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Showing posts with label James Pitts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label James Pitts. Show all posts
Left: James Pitts, Night Blooming Cereus, 1999, Platinum Palladium Print, 5x4", Edition of 25, $1000
Right: Beth Moon, Nepenthes Coccinea, Platinum print, 7.5x5", Edition of 9, $900 


In celebration of the spring season, we have installed a selection of Platinum prints focused on floral still lives from gallery artists Beth Moon and James Pitts.

You may be wondering, upon reading the opening sentence of this week's post, what is a platinum print anyway? To that I say: fantastic question.

Platinum printing is a method that uses light-sensitive platinum (as opposed to silver in "traditional" darkroom printing) to make a picture! This printing methodology dates back to the late 1800's and is known for being a process that has the potential to produce an incredible tonal range as well as to achieve archival permanence. When making a platinum print, the image is produced by placing a negative on top of paper coated with a photosensitive solution and then exposing that paper to light; this process is referred to as contact printing and is notoriously difficult to do well (for more in-depth descriptions of alternative processes, check out this article!).

James Pitts and Beth Moon are two who have mastered this laborious workflow through years and years of diligent practice. Their mastery is apparent, and though the overall practices of the two artists are wildly different, they converge in floral formalism.

Beth Moon's plant portraits are from her portfolio entitled The Savage Garden. This work serves as an investigation of the formal beauty of carnivorous plants. Moon's images don't treat these plants as our culture often does, with some element of novelty and exoticism, but instead highlights their supple curves and delicate structure. This attention to detail and composition is mirrored in the platinum works of James Pitts, who has been making still lives of flowers for well over twenty years as meditative studies of light and form. In Pitts' work, the flower is simply the vehicle for serene expression. 

Take a sneak peak at what's up on the wall below and explore more work from Beth Moon and James Pitts as well!

>> Beth Moon Interview <<

>> James Pitts on his Platinum printing origin story <<


James Pitts, Wild Poppy with Seed Pod in Girard's Vase, 1996, Platinum Palladium print, 5x4″, Edition of 25, $1000

Beth Moon, Nepenthes Bicalcarata, Platinum print, 12x8″, Edition of 15, $1200

James Pitts, Digbyana, Platinum Palladium print, 5x4″, Edition of 25, $1000

Beth Moon, Nepenthes Ventricosa, Platinum print, 12x8″, Edition of 15, $1200


>> Explore Beth Moon's online exhibition, BAOBAB, here! <<


>> See more portfolios from James Pitts here! <<

• • • • • 

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

photo-eye Gallery is proud to represent Beth Moon and James Pitts.

For more information, and to purchase prints by Beth Moon and James Pitts, 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 On View - Platinum Florals from Beth Moon and James Pitts Delaney Hoffman
In anticipation of warmer weather and lots of pollen in the air, we've installed a stunning selection of floral platinum prints from Beth Moon and James Pitts in our gallery space! Click here to see some of the work and to learn more.
photo-eye Gallery Put a Bow on It! | photo-eye Gallery's 2021 Gift Guide Delaney Hoffman
photo-eye Gallery's annual holiday gift guide featuring incredible, affordable works from our represented artists!
Ah yes, centered.

It’s that time of year again, and by that time of year, I mean that it’s time for photo-eye Gallery’s annual Put a Bow on It gift guide!

Despite all of the difficulties that this year has put in front of us, I am happy to say that we have almost made it out! November and December bring promises of cozy fireside nights, snow-frolicking and beautiful meals with family and friends. Alongside the many joys of winter, however, are the many stresses of the holidays, the most prevalent of which is the pressure to find the perfect gifts for those special people in your life.

Luckily, photo-eye Gallery is here with a plethora of beautiful presents for your favorite photography or contemporary art lover! There’s nothing like the gift of a limited edition artwork to tell somebody that they’re truly one of a kind, and these unique, affordable pieces will supply beauty that lasts a lifetime. By purchasing from us, you’re not only supporting photo-eye Gallery, but also the independent artists who we represent as well!

