on play and preschool

I just returned from visiting my granddaughter's preschool. It was an amazing place, filled with "play" stations waiting to be explored... stimulating the mind and imagination. I am reminded of Paul Klee's work and his attempt to return to the child - mind... and of Michael Kenna's portfolio, Monique's Kindergarden. If I lived here it would be great fun to "really" photograph the classroom. Better yet, return to pre school as a student!

the paint and easel were all set up...I was tempted to start painting!











I watched the children at play....with no mind or concern for outcome... all process. An invaluable lesson.

on freedom

PLEASE VOTE!
we do not have the luxury of sitting this election out.
i am deeply concerned about this election and its implications for the future of our country.
please get out and vote tomorrow...

"None of us can sit this election out..." The stakes are too high

THIS IS A PUBLIC SERVICE ANNOUNCEMENT!



Please be sure to vote and get everyone you know out to vote. I shutter to think about the consequences of the Tea Party dominating our country.

From Michelle Obama...
"None of us can sit this election out.

Not when we're just beginning to see the results of the change we've all been working for, and when there's still so much left to do.

Commit to vote this fall.

And with so much at stake, we need to make sure your friends and family get out to vote as well. The best person in the world for that job is you.

That's why OFA is launching its Commit to Vote Challenge. It's a powerful way for you to commit to vote in this election -- and then have fun while inspiring your friends to do the same.

Get started here

Stephen Althouse

Reflecting back on my trip to Berlin I realize that what I responded the most to was work that was streamlined and clearly seen. A friend, Tina Schelhorn from Galerie Lichtblick in Cologne suggested I check out Gallery Ruhnke while visiting the palace in Potsdam. There was an exhibition there titled Concrete Conceptions which was primarily sculptural. Every piece in the show was elegant, each piece streamlined to the clearest and cleanest lines. It was so refreshing and exciting to see the work. It was thru the gallery that I became aware of the photographic work of Stephen Althouse, an American born artist.

Rake I, 2003, pigment print, 42 x 31 inches

Inlay, 2003, pigment print, 42 x 31 inches

Closed Tongs, 2004, pigment print,59.5 x 88 inches

Clamps and Shroud, 2003,pigment print
59.5 x 88 inches


Saw I, 2003, pigment print 42 x 31 inches


The following was written for a show by WENDY M. BLAZIER
Senior Curator, Boca Raton Museum of Art

Tools and Shrouds
Stephen Althouse
Boca Raton Museum of Art, Boca Raton, Florida
SEPTEMBER 9 – NOVEMBER 8, 2009

FROM THE EARLIEST DAYS OF PHOTOGRAPHY, the pictorial documentation of the world around us has held infinite fascination as the subject for photographers. And from the beginning, the photographic image was as influential as the printed word. Even today, when we look at a photograph, we tend to “read” the image for its informational content. Stephen Althouse’s images can be read as metaphors for the interconnectedness of secular and spiritual life. His images combine the practical and symbolic, weaving a relationship between tools and
textiles as venerated symbols of work and faith. Like medieval devotional relics and honorific textiles, Althouse’s tools and shrouds become symbols of power and reverence, engaging the viewer in a dialogue about history, humanity, tradition and spirituality.

Born in Washington DC in 1948, Althouse grew up in rural Bucks County, Pennsylvania, where he trained as a sculptor. The product of a Quaker education, Althouse received his MFA from Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, and studied sculpture at Tyler School of Art,
Philadelphia. The sculptural tradition of making and manipulating subject matter is carried over in his photography, and is further explored in these enigmatic and powerful images. For 30 years, Althouse lived in Miami where he was a Professor of Fine Arts at Barry University, before
returning to central Pennsylvania, where he lives and works creatively today.

This exhibition presents Stephen Althouse’s most recent work as well as a series of powerful images which the artist created in 2003 and 2004 while serving as artist-inresidence at the Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art in Liège, Belgium, through a Fulbright Research Fellowship.

The Museum is pleased to share this exhibition and publication with a larger audience in both Canada and Germany. We feel it is important to show Stephen Althouse’s recent work and to create a scholarly catalogue that amplifies our understanding of his compelling
images. For their very generous support of this publication, we thank Lawrence D. and Lucienne Lefebvre Glaubinger of The Glaubinger Foundation. We thank Dr. Eugene W. Metcalf, Jr. and Dr. Mark McPhail for their perceptive essay which constitutes a significant contribution to this publication. For their presentation of concurrent exhibitions of Stephen
Althouse’s photography, we thank Jacqueline Hébert Stoneberger of Beaux-arts des Amériques in Montréal, and Werner Ruhnke of Galerie Ruhnke, Potsdam, outside Berlin, Germany. Lastly, we extend our heartfelt thanks to the Museum’s trustees and donors, who have demonstrated their commitment to the Museum in their support of the Museum’s ambitious and internationally-recognized exhibition program.
WENDY M. BLAZIER
Senior Curator, Boca Raton Museum of Art

Blogging from Berlin ~ Museum Madness



Having bought a 3 day museum pass, I thought it best to try to see as much as possible. 12 museums in 3 days. It feels like a record. By the end of the 3 days, I felt a bit like a Picasso painting!



