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photo books

10th Annual Photobook Exhibition | Part 4

Posted on April 23, 2020

Today’s selection of phonebooks in part 4 of our series showcases those who are connected to family, science and history. As part of the 10th Annual Photobook Exhibition juried by Karen Davis and Paula Tognarelli, these books highlight the creativity of each artist.

Read on.

Kate Miller Wilson  – Look me in the Lens

 In photographing my son daily, I realized I was also photographing his autism. The photos offered a glimpse into his world. Our story resonated with families and photographers around the world, and I felt the best way to portray it was in a book format that coupled my photos with my son’s insights about autism.

What do you hope we as viewers and readers take away from reading your book?

look me in the lens - wilsonAfter seeing my book, I would like readers to feel compassionate and connected – to others on the autism spectrum and to one another. We all have some of the traits of autism, and it is through these commonalities (and hopefully through my work as well) that we can connect. I want people to have a more nuanced view of autism – not solely as a disability but as a gift as well.

What is next for you?

I am continuing my work photographing my son as he enters the teenage years, although I mainly shoot large format film now. I feel that this time of transition is challenging for most kids, but it presents a unique challenge in people who rely heavily on routine. As we work through this time of change together, I hope to capture it on film.

Is there anything else we should know about you, your work or your process?

lens - miller wilson

You don’t know what you’re capable of. We’re both so worried about the coming school year, about the anxiety that could erase all the progress we’ve made this summer. But you’ve learned so much about yourself and your emotions. We can do this together.

My work, whether it’s about autism or not, is always about connection. I feel that we have never needed connection more than we do right now when we are separated from family and friends. Much of my autism series is about connecting across a barrier, and that is something we all must do now. Our work as photographers and artists is to provide the voice and common ground for our larger society during this time.

Artist Statement: Using film and digital photography, I strive to create images of tonal depth and vivid sensory detail that act as a starting point for a viewer’s unique visual journey. My work explores the themes of connection, loss, and self-discovery, often through the lens of my own perspective as the parent of a child on the autism spectrum. I work hard to produce images that walk the line between light and shadow and are faintly (or not-so-faintly) unsettling because they touch on something familiar – an emotion, a memory from childhood, a nameless longing.  I believe we are all striving to connect, no matter how different our perspectives may seem, and I hope my work fosters that connection.

About Kate Miller-Wilson

Kate Miller-Wilson is a Minnesota-based fine art photographer and writer, who believes strongly in daily creative practice and self-challenge.  She uses everything from large format film cameras and ancient lenses to modern digital tech to create work that touches the viewer and prompts connection.

Together with her son, she authored the successfully crowd-funded photo book, Look Me in the Lens, which explores how autism affects the parent-child bond.  Her award-winning work has been featured in numerous gallery exhibitions around the country and published in Shots Magazine, Lenscratch, My Modern Met, Natural Parent Magazine, and many others.

Look Me in the Lens: Photographs to Reach Across the Spectrum
2018
Other Contributor: Eian Miller-Wilson, provider of insights
9 x 11″
108 pages  60 photographs
Hard cover
Printer: Edition One
$50.00

 

Mark Peterman – These Years Gone By

peterman book coverThese Years Gone By… is a love story told through my grandparents letters from World War II. Shortly after my grandmother’s death in 2008, my mother discovered about 300 letters that my grandparents had written to each other during World War II. They had been kept by my grandmother for over 60 years and inherited by my mother. These letters provided a new insight for my family into the lives of my grandparents during this critical time in world history. From these letters, artifacts and old family photos, I have woven together a narrative that tells the story of this challenging time in their personal history.

Where did the inspiration for the book project come from?

Growing up, there was a certain mystique about my grandfather’s time in the military. There were vague stories among the family that no one could quite confirm. Those stories would come to life when my mother would show us my grandfather’s large metal foot locker that she kept with all his possessions from his time in the military.

What would you like us as viewers to take away from reading and viewing your book?

peterman - printThis project is more of a curatorial effort through family history with artifacts and old family photos. While this project is narrative driven and embraces my interest in family and world history my other work is slightly different.

Whats next for you creatively?

I have been working on more narrative storytelling projects with all the recent downtime that involve scenes I have created of small scale environments that I call Constructed Realities.

Artist Statement:
These Years Gone By… is a love story told through my grandparents letters from World War II. Shortly after my grandmother’s death in 2008, my mother discovered over 300 letters that my grandparents had written to each other during World War II. They had been kept by my grandmother for over 60 years and inherited by my mother. The letters provided a new insight into the lives of my grandparents during this critical time in world history. From these letters, artifacts and family photos, I have woven together a narrative that tells the story of this challenging time in their personal history.