Our gallery staff has compiled a list of beautiful objects from our flat files that are both under $1500 and available for local pickup on purchase. If you don’t live in Santa Fe, no worries! We offer shipping both domestically and internationally.


Take a look at the items below — you’re guaranteed to find something that fits the style you’re after, all for under $1500! Thank you for supporting photo-eye Gallery!



Jo Whaley, 62: Noctuid



Steve Fitch, Beresford, South Dakota, June, 1988

 Interested in Steve Fitch's work? Check out American Motel Signs II in our Bookstore here! 





4. Maggie Taylor, Fancy of Flight, Archival pigment print, 8 x 8″ image in 16 x 16″ mat, Edition of 15, $1500

Maggie Taylor, Fancy of Flight



Pentti Sammallahti, Helsinki, Finland, 1981

Interested in Pentti Sammallahti's work? Check out Me Kaksi in our Bookstore here




Interested in Rachel Phillips' work? Check out Divinations in the Bookstore here!




Kate Breakey, Butterfly


For any purchase inquiries or questions, please contact photo-eye Gallery directly via email or telephone at gallery@photoeye.com or 505-988-5152 x202!

If you would like to discuss one of the pieces included our gift guide, we would encourage you to contact us as soon as possible to confirm current availability and the shipment timeline.

>> For more curated selections of works that make perfect gifts, check out our other posts from the Put a Bow On It series here! <<


• • • • • 

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


For more information, and to purchase prints by any artists listed above 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 From the Flat-Files: Flowers from Jo Whaley and James Pitts Delaney Hoffman
photo-eye Gallery Assistant Delaney Hoffman compares and contrasts works of Jo Whaley and James Pitts

Details from James Ware Pitts' Flower portfolio (2021) and Jo Whaley's Eucalyptus (2012)

Hello one and all! My name is Delaney Hoffman, I’m the Gallery Assistant here at photo-eye and had the pleasure of choosing some work from our flat files to talk about this week. I have always loved photography because it is a medium that lends itself to construction of allegorical meaning in the most slippery way. One can make millions of images over a lifetime that relate not only to the individual photographer’s experience, but also to all of the other images that they have seen and digested. A single symbol can mean one thing for a long time or various things over a varied period of time, but the task of symbolic interpretation ultimately falls upon the viewer.

When thinking about symbolic interpretation and representation, I found myself stricken by the very, very small portfolio in the flat file of James Pitts that is simply entitled Flowers. Only 2 x 1.5” large, the portfolio is full to the brim with 55 tiny, beautifully made pigment prints of Pitts’ floral still lifes. Some of these can be seen below:

A selection of images from Flowers, 55 archival pigment prints in handmade box, 2" x 1.5," edition of 18, $250

Unboxing the flower portfolio feels like nothing short of a miracle; there is beauty in endless supply. Independent of how beautiful the images themselves are, their size demands intimate interaction. These pictures command attention through closeness. It is impossible not to be hyperconscious of your own body while going through this work; feeling the roughness of your fingers rock nimbly around the tiny archival pigment prints that maintain the tonal quality of their large format platinum palladium predecessors. 


James Pitts, Bottle with Sharon's Seeds, 1998, platinum palladium print, 8"x10," edition of 25, $2000

The attention this work draws to the viewer’s body strikes me, a young woman author, as coming from a masculine position, regardless of the gender of the artist. If the flower has been so often substituted or used interchangeably with the female form throughout art history, then Pitts’ portfolio is effectively a preservation box. The flower is a collectible beauty that is rendered permanent and static by the photograph — an idea that seems in opposition to the floral representations in Jo Whaley’s Botanical Studies.

