Thursday, May 27, 2010

Chicago Cultural Center - Jon Fjortoft: Photographs - Gallery Talk

From the Chicago Cultural Center:
Thursday June 3rd, 2010

Location:
Chicago Cultural Center
78 E. Washington St, Michigan Avenue Galleries
Chicago, IL 60602

"Photographer Jon Fjortoft leads a gallery talk through the exhibition of his work Jon Fjortoft: Photographs.


This exhibition looks at two bodies of work by the Chicago-based photographer, his landscape portraits of manufacturing plants and his “street photographs” of people in downtown Chicago."



Friday, May 14, 2010

Gage Gallery- Jerry Pritikin:San Francisco in the 1970s

From Gage Gallery


June 3 - Aug. 13, 2010
Opening reception June 3, 5-8pm


Roosevelt University Celebrates June Pride Month. Opening reception will take place from 5-8 pm in the Roosevelt University Gage Gallery. The show runs through August 13, 2010.



Tuesday, May 11, 2010

William Eggleston: Democratic Camera - Exhibition Overview *TODAY*


From the Art Institute of Chicago:


TODAY - May 11th 12:00-12:45 PM
Modern Wing, meet in Griffin Court
Free with admission

"Exhibition Overview

William Eggleston: Democratic Camera, Photographs and Video, 1961–2008

Join the curator for a guided walkthrough of this special exhibition."

Tuesday, May 4, 2010

Art Institute of Chicago - William Eggleston: Democratic Camera - Curator Walkthrough

From the Art Institute of Chicago:
May 11th 12:00-12:45 PM
Modern Wing, meet in Griffin Court
Free with admission


"Exhibition Overview


William Eggleston: Democratic Camera, Photographs and Video, 1961–2008


Join the curator for a guided walkthrough of this special exhibition."



Saturday, May 1, 2010

Schneider Gallery- Portrait Group Show: A New Angle

From the Schneider Gallery
May 14- July 3, 2010

Opening Reception
Friday, May 14, 2010
5:00-7:30pm

The Schneider Gallery is pleased to present the work of four young artists, Jowhara AlSaud, Jess T. Dugan, Jennifer Greenburg, and Ursula Sokolowska. These exceptional women photographers all explore the power of the portrait.

The portrait is personal, and when effective, goes beyond depiction- it commands presence, it reveals the quality and character of the sitter. The portraits by AlSaud, Dugan, Greenburg, and Sokolowska allow us the unique pleasure to do more than look but to engage a world that we may otherwise not feel invited into. Each artist captures their subject with such ease and grace that we too feel to have an intimate relation with them. We do not see as a voyeur, rather as friend, confidant, or equal. We are welcomed to comfortably wander, even inhabit the frame.

Saudi Arabian artist Jowhara AlSaud works with purpose. She begins with images of daily life- snapshots of family and friends- and works subtractively, scratching into the emulsion of the negative itself. Through elimination she employs a visual language that reacts directly to the process of censorship.

Jess T. Dugan takes interest in identity and self definition. She explores how activities, collections, and place act as mirror to the self. Dugan both asks and answers the question- how are our passions, interests, and pursuits reflected in the environments we inhabit. A seemingly simple question is handled with sincerity, delight, and insight into the figures and the spaces illuminated.

Jennifer Greenburg explores the subculture of the American Rockabilly in frames that inherently have documentary quality, but work beyond the limits of the genre. The Rockabillies live within the parameters of mid-twentieth century America. Judgment, critique, and skepticism of those living this adopted lifestyle fall away; our engagement with the figures is both personal and direct.

Ursula Sokolowska’s latest work is subtle yet weighty. No removal exists between the viewer and subject. The immediacy and rawness of the individuals depicted allows for an instant contact with the space, charac-ter, and subsequent narrative. If we were not allowed to hide ourselves in shadow our meeting with the figures would almost be abrupt.