About Mark Peterman – 

I’m an artist who explores narrative storytelling through photographs and multimedia using constructed realities that cross over into implied fiction. My work contains a graphic story-telling quality with a cinematic feel.

Although my work embraces the post-modern world it is highly informed by history, and research plays an important part in my work. A desire to be creative on a daily basis fuels my curiosity about the human experience, I document experiences in sketchbooks as a way of remembering my life.

My work has been featured in the Prix De La Photographie Paris, American Photography 28 and 35 Annual, PDN Photo Annual.

These Years Gone By
2018
8 x 10”
Pages: 118
hard cover
Printer: Blurb
$29.99

To see more about Mark Peterman‘s work, please log onto his website.

 

Mike Callahan – Circling and Finding

How did the book project come about?

In mid 2018, I was diagnosed with and began living with pancreatic cancer. This book (circling and finding) came to life between mid 2018 and early 2019.

callahan coverMy photography has always focused on images of the stuff of daily life ordinarily passed by or kept at the periphery. This approach was named ‘something and nothing’ by Charlotte Cotton in 2009 in her book ‘the photograph as contemporary art.’ These images interrogate the intimate cycles of identity, self-preservation and mortality.

In November 2019, I began working on a photo book considering the potentiality to generate a new prevailing behavioral contagion imagining what’s achievable in this moment of profuse creative incompletion.  (behavioral contagion is the propensity for a person to copy a certain behavior of others – originally discussed by Gustave Le Bon in his 1895 work ‘The Crowd: A Study of the Popular Mind’ and recently argued by Professor Robert H. Frank in his newest book ‘Under The Influence: How Behavioral Contagion Can Drive Positive Social Change‘).

Artist Statement
open hole callaghanMike Callaghan’s work focuses on fragmentation, rearrangement and reinterpretation while considering the intimate cycles of identity, preservation and mortality. Mike interrogates the subtlety of gesture and the subtlety of difference in a moment when frameworks of relationships are at once prominently visible and exhaustively hidden.

About Mike Callaghan 

Mike Callaghan is an artist and writer whose practice focuses on fragmentation, rearrangement and reinterpretation while considering the intimate cycles of identity, preservation and mortality. Mike interrogates the subtlety of gesture and difference in a moment when frameworks of relationships are at once prominently visible and exhaustively hidden. Mike’s work has been exhibited throughout North America and Europe, including at Griffin Museum of Photography (Massachusetts), Marin Museum of Contemporary Art (California), Center for Photographic Art (California), Reece Museum (Tennessee), Soho Photo Gallery (New York), Manifest Gallery (Cincinnati), Gallery 44 (Toronto), Propeller Gallery (Toronto), Elysium Gallery (Wales) and PhotoIreland (Dublin). Also, his work has appeared in a number of publications, including ZYZZYVA, Der Greif, BlackFlash, Drain, Crooked Teeth, Barzakh, Burningword Literary Journal and The Shanghai Literary Review. He earned an MFA from the San Francisco Art Institute.

circling and finding
2019
8.5 x 9.75”
80 pages
25 photographs

Fern Nesson – Signet of Eternity

 Where did the idea come from?

signet - fernMy father was a superb fine art photographer. In 1999, he and I published a book together about his life’s work. The book, Reflections, consisted of 100 of his photographs and six interviews that I did with him about his aesthetic and his process. Writing the book together was an intimate and extraordinary experience.  I learned so much about the life of an artist.

Years later,  when my father turned 85, he entrusted all his photographs to me: over 20,000 negatives and countless prints — the substance of his entire life as an artist. I spent a year curating and storing his work. Among the prints, I discovered many  exquisite photographs that I had never seen. I asked to interview him one more time. For the interview, I asked him only one question:

“Dad, are you afraid to die?” Here is what he said: “No. As long as I can create art, I feel alive. I don’t worry at all about what will come after. And I’ll live on in you. ”

Two years later, my Dad and I prepared a book, Envoi, comprising twelve of these “undiscovered”  black and white images and the transcript of that interview. I took the proofs to him for one last review on July 17, 2010. We sat together while he read every word and scanned every detail of the design. “It’s perfect,” he said, “don’t change a thing.” Since he looked tired, I asked, “Are we done?” “Yes. We’re done.” I rose to leave and he hugged me hard and told me he loved me. That night, he went to sleep and did not wake up.

