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Showing posts with label Chaco Terada. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chaco Terada. Show all posts
photo-eye Gallery Chaco Terada: New Work photo-eye Gallery photo-eye Gallery is thrilled to share new work by Chaco Terada.


Chaco Terada, I Am Home 4, 2022, Sumi & Pigment Ink on Silk, 10x7", Unique Print, $1,800

If you've been following Chaco Terada's work, you might be anticipating her annual visit to photo-eye.  I am pleased to report that we were able to catch up with Chaco recently and now have some fantastic new pieces in our inventory.  A selection of the new works can be viewed below, and you can find additional work on our website.  


In the case that you've recently discovered Terada's work, you might be curious about her unique process.  Terada's process involves printing photographic images onto multiple layers of silk, which are often embellished with brushwork using Sumi ink. Each layer of silk is delicately stretched between an 8-ply matboard, like a canvas, so that every semi-transparent layer of silk interacts with each other, much like a watercolor painting.   


Enjoy viewing — and please reach out if you would like to discuss a specific piece.  

 
Chaco Terada, To Pontoon 1, 2018, Sumi & Pigment Ink on Silk, 10x7", Unique Print, $1,800




Chaco Terada, A Fragment 2, 2023, Sumi & Pigment Ink on Silk, 10x7 in, Unique Print, $1800



Chaco Terada, Wind from East 2, 2023, Sumi & Pigment Ink on Silk, 10x7 in,  Unique Print, $1800


If you would like to know more about Chaco Terada and her process you can find more information HERE


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PRINT COSTS ARE CURRENT UP TO THE TIME OF POSTING AND ARE SUBJECT TO CHANGE.
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If you are in Santa Fe, please stop by we are open Tuesday– Saturday, from 10am- 5:30pm. 

1300 Rufina Circle, Unit A3, Santa Fe, NM 87507

For more information, and to reserve one of these unique works, please contact 
Gallery Director Anne Kelly
You may also call us at (505) 988-5152 x202

photo-eye Gallery Chaco Terada: Gallery Musings photo-eye Gallery photo-eye Gallery's staff is pleased to share thoughs on one of their favorite images by Chaco Terada.


Since the 6th century, calligraphy has been a revered art form in Japan, following its introduction by Chinese masters. Today, it reflects the influence of Japanese Zen Buddist philosophy, where artists clear their minds to allow each character to arise spontaneously, committing it to paper in fluid motions. Yhohei Teradam, an esteemed calligraphy teacher at the University of Toyama, began teaching his daughter Chaco the art when she was only four years old. In her early twenties, Chaco would bring her passion for calligraphy to the United States and combine it with a new love: photography.

Chaco Terada has always been captivated by the way the lines of folded calligraphy paper showed through when held up to the light. Inspired by a poetry book that merged text and images, she developed a process that combines Sumi ink calligraphic mark-making with black-and-white photographic images printed on sheer silk, producing unique vignettes. Her subjects include landscapes, portraits, flowers and other imagery that is shrouded and obscured, their details blurred by layers of silk. Each layer of silk is then stretched between 8-ply matboards, like a canvas so that each semi-transparent layer of silk interacts with each other. The calligraphy is often painted on multiple layers, giving the impression of free-floating thoughts in the atmosphere. The spaced layers add depth to the images, and the silk adds an ethereal, atmospheric quality to the photos. 

Terada's brushstrokes derive from characters with multiple interpretations, creating impressionistic takes on mood and feeling. She says, "My calligraphy is influenced by life experiences. When I create a brushstroke, I think of the motion of water in a stream or the movement of a breeze. My lines do not create a word in the traditional sense; they interpret the meaning or mood that I feel the word represents."

>> To learn more about represented artist Chaco Terada, click here <<

>> To view more of Chaco Terada's work, click here <<



Gallery Director Anne Kelly and Gallery Assistant Jovi Esquivel share their thoughts on their favorite piece. To fully appreciate Terada's work and the interplay between the layers of silk, they should be experienced in person.


