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Showing posts with label Hearts and Bones. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hearts and Bones. Show all posts

photo-eye Gallery Tom Chambers: Hearts and Bones
Closing Saturday, February 16
Tom Chambers' expansive mid-career retrospective comes to a close this Saturday, Feb 16. Also debuting Wintry Beacon a new image in the Tales of Heroines series.

Tom Chambers, Wintry Beacon, 2019, Archival Pigment Print, 22x13" Image, Edition of 20, $950

"Tom Chambers transforms the everyday into the mythical. His hyperreal images depict much more than a moment in time. Rather they show something far less tangible…perhaps a memory, feeling or dream…allowing the viewer to make a personal connection."
– Anne Kelly, Gallery Director
From 'Praise for Tom Chambers' Hearts and Bones'

Hearts and Bones
photographs by Tom Chambers
Signed Hardbound – $45.00
Charming, whimsical, and enigmatic, Tom Chambers' stirring photomontages have captivated collector's for more than 25 years. In that time, Chambers' vignettes have consistently and convincingly blended fantastical elements with the everyday to tell stories about the human condition–fragility, ritual, perseverance and trust. Hearts and Bones has been a very special exhibition for us at photo-eye Gallery. Not only is it a mid-career retrospective for Chambers, but it represents over a decade of his relationship with photo-eye as a represented artist, and carries the feeling of celebrating a milestone birthday with a family member. Punctuating the exhibition was the release of Tom's exquisite new monograph, published by Unicorn, including an introduction by former photo-eye Gallery Director Elizabeth Avedon. In fact, Avedon, and then Gallery Assistant Anne Kelly, both organized Chambers' first exhibition at photo-eye Gallery back in 2007.  It has been a delight to witness the progression of Tom's work here in the gallery these months, including the debut of his newest series Tales of Heroines.
Tom Chambers' Tales of Heroines
installed at Photo LA 2019 (left)

To cap the exhibition, Chambers is debuting a new image in the Tales of Heroines series, Wintry Beacon (above).  The snowy background image was photographed by Chambers up on the hill above Santa Fe at the Native American and Folk Art museums.

Tom Chambers: Hearts and Bones closes this Saturday, February 16th. If you haven't already, we invite you to stop by the gallery or visit the online portfolio, to view this comprehensive collection of Chambers' photomontage artwork.







• • • • •

All prices listed were current at the time this post was published. 
Prices will increase as the print editions sell.

For more information, and to purchase prints,  please contact Gallery Staff at 
505-988-5152 x202 or gallery@photoeye.com

Tom Chambers, Moat Float, 2018, 
Archival Pigment Print, 28x29" Image, Edition of 10, $2300
Tom Chambers:
Hearts and Bones
Closing Saturday, February 16th, 2019

» View Work by Tom Chambers

» Read More about Tom Chambers

» Photo LA 2019, including Tom Chambers


photo-eye Gallery
541 S. Guadalupe Street
Santa Fe, NM 87501
505-988-5152 x202
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photo-eye Gallery Tom Chambers: Hearts and Bones
Press and Pics
Tom Chambers: Hearts and Bones, opened at the end of November and we are thrilled about the enthusiastic response the work has received from the fine art community in Santa Fe.

Photographer Tom Chambers holding a copy of his new monograph, Hearts and Bones, at photo-eye Gallery.

Tom Chambers: Hearts and Bones, opened at the end of November and we are thrilled about the enthusiastic response the work has received from the fine art community in Santa Fe. photo-eye Gallery is proud to have represented Chambers for more than a decade now and he's become one our most popular artists over the years. Since his first solo exhibition in 2007, Chambers' narrative photomontages have delighted viewers by inviting them to believe in a world rich with magic and mysticism. Hearts and Bones is a mid-career retrospective; a celebration of Chambers' complete body of work covering more than twenty-five years and includes three images from his yet-to-be-titled portrait series, Nesting with Scissors, Hide Your Eyes, and Now Now. Paul Weideman of the Pasatiempo wrote an excellent summary of Chambers' work and career in his December 14th cover story with background and commentary provided by the artist. Here's an excerpt from Weideman's article Of Girls, Birds, and Cloudy Skies discussing Chamber's new work:

Gallery Associate Julaine Worthington holding a copy of the December 14th issue of the Pasatiempo featuring Tom Chambers' image Fire and Ice on the cover. 