 Signet of Eternity represents my journey  to recovery from this immense annd heart-breaking blow. I described this journey in my introduction to the book:

signet - fernWhen my Dad died and the sun went out. I felt the night sky open to infinity, icily reaching away from me in emptiness. For two years, nothing could console me for his loss. But then I took up my camera again. Without any conscious purpose, I began to photograph at night. At first, my photos were mostly black, sometimes with a tiny dot of the moon in the far distance. But, in time, more points of light crept in. Increasingly, I became more interested in finding light than in recording darkness. The dark of night became a space with the potential for illumination, for complexity, for life and liveliness, even for warmth.
This book traces my journey from loneliness, grief and the fear of death to a place where light and life continue to exist. Photography, my father’s passion, gave me the courage to face both his death and mine. As he plainly knew, my father is now part of the eternal and he makes the night brighter for me. ”

About the genesis of the book – 

I had no idea how to recover from my father’s death but , taking my cue from him, I turned to photography. What had been a life-long hobby for me, I now saw as a lifeline. My father taught me that creating art was life-affirming and I trusted him. I quit my job and enrolled in an MFA program to study photography. Three years later, I emerged with a degree and also with ths book.

In crafting Signet of Eternity, I read many books from all cultures on the themes of life and loss: poetry, Eastern religious texts, biblical texts, novels, even song lyrics. I excerpted those that spoke to me and paired them with three types of images: 1) abstract photographs, 2) Zen paintings and 3) “signets.” Signets were my way of creating smail signs that point to eternal life.  I drew the name, signets, from a line in a poem by the great Indian poet and philosopher, Rabindranath Tagore: ” press the signet of eternity upon many a fleeting moment of your life.”  In the book, I arranged the texts and the photographs to represent my jouney from darkness into light. The book begins with despairing texts and dark photographs and progresses to more transcendent writing and bursts of color in the images.

 Signet of Eternity  mirrors my own journey from despair to acceptance, to joy, and from amateur to fine art photographer. Since publishing this book, I have done several other photobooks and have more in the works. But Signet of Eternity, dedicated to my father, and a lifeline to me, will always be the one that is closest to my heart.

As Rabindranath Tagore so eloquently put it:

“All things rush on, they stop not,

no power can hold them back,

they rush on.

Is it beyond you to be glad with

the gladness of this rhythm?

to be tossed and lost and broken

in the whirl of this fearful joy? ”

What would you like us as viewers and readers to take away from your publication?

Art can heal.

In my introductory essay to Signet of Eternity, I make that case:

Roland Barthes asserts that ” a photograph is a witness, but a witness of what is no more — a record of what has been.”  Every image is an image of death. But Barthes’ is wrong. His view is too narrow, too limited, even too literal. Although the camera records only a present moment it need not be “dead.”

The image itself may constitute a new, living moment.

Representational images — “decisive moments” — may very well be memento mori.  But what of abstract, non-representational photographs — images that create their own energy?  These, too, record a specific past moment but, if they hit their mark, they escape and float free of it.  An image that embodies energy and engages the viewer in a mutual experience of it is not merely a record of a past moment. It creates new energy. Like Cezanne’s paintings, it is alive; it breathes.

When I use my camera, my theme is not death.  The past and the limitations of photographic technology are trumped by physics.  Einstein’s equation runs two ways: just as energy can become mass, mass can become energy. Light and a camera produce the photograph. But a photograph can produce its own energy and light as well.

This book defies death. Creating it saved me; it brought me back to life. My father’s death was not the end for him nor was it for me. The texts I chose express a way to understand death as an event in a chain of events that precede and follow it. We were here before we were born and we will remain after we die.
The search is for the signet of eternity: what lasts? what persists? what dissipates mourning and despair? Can we escape the black hole of death through finding the light? And, in escaping, can we find the person we have lost in that very light, where, as we know from the physicists, he must, in fact be?

Working on Signet of Eternity gave me the strength to face my father’s death: to wrestle with grief, to rise from depression, to find the light and the energy to move forward without forgetting, minimizing, denying or repressing the pain.  It worked for me and I invite you to put it to work for you.

What projects do you have coming up?

I have two other photo books that are crrently in their final drafts:

Word, a memoir that consists of a rather long essay and 50 accompanying abstract photographs each including words in some form.
All Here, All Now, a book of three essays on the nature of time in physics and 75 abstract images that riff on the theme.