As the gallery director at photo-eye, I have the opportunity to form a relationship with the artists we represent, which includes hearing stories that are typically not included in general artist statements. These stories help provide a more complete comprehension of an artist's work, so I like to share them alongside experiences whenever possible.

Chaco Terada's relationship with photo-eye dates back about 15 years. Over this period I have thoroughly enjoyed getting to know Chaco, watching her career blossom and her art-making process evolve.

Chaco began producing art at age four when she began her studies in the ancient art of calligraphy. In her twenties, her calligraphy skills presented the opportunity to travel. Chaco eventually decided to settle in the United States, where she developed a passion for photography, which she began incorporating into her brushwork. In this new process, she moved away from traditional characters, which can be literally interpreted, into a new free-form version of calligraphy that she considers meditative mark-making. These marks benefit from a mastery of the ancient art of calligraphy but are not bound by traditional rules.

I would like to highlight Little Fox, for I see Chaco in all of her images but particularly this one. I perceive Little Fox, as a portrait of the artist, but not in the literal sense. Foxes, known as kitsune, often appear in Japanese folklore and are believed to have paranormal abilities such as shapeshifting. Chaco possesses many positive characteristics associated with foxes. Chaco is cunning, playful and resilient. 

This piece was made in 2020 when most of us were in quarantine. During this time Chaco revisited images from the past, looking for new inspiration. In this process, she came across a photograph that she had made of an Oragomi fox that was photographed on a trip to Japan the year prior and decided to work with that. The final image depicts the origami fox framed by silhouetted foliage. The origami fox appears to be looking out a window and dreaming of returning to the forest to play. 

Because Chaso's images are composed by stacking multiple layers of semi-opaque silk, the individual elements become one, they are capable of representing not just one moment in time but multiple places within the same frame. Her past, present and future are illustrated in a single image.

—Anne Kelly


Chaco Terada, Sounds of Silhouette, Sumi & Pigment Ink on Silk, 10 x 7½ Image, Unique Object, $1800

I feel a profound connection to the wind, which beckons me to dream and awakens all of my senses. Living in New Mexico, I cannot escape the dramatic interplay of light and sound shaped by the forceful will of the wind as it moves through the tall Cottonwood trees. The artwork titled Sounds of Silhouette amplifies this connection for me. The work appears to be a vignette of leaves and branches that have been printed on multiple layers of silk, creating a sense of depth and varying densities that mirror the way light moves through trees. Against this backdrop of light and shadow, Chaco's hand emerges with iridescent calligraphic strokes, capturing the essence of wind whispering through leaves.

Chaco's process of combining calligraphy with photography on silk produces an otherworldly quality that draws me into the artwork and makes me feel connected to the natural world. 

—Jovi Esquivel


If you are in Santa Fe, please stop by during gallery hours or schedule a Virtual Visit here.


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Print costs are current up to the time of posting and are subject to change.


For more information, and to reserve one of these unique, extraordinary new works,
please contact photo-eye Gallery Director Anne Kelly 

1300 Rufina Circle, Unit A3, Santa Fe, NM 87507
Tuesday– Saturday, from 10am– 5:30pm

You may also call us at (505) 988- 5152 x202


photo-eye Gallery From the Flat Files: Jovi Esquivel photo-eye presents a collection of spring-themed photographs that capture the essence of the season in their own unique way, highlighting the beauty and fragility of nature, the promise of new beginnings, and the wonder and magic of the world around us.

Cig Harvey, Bougainvillea, Bequia, 2019, Archival Pigment Print, 16x20", Edition of 10, $3,000 

Spring is a season that fills us with hope and promise. As the earth awakens from its winter slumber, nature bursts forth with new life, reminding us that even in the darkest of times, there is always the possibility of renewal. It's a time when we are reminded of the power of change and the resilience of the natural world. This week, we'll explore stunning photographs from artists Cig Harvey, Chaco Terada, Tom Chambers, Kate Breakey, and Thomas Jackson, to name a few, that capture the essence of spring and its message of hope and renewal. From delicate blossoms to vibrant landscapes, these images are a celebration of the beauty and wonder of the world around us. So let's dive in and immerse ourselves in the colors, textures, and emotions of this incredible season. 