If viewers are seeking meaning in his works, they may often be confounded, or at least challenged. But his methodology also makes it fun to view them and discover nearly hidden elements. The main subject of
Hide Your Eyes is a girl with a hooded hawk on her wrist partially lifting a blindfold. There are birds here and there, and two rabbits camouflaged in the grass. The hawk was a stuffed bird Chambers found in a case at a hawk sanctuary. “Hide Your Eyes is one of a very new series. I have seven completed right now and three are at the gallery for this show. I wanted to shake up my work, to do something totally different. I set parameters. I decided they would be full-length portraits, all the same size, all looking directly ahead, all with the horizon line at knee height so it would be mostly sky, and the colors would be muted.”
Another of his newest pictures is Nesting With Scissors. Here is a young lady standing, looking out of the frame at us as she cuts her hair with a large pair of scissors. She has a sad look on her face. Sparrows are harvesting the cut hair in midair and on the ground, using it to improve their nest. Chambers said he has not yet nailed down the artistic statement for this new series. The parameters limit the basic look of the photos, so the story is told purely by means of the other elements and the action. “I don’t know the name of the series yet. It has to do with storytelling and maybe heroines, because I think this will be all girls.” – Paul Weideman

We'll have more from Tom later in January about his new portrait series when we release the full portfolio of images alongside a new interview with the artist. In the meantime, we are incredibly grateful for your enthusiasm and support this year, and wish you all the best in the year to come.

Represented Artist Tom Chambers with photo-eye Gallery Director Anne Kelly. Image courtesy of Sally Chambers. 
Tom Chambers: Hearts and Bones installed at photo-eye Gallery

• • •

For more information, and to purchase prints, please contact Gallery Staff at 
505-988-5152 x202 or gallery@photoeye.com


On view through February 16th, 2019

» View the Work

» Read Our Interview 
   with Tom Chambers

» Purchase the Monograph 


photo-eye Gallery
541 S. Guadalupe Street
Santa Fe, Nm 87501
–View Map–





photo-eye Gallery Gallery Favorites
Tom Chambers: Hearts and Bones
This week Gallery Staff has selected their favorite images from Chamber's current exhibition Hearts and Bones, a mid-career retrospective containing 26 images spanning twenty-five years of work and ten separate projects. The exhibition remains on view through February 16, 2019.

Tom Chambers: Hearts and Bones installed at photo-eye Gallery
Tom Chambers is a master storyteller. His intricate photomontages construct convincing single-setting narratives delicately balanced between beauty, danger and wonder. His images captivate us as they leave room for our own personal experience and imagination to answer the questions each scene poses. Our reaction becomes part of the creative process and a reason to revisit the image time after time. This week our Gallery Staff has selected their favorite images from Chambers' current exhibition Hearts and Bones, a mid-career retrospective containing 26 images spanning twenty-five years of work and ten separate projects. The exhibition remains on view through February 16, 2019.