Signet of Eternity
2017
166 pages   80 images
hard cover  $200

 

Pamela Connolly – Cabriole

Cabriole - connollyWhat was the inspiration for the book project?
As a child I spent endless hours roaming the maze of rooms in my father’s furniture store. The shapes that filled these spaces,1960’s reproductions of ‘Early American’ furniture became imprinted in my consciousness. Fifty years on I find that looking at the outlines of this particular style of furniture open a portal to my childhood and what it felt like to be me then. I move back and forth in time as these familiar shapes surface in my day-to-day life.
What do you hope we as viewers and readers take away from your phonebook?
Hopefully viewers will be transported to an ethereal world of light and shadow that contemplates childhood memory, aging, and the passage of time.
What is next for you?
I am currently working on a series of ’Tin Houses’ (working title), which I see as a continuation of ‘Cabriole’.

cabriole hairArtist Statement  As a child I spent many hours roaming the maze of rooms in my father’s furniture store. The shapes that filled these make-believe spaces, 1960’s reproductions of ‘Early American’ furniture became imprinted in my consciousness. Without realizing it I committed these shapes to memory.

Fifty years on I find that looking at the outlines and forms of this particular style of furniture open a direct portal to my childhood, and what it felt like to be me then. I move back and forth in time as I see these familiar shapes surface unexpectedly in my everyday life.

About Pamela Connolly

Pamela Connolly has exhibited throughout the US and Europe, including at the National Portrait Gallery in London where she was a finalist in the 2015 Taylor Wessing Photographic Portrait Prize exhibition. Her photographs are in the collections of Houston Museum of Fine Arts and numerous private collections. Her self-published book, ‘Cabriole’ will join the collection of the Indie Photobook Library at Yale University, and the International Center for Photography Library.

Connolly taught photography at The Horace Mann and Masters Schools in New York for 10+ years. She has also organized photo-workshops to kids at risk, most notably in collaboration with the ‘Kids With Cameras’ organization in post- Katrina Louisiana. This workshop culminated in an exhibition entitled ‘Where We Live’ at the Union Gallery at Louisiana State University and the State Library in Baton Rouge and Muhlenberg College where Connolly was invited as a visiting artist.

Cabriole
2019
7 x 9.75″
24 pages 23 photos Soft cover
Hand stitched, 3 hole Japanese stab binding
Self-printed

$75

Filed Under: Exhibitions Tagged With: Photography, photo books, artist made books, griffin museum, Davis Orton gallery, Paula Tognarelli, Karen Davis

10th Annual Photobook Exhibition | Part 3

Posted on April 21, 2020

Its day 3 of our Photobook Exhibition posts. Today we look at the objects we surround ourselves with. We hope that as we all stay safe at home, we can take some time to hold the objects we care for with reverence and care. Books can transport us to another space, and especially in these times of physical distancing, it is those objects that get us through our days.

Read on to celebrate these talented artists.

Kent Krugh – Speciation: Still a Camera

Where did the idea for the book come from?  

Krugh - speciationI first started using X-rays as a tool to visually explore objects in 2010 when I took a box full of my daughters’ dolls to work. The X-rays were ghost-like and haunting, and I liked them. I could literally see beneath the surface (as the photography cliché goes). The source of X-rays is a linear accelerator– the same machine that is used to treat cancer patients. But treating dolls with cancer killing rays was not the end goal, of course. I continued making X-rays with other objects from diverse sources such as nature (birds, seed pods, skulls), flea markets (vacuum tubes and light meters), and musical instruments.. Five years ago, I started X-raying cameras Actually, I X-ray anything that seems interesting to me and fits on a few pieces of film or the digital imager. I have a small collection of thirty cameras that I started X-raying in 2015.  I made a few prints and showed them to my photography friends.  Many of them let me borrow their cameras to X-ray.  After three years I had made x-rays of 130 cameras. The idea of the book came from a portfolio review of the camera X-rays by Jennifer Yoffy in Atlanta.  It was published in December 2018 by Fraction Editions and 500 copies were printed.

What would you like us as viewers to take away from your after seeing your work and words?  

krugh - twoThis work uses x-rays to explore the micro-evolution of cameras and is a metaphor about the limits of evolution. While form and media may have changed, the camera is still a camera: a tool to create images by capturing photons of light.  Today’s sophisticated digital cameras look and operate far differently than the first cameras of the nineteenth century, however the essentials have not changed.  The photographer points a contraption with a lens towards the subject to encode its likeness on a storage medium, be it film or digital sensor.  And this contraption has been manufactured in many wonderful and clever designs, the complexity usually hidden inside.  While making these x-rays, I have been surprised and astonished by what I found inside the cameras.   The lens, when imaged from the side, contain a multi-element train of perfectly shaped glass forms whose purpose is to collect and direct light towards the target.

