Origins Story, Through a Modern Lens
Experimental Strategies at Aipad’s Photography Show
By MARTHA SCHWENDENER
The photography world has been ruled in recent years by a fascination with abstraction and experimental processes and techniques. You see this everywhere in the current Association of International Photography Art Dealers show at the Park Avenue Armory. Even Hans P. Kraus Jr., who deals in photographic old masters, is showing — alongside vintage prints by Charles Marville, now featured in a show at the Metropolitan Museum, and Eugène Atget — some 19th-century pencil drawings by John Herschel, an important contributor to early photography. The drawings here, of Stonehenge and sights on the European Grand Tour, were made with a camera lucida, an optical device that functions in a manner similar to that of the camera obscura but in full daylight rather than a dark room.
Photography by 1930s Surrealists like Raoul Ubac is on view at Contemporary Works, while Gitterman is showing photographs from the 1940s by Josef Breitenbach,
who taught at Black Mountain College in North Carolina and combined the
Photogram technique with chemical manipulation and other darkroom
methods.
Photograms, cameraless images made by exposing light-sensitive paper, are everywhere here. Von Lintel
has contemporary ones by Farrah Karapetian and Wendy Small, as well as
Floris Neusüss, who has devoted his career to making them. Joel Soroka
has modern black-and-white photograms by the Hungarian-born artist
György Kepes and Ei-Kyu of Japan, as well as a large vintage oil print,
believed to be unique, of a still life with scissors, thimble and
needle, by Pierre Dubreuil. Yancey Richardson
is showing a large color photogram with a lattice pattern, reminiscent
of Henry Fox Talbot’s early calotypes, by Bryan Graf. Gitterman has a
chemigram, a process invented in the 1950s that works something like wax
resistance in batik, by the German artist known simply as
Chargesheimer.
Read full article @ New York Times
Read full article @ New York Times
The AIPAD Photography Show New York runs through Sunday at the Park Avenue Armory, 643 Park Avenue, at 67th Street; aipad.com.
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