Chaco Terada, Sakura Front 4, Sumi & Pigment Ink on Silk, 9.5x11", Unique Print, $4,200 


Tom Chambers, Tea for Two, 2018, Archival Pigment Print, 32x18, Edition of 20, $1,850


Maggie Taylor, Golden Hour, 2019, Archival Pigment Print, 8x8", Edition of 15, $1,700


Ben Depp, Mayflies, 2021, Archival Pigment Print, 22.5x30", Edition of 10, $2,000


Walter Plotnick, Love Birds, Silver Halide Print, 16x20", Edition of 15, $1,950


Zoë Zimmerman, Quarantine #60 (Day #76), Archival Pigment Print, 20x16", Edition of 24, $1,200


Kate Breakey, Tulip Bud, Archival Pigment Ink on Glass & 24kt Gold Leaf, 8x6", Edition of 20, $1,200


Hiroshi Watanabe, TDTDC 39 (Purple Tree), 2011, Archival Pigment Ink, 9x9", Edition of 5, $1,800


Amanda Marchand, Hart's Tongue (Kodak Polyfiber FD), 2020, Unique Archival Pigment Prints, 18x15", Edition of 3, POR


Thomas Jackson, Tulle no.34_v1, Ocracoke Island, North Carolina, 2021, Archival Pigment Print, 20x25", Edition of 4, $2,500


Print costs are current up to the time of posting and are subject to change.


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If you are in Santa Fe, please stop by during gallery hours or schedule a visit HERE.

For more information, and to reserve one of these unique works, please contact
Gallery Director Anne Kelly or Gallery Assistant Jovi Esquivel

You may also call us at (505) 988-5152 X202

photo-eye Gallery

1300 Rufina Circle, Unit A3, Santa Fe, NM 87507
Tuesday– Saturday, from 10am– 5:30pm
photo-eye Gallery Celebrating 2022: photo-eye Gallery Highlights! photo-eye Gallery As the year comes to a close, our gallery staff is reflecting on some of our favorite artworks and highlights from 2022— work that has brought us beauty, inspiration and solace.

Chaco Terada, Little Fox, Sumi Ink on Silk, 10x7.5", Unique print, $1800 

Greetings! 

It's hard to believe that this year is ending, I think about the time in my life when "time" felt eternal. Now, as each year passes, I find myself working harder to hang onto the threads of each passing day. 

I started at photo-eye Gallery six months ago, and while I've been fortunate to have worked with photographs most of my career, it has been a joy to have the opportunity to collaborate with our artists — I admire each of them for their exceptional ability to capture a sense of reality shaped by their perspective eye and mind. So much beautiful work has come to us this past year and I'm excited to share new work by artists Beth Moon, Vanessa Marsh, and Maggie Taylor in the new year — I will also be introducing a few new artists. 

As the year comes to a close, our gallery staff is reflecting on some of our favorite artworks and highlights from 2022. The year began with an exhibition of Linda Connor and Pentti Sammallahti's work, a photo-eye Conversation between Anne Kelly and Brad Wilson, and an online exhibition of Beth Moon's portfolio of Baobabs. Spring and Summer brought us the beautiful exhibition of Platinum Florals by Beth Moon and James Pitts, new portfolios from Zoë Zimmerman, Siri Kaur, Tony Chirinos, and Keith Carter, Reuben Wu was featured on the cover of the August issue of National Geographic, and the exhibition Internal Logic by Maggie Taylor. In the Fall, Chaco Terada and David H. Gibson made their annual visit, giving gallery staff a day full of new work to admire. In this blog, you'll find work that has brought us beauty, inspiration and solace that range from interviews with artists to photographs, and exhibitions. 



We hope you enjoy viewing our selections and are looking forward to what the next year brings.

Wishing you all a happy and healthy end to the year! 