In quite another sense, this project is an homage to the cameras I have owned, used, or handled. The tools of the trade, having faithfully imaged for decades, have themselves been imaged.   The resulting images align with an inner desire to probe those unseen spaces and realms I sense exist, but do not observe with my eyes.

What is your next project? 

I am now taking X-ray of my grandchildren’s toys.

Anything else you’d like to add about your process or series, feel free to add so I can make a fuller post about your work.

“Speciation” is the process where new species can arise when populations are reproductively isolated.  The can be due to random mutations and natural selection, or hybridization between closely related species. This process of speciation has been documented by many and is difficult to deny.  Many insist that this is indeed evidence of evolution in action—given enough time this same process has given rise to all forms of life on earth.  And many also insist that this process can indeed produce species and variation within species, but this is the limit of evolution—no one has ever seen a dog produce a non-dog.  So, to close the loop—a camera is still a camera, though tremendous diversity exists.

Bio: Kent Krugh is a fine art photographer living and working in Cincinnati. He holds a BA in Physics from Ohio Northern University and an MS in Radiological Physics from the University of Cincinnati. His work has been exhibited in numerous exhibitions both national and international and in major festivals including FotoFest in Houston and the Festival de la Luz in Buenos Aires. He is the recipient of numerous awards and honors in both national and international print and portfolio competitions. Krugh has been a Photolucida Critical Mass Finalist. His work is held in various collections including the Cleveland Museum of Art, the Portland Art Museum, and the Cincinnati Art Museum.  A book of camera x-rays and essays by A.D. Coleman and Barbara Tannenbaum, Speciation: Still a Camera, is recently published.

To see more of Kent Krugh‘s work log on to his website.

Speciation: Still a Camera
2018

Bree Lamb, Editor
A.D. Coleman, Author
Barbara Tannenbaum, Author
98 pages   69 images
$40

Bootsy Holler -Treasures

Where did the idea for the book come from?

Holler - treasuresThe idea was formed when I started a series called Treasures:  44 objects, about all the things I’ve known for my whole life that live at my mothers house.  The end product was a 6 x 8 x 3.5 inch wood box which included all 44 objects on 5 x 7 inch cards, Edition of  3.  I decided to start putting all my fine art in book form for my family or anyone to easily enjoy. Treasures: objects I’ve known all my life, was perfect to start with, as I felt like it was already a book, and all the images were ready to go.

What would you like us as viewers to take away from your after seeing your work and words?

holler - treasuresTreasures is a short story if you read the back of each card.  Each card tells a bit about the life of the object.  The images might trigger your emotions about objects you may have grown up with, so I want you to feel a connection to an object and have your own memory.

What is your next project?

My next book project is my Rock’n Roll photographic memoir about my time spent in the Seattle music scene.  I photographed the scene between 1995 and 2010.  I have so much portraiture and life images that have never been seen outside of Seattle.

Anything else you’d like to add about your process or series, feel free to add so I can make a fuller post about your work.

treasures 2 hollerTreasures is a humorous look at the objects people live with, that we build our lives around, that we give breath to, and how they eventually become part of our lives – and tell our stories.
Artist Statement: These objects we live with, that we build our lives around, that we give breath too, become part of our lives — and tell our stories.

I often like to show the simple things in life through my art, and specifically in regards to “Treasures” I want to show how these ordinary objects have purpose and beauty. I hope that by photographing them, I’m getting people to stop and look at the mundane. For me, it’s a meditation on the simple things we can overlook.  In my own way I’m listening to what the objects have to say. The mindfulness comes with stopping. Listening. Transcending the objects we collect from “just stuff” to “treasures.”

Bio: Bootsy Holler is an intuitive artist who has been a working photographer for over 25 years in fine art, music, editorial, and advertising.  Best known for her remarkably sensitive style of portraiture, she has been noticed and awarded by the Society of Photographic Journalism and Association of Alternative News-media.

Now a fine art photographer her work examines the nature of identity and the reimagined family photo album.  Bootsy has exhibited in 17 solo shows and over 30 group exhibitions over the years. Her fine art has been featured in publications including PDN, NPR, Lenscratch, and Rangefinder.

Her Visitor series was selected for Critical Mass Top 50 in 2011.  She has been commissioned by commercial companies to design and produce art for their creative advertising spaces and has work in the Grammy Museum permanent collection, as well as in private collections around the United States and Europe.

