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Showing posts with label Meghann Riepenhoff. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Meghann Riepenhoff. Show all posts

photo-eye Gallery LIGHT + METAL:
Meghann Riepenhoff on making work For Anna
photo-eye Gallery is very proud to have four works by Meghann Riepenhoff from her series For Anna, Vol. II in LIGHT + METAL – Courtesy of EUQINOM Gallery.

Meghann Riepenhoff, For Anna, Vol. II. Plate 31, 2017,
 Dynamic Cyanotype, algae and shoreline debris, 12x9" Image, Unique, $3500
Courtesy of EUQINOM Gallery
photo-eye Gallery is very proud to have four works by 2018-2019 Guggenheim Fellow Meghann Riepenhoff in LIGHT + METAL. Riepenhoff's For Anna, Vol. II is an homage to prominent 19th-century cyanotypist Anna Atkins and a response to her influential book Photographs of British Algae – widely considered to be the first published using photographic illustration.

While viewing an original copy of the publication, Riepenhoff became fascinated with a progression of impressions a previous reader left across the pages. Here, Riepenhoff witnessed a lasting interaction with Atkins' work left for consideration by future readers and responded herself by creating a series of dynamic cyanotypes printed on location, exposed by the sun and developed in the ocean.

Unlike Atkins' traditional photograms, which were produced with dried, manicured specimens, Riepenhoff's images are made with wet seaweed on location, creating an impression of both the object and its environment. Although the prints are unique and sold separately, their naming convention indicates a single volume, a new book for the 21st-century.

We reached out to Meghann for some insight into her process, as well as details regarding the forthcoming release of her monograph, Littoral Drift + Ecotone, published by Radius Books in Santa Fe, New Mexico.

Meghann Riepenhoff, For Anna, Vol. II, Plate 15, 2016, 
Dynamic Cyanotype, algae and shoreline debris, 12x9" Image, Unique $3500
Courtesy of  EUQINOM Gallery

photo-eye:     What inspired you to create the pieces that are included in LIGHT + METAL?

Meghann Riepenhoff:     The first female photographer, Anna Atkins, was also a pioneer in botanical/scientific illustration. She used specimens collected from the shorelines and made cyanotype photograms with them. Her minimal, elegant compositions offered a new way of seeing, and a new way of understanding the world. Previously, scientific illustrations were hand-drawn approximations until Atkins’ British Algae introduced a new way to record the environment around us.

pe:     Why did you choose to work with the Cyanotype process?

MR:     I’m influenced by Atkins’ work, which illustrates the earliest relationship between photography and shoreline. In my work, I revisit the shoreline with cyanotype but make a new kind of image of the landscape, where elements in the environment are both subject and process.

Meghann Riepenhoff, For Anna, Vol II, Plate 28, 2017 
Dynamic Cyanotype, algae and shoreline debris, 12x9" Image, Unique, $3500
Courtesy of  EUQINOM Gallery

pe:     What can you tell us about your forthcoming book from Radius?

Littoral Drift + Ecotone 
 Photographs by Meghann Riepenhoff. 
 Radius Books/Yossi Milo Gallery, 2018
MR:     My book features work from my sister series Littoral Drift and Ecotone. Both series are unique, cameraless cyanotypes made directly in the landscape. We designed the book as a do-si-do (back-to-back binding), so that the series exists as both discrete and connected. The binding style also references cycles, natural forces that are paramount in my work.

The books contain three inserts: one that is full of images of process; one that shows a Littoral Drift cyanotype as it changes over time; and one that is all text. I had the absolute pleasure of having a conversation with Charlotte Cotton transcribed for the bulk of the text, and an introduction from Josh Chuang. Both of these brilliant people have informed my thinking and work, and I’m thrilled to have them as part of the project.

pe:     What is your favorite color?

MR:     Black is my favorite color, followed closely by Yves Klein blue.

Meghann Riepenhoff making work in the field.
Image courtesy of the artist.
Riepenhoff’s work has been exhibited and is held in the collections at the High Museum of Art, the Museum of Fine Arts (Houston), the Museum of Contemporary Photography (Chicago), and the Worcester Art Museum. Additional collections include the Albright-Knox Art Gallery and the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, which holds Riepenhoff’s 12’x18’ unique cyanotype. Additional exhibitions include the Aperture Foundation, San Francisco Camerawork, the Denver Art Museum, the New York Public Library, and the Museum of Fine Arts (Boston).

Riepenhoff's work has appeared in ArtForum, Aperture PhotoBook Review, The New York Times, Time Magazine Lightbox, Wall Street Journal, The Guardian, Oprah Magazine, Harper’s Magazine, Wired Magazine, and Photograph Magazine. Her first monograph, Littoral Drift + Ecotone, is due in October, as is published by Radius Books and Yossi Milo Gallery.

Riepenhoff is the recipient of a Fleishhacker Foundation grant, residencies at the Banff Centre, Rayko, and the John Michael Kohler Arts Center, and an affiliate studio award at the Headlands Center for the Arts. She is a 2018-19 Guggenheim Fellow.