The museums visited were the Pergamon, Neues Nationalgalerie, Alte Nationalgalerie, Hamburger Bahnhof, Kathe Kallwitz, Museum fur Fotografie, Berggrum, Scharf Gerstenberg, Bauhaus, Gemaldegalerie, Neue National Gallery, Museum fur Film & Fernsehen! I feel like I have travelled thru time and taken an amazing art history course. It has been dazzling. Each day when I think I have exhausted the city, I am thrown off guard by a totally unexpected delight.

Museum fur Film & Fernsehen

self portrait from Museum fur Film & Fernsehen

The film museum was a find. The creativity that went into the exhibition space was stunning. One walks thru the history of German Film...and then finds oneself in a morgue like room with steel drawers from floor to ceiling. This is when Hitler came into power and the film industry was derailed and used solely for propaganda. Those who were not sent to the concentration camps fled to the US. It made me think more deeply about how repressive societies stifle the human spirit (Cambodia with Pol Pot and China's cultural revolution under Mao).






The Neue National Gallery is housed in a Ludwig Mies van der Rohe building as was my graduate school at the University of Chicago. It was an amazing, visceral experience to be in a building that felt so familiar, from the flooring to the railings and the chairs in the entryway! Besides the familiarity to my past, it was a very pleasing and coherent museum experience.







For the next two weeks Berlin is hosting a Festival of Lights at night. It was so much fun to see the city lit up. It was also great to see so many people strolling after dark.






There is so much to see in this city. The art collections are magnificent... and perplexing in that they survived. Germany lived thru an incredibly dark period in human history and has risen thru the ashes, phoenix-like, rebuilding with grandeur without forgetting its past. It is truly stunning.

Art Loop Open Friday @ Block 37 ~ Please Vote

Life Guards from the Crude Awakening portfolio will be exhibited at Block 37 Friday night at the very first Art Loop Open, Chicago’s new curated art competition which will transform ten venues throughout Chicago’s Loop into interactive public art exhibits. Please visit each venue and begin voting for your favorite artwork, while enjoying specialty "Artini" cocktails. I promise it will be a blast.

Life Guards 40" x 40".

Blogging From Berlin ~ Part 3

Berlin is such an amazing city. It is grand, elegant, quaint, vibrant, boxy, dazzling and endlessly fascinating.

I am so impressed by the power good art has on the psyche, mind and body. Yesterday was the first day using a 3 day continuous museum pass and there is just no way to get thru all the museums, even in a week. After 3 museums and 6 hours on my feet, I was feeling quite tired and fatigued. I was reinvigorated, again, by visiting the Hamburger Bahnhof Museum where I view an Anselm Kiefer work IN Germany! He is one of my all time favorite artists. I was first introduced to his work the Art Institute of Chicago.







And what fun to see an Andy Warhol!



On Heidestrasse Street I thought I had exhausted all the galleries and then I stumbled upon the Haunch of Venison Gallery. The show was titled Das Gift, works by Yoko Ono...and what a gift it was! Focused mostly on performance and conceptual art, she asks for the viewers participation to heal the world of violence, a universal concern.




Heal
A Large canvas with rips and cuts in the canvas, inviting the viewer to help in mending oneself and the world.


Coats
Seven coats hang at the very end of the room, all belonging to people who were wearing the coats when they were shot point blank from close range.



Art, done well, has the power to transform.

Berlin ~ Part 2

Berlin is an incredible city seeped in dramatic history. It is impossible not to be deeply moved by its past and the numerous markers of rememberence. I keep flashing back to the movie, The Lives of Others. If you haven't seen it, you should. It is one of the most haunting movies I have ever seen. Please go rent it.

remenant of the Berlin Wall

One of the first sites I visited was Neue Wache, a memorial for all victims of the war, the modern Pieta by one of my very favorite artists, Kathe Kollwitz (more on her work later). It is a sober and beautiful work.



On a walking tour I passed markers for those whose lives were lost trying to cross the river to freedom.



and the Holocaust Memorial consisting of 2711 sarcophagi-like columns rising up in somber silence from undulating ground.