To see more of Bootsy Holler‘s work log onto her website.

Objects I’ve known all my life
2019
Other contributors: PaperChase, Print & Bind
Sara Morris, Editor
Jason Adam, Designer
6.5 x 4”    94 pages  44 photos
Soft Cover  Printer: Paper Chase Press
Price: $55

Linda Morrow – Caught in the Looking Glass

morrow - bookArtist Statement: Caught In The Looking Glass is a handmade artist’s book that celebrates random reflections that appear on a shiny surface. Twelve color images illustrate that, indeed, another world can exist within the frame of a mirror. This lay-flat book contains twelve images that were captured in or around a chateau in the South of France. Inside covers are lined with mirrored paper; the book is enclosed by a soft, paper slip case.

Bio:  Linda Morrow is a fine art photographer and book artist who lives in Long Beach, CA. Her childhood played out on a ranch in Arizona where she spent long hours memorizing the landscape and using her imagination to amuse herself. This background combined with years of teaching likely brought about her love of books and her interest in the process of making them.

To see more of Linda Morrow‘s work log onto her website.

Caught in the Looking Glass
2018
Size of book 8×8”
Other contributor:
Jace Graf – binder, consultant
32 pages  12 photographs
Binding: open spine stitching
inside covers: mirrored paper
with handmade slip case
hand-made
Price- $175

Melisa Eder – The Beauty of Bodega Flowers

Eder - bodega flowersArtist Statement: As a diehard New Yorker, I have often admired the flowers one may find in her neighborhood bodega. Bodegas are unique and ubiquitous to the various neighborhoods in New York City; of course, pending gentrification. Their locations span from the Bronx to the Lower Eastside and Queens, Staten Island and Brooklyn. They are reliable 24 hour stores where one can purchase a beverage, lottery tickets, smokes or a sandwich. Many are also places where you could buy a colorful bouquet of flowers in a pinch. Wrapped in cellophane, these bouquets are specifically identified as ‘Bodega Flowers’. Some may view these flowers as ‘cheap or less than’ but that’s simply not the case. Roses come in every color, Daisies are pretty, and fluorescent Pom Poms are for the taking. Bodega Flowers are for everyone and they are truly beautiful!

Bio: Melissa Eder’s work has been shown nationally and internationally; venues include: Bronx Museum of the Arts, New York University’s Broadway Windows Gallery, Art in General, the Aperture Foundation, the Humble Arts Foundation, the Whitney Houston Biennial, the Parlor Gallery, the Urban Institute of Contemporary Art, Grand Rapids, Michigan.

She was an artist-in-residence at the Henry Street Settlement in New York City, the Saltonstall Foundation in Ithaca, New York and the Atlantic Center for the Arts in New Smyrna Beach, Florida. She has received numerous grants including funding from the Puffin Foundation and two Manhattan Community Arts Fund grants from the Lower Manhattan Cultural Council. Her work has been reviewed by the New York Times, highlighted in Feature Shoot and various other publications. She participated in the Satellite Art Show during Art Basel Miami 2016. Melissa works in Brooklyn as an artist in residence through the chashama studio residency.

To see more of Melissa Eder‘s work log on to her website.

The Beauty of Bodega Flowers
2019
12×12”
20 pages   10 images
Hard Cover
A singular flower photo sticker is adhered to each page opposite the image of a group of flowers
$120

Dan McCormick – Photograms

Where did the idea for the book come from?

mccormick - photogramsThe idea for this project came when I found out that the new art teacher in my son’s grade school was teaching the class to color within the lines. I knew that if I confronted her in an argument that she had a bad idea, I would loose the argument. So I choose to undermine her teaching by having my son create photograms in our bedroom – bathroom. I began that series in 1984 with each of my kids taking turns posing and then we developed the photograms in the bathroom. I came back to photograms fifteen years later, in 1999 with professional models. A second time I came back to the photograms with professional models around 2015. This when I came up with the idea of creating a book with these three sets of images.

What would you like us as viewers to take away from your after seeing your work and words?

I am a formalist. I wish the audience to read the symbolism of the juxtaposition with the human body and to enjoy the lights and darks and the lines of the figure with odd shapes of the elements.

What is your next project?

I am doing cell phone grids with images of nudes, 3 x 3 and 3 x 4.

Photograms
2018
Afterword by Lyle Rexer
Edited by James Luciana
12 x 12”  39 pages  41 images
Hard cover  Blurb

 

 

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Photography, photo books, objects, self published

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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