Beth Moon, Ankoabe Forest, Platinum Print, 22x36", Edition of 5, $7,000



Tom Chambers, Marsh Flight, Archival Pigment Print, 20x20", Edition of 20, $1200 



Zoë Zimmerman, Quarantine #14 (Day #18), Archival Pigment Print, 20x16", Edition of 24, $1200



David Trautrimas, Night Sweats, Archival Pigment Print, 9x13", Edition of 5, $900






Keith Carter, Starry Night, Archival Pigment Print, 16x16" Edition of 25, $1600



Left to right: Mitch Dobrowner, Shiprock Storm; Mark Klett, Moonset with Venus; Edward Bateman, Antelope Island No. 766

Over the summer, Gallery Director Anne Kelly asked photo-eye Gallery artists for their thoughts on the belief that "Turmoil is necessary for an artistic Practice." Mark Klett, Mitch Dobrowner, and Edward Bateman share in Part One, and in Part Two Amanda Marchand and David Trautrimas chime in.   


photo-eye Gallery is proud to represent all of the artists in this article.


Print costs are current up to the time of posting and are subject to change.


For more information, and to reserve one of these unique, extraordinary works, 
please contact photo-eye Gallery Director Anne Kelly or Gallery Associate Jovi Esquivel.


photo-eye Gallery

1300 Rufina Circle, Unit A3, Santa Fe, NM 87507
Tuesday– Saturday, from 10am– 5:30pm

You may also call us at (505) 988– 5152 x202





  photo-eye Gallery   New Work by Artist Chaco Terada    Anne Kelly       New work by represented artist Chaco Terada
Since the beginning of photo-eye's relationship with Chaco Terada in 2007, gallery staff and collectors of Terada’s works have had the honor of witnessing her art-making practice evolve. Chaco’s process involves printing her photographic images on silk and adding handwork with Sumi ink. Each layer of silk is then stretched between an 8-ply matboard, like a canvas, so that each semi-transparent layer of silk interacts with each other — like a watercolor painting. This unique practice is the direct result of a curious moment when she picked up a piece of discarded silk and considered the possibilities. Terada's process has become more elaborate as she has mastered her craft and delved deeper into her musings. 
“My calligraphy is influenced by life experiences. When I create a brushstroke I think of the motion of water in a stream or the movement of a breeze. My lines do not create a word in the traditional sense, they interpret the meaning or mood that I feel the word represents. Before I depict the character of the word autumn, I would meditate on an autumn scene, and let the details that come to my mind direct my hand."
— Chaco Terada

Recently, Chaco visited the gallery to share works made over the last year — an annual visit the gallery has come to look forward to. Over the years the aesthetic of Chaco’s work has remained consistent, without getting stale and always providing surprises. While many artists credit “the world around them,” as their muse, I would specify that in the case of Chaco, she has a particular sensitivity, or curiosity about, the world around her that makes her visions particularly unique. As a solid example, I will bring you back to her curiosity about the discarded silk, which resulted in the process that she is known for today. photo-eye Gallery is delighted to share these new works by represented artist Chaco Terada today!


Chaco’s new works are introspective, while this isn’t a shift for her, when viewing the work I do get the sense that over the last few years she has delved just a bit deeper as the world around us has morphed from travel restrictions that have prevented her from visiting her home in Japan, resulting in more time spent in the studio, photographing closer to home and pulling images previously shot in Japan as a method of travel. Like many artists, Chaco took a step further inward, and as a result, I believe the viewer gains an even deeper appreciation for Chaco’s curiosity and imagination. 



In the new works, we experience a range of studies, from Cicada wings — who's summer song reminds her of her childhood in Japan, a series that includes self-portraits of the artist with cherry blossoms, studies on small loan houses around northern New Mexico titled The Poets House and some studies that take us back to Japan. 


Chaco Terada, For the Only 4, 2022, Sumi & Pigment Ink on Silk, 13x9", Unique Print, $4,200 

To learn more about Chaco Terada’s process, take a look at the fantastic interview in the link below. 