The image from Botanical Studies that I feel intensely drawn to is Eucalyptus (2012):

Jo Whaley, Eucalyptus, 2021, archival pigment print, 24" x 19," edition of 25, $2000

Jo Whaley renders her single eucalyptus branch with a similar precision to James Pitts’ flowers, though she seems to be driven by an ulterior motive. The presence of a pooling pink liquid tells us that some sort of extraction has taken place or is in progress; this flowering body is not static but is transitioning into something else. Whaley’s attachment to lighting manifests here with an almost sterile quality being imparted onto the subject by its cool tones and overall sharpness, but the balance that she communicates through the single wire knot at the top of the frame, and through the tangible fragility of her mysterious glass instrument, makes this image curious, uncanny and even humorous.

Whaley’s botanicals are in transition; a state that stands in opposition to the stasis that Pitts situates his own florals. A man watches a woman’s body, the woman lives in the body, and there is a fundamental difference between these two positions. The co-existence of these two works as images (or collections of images) in the same gallery, despite the way that they’re culturally opposed from an analytic perspective, is my favorite part about working in the arts. There are so many objects that give us fodder to think about — whether we agree with them, don’t, or aren’t sure — and in that ambiguity there is always some sort of beauty to marvel at.


A selection of images from Flowers with the author's hand for scale.
Flowers is 55 archival pigment prints in handmade box, 2" x 1.5," edition of 18, $250


Contact us to purchase prints by Jo Whaley or James Pitts.


• • • • • 


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 Delaney Hoffman, or you may also call us at 505-988-5152 x202





photo-eye Gallery Photography Collecting Tips photo-eye Gallery
What should you look for when collecting photography? Anne Kelly, our gallery director is here to advise. With her expertise in photography, Anne has a keen eye on what to look for.

Jo Whaley, Magnolia,  2016, archival pigment print, 2020, 14" x 24," edition of 25, $2000

 

"Every work of art has a story  — who made it, how, when, and what it means — hanging it in your home makes its story a part of your own." 
— Anne Kelly


Some people buy photographs as an investment, they hope for a profit once an artist becomes more established. Others collect photographs simply because they resonate with an image, and want to display and enjoy it. What should you look for when collecting photography? Anne Kelly, our gallery director is here to advise. With her expertise in photography, Anne has a keen eye on what to look for. Check out the links below for her top tips on collecting photography.


 
 
Anne Kelly by David Hyams


Also included in this post are some excellent print recommendations to start your collection.
See below!

 
 
Julie Blackmon, Night Windows,  2016, archival pigment print, 2020, 22" x 29," edition of 25, $3100

"If your collecting budget is on the conservative side, take look at the Photographer's Showcase. The Showcase primarily features works by emerging artists, photographer's new or fairly new on the scene, and the prints tend to be more affordable."

 

Bryant Austin, Solar Transit of Coastal Valley Oak - Carmel CA,  2016, archival pigment print, 2020, 22" x 15," edition of 10, $3400
 

"So much great work is being produced, it’s easy to get overwhelmed. Chose an aspect of the work you respond to that serves to unite and focus your collection."


James Pitts, Single White Tulip in Round Black Vase, archival pigment ink print, 19 x 15," edition of 10, $1200

"Because of our access, we can also find you sold out works, only available on the secondary market."

 

 
"Reach out. Build a relationship with Patricia or myself, and we can guide you through the process. ASK US ANYTHING – sometimes collecting can be jargon-heavy, and we can help make sense of it for you!"

 
 
• • • • •
 
 
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

 
photo-eye Gallery Looking Inward: 2020 Highlights photo-eye Gallery
For artists, the act of looking inward is nothing new. It constitutes a significant part of the creative process. Yet, these unprecedented times have made this exercise all the more pertinent for them.

Laurie Tümer, Homebound, June 6th 2018/21, 7:21 pm, archival pigment print, 6 x 12 inches, edition of 15, $800

"Years ago, I began the practice of photographing what I see, mostly framed through a window – New Mexico’s high desert, and the gardens and buildings I designed to photograph. Weirdly, being homebound these past 10 years due to progressing Multiple Sclerosis somewhat prepared me for this pandemic. What has made this endurable is the place I live, a generous subject, and being no stranger to isolation. These images always seemed to need the suggestion of a framed opening, where I pause before these spectacles of heaven and earth that provide respite from the catastrophic losses in the world and in my own life. After years of experimentation, constructing the elliptical arch this year satisfied my need for a frame, I began the series "Homebound", and art's survival value has become even clearer." Laurie Tümer

There is something unexpectedly positive that has been generated by this pandemic: the call to look inward and contemplate our place as individuals on a shared planet.