Holocaust Tower from the Jewish Museum


To the left of the Brandenburg Gate there is a Room of Silence, a much welcomed space. It's purpose is to "provide an opportunity for everyone, independent of backround, color ideology, religion and physical condition to enter and remain in silence for a while ...and an invitation to tolerence, a brotherhood of man embracing all nationalites and ideologies, a continuous reminder against violence and xenophobia, a small step toward peace and spirituality.

The weaving on the wall was created by Hungarian aritst Ritta Hager and was the perfect object to contemplateon while searching for the light in the darkness.

Blogging from Berlin ~ 10/10/10



Have spent my first full day in Berlin. The light has been extraordinary...











Spent several hours at Art Forum Berlin, an art fair that focuses only on contemporary art. Seeing so many objects that I had difficulty relating to has left me contemplating.....





What Is Art?

Chicago Artist Month

October is Chicago Artist Month and there are many venue offerings. My Crude Awakening photographs will be exhibited in 3 locations. The first is for the Art Loop Open, October 15-29, Chicago’s new art competition— which will transform ten venues throughout Chicago’s Loop into interactive public art exhibits. My piece, Life Guards, will be exhibited at Block 37. On Friday, October 15 from 5 to 8 p.m. The public is encouraged to visit each venue and begin voting for their favorite artwork, while enjoying specialty "Artini" cocktails and other offerings.

Life Guards 40" x 40".

The next venue is at the Chicago Center for Green Technology. They partnered up with the Global Alliance of Artists and put a show together called "What We Worry About." I will have Life Guards, Marissa, and Keith,Laura and Olivia in this show. The opening reception is this Thursday from 5:30 - 7:30 at 445 N. Sacramento.



Marissa

Keith, Laura and Olivia


And finally, I will be showing "Life Guards" in the 2nd Annual Artists for a Greener Evanston Showcase October 15 and 16th at the Noyes Cultural Arts Center.

Phew!
Have a great month!

Filter Photo Festival

It is coming up next week. The brain child of Sarah Hadley, Filter Photo will offer the Chicago Photographic community a five day event dedicated to inspiring and educating emerging and professional photographers. There will be an opening Wednesday, October 6, 6-9 pm, of a juried show, "Bauhaus Inspired Photography" at the Chicago Photography Center followed by multiple lectures, master classes, portfolio reviews, and panel offerings. It is clearly a photography lovers delight. I will be teaching a workshop Finding Your Muse ~ Reflections On the Creative Process, from 9am-1pm on Friday morning. I am really looking forward to sharing my insights about art making. Hope to see you there!

On Balance...Hubertus von der Goltz

The Encounter by Hubertus von der Goltz is an amazing piece. Each time I view it, it has different meaning for me. I finally decided to learn more about it and to my surprise, I had only been seeing on half of the piece! The work was created and installed atop the Maple Avenue Garage for the City of Evanston in December 2009. Created by artist Hubertus von der Goltz, The Encounter features two figures delicately balancing and moving toward each other.







Not having seen the second figure, I was thinking about how life...every moment, hour, day, week and year...is a balancing act.
Keeping the mind, body and spirit in a state of equilibrium each and every day is a balancing act.

"Keep The Balance", 2009, Sculpture Project for Riverside Landscaping Belt at World Expo 2010, Shanghai, China

On his website Hubertus von der Goltz states..

"In the distance on a building high above, a man tries to maintain his balance along a narrow steel beam. Both him and the beam seem somewhat superfluous to the structure of the building. Why is he up there and what is he doing? Our pulse quickens in respond to the spectacle above, and gives us cause to question the man`s sanity. Hubertus von der Goltz´s two-dimensional silhouettes can only sustain this deception momentarily, however, and the drama of the situation finally gives way to reality.

Balance is at the core of Hubertus von der Goltz´s work. The subtly rendered gestures and postures of his figures are poised to reflect the allegorical possibilities which balance suggests. The rise and fall of mankind are contained in their lofty heights, precarious disposition, and enduring stance. His figures are powerful, concise symbols, epitomizing the trials and tribulations of human existence."

"On The Way" Drielanden, Harderwijk, 2005, Netherlands


Auf dem Weg", Binningen, Basel, 2008, Schweiz

The Encounter, Sculpture for Evanston Illinois by H.v.d. Goltz from Peter Hartel on Vimeo.

