exhibitions at The Dairy Center for the Arts, The Rhode Island Center for Photography, The Houston Center for Photography, and The Center For Fine Art Photography. His work will be part of the Qualities of LIGHT symposium at the Center for Creative Photography in Tucson in January of 2020. Recent awards include Top 200 Critical Mass, Center For Fine Art Photography Portfolio Showcase 12 and top ten finalist in the New Orleans Photo Alliance 2018 Clarence John Laughlin Award. Kevin recently completed an artist residency in January of 2019 in Brazil and explored how varied perceptions of time can be represented.

Kevin has taught college courses in photography, graphic design, and multimedia art at numerous universities and currently teaches at the University of Colorado Boulder where he has taught since 2011. He lives with his daughter in mountainous Boulder, CO and gets regularly woken up by coyote cries, owl hoots, and horse whinnies.

Fun facts: He did a stint as a full-time graphic designer for an Amazon.com company, made an interactive garment with force sensors that played odd bodily noises back in 2006, collaborated extensively with a modern dance company as a VJ, and played bass in a Seattle band that once played live on KEXP-Seattle.

To see more of Kevin Hoth‘s work, log onto his website. Look here follow him on Instagram.

Filed Under: Online Exhibitions Tagged With: light, online exhibition, Landscape, Corona Exhibition, mirror, metaphoric gaze, everywhere and all at once, color

June Photo Chat Chat | featuring Sean Du, Greg Jundanian, Eric Kunsman & Minny Lee

Posted on May 16, 2020

Once a month we bring together four photographers to talk about their work, and inspire us all creatively. Called the Photo Chat Chat, our next installment happens June 11th. Here is our line up. It promises to be a great conversation.

 

sd canadian rockies

Canadian Rockies, No. 6    © Sean Du

Sean Du is a landscape photographer whose work aims to reconnect us with nature. His on-going project “Above the Treeline” records, by way of hiking and climbing, the normally unseen views of North America’s mountain wildernesses. Since earning his BFA in photography from Art Center College of Design in Pasadena, California, his work had been exhibited in institutes such as the Center for Photographic Art in Carmel, California, Los Angeles Center of Photography, the Center for Fine Art Photography in Fort Collins, Colorado, Sangre de Cristo Arts Center in Pueblo, Colorado, and Photographic Center Northwest, in Seattle, Washington. He currently lives in Pasadena, California.

 

gj woman

© Gregory Jundanian

Gregory Jundanian is an emerging artist focused on portraiture with a concentration on communities. His current project, In Their Footsteps, is about his connection to Armenia, and the connection between Armenia and Armenian break-away republic of Artsakh. Other ongoing projects include a series of work on male identity focusing on local area barbershops, and different landscape projects that keep him busy until he can photograph people once again. In
the meantime he is finally fully utilizing his Netflix account.

Jundanian was a 2017 Critical Mass Top 200 finalist with Spoken Word, his work on the poetry slam community in Boston. He also had a solo show with that work at the South Boston Public Library, and has shown both nationally and internationally in group shows. He recently completed his post-bac degree at MassArt, and will be entering an MFA program at the University of Hartford this summer.

 

ek - rochester

East Main St, Rochester, NY  ©Eric Kunsman

Eric T. Kunsman (b. 1975) was born and raised in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania. While in high school, he was heavily influenced by the death of the steel industry and its place in American history. The exposure to the work of Walker Evans during this time hooked Eric onto photography.

Eric holds his MFA in Book Arts/Printmaking from The University of the Arts in Philadelphia and holds an MS in Electronic Publishing/Graphic Arts Media, BS in Biomedical Photography, BFA in Fine Art photography all from the Rochester Institute of Technology in Rochester, New York.

Currently, he is a photographer and book artist based out of Rochester, New York. Eric works at the Rochester Institute of Technology (RIT) as a Lecturer for the Visual Communications Studies Department at the National Technical Institute for the Deaf and is an adjunct professor for the School of Photographic Arts & Sciences. He has owned Booksmart Studio since 2005, which is a fine art digital printing studio, specializing in numerous techniques and services for photographers and book artists on a collaborative basis.

 

ml - self portrait

Self-portrait, Asbury Park, NJ , 2012. © Minny Lee

Minny Lee is a lens- based artist who is currently focusing on making artist’s books. Her work contemplates the concepts around time and space and the coexistence of duality. Lee was born and raised in South Korea and obtained an MA in Art History from City College of New York and an MFA in Advanced Photographic Studies from ICP-Bard. Lee was awarded a fellowship from the Reflexions Masterclass in Europe and participated in an artist-in-residence program at Halsnøy Kloster (Norway) and Vermont Studio Center. Her work has been exhibited at the Center for Fine Art Photography, Camera Club of New York, Datz Museum of Art (S. Korea), Espacio el Dorado (Colombia), Les Rencontres d’Arles (France), Lishui Photo Festival (China) among other venues. Lee’s artist’s books are in the collection of the International Center of Photography Library, New York Public Library, Special Collections at the University of Arizona, Special Collections at Stanford University, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Amon Carter Museum Library, and many other private collections. Lee was based in the greater New York area for more than twenty years and recently relocated to Honolulu, Hawaii.

 

For more information about the photo chat contact us. If you wish to be a presenter at a future event email us. The chat is free for everyone. Reservations required and can be made on our website.

Filed Under: Portfolio Reviews, Online Events Tagged With: Photo Chat Chat, Griffin Museum Online, documentary photography, Photographers on Photography, Self Portrait, Landscape, artist conversations

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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