The entire series, Heavy in White, is provocative and beautifully made. I urge you to visit Bianchi’s website to view or re-view the work.
Read MoreColor like this can only be a labor of love, like gardening.
Read MoreCan one invent landscapes to speak to the natural and culture changes humans experience during migration? Ellen Jantzen ponders this in her invented landscape, Meadow View.
Read MoreWhat does one do when, as an adult, they learn the painful secrets of their ancestral history? Linda Plaisted learned the answer to that and shows us via savvy use of materials.
Read MoreGiven that her photographer father, Todd Walker, was well-known for pushing at the edges of photography, it's not surprising that Todd Walker imparted his exploratory nature upon his daughter. Walker grew up in her father's studio, often surrounded by his photographer friends, many of whom we now consider luminaries. Walker uses her talent and challenges with double vision to create works that invite viewers to experience photographic installations as unique transitional worlds of her imagining.
Read MoreGladis said, “I’ve always been drawn to night photography, as darkness can turn the most benign daytime scene into something with a much different mood.”
Read More"Inserting myself into the image acknowledges my artist's hand and records the passage of time.”
Read MoreThe luminous moments of Passage are performances of contemplation and meditation, an experience of feeling the presence of absence. I called it her gone-ness. I challenged myself to create as many worlds as I could find in a single stucco wall on the side of our house.
Read MoreI love diptychs or triptychs, I love the "interesting conversations" that happen when disparate-seeming images are skillfully forced to hold space together.
Read MoreWho makes an artist photobook out of image transfers on clay?
Read MoreThe zipper triggered memories of her extremely frugal mother saving buttons and zippers from their clothes for future use. She had grown up in a household where sweaters were hand-knitted and clothes were homemade, and she stated, “My mother’s hands were always busy.”
Read MorePhoto historian Michel Frizot wrote, "The photograph is not in its essence a transparency through which we gain access to a known reality but, on the contrary, a source of ambiguity and often, perplexity. The photographic image is a constellation of questions for the eye because it offers viewers forms and signs they have never perceived as such and which conflict with their natural vision." That's quite an accurate statement for this triptych by Kurt Schroeder.
Read MoreMitchell writes, "These are spaces of transition. I create a world between a dream and a cinematic still. There is a sense that the space and narrative continue beyond the frame, with echoes from a past existence, that nature will eventually have its way with us.
Read MoreMeltzer told me photography allows her to see the world from a fresh perspective. Having spent a long career in education and social services, she shares some of what she learned via her series, Through the Lens of Children, from which this picture, Sure!, arises.
Read MoreThe dichotomies and questions pictured within the image brought me so many new questions and brought me back to look at again and again.
Read MoreAsner-Alvey told me that using her body repetitiously displays her ongoing struggle to gather and reconstruct the fractured pieces of her humanity. She continued, "The process of image transfers mimics the textures of skin and creates a bifurcated visceral, painterly image."
Read MoreThough The Visitor could have been made anywhere with an aging and neglected building, it sings to me of my mental picture of the South (which is most likely a fairy tale that exists only in my head.)
Read MoreZoom became a lifeline for many of us during the pandemic. But what when one of the participants secretly goes beyond simply participating? Where is the line between looking, voyeurism, and spying?
Read MoreI am interested in the way the textures make a statement within the frame. It gives me the impression of emerging from something negative.
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