Back from San Francisco

I'm back after a fabulous weekend in SUNNY San Francisco. The gallery talk and reception at Corden Potts was a wonderful experience in which I had the opportunity to think about my work more deeply and connect with other artists and collectors. Jan Potts and Liz Corden are awesome as is their gallery. It was one of those perfect days in which I was surrounded by family and friends talking about what I love.



It was great to see my photography friends including Luis Delgado. He has been incredibly prolific and has an exhibit, Amuse Bouche & Arbor at the Gallery 291 (291 Geary, 5th Floor). A little closer to home (my home, that is) is Mano Mundo Corazón,Artists Interpret La Lotería at the Center for Book & Paper Arts,Columbia College from September 9 - December 10. He told me has has 6 different venues in which he is showing his work. For more info, go to his website.







I had a chance to catch up with Ann Jastrab, an amazing, charismatic gallery director of the RayKo Photo Center in SF. Ann is a great supporter of photography and from what I heard, may be single handedly responsible for the amazing gallery opening turn out at Rayko. They are lucky to have her. BTW, they are having a 2010 KODACHROME JURIED SHOW with an October 4th deadline. Check it out!

I also met Rachel Phillips and was thrilled to become familiar with her work and talk "shop." Rachel does pigment transfers prints onto vintage envelopes. She is represented by Modernbook Gallery.

Mayfair Air Mail

PA Square House

Hotel Plaza

Heather Polley's portfolio, Vanitas, was a pleasure to view in person. They are exquisite prints of still lifes.

The Five Senses

In her words...
"As a member of Bay Area Photographers Collective, I had the opportunity to participate in our "group project", where every interested member works on the same theme. "Loss" was the new topic, and I was not sure whether I would participate. When I thought about ideas that other BAPC members had for the project, it did not resonate with my own life experiences. My immediate family and friends are, thankfully, all still alive and healthy. I decided that I needed to approach the topic from a completely different direction for it to be truly personal work. I wanted to address a fear of loss in the future—loss of loved ones, of youth, of opportunities for happiness in my life. I asked friends and family most dear to me for symbolic belongings to photograph, as a way to contain their memory while they still live.

The series Vanitas is inspired by European, especially Dutch Baroque, still life painting. Vanitas as a genre employed props as reminders of the transience of life and the inevitability of death. These photographs are not intended to be slavish copies of Old Masters. Some of the original paintings deliberately contained seductive objects to make a moralistic stance about sin, while simultaneously celebrating life’s pleasures. I have turned this notion on its head by removing any moral undertones and simply concentrating on the sensuality of the photograph itself. Savor it all before it fades to dust.

I have included many traditional objects symbolic of the transience of life, including fruit, flowers, overturned empty glasses, snuffed candles, sweets, jewelry, watches, portraits, and anything in a state of decay. Along the way I also chose my own symbolic objects, many of which have been literally cast off of living things, such as shells, cracked eggs, feathers, seed pods, and broken glass.

I view each photograph as a freestanding piece, much like the individual paintings that inspired them. Each piece may have a unique composition and may address a unique point of view. The series has expanded into exploring loss that has already occurred in my life."

The Elixir of Love

Mandarin Oranges

Seed Pod and Parrot Feathers

Alyson Belcher's pinhole self portraits reminded my so much of Austrian photographer Rudolf Koppitz's (1884-1936) nude self portraits. It seems they are both drawing from the collective unconscious. Alyson is represented by the Robert Tat Gallery and she mentioned that is is gearing up for a show at the BMG Gallery in Woodstock, NY.



San Francisco was full of surprises, one of which looked like a gay pride gathering. We were driving thru the city and happened upon some men walking toward the event in their "birthday suits," plus socks, hiking boots and backpacks. Being a photographer, I, of course, photographed out the car window....but I will spare you the details.

Gregory Scott shortlisted by The Guggenheim Museum

Gregory Scott's At the Beach was shortlisted by The Guggenheim Museum project, “YouTube Play, A Biennial of Creative Video”. So so fun! There were a mere 23,000 submissions from 91 countries! Have a look and see. His work incorporates photography, video and painting. He broke the mold and deserves to be celebrated!


An article by the New York Times is HERE. The rest of the short list can be seen HERE. It will provide hours of entertainment by very talented artists.

Intimate Moments ~ Frank Yamrus and Emily Heller

I am heading to San Francisco next week and in thinking about the visit, I thought I would share some compelling photography by a few San Francisco photographers. Years ago I met Frank Yamrus at Fotofest and saw his work, Rapture. It has stayed with me for years, as has Emily Heller's portraits. Rarely do we see ourselves so intimately and clearly. Our biology is inescapable.

untitled (Paul), 1999

In Frank's words...