To appreciate the full effect of a Terada photographic object they simply must be seen in person. If you are in Santa Fe, please stop by during gallery hours or schedule a Virtual Visit here.


Print costs are current up to the time of posting and are subject to change.


For more information, and to reserve one of these unique, extraordinary new works,
please contact photo-eye Gallery Director Anne Kelly or Gallery Associate Jovi Esquivel.
1300 Rufina Circle, Unit A3, Santa Fe, NM 87507
Tuesday– Saturday, from 10am– 5:30pm

You may also call us at (505) 988- 5152 x202


photo-eye Gallery New Work: Chaco Terada Delaney Hoffman
photo-eye Gallery presents a portfolio of recent works from gallery artist, Chaco Terada.
Chaco Terada, Nishiki 3, 2021, Sumi ink and archival inks on silk, 13 x 10," Unique, $1800

photo-eye Gallery is ecstatic to present new works from represented artist Chaco Terada.

Chaco Terada creates dynamic, beautiful compositions made up of images printed onto silk that are then layered and marked with Sumi ink. This process has roots in the practice of traditional Japanese and Chinese calligraphy, which Chaco has engaged with since she was a small child. The marks that Terada adds to the images are poetic, both in their origin as texts but also in the gestures that the artist uses; her artwork is imbued with a life all its own. 

Chaco’s meditative, expansive practice allows her to translate everyday observations into unique, dynamic objects that mimic the experience of feeling in their dimensionality. The artist allows you to step into her world and share in her experiences of love, loss and joy through the dynamism and literal depth of her artwork. 

When asked about her thematic influences in a 2018 interview, Terada stated that, even in all of the specificity of experience that influences her work, the common thread could simply just be “life.” As the artist says: “All of [her] mystery, wonder, and excitement are there.”

Chaco Terada, Brake, 2021, Sumi ink and archival ink on silk, 14x10.5," Unique, $1800


Chaco Terada, The Moon Lay 1, 2021, Sumi ink and archival inks on silk, 9.5 x 7,"
 Unique, $1800



When Terada stretches her silk frames, she stretches the world itself. She gifts the viewer a window into her own emotional, interior world. She has built these objects in a way where the depth of the physical image brings you in and allows you the freedom to explore; to try looking from a different angle, in a different light, for longer than you may engage with a flat image on a wall. 

To encounter Terada’s work is to encounter an outstretched hand inviting you to be still, take a breath and think for a while, which is something that we all could benefit from, perhaps.

>>View the new portfolio in its entirety here.<<


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For more information, and to purchase prints, please contact Gallery Director Anne Kelly or Gallery Assistant Delaney Hoffman, or you may also call us at 505-988-5152 x202


photo-eye Gallery New Images by Chaco Terada photo-eye Gallery
photo-eye Gallery is delighted to announce two new works by represented artist Chaco Terada. Known for her meditative and distinctive process, Terada prints her images directly onto multiple layers of silk, giving her images a subtle sense of three-dimensionality. She then applies text using Sumi ink with her own "free" form calligraphy, making each work one-of-a-kind.
 
Chaco Terada, To the Flow 1, 2020, 14 x 7" image, 24 x 16" mat, archival pigment ink and Sumi ink on multiple layers of silk, unique, $1800
 
photo-eye Gallery is delighted to announce two new works by represented artist Chaco Terada.

Known for her meditative and distinctive process, Terada prints her images directly onto multiple layers of silk, giving her images a subtle sense of three-dimensionality. She then applies text using Sumi ink with her own "free-form" calligraphy, making each work one-of-a-kind.

Having cultivated the skill of calligraphy at a very young age, and adopted photography in her twenties, Terada draws inspiration from both her own personal journey and Japanese culture to create her work. While Terada's unique pieces render as personal visual poems, her themes are universal — motifs of love, loss, family and life's journey run deep, similar to the multiple layers of silk, images and Sumi ink used to create her works.
 

