"Transmutations: Abstraction in Nature" Exhibition

Michael Mazzeo Gallery

poster for "Transmutations: Abstraction in Nature" Exhibition

This event has ended.

On View by Appointment through July

Transmutations consists of imagery in which either the photographer alters nature or allows nature to alter the photographic material.

Caleb Charland’s curiosity led him to relinquish control of the image-making process by introducing bacteria to his film. By consuming the gelatin emulsion and redepositing and repositioning the image particles, the bacteria create patterns and shapes, not dissimilar to those left behind by other natural processes. Charland’s images are a biograph, evidence of a bacterial life cycle, an index of existence.

Christian Erroi began to use photography as a means of communication after suffering a series of strokes causing paralysis, temporary blindness and the loss of his ability to speak or write. His lyrical color images of tree canopies and regional flora, divorced from their natural environs and reconfigured as freestanding elements in empty space, are informed by MRI scans
of his brain.

Chance and unpredictability play a significant role in the work of Yong Hee Kim. His investigation into the metaphysical nature of photography is expressed through the tangible, yet immaterial properties of natural phenomena. His altered and enlarged Polaroid SX-70 images of the sun refer to the dualities of light, metaphorical and physical.

By means of multiple exposure and layering of images, Sebastian Lemm builds elaborate networks of branches and leaves that become more than the sum of their parts. In this series of monochromatic works titled Strata, he summons gestalt theory to explore one of his recurring themes, the accumulation of memories.

Using vintage optics and extended time exposures, Chris McCaw pushes traditional photographic material far beyond its intended capacity, allowing the sun to scar his paper negatives. Marked by staccato burns, long charred gashes and the occasional suggestion of landscape, these raw, primitive images recall the experimental origins of the medium.

Media

Schedule

from May 13, 2009 to July 31, 2009
On View by Appointment through July

  • Facebook

    Reviews

    All content on this site is © their respective owner(s).
    New York Art Beat (2008) - About - Contact - Privacy - Terms of Use