Friday, January 30, 2009

LAURA McPHEE Guardians of Solitude/ Bonni Benrubi, NY

LAURA McPHEE : Guardians of Solitude
Bonni Benrubi Gallery, NYC
February 5 - April 4, 2009

Reception February 5, 6 to 8pm
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Laura McPhee, Beaver Ponds on Fisher Creek After Wild Fire,
White Cloud Mountains, Idaho
, 2007, C-print
Courtesy Bonni Benrubi Gallery

(press release)
Bonni Benrubi Gallery is pleased to present a solo exhibition of new work by photographer Laura McPhee. “Guardians of Solitude” is built upon McPhee's work from her 2003-2005 “River of No Return,” series consisting of studies of the landscape and a small rural community in a remote region of central Idaho: Sawtooth Valley. “Guardians of Solitude” celebrates the unsurpassed splendor of a fabled region, while also presenting the environmental complexities of managing a vast landscape in which the needs of ranchers, biologists, miners, tourists, and locals seek a finely delineated balance. In images spanning all seasons, McPhee depicts the magnificence and history of the Sawtooth Valley in central Idaho. This new body of photographic work presents queries about our contemporary notion of the utopian American landscape -- what it was and what it will become. Panoramic in its scope, the photographs examine conflicting ideas about landscape in America and scrutinizes our values and beliefs about the natural world. The nature/culture dilemma is endlessly complex and these images describe this kaleidoscopic; a fragmented, and contested relationship, within one place and among one group of people. Photographer Laura McPhee follows in the tradition of 19th-century artistic approaches toward the sublime, relying on a large-format view camera to capture images of exquisite color, clarity, and definition. Rooted in the work of Carleton Watkins and Frederick Sommer, McPhee has taken the traditional genre of landscape to it's contemporary self both in medium and content.

Thursday, January 29, 2009

The New Gallery Concert Series

A SENSE OF HOME
Part of the Young Composers Festival 2009
Featured visual artists from the Art Institute of Boston at Lesley University

Event Thursday, January 29, 2009
7pm


From left to right:
Emma in 4 o'clock Sun
,
July 2007

©
Margaret Hall

Suncatcher, 2008
© Kelly Burgess



Untitled
© Tara Sellios


Wednesday, January 28, 2009

Struggling Artists Join Forces/ CNN Video

CNN's Ben Tinker reports on artists sharing their workspace, materials and ideas in these tough economic times.








Brandeis to Close Rose Art Museum/ ARTINFO

BOSTON—Facing a major budget crisis, Brandeis University has announced it will close its Rose Art Museum and sell off its entire 6,000-work art collection.


Courtesy Rose Art Museum

Rose Director Michael Rush says he was informed of the decision to close the museum shortly before it was announced.


http://graphics.boston.com/bonzai-fba/Globe_Photo/2006/09/27/1__1159365270_9557-2.jpg
John Blanding / Globe Staff

Rose Art Museum

Sunday, January 25, 2009

Spring Schedule 2009

January 27
Intro

February 3
Curators Talk Andrew Mroczek + Bonnell Robinson

Photographic Figures
Museum of Fine Arts Boston


February 10
Visiting Peruvian artist Juan Jose Barboza Gubo


February 17
ICA Boston 1pm
Talk with ICA curator
Shepard Fairey: Supply & Demand
Momentum 12: Gerard Byrne
2008 James and Audrey FOSTER PRIZE
ICA Collection including new acquisitions


March 3
Visiting artist Lissa Rivera


March 10
SPRINGBREAK


March 17
Visiting artist Bill Burke


March 20 + 21
NYC Galleries & Museums


March 24
Visiting artist Laura McPhee


March 31
MIT LIST Visual Arts Center
Tour & Talk
Melanie Smith: Spiral City and Other Vicarious Pleasures

April 7
MassMOCA
Simon Starling: The Nanjing Particles
Badlands: New Horizons in Landscape
These Days: Elegies for Modern Times
Anselm Kiefer: Sculpture and Paintings


April 14
Skype Interview with Ben Sloat in Taiwan/ China


April 17
Visiting artist Alessandra Sanguinetti


April 21
open
RISD/ BROWN/ Providence


April 28

Final Presentations

Audio Slide Show: A War's Many Angles/ New York Times

NYT Photographer's Journal

The photographers Tyler Hicks and Moises Saman documented the fear, loss and destruction wrought by the three-week war in Gaza.

See also Photographer's Journal: Kabul in Transition by Tyler Hicks/ NYT.

Saturday, January 24, 2009

PULL OF GRAVITY: Photographs by Emmet Gowin and Elijah Gowin

Griffin Museum of Photography
January 29 to February 29, 2009


From Changing the Earth
© Emmet Gowin


"In Pull of Gravity both Elijah Gowin and Emmet Gowin deal the viewer a mysterious and contrary hand, yet they do so in very different ways," says Paula Tognarelli, executive director of the Griffin Museum of Photography. "We are captivated by the dual and opposing nature of the photographs as we look for the meaning in what we are seeing. At the same time, father and son utilize scale as a means of conveying the fragile quality of our lives and the world we inhabit."
(excerpt from press release)

From Of Falling and Floating
© Elijah Gowin
Courtesy Robert Mann Gallery


Elijah Gowin website
Emmet Gowin link

Friday, January 23, 2009

It's Complicated: The American Teenager

ROBIN BOWMAN
Catherine Edelman Gallery
Chicago, IL
January 9 to March 7, 2009


Faduma Mohamed, age 16, Said Ahmed, age 15, Minneapolis, MN,
July 12, 2004
© Robin Bowman


(press release)
Robin Bowman's five-year journey into the heart of teenage America resulted in a series of 419 collaborative portraits, in which she shares her discoveries of a generation now coming of age. In searing and intimate contemporary photographs, presented with the young people's own voices of passion, pride, embarrassment, lust, dread, pain, anxiety, instability and rage, the book charts the coming of age of the largest generation ever in America, almost double the 1960s baby boomers.

In her exploration, she traveled 21,731 miles to photograph teens in every region of the country and every socioeconomic group: from a Texas debutante to teenage gang members in New York City; from a drag queen in Georgia to a coal miner in West Virginia. Her intimate photographs invite individuals to look more closely at how complex challenges facing a rising generation of Americans have informed individual identities. The photographs also ask us to reconcile preconceived ideas and stereotypes of teenagers with the diversity of individuals in the portraits.


Jason Kramer, age 18, Rockland, ME, July 5, 2002
© Robin Bowman

Sunday, January 18, 2009

Art New England/ Bonnell Robinson

Eskimos, Excavations, Executions, and Explosions:
Archiving the Boston Herald-Traveler Photo Morgue

by Bonnell Robinson


Tsar Nicholas II and Family, 1913
Herald-Traveler Photo Morgue
Courtesy of Boston Public Library


Bonnie Robinson's article on the Boston Heralds-Traveler Morgue Collection at the Boston Public Library is now featured at Art New England's December/ January 2009 issue.
Art New England - December/January 2009

Make sure to pick up a copy and check it out.