Riepenhoff is based in Bainbridge Island, WA and San Francisco, CA. She received a BFA in Photography from the University of Georgia, and an MFA from San Francisco Art Institute. She is from Atlanta, GA.

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LIGHT + METAL has been extended at photo-eye Gallery 
through Saturday, September 22nd, 2018. 

For additional information on Meghann Riepenhoff's work, 
and to purchase prints, please contact Gallery Staff at 
505-988-5152 x202 or gallery@photoeye.com.





photo-eye Gallery Three Works We Love from LIGHT + METAL Gallery Staff highlight three notable works from our group exhibition LIGHT + METAL, on view at photo-eye Gallery through September 15th.

LIGHT + METAL installed at photo-eye Gallery
Featuring sixty unique works by fourteen artists, selecting three objects to feature from LIGHT + METAL was a daunting task. Perhaps more than usual, this exhibition with its diverse array of photographic techniques, intents, and expressions has captured our attention and imagination. More than a year in the making, producing LIGHT + METAL was a labor of love and each of us have a strong investment and interest in every work installed at the Gallery. To truly cover our favorites, our lists could have easily run ten or more artworks long. It's possible we may return to highlight a few additional images and artists during the run of the show, but for now, please enjoy our discussion of three unique pieces we find notable and compelling from LIGHT + METAL.

Anne Kelly selects Molecule by Anne Arden McDonald

Anne Arden McDonald, Molecule, 2017, Cameraless Gelatin-Silver Print, 24x20" Image, Unique, $2400 Framed 

Anne Kelly - Gallery Director
anne@photoeye.com
505.988.5152 x121
The image from METAL + LIGHT that I keep returning to is Molecule by Anne Arden McDonald.   I had a chance to discuss the making of this image in detail with Anne when she was in town for the reception- and learned that it was created by placing soap bubbles directly on top of silver gelatin paper in the darkroom prior to being exposed it to light. I love how playful the process of creating this image was, and every time I pass by this piece I see it differently. Sometimes Molecule appears simply as an abstract image and other times it's a powerful combination of elements capable of making oceans and atmosphere.






Lucas Maclaine Shaffer selects For Anna Vol. II, Plate 31, by Meghann Rippenhoff

Meghann Riepenhoff, For Anna, Vol. II. Plate 31, 2017,
Dynamic Cyanotype, algae and shoreline debris, 12x9" Image, Unique, $3500, Framed
Courtesy of EUQINOM Gallery

I've adored Meghann Riepenhoff's Cyanotypes since Anne first made me aware of the work a few years ago, and am incredibly excited to feature four of her works in LIGHT + METAL. As an artist and collector, I respond to the print's unique nature, physicality, and purpose. En mass, Riepenhoff's work questions the nature of our relationships to the landscape, images, time, and permanence – given the impact of her images, it is no wonder she was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship this year.

Lucas Maclaine Shaffer
Special Projects & Client Relations
lucas@photoeye.com
505.988.5152 x114
For Anna Vol. II, Plate 31 is part of a larger series paying homage to prominent 19th-century cyanotypist Anna Atkins and a response to her influential book Photographs of British Algae – widely considered to be the first published using photographic illustration. I've read that while viewing a copy of the original publication, Riepenhoff became fascinated with a progression of impressions left by a previous reader. Here, Riepenhoff witnessed a lasting interaction, a dialogue of sorts, with Atkins work left for consideration by future readers and has responded by creating a series of dynamic cyanotypes printed on location, exposed by the sun and developed in the ocean. Unlike Atkins' traditional photograms produced with dried manicured specimens, Riepenhoff's images are made with wet seaweed on location,
Pre-Order Meghann Riepenhoff's upcoming
monograph, Littoral Drift. Signed Hardbound: $60.00
creating an impression of both the object and its environment. Although the print is unique, it's naming convention indicates it is part of a larger single volume, a new edition of blue photographic drawings for the 21st-century, here Riepenhoff is able to also include a subtle statement about contemporary culture.

As for the print; it's gorgeous. It's deep pervasive blue surface possesses a patina that transforms from a smooth solid at the top to a translucent and granular liquid at the bottom. The central algae impression radiates with a glowing white border and its dark jagged form creates a kind of portal, or nexus, in the surface of the image. For me, the object is delightfully paradoxical, at once exhibiting abstract aesthetics while presenting an utterly exacting representation of a specific object from a specific location. For Anna Vol. II, Plate 31 is a stunning and complex addition to any collection.


Yoana Medrano selects Rose by Kate Breakey

Kate Breakey, Rose, Hand-Colored/Encaustic, 25x27" Image, Unique, $2000 Framed

Yoana Medrano – Gallery Associate
yoana@photoeye.com
505.988.5152 x 116
I’ve become a fan of Kate Breakey’s: she makes a lot of different work that is constantly inspiring me. While getting ready for the LIGHT + METAL show we received many boxes, Kate sent a large box with two pieces. As I peeled back the cardboard, I was stunned for an unexpected moment and then felt like I wanted to cry: delighted and nostalgic tears. I knew the moment that I saw it that it would be my favorite pick and instantly called dibs.

