Photography

Into Wonderland: Review of Sanja Hurem's "Metamorphosis"

Dusk.

A ghost town named Vlacháta on the island Kefalonia, off the west coast of Greece.  Earth, shrubs, rocks, rubble, and the fossils of a community.  Old Vlacháta now.  Paleá Vlacháta.  Like referring to a person who has passed on. Joseph.  Joseph, deceased.  A town that used to be alive now deserted and emptied.

But, all things in life trace circles.

So, it lives again.  

COLOR IN MOTION: Featuring Erin Hanson, Pomm and Ian Ely

The Erin Hanson Gallery is pleased to present a group exhibition of works from three popular LA-based artists. Color in Motion will show for a limited engagement on Saturday, March 26th

The LA artists featured in this limited engagement exhibition are Pomm, Ian Ely and Erin Hanson. The driving focus will be color and motion.

Looking In, Looking Out: Latin American Photography

Looking In, Looking Out: Latin American Photography

October 18, 2015 – March 20, 2016

The scenes of Latin American culture, politics, environments, and individuals are explored in depth in Looking In, Looking Out: Latin American Photography. This exhibition, drawn from the permanent collection of the Santa Barbara Museum of Art, highlights works by Latin American photographers, or artists who have adopted it as home, so that those from outside the region may look into the lives of Latin America. Through the lens of nostalgia, propaganda, a populist aesthetic, and changing perspectives, the iconic and emerging photographers illustrate the diverse but often similar spirits of countries in the region.

 

Is it in the nature of humans?

If you missed it, Hanover College’s Human Nature exhibition displayed four artists’ representations of what is fundamentally human. Less didactic than you might expect, artists Rachael Banks, Robert Ladislas Derr, Bernie Kasper, and Lauren Wesley subtly observe the stuff of mankind through very different expressions and imaginations.

Looking In, Looking Out: Latin American Photography

The scenes of Latin American culture, politics, environments, and individuals are explored in depth in Looking In, Looking Out: Latin American Photography. This exhibition, drawn from the permanent collection of the Santa Barbara Museum of Art, highlights works by Latin American photographers, or artists who have adopted it as home, so that those from outside the region may look into the lives of Latin America. Through the lens of nostalgia, propaganda, a populist aesthetic, and changing perspectives, the iconic and emerging photographers illustrate the diverse but often similar spirits of countries in the region.

Pages

Subscribe to Photography