Anne Kelly selects Moat Float

Tom Chambers, Moat Float, 2018, Archival Pigment Print, 28x29" Image, Edition of 10, $2300
Anne Kelly, Gallery Director
505.988.5152 x114
I distinctly recall the first time I encountered one of Tom Chambers' prints. Twelve years ago I saw Prom Gown #1. At the time I couldn’t articulate what it was about the image that moved me--I knew immediately I was looking at an artist with vision and promise. Since then Chambers has continued to produce images that speak to me. The first time I saw Moat Float I was transported back to my childhood days, swimming in the lake at my grandparents', floating along with my little butterfly sailboat. Tom depicts a fragile, young girl, still in her dress, lying in the cold waters of a dreary lake, gulls circling a lonely castle, a small sailboat carried on the ripples of time. The scene is both chilling and calming. The muted colors elicit a feeling of sadness, yet the boat sails proudly forth while smoke pours from the chimney, a fire waiting inside. Life carries on despite the grayness we often feel. It reminds me of the resilience we all hold within us, especially when we remember to embrace our child-like wonder. I'm often asked how I choose artists to represent and how I build my own personal collection. The answer is the same: I follow my intuition, gathering the things that speak to me most.


Lucas Maclaine Shaffer selects Now Now


Tom Chambers, Now Now, 2018, Archival Pigment Print, 22x13" Image, Edition of 20, $950
Lucas Maclaine Shaffer
Special Projects & Client Relations
photo-eye Gallery
505.988.5152 x114
Now Now, from Tom Chambers upcoming Portrait Series, exemplifies the artist's ability to construct a resounding fiction in a simple frame. Eschewing his standard square format for an arched vertical, Chambers borrows a classic form akin to that of Medieval iconography, and in doing so, imbues Now Now with both mythological status and symbolism. Something important, something powerful, is evident in the image, but the narrative details are yours to decipher.

The idyllic pastoral setting is delightful, yet clashes with the young woman's rigid posture, unexplained injury, and piercing gaze aimed directly at the viewer--one that seems to say, "I see you." The tension of the narrative is delivered in the delicate gesture of the young woman's left hand. Hovering her hand just above her wolf-protector's head, she appears to be keeping it momentarily at bay, her eyes focused intently on us, the viewer. Chambers deftly creates the feeling of being seen by the subject and gives us the illusion of agency in the confrontation, as if our actions will somehow determine the next scene in this narrative. The moment is rife with anticipation. Now Now is magnetic. It draws me in with its pristine detail and muted pastels and holds me in place with its mysteries. Who is this girl? Why is she hurt? Why does she need protection? Who am I to her? Is she far from home? Where are her shoes?

I find the image captivating and can imagine it being especially powerful if presented in life-size. I adore Chambers' ability to build complex worlds worth visiting on a daily basis. I appreciate the room he leaves for our own imagination, interpretation, and reflection in the process.


Juliane Worthington selects Late for Dinner

Tom Chambers, Late For Dinner, 2013, Archival Pigment Print, 20x20" Image, Edition of 20, $1600
Juliane Worthington
Gallery Associate
505.988.5152 x116
I love the way Late For Dinner feels like a scene from a fairy tale dream. The edges are soft and blurred, the pink hue of the sunset fading behind the small, old village on the hill. At first glance the sweet girl, in her best gown grabs my entire focus. But the more I study this image, which I asked be hung next to my desk in the gallery, I’m aware of the ravens circling the structures that appear to be vacant and abandoned. Why is such a beautiful child, barefoot and alone on a road to a forgotten place? How late is she really? Is it an hour or a hundred years? I can’t see her face to know with what intent she’s running up this damp and slippery path. What Chambers executes so well in in his work is the ability to create a vision of an idea that’s nearly possible, slightly dangerous, and completely mystifying. His montages often ride the line between dreams and nightmares. Perhaps it’s up to us to decide—will the girl break the spell on the ghostly village and restore it with the beauty and life of her own innocent spirit, or is she too late?


———

All prices listed were current at the time this post was published. 
Prices will increase as the print editions sell.

For more information, and to purchase prints, please contact Gallery Staff at 
505-988-5152 x202 or gallery@photoeye.com


On view through February 16th, 2019

» View the Work

» Read Our Interview 
   with Tom Chambers

» Purchase the Monograph 


photo-eye Gallery
541 S. Guadalupe Street
Santa Fe, Nm 87501
–View Map–





photo-eye Gallery Opening Friday, November 30 – Tom Chambers: Hearts and Bones photo-eye Gallery is thrilled to announce Hearts and Bones, a mid-career retrospective spanning more than twenty-five years of work by award-winning photographer Tom Chambers.