As I looked at Rose, a hand-colored encaustic print, I could only think of my mother. My mother’s hobby and passion are taking care of her rose garden and if I could capture the essence of her this image would be it. There is something about the encaustic wax that just softens the entire piece as well as giving it dimension. I’m pleased to say that I have the luxury of having a perfect view of Rose for the duration of the show as it hangs directly in across from my desk.


LIGHT + METAL is on view through September 15th, 2018 at photo-eye Gallery.

For additional information, and to purchase works from the exhibition, please contact Gallery Staff at 505.988.5152 x202 or gallery@photoeye.com.

» View LIGHT + METAL

» Read More about the Exhibition

» Visit the Gallery

541 S. Guadalupe St. 
Santa Fe, NM, 87501
-click for map-

photo-eye Gallery Opening July 27, 2018:
Light + Metal – Unique Photographs and Objects
Please join photo-eye Gallery for Light + Metal, a group exhibition featuring unique photographic prints and objects by 13 artists working with an array of alternative and non-standard processes. An Opening for Light + Metal will be held on Friday, July 27th from 5 to 7 pm during the Last Friday Art Walk in the Santa Fe Railyard Arts District.


photo-eye Gallery is thrilled to announce Light + Metal, a major group exhibition featuring 60  unique photographic works by 14 artists printed in an array of alternative and non-standard processes.

Participating artists include David Emitt Adams, Kate Breakey, Vanessa Marsh, Nissa Kubly, Michael Jackson, Anne Arden McDonald, Heather Oelklaus, Kevin O’Connell, David Ondrik, Meghann Riepenhoff, Claire A. Warden, Julie Weber, Vanessa Woods and Lori Vrba.


An opening and artist reception for Light + Metal will be held this Friday, July 27th from 5 to 7 pm during the Last Friday Art Walk in the Santa Fe Railyard Arts District. We are very excited that Nissa Kubly, Anne Arden McDonald, Heather Oelklaus, and David Ondirk will be joining us at the opening.

Anne Arden McDonald, Virus, 2017, Camraless Gelatin-Silver Print, 24x20" Image, Edition of 5, $2100

Now is a very exciting time for photography. The 14 artists in Light + Metal are reacting to the proliferation of digital photographic technologies by experimenting with traditional, metal-based processes and materials, including silver-gelatin paper, cyanotype, and wet collodion, to create unique photographic objects—often without using a camera.

Works in Light + Metal employ 19th, 20th, and 21st-century processes to expand and challenge the notion of a photograph as a convincing representational image. In some works, such as those by Julie Weber and Michael Jackson use light itself as a subject, while others, such as Meghann Riepenhoff, Anne Arden McDonald, and David Ondrik, push the boundaries of physical photographic materials to make statements regarding technology, culture, and the environment. We are truly proud of Light + Metal's scope and scale.

David Emitt Adams, Eagletail, 2014, Wet plate collodion tintype made on object found in the Sonoran Desert,
 6.5x11" Image, Price Upon Request

Kate Breakey, Chrysanthemum, Hand-Colored/Encaustic Archival Pigment Print, 26x28" Image, Unique, $2000
Michael Jackson, M, Luminogram on Silver-Gelatin Paper, 20x16" Image, Unique, $4,000
Julie Weber, Two Permutations of Light (Ilford Multigrade FB), 2018 Photogram diptych on gelatin silver paper 
(print 1 fixed; print 2 unfixed), 14x11" Image, Unique  $1500 Framed

Heather Oelklaus, Meditation, 2017, Chemigram, 14x11" Image, Unique, $750
David Ondrik, Erosion 1, 2018, Photogram, 28x30" Image, Unique, $2000
Meghann Riepenhoff, For Anna, Vol. II. Plate 31, 2017, Dynamic Cyanotype, algae and shoreline debris, 
 12x9" Image, Unique, $3500
Courtesy of EUQINOM Gallery
Lori Vrba, Portal, Encaustic Photograph on Vintage Cupcake Tin, 28x16" Image, Unique, $1600
Vanessa Marsh, Untitled #45, Photogram on Silver-Gelatin Paper 16x20" Image, Unique, $1500
Vanessa Woods, Waiting for Rainbows, 2017, Photocollage, 11x14" Image, Unique, $1500
Kevin O'Connell, Canyon Series #8662, Platinum/Palladium Print, 14x11" Image, Edition of 3, $1400
Nissa Kubly, Enamel Necklace I, Enamel on copper with digital image transfer, Unique, $280

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

Light + Metal is on view at photo-eye Gallery through September 15, 2018.

For more information about an artist or artwork, and to purchase prints, please contact Gallery Staff

505-988-5152 x 202  •  gallery@photoeye.com.

» View Light + Metal

» Attend the Opening Reception

» Directions to the Gallery