login   password  artist portfolio  gallery portfolio  MYabsolutearts 
absolutearts.com
 
help   |  media kit   |  about us   |  services   |  contact  
  NEWEST TRENDS                .   SEARCH   .   BUY   .   JOIN   .   COLLECT   .   RESEARCH   .   READ  .   DISCUSS  
Indepth Arts News:

"The Abstracted Landscape : Work by 4 International Artists"
2009-09-24 until 2009-11-14
Laurence Miller Gallery
New York, NY, USA United States of America

Laurence Miller is pleased to present, as its opening show for the fall, The Abstracted Landscape, featuring the work of four mid-career international artists: Peter Bialobrzeski, from Hamburg; Stephane Couturier, from Paris; DoDo Jin Ming from Beijing and New York; and Toshio Shibata, from Tokyo. These four photographers each translate the landscape into a poetic and abstract vision, utilizing techniques and processes unique to photography to create scenes that remain sufficiently recognizable yet unobtainable through the naked eye.

Peter Bialobrzeski, in his series Lost in Transition, photographs rapid urbanization and industrialization by taking very long exposures, which create other-worldly colors and lighting not visible to the naked eye. Stephane Couturier embraces the camera's monocularity in his series from Havana to flatten our normal reading of space and render totally ambiguous the walls of a decaying interior. DoDo Jin Ming, in her series Behind My Eyes, applies the technique of negative printing to render mysterious and foreboding fields of sunflowers. And Toshio Shibata wields his large view camera, with multiple tilts and swings, to look straight down the side of a dam, creating a vertigo-inducing  viewpoint we would be unable (and perhaps unwilling) to see directly with our own eyes.

Abstraction in the landscape has a rich tradition within the history of photography. Felix Teynard‚s Egyptian views from the mid-1850‚s are wonderfully abstract, as are those of J.B. Greene and August Salzmann. Timothy O‚Sullivan, Carlton Watkins and William Henry Jackson each made views of the American west from the 1806's through the 1880‚s, that were equally rich in detail and minimal in composition. In the 20th century there are many examples, from George Seeley to Paul Strand, through Moholy Nagy and the Bauhaus to Edward Weston's glorious sand dunes.


Related Links:


 
Jeff Ramirez : This is the life - These are the real things - Cella Gallery


Call for Artists : LIQUID CITIES - International Video Art Limousine Festival . London, April 2010 - International ArtExpo


Rita Kashap Homage to Friedrich S. - Galerie Vinogrado


Romance, Passion, Eroticism : The Art of Love to Feature Work by Walter King - Galleria Evangelia


The Thoughts Series by D. Lammie-Hanson - Big Top Art Gallery


Call for Artists : Seeking 300 Glass Pieces - Saco Msueum


EDGE OF INDONESIA - Edge Gallery


Suzi Evalenko - What Mattered Most : A Life in Art and Letters - First Street Gallery


Wayne Quilliam : Photography in Context of Indiginous Australian Culture - Art Place Berlin - The Forum for Contemporary Art and Intercultural Project at Park Inn


Tim Etchells : A Solo Exhibition - Gasworks Gallery


Alberto Giacomett i: Woman with Chariot. Triumph and Death - Stiftung Wilhelm Lehmbruck Museum


Street Seen : The Psychological Gesture in American Photography, 1940-1959 - Milwaukee Art Museum


Tino Sehgal - Guggenheim Museum


Donnie 2010 : Contest and Exhibit - Karin Kuhlmann Earns Honorable Metion - MOCA, the Museum of Computer Art


 

indepth arts search:     
 
Free Arts News Subscription | Browse the Arts | Artist Portfolios | International Arts News | Arts News Archive | Privacy Policy