Tom Chambers, Moat Float, 2018, Archival Pigment Print, 28x29" Image, Edition of 10, $2300

Announcing

Tom Chambers: Hearts and Bones 
Opening Reception & Book Signing: Friday, November 30th, 5 – 7 PM
On View: November 30th, 2018 – February 16th, 2019

ABOUT THE EXHIBITION

photo-eye Gallery is thrilled to announce Hearts and Bones, a mid-career retrospective spanning more than twenty-five years of work by award-winning photographer Tom Chambers. Featuring work from nine different photographic projects, Hearts and Bones complements the recent release of Chambers’ third monograph, also titled Hearts and Bones, released in early October by Unicorn Publishing Group. An exhibition opening, artist reception, and book signing event will take place on Friday, November 30th from 5–7 pm during the Last Friday Art Walk in Santa Fe’s Railyard Arts district. Hearts and Bones will remain on view through Saturday, February 16th, 2019.


Tom Chambers, Nesting With Scissors, 2018, Archival Pigment Print, 22x13" Image, Edition of 20, $950


ABOUT THE ARTWORK

Tom Chambers, Night Light, 2008,
 Archival Pigment Print, 20x20" Image, 
Edition of 20, $1600
Tom Chambers is a master storyteller. Employing Magic Realism, Chambers’ complex single-setting narratives convincingly insert fantastical elements into our everyday existence. In this world, people share a kindred connection with animals, spoken words fall as floral blooms, and the metaphysical nature of light reveals sacred spectacles. Using imagery from the artist’s travels to locations such as Iceland, Italy, and Mexico, Chambers’ images appear otherworldly. The scenes are evocative, yielding a feeling of delight, wonder, and trepidations as Chambers explores themes of transformation, vitality, mythology, and identity. An early adopter of digital media, Chambers builds his improbable scenes by seamlessly integrating elements from multiple photographs into a single image.

“Since I began creating photomontage, storytelling has been part of all my series and something that has engaged the viewer. My hope has been that the viewer will look at my images, each of which contains an unfinished story, and then create his own interpretation of what's seen. Magic realism has been a tool for me to create a strong narrative. I use magic realism to peak viewer's interests compelling them to take a second look because something looks different or improbable;  I really want to raise questions in the viewer's mind. I like to say that instead of taking a photo, I am making a photo. Many of my inspirations for my montage photography come from musings or dreams, which I refer to as improbable dreams.” – Tom Chambers

ABOUT THE ARTIST

Tom Chambers photographing on location.
Tom Chambers has exhibited photomontage images from nine photographic series nationally and internationally in twenty-one solo exhibitions and over seventy group exhibitions and art fairs since 1998. Tom has received fellowships from the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts and the Virginia Commission for the Arts, and his photography is held in the collections of the National Museum of Photography, Bogotá, Colombia; California State Polytechnic University; Santa Barbara Museum of Art, CA; Santa Fe Museum of Art, NM; and the Museum of Contemporary Art (MOCA) Bangkok, Thailand among others. Entropic Kingdom, containing images from five series, was published by Modernbook Editions in 2012. Galerie Vevais published Werkdruck No. 6 in 2015 featuring his Illumination series, and a retrospective book, Hearts and Bones, was released in October 2018, by Unicorn Publishing, London.

———

All prices listed were current at the time this post was published. 
Prices will increase as the print editions sell.

For more information, and to purchase prints, please contact Gallery Staff at 
505-988-5152 x202 or gallery@photoeye.com


On view through February 16th, 2019

» View the Work

» Read Our Interview 
   with Tom Chambers

» Purchase the Monograph

photo-eye Gallery
541 S. Guadalupe Street
Santa Fe, Nm 87501
–View Map–