Chaco Terada, To the Flow 2, 2020, 14 x 7" image, 24 x 16" mat, archival pigment ink and Sumi ink on multiple layers of silk, unique, $1800
 
To learn more about Chaco Terada’s process, take a look at the fantastic interview in the link below. And please contact us if you would like more information or if you would like to reserve one of her unique, extraordinary new works.
 

 
 
Chaco Terada at work in her studio in Dallas, TX – photo: David Gibson

 
 
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Works by Chaco Terada are UNIQUE due to her technique and they come matted in 8 ply archival mat board.

 For more information, and to purchase any of these one-of-a-kind works, please contact Gallery Director Anne Kelly or Gallery Assistant Patricia Martin, or you may also call us at 505-988-5152 x202

 





 

photo-eye Gallery From the Flat-Files: Photomontage photo-eye Gallery
We can discuss photomontage in both its analog and digital versions, its numerous technical possibilities within both these realms, and the issues it faces in contemporary art. This week we feature some of our favorites photomontages from our flat-files.

Jennifer Greenburg, I was a vendor of drink but not love, archival pigment ink, 24 x 30 inches, edition of 3, $3500

 
Popularized by the Dadaists and Constructivism, photomontage has provided artists with the ability to go beyond photography's primal pursuit to represent reality. In an unparalleled way, the technique has offered original, or at least re-interpreted, worlds in photographic form — artworks that seamlessly combine many photographs into one, new vision and idea.

Today, we can discuss photomontage in both its analog and digital versions, its numerous technical possibilities within both these realms, and the issues it faces in contemporary art. 

This week we feature some of our favorite photomontages from our flat-files.


Jennifer Greenburg

Using digital photomontage, Jennifer Greenburg inserts herself into scenes of mid-century America. Her series Revising History, seamlessly incorporates images of Greenburg within the compositions of anonymous vintage photographs. The resulting black and white images look like those found in a family album.

In images like I was a vendor of drink but not love, Greenburg chose an image that depicts a character she can identify with. She researched who the subject was and tried to figure out what her experience was the moment the image was captured. The intention behind the work is to raise a conversation with her audience about how we interpret media and personal memories to establish a collective history.

To learn more about what goes on behind Jennifer Greenbug's images, read our interview with her here

Maggie Taylor

 

The Harbinger, by Maggie Taylor, combines old photos and illustrations, mainly representing a crow cawing on top of an uncanny flying device and a polar bear placidly swimming across an iceless sea. The resulting artwork is a surrealistic dreamscape that commands careful attention from the viewer to fully grasp.

Taylor's photomontages, a combinatinon of the historical and contemporary, consist of 19th century daguerreotypes, old illustrations, found photographs, and diverse objects and artifacts —all layered together through meticulous digital image editing. You may learn more about her practice here

Chaco Terada

 
Chaco Terada's creative process is meditative and organic, her workflow is purely intuitive, her images are inspired by her daily musings and interactions with her surroundings. A master calligrapher and visual poet, Terada uses multiple layers of silk, images, sumi and pigment inks to create her works.

There is something very "natural" about Terada's photomontages. In Dialogue, somehow the mechanicity often attributed to photomontage — the layering of dissasociated elements — is completely blurred in the misty quality of the work. The delicate brush marks in the foreground and the serene mountaintop in the background, dissolve together in a seamless and harmonious visual dialogue. To learn more about Chaco Terada's work, check out the interview she did with photo-eye.

Tom Chambers

 

For Tom Chambers, photomontage is a vehicle to combine the diverse ideas stemming from his imagination — a way to make them tangible.
 
To construct his photographs, Chambers usually sketches the concept he has for an image. Sometimes, he will also find an element and photograph it as a starting point. The rest of the magic happens in the digital post-production process. 
 
His photomontage I can touch merges reality and dream, while speaking to the beauty of childhood and the wonder of sea life. It is magical realism at its best. You may learn more about his work here
 
 


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All prices listed were current at the time this post was published.

For more information, and to purchase prints, please contact Gallery Director Anne Kelly or Gallery Assistant Patricia Martin, or you may also call us at 505-988-5152 x202