For artists, the act of looking inward is nothing new. It constitutes a significant part of the creative process. Yet, these unprecedented times have made this exercise all the more pertinent for them.

Over the past year, art has given hope, imagination, and the feeling of companionship to many. This goes beyond entertaining those self-isolating at home with books, music, and Netflix. Art has been a platform for voicing emotional and critical responses to the current state of our world.

This week, photo-eye Gallery shares work created by some of the artists who have been actively engaged during this time. Take a look at the images below, and please reach out to us if you would like further information. Enjoy!

 Tom Chambers

Tom Chambers, Suspended Animation, 2020, archival pigment ink print, 20 x 20 inches, edition of 20, $1200
 
 

Julie Blackmon

Julie Blackmon, River, 2020, archival pigment print, edition of 10, $4000
 

James Pitts

James Pitts, Tulip in Small Indian Pot, 2020, archival pigment ink print, edition of 10, $1200
 
 

JP Terlizzi

JP Terlizzi, Marchesa Camellia and Rhubarb, 2020, archival pigment ink, 21 x 14 inches, edition of 10, $1200

 
 

Edward Bateman

Edward Bateman, Yosemite Gateway No. 2 (with 3D printed landscape), archival pigment ink print, 10 x 15 inches, edition of 8, $950
Yosemite: Seeking Sublime - Online Exhibition


 Michael Kenna

Michael Kenna, Four Hundred and Seventy Five Birds, San Francisco, USA, 1992, toned gelatin-silver print, 6 x 9 inches, $3000
 Michael Kenna: Il Fiume Po (The River Po) - Online Exhibition
» View More Work by Michael Kenna
 
*Four Hundred and Seventy Five Birds was made in 1992, but was printed as a result of Kenna revisiting his archive of negatives in 2020, when travel wasn't possible.



• • • • •
 
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

photo-eye Gallery New Work: James Pitts photo-eye Gallery
photo-eye Gallery is delighted to announce new work by represented artist and Santa Fe based photographer James Pitts.

James Pitts, Drooping Tulip in White Japanese Vase Facing Right,  2020, archival pigment print, 15" x 19", edition of 10, $1200

photo-eye Gallery is delighted to announce new work by represented artist and Santa Fe based photographer James Pitts.

Made during the pandemic, the new images are from the artist's ongoing series Flowers a meditative series of various flora set against minimal backgrounds that are a nod to Zen philosophy in its simplicity and delicateness.

Widely known for his serene and beautiful prints created from large-format negatives, Pitts' work is timeless, elegant, and alluring.

Take a look at the link below to see more new images, and please reach out to us if you would like further information.
 
 

James Pitts, Single White Tulip in Round Black Vase, 2020, archival pigment print, 15" x 15", edition of 10, $1200

 
"The past year afforded more time
than normal for stillness and
observation.
I am thrilled to be alive and sentient.
I love making things, whether it be
building a guitar, cooking a meal
for my wife, making a vase or
setting up a little stage to take a photograph."   
 

James Pitts, Drooping Cyclamen in Coil Sculpey on Gold Rectangle, 2020, archival pigment print, 15" x 15", edition of 10, $1200
 
"I have never lost the excitement
of seeing an image on the ground
glass, turning on the lights to view
a new negative in the hypo, brushing
platinum sensitizer on a piece of
paper or viewing a final print.
It is all magical."
 

James Pitts, Ranunculus and Bud in First Sculpey Vase Shadows, 2020, archival pigment print, 15" x 19", edition of 10, $1200
 
"The natural world is astonishing and
the amount of diversity is truly
unbelievable."