"Foremost, I see this work to be about rapture. These portraits were taken over a four month period from October 99 through January 00. I was interested in exploring intimate and honest moments of "rapture" that we usually do not have the opportunity to witness outside of personal experiences, let alone contemplate in a still photograph.

In this project I have stripped the subject and the viewer of all context and environment to examine these very moments. As a point of departure, I have asked my subjects to masturbate to orgasm(s). Much of this project was about trust and comfort level; therefore the images were shot in my home. Each subject was photographed from the initial moment of stimulation through 8-10 minutes after orgasm(s). The first 20-30 images were about establishing a deeper comfort level, another level of trust. In order to examine this state of "rapture" the subject needed to let go. In many of the images, the subject appears to have reached this level while other images represent the struggle of this process and reflective of certain truths. The editing process brought me to these images before you.

The window of time represented in this collection of images is approximately 5 minutes before orgasm to approximately 5 minutes after orgasm. There are a few images that are the actual moment of climax, but the work is not specifically about orgasm, but about rapture. Although the physiology of the physical crisis is unavoidable, I am more interested in the psychology of this time frame. These photographs represent a blending of the psychology and physiology surrounding this event."

untitled (Greg), 1999

untitled (Del), 2000

untitled(Dede),2000


untitled(Jeffery), 1999

untitled(Astrid), 1999

In her Portrait series, Emily Heller states, "Food is a pleasurable, important, and joyful part of everyday life but it also has a dark side. It is the ultimate symbol of our overconsumptive culture as we literally feed our bodies with our search for identity, status, and a sense of belonging." One feels the discomfort of a voyeur when viewing the images, experiencing unavoidable tension between the natural and the strange.

Joel

Kristine

Brad

Aaron

Nicola

Shamus

Pat

Moving off the Grid ~ Lucas Foglia

I went to several art openings last Friday night in Chicago. The David Weinberg gallery (which I sadly learned will be closing it's doors in March 2011) had a wonderful exhibition of the Yale University School of Art 2010 MFA Photography Candidates. I don't know what it is about that school but they turn out some extraordinary artists, one if which is Lucas Foglia.

Patrick and Anakeesta, Tennessee 2007

I saw this breathtaking photograph which I find incredibly beautiful and disturbing. I could spend hours contemplating it's meaning. I returned home that night and opened my latest Aperture Magazine and not surprisingly, Foglia's work was featured. With all that is going on in the world today, one does wonder what it would be like to live "off the grid."

Foglia's artist statment...

"Since 2006 I have traveled throughout the southeastern United States, befriending, photographing, and interviewing a network of people who left cities and suburbs to live off the grid. Motivated by environmental concerns, religious beliefs, or predictions of economic collapse, my subjects build their homes from local materials, obtain their water from nearby springs, and hunt, gather, or grow their own food.

All the people in my photographs are working to maintain a self-sufficient lifestyle, but no one I found lives in complete isolation from the mainstream. Many of my subjects have websites that they update using laptop computers, and cell phones that they charge on car batteries or solar panels. They do not wholly reject the modern world. Instead, they step away from it and choose the parts that they want to bring with them. "


Pixie and Kyd's Duet, Falling Leaves Rendezvous, Georgia 2007

Homeschooling, Tennessee 2008

Bear, Shot by a Neighbor, Kevin's Land, Virginia 2008

Valerie and the Shadow, Tennessee 2008

Andrew and Taurin Drinking Raw Goat's Milk, Tennessee 2009

National Geographic, Wildroots Homestead, North Carolina 2008

Robert & Shana ParkeHarrison

Went to a few openings last night in Chicago and feel really inspired. Robert & Shana ParkeHarrison have work at the Catherine Edelman gallery which is totally stunning. They are giving an gallery talk at noon today if you are in the area. Should be really interesting. The work is seamless and so beautifully executed. The title of the show is Beginnings...no wonder I like it so much!

The Source (2004)

Burn Season (2003)

Study for Hi-Rise Planting (1993)

Study for Flight (1993)

Study of Nest (1994)

"Robert & Shana ParkeHarrison began collaborating on photographs shortly after graduate school, when they began constructing and choreographing scenarios about mans affect on the landscape. In these stagings, Robert would dress in a black suit and starched white shirt -- often referred in the press as an Everyman – and interact with the land, creating environmental performances. These surreal images addressed issues about the earth and mankind's responsibility to heal the damage he has done to its landscape. Often acting as earth's protector, healer and communicator, Everyman used low-tech instruments, creating settings more akin to cinema than the family photo album. These ground breaking images can be seen in their first monograph, The Architect's Brother."

You won't want to miss this show.