For more information on this exhibit:
http://www.richmanphotoart.com/news--events.html
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For information on any photos or posts on this website, email me at [email protected].
In my "Humanity and the City" exhibit at the Johnson & Johnson Corporate Art Gallery in New Brunswick, New Jersey (January 31-March 17, 2017), I seek to celebrate subject. My photography is the interpretation of the city and the connection of its people to it Working in black and white printing, with the elimination of color, I am able to focus on subject without distraction. The interplay of light and atmosphere are enhanced in this environment. I have searched for patterns, the common denominators of human existence within that most basic and overlooked of human achievement-the city. The city is its people and its people are the city. While abstraction and an expanding application of photography into multi-media works has its place, it is refreshing and challenging to search for and capture the moments of life that form a common thread across our times.
For more information on this exhibit: http://www.richmanphotoart.com/news--events.html ******** For information on any photos or posts on this website, email me at [email protected].
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.The East Building of the National Gallery in Washington, D.C., has reopened after extensive renovation, and it now rivals and compares favorably with MOMA in New York and the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. Photography is not only the subject of special exhibits, but is also integrated within other collections, a feature seemingly becoming more common.
Two exhibits raised a particular question. One was a room devoted to the Düsseldorf School of Photography, including photographers Thomas Struth and Thomas Ruff among others, whose life size photographs dominate the room. In fact, the curator card on the wall tells us “the monumental size of their pictures produces an immersive quality, challenging our expectations of the nature of the medium and the boundaries between photography and painting.” A second room, part of the American art exhibition, featured two photographs by Charles Sheeler of the same scene, but framed and displayed in different sizes. The larger was not monumental, and both images are within the normal range of sizes of traditional photography of Sheeler’s time. Putting aside for the moment the exposure and other issues (remember this is a photograph of a photograph), we can compare side by side which image size is preferable. But the broader question raised by the Düsseldorf School images is reminiscent of the early Pictorialism of photography. In the 19th century, as photographers sought to establish photography as a respectable medium of art (and not just as a utilitarian exercise), they engaged in posed pictures to emulate art. We then saw the Photo Secessionists who sought to establish photography as an art form independent of painting and its replication. Have we come full circle? This is not to criticize the work represented, but merely to note that while these are powerful works, and size does not, in all instances, make the image. The photography of Walker Evans, Robert Frank and Berenice Abbott, to name just three, are cases in point. ******** For information on any photos or posts on this website, email me at [email protected]. |
AuthorSteven Richman is an attorney practicing in New Jersey. He has lectured before photography clubs on various topics, including the legal rights of photographers. His photography has been exhibited in museums, is in private collections, and is also represented in the permanent collection of the New Jersey State Museum. Archives
December 2022
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