James Pitts, Climatis in Victoria's Sculpie Vase, 2020, archival pigment print, 8" x 5.5", edition of 10, $900

"Flowers engage me. I am
interested in a dialogue between
the bloom and an environment."
 

James Pitts, Tiny Daisy Four Sculpey Vases, 2020, archival pigment print, 19" x 15", edition of 10, $1200

"Being present in the liminal space is
intoxicating and the anticipation of change is thrilling.
I am interested in human interaction 
with nature.
I am blessed with time and joyful 
to be alive."
 

James Pitts, Flower Gold Sculpey Edge of Table, 2020, archival pigment print, 15" x 15", edition of 10, $1200
 
"Photography helps me to see and 
to remember where I have been and to cherish  
this remarkable place."
 – James Pitts

 

 » Interview with James Pitts

 

• • • • •
 
 
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
photo-eye Gallery 2019 Group Show
James Pitts Interview
Interview by Alexandra Jo photo-eye Gallery is pleased to feature three of Pitts’ new color photographs in our 2019 Group Show on view through this Saturday, April 20, 2019.
Interview by Alexandra Jo

Prints by James Pitts installed at photo-eye Gallery for the 2019 Group Show.
James W. Pitts is a Santa Fe-based photographer widely recognized for his gentle, understated platinum prints created from large-format negatives. Whether in color or black and white, his work nods to elements of minimalism and Zen Buddhism in its simplicity and elegance. photo-eye Gallery is pleased to feature three of Pitts’ color photographs in our 2019 Group Show.

photo-eye Gallery Assistant, Alexandra Jo, recently spoke with Pitts about his creative process and different approaches he takes to make his artwork:

James Pitts – Dried Gourd, 2018, Archival Pigment Print, 17x9" Image, Edition of 5, $650

Alexandra Jo:     Your work in the 2019 Group Show is in color, whereas much of the work you’ve shown at photo-eye previously is in black and white. Do you look at the two approaches differently? Do they have a dialogue with one another or progress in a certain way in your overall body of work?

James Pitts:     I actually do a lot of different kinds of work. I’ve photographed flowers for a long time and have worked in both black and white and color photography over the years… I am really open to doing lots of different kinds of things with my art. photo-eye Gallery usually shows the flower pictures and platinum prints, and I’ve kind of gotten known for that, but in all of my work I really just photograph whatever appeals to me visually. The flower pictures aren’t really about the flowers so much, it’s just an opportunity to take a picture. I’ve been very interested in taking photos of objects for a long time, and anything I photograph is really about using the formal elements of photography, things like lighting, composition, etc.

AJ:     That kind of leads into my next question about how you set up your photographs… In a previous conversation with photo-eye Gallery, you mentioned setting your photographs as if they're on a stage and working to find different backgrounds that appeal to your aesthetic. Can you go into more detail about both the process of finding backdrops and setting the stage for your photographs?

JP:     I pretty much rely on chance. I gather things up and put little stage sets together. The photographs in this show that have Jackson Pollock-esque backgrounds are actually papers that were the backs of two of my paintings. I saw them one day and thought they looked interesting. I like photographing things from more than one angle, turning things around, finding comparisons and dialogues someone might find by looking at them… that’s why there is a diptych [in the show] of the same vase and leaves from different angles. I also like photographing things that are small because it’s easier to find an interesting background for small things. I like the intimacy of something small… I even prefer small prints to bigger ones. I can find more interesting paper that has odd stains of metal that has a pattern, and backgrounds that are seamless. You can also see things that you don’t normally see when working small. You are able to pick up things that otherwise go unnoticed.

Of course, there are plenty of opportunities for failure, but chance is definitely a big thing for me. I don’t have any kind of slick philosophy for what I do; I’ve just been in love with photography since I was a kid.

James Pitts – Dried Gourd Leaves Diptych, 2018, Archival Pigment Print, 11x17" Image, Edition of 5, $650


AJ:     I like that idea of chance and opportunity for failure. Could one say that there is a spirit of experimentation in your approach to art?

JP:     Yes, I do think with painting experimentation is more available. You’re not relying on using a machine, but using your body and responding to the materials. But it’s like Eggleston said: “[Photography] is a democratic medium.” It relies on what you choose, what you edit. I like to think about what you don’t include in the photograph instead of what you do include. Everything is available and it’s up to you to decide what you put in front of the lens. I don’t like to put so much self-importance on the process. If people respond to [the work] I’m welcome to the possible creative dialogue.

AJ:     Well, one thing that I strongly respond to in the work is the connotation and subtle reference to Zen Buddhist aesthetics like minimalism, geometry, simplicity and natural texture. Has that culture directly influenced what you find visually or aesthetically pleasing?

JP:     Yes, that culture is very influential on what I find aesthetically pleasing. I’m a minimalist. I don’t like having a ton of things around, so it’s better for my eye to not have a lot of things. It’s been a part of my life for a long time.

AJ:     So that carries over to your aesthetic preferences in photography?

JP:     Yes. I think you’re influenced by everything you see all the time. I have big heroes in art… I love Matisse, Cy Twombly, etc. and I may be influenced by them on a certain subconscious level. But I think you’re influenced by everything you see.

AJ:     The three works in this show are of wilted, shriveled, dying plants, whereas a lot of your other photographs of flowers are of living plants in the prime of their bloom. Was there an influence or specific purpose behind your shift in focus between plants in their prime vs. plants in stages of decay?
James Pitts – Wilted Yellow Tulip, 2018, 
Archival Pigment Print, 17x11" Image, 
Edition of 5, $650

JP:     Subconsciously, I think so.  The photograph of the wilted flower in the exhibition was taken after an eight-year relationship ended. It’s been a difficult time dealing with that because it kind of came out of nowhere, and around that time a friend had said something about how beautiful dying things are, so all of that may have played some sort of subconscious part in the wilted flower, and the wilted gourd photograph.

Also, I like using the backs of books for backgrounds sometimes, and in that wilted flower photograph, I used an Anselm Keifer book that shows a painting he did of collapsing buildings. I love that contrast between the wilting flower and the collapsing concrete structure. It was a coincidence that I pulled that book out and happened to find the juxtaposition interesting. I also just think it’s interesting what age does. It brings some perspective that just gets more interesting as I get older.

AJ:     So is there anything that you’re working on currently, or a different direction you think your work might take in the future?

JP:     I’ve always been interested in the same things, taking photographs, objects, some things have just taken longer to make. I’ve always worked in series. I’m interested in building from what people do in “unintentional art...” I have a series of photographs of utility covers from Tokyo in which I arrange them in a grid. I’m interested in portraits; I have a series of portraits that have never been shown. I love the texture of peoples’ skin and just the way they look… it’s pretty fascinating that we are all different. I’ve also been building boxes recently, thinking about the sculptural element of objects. I’ve also been working with 35mm film to make blurry images. I just love film cameras. Something about using film is really elaborate and nice. But I don’t think my work is going in any different direction… it’s all just a continuation of those things I’ve always found interesting.

I have a friend who is a painter who never shows her work, but to me, if there is no one to see the work it’s kind of pointless. And whether it’s liked or not is kind of irrelevant, I just enjoy the dialogue. Connecting is the most important thing in my world, and in life, for me. Art has been a part of my life for a long time, and luckily I don’t have to make a living off of it, I can just love doing it. Being able to do art and have someone look at it is part of that. I just like doing art, and if I can connect with another person, that’s wonderful. ■

photo-eye Gallery's 2019 Group Show remains on view through this Saturday, April 20th. If you're in Santa Fe, please stop by to see this diverse collection of new and notable works by ten acclaimed represented artists.



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

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


2019 Group Show
on view through April 20, 2019

» View work from the exhibition

Select Included Artists:

» Julie Blackmon
» Kate Breakey
» Mitch Dobrowner
» Michael Kenna
» Clay Lipsky
» Beth Moon
» James Pitts 
» Reuben Wu 
» Brad Wilson