Art Exhibitions

April 03, 2008

Running the River with John Blaustein

John Blaustein, a veteran photographer from Berkeley, California, is just one of 26 artists featured in the upcoming SITES exhibition Lasting Light: 125 Years of Grand Canyon Photography. Run the river with John as he talks about getting one of his most compelling shots:

"As a river guide, I made dozens of trips through the Grand Canyon. On a cool, stormy day, we had stopped for lunch on a little beach at the mouth of 140-Mile Canyon, the halfway point through the Grand Canyon. Munching on a sandwich and waiting for the inevitable afternoon thundershower, someone glanced up the talus slope and noticed this bighorn sheep perched on a rock surveying the boats and all the people. 

Bighornsheep

While I'd seen dozens of bighorn over the years, this was the closest I'd ever been to one. I ran to my boat, grabbed my camera with a 200mm lens and started climbing the slope toward the sheep. When he noticed me approaching, he took a few steps up the slope and then hopped onto a big boulder, putting himself in a silhouette from my point of view. Not only that, his pose was a perfect profile, and then he had the courtesy to turn his head right toward me. I shot two or three frames before he turned and vanished up the slope. Lots of luck is involved with this kind of photography--the perfect pose, the perfect steel gray sky, and being there to shoot it!"

>>Want more images?

March 31, 2008

New Podcast on Jim Henson

Muppets Tired of listening to those same 2,000 songs on your iPod or .mp3 player? Want to hear something different? Download our latest podcast about Jim Henson's Fantastic World, a glimpse into the life of true American original.

Can't wait for opening day at the ballpark? Download Beyond Baseball: The Life of Roberto Clemente to get you ready for that first pitch! This one is sure to move and motivate you!

March 27, 2008

Walking with Giants in Nashville

If you haven't heard of Hatch Show Print in Nashville, Tennessee, it's about time that you do. This working letterpress is steeped in the traditions of yesteryear and, through good old-fashioned hard work and craftsmanship, keeps producing fantastic posters for the music biz's biggest names. Here's what Hatch curator and designer Jim Sherraden had to say about his home away from home.

Jimsherraden Q. Why is Hatch Show Print relevant today?
A. One of the many things that isn't lost on me when speaking to some of the tens of thousands of people visiting us each year is that each person perceives Hatch differently, each one of them would answer that same question differently, which is why Hatch is relevant at all. From a graphic designer's standpoint, Hatch is relevant because we've survived all the changes in printing technology to become the antithesis of contemporary digital design. Here at the shop, the printer is the designer, and the designer is the printer. All our work is done by hand. 

And then for a history buff, we're relevant because Hatch is living history. We keep ink on the blocks and dust off their backs. We're in constant production. If one is a music fan, then Hatch is relevant because the music comes alive, either past or present, when viewing a Hatch poster. From the standpoint of a University graphics or printmaking teacher, Hatch is relevant because we teach through our extensive intern program and host several presentations and workshops every year. From the standpoint of a typography student, we're relevant because we demonstrate daily how type is set and how posters are designed and printed.

Q. Hatch has had some pretty famous clients. Had any memorable dealings with famous folks?
A. I'm always quick to point out that we're surrounded by legends every day in this shop, in the shape of their names on posters or their images on photoplates. This place keeps one humble because so many careers have risen and fallen in the years they've been Hatch customers. I'm also proud of the people who feel they can stop by and say hello, show their friends around and be proud as Nashvillians of the heritage of Hatch. Recent guests have included Norah Jones, Gillian Welch, John Prine, Joaquim Phoenix, Chris Isaak, the band Weezer and my dog Rudy. He's famous with the cats--famous for chasing them.

Q. What's your favorite poster in the collection and why?
A. My favorite poster in the collection is, and always will be, the last one we printed before we lock the door and go home because it means that Hatch is still printing, still in business, still relevant in the twenty-first century.

American Letterpress: The Art of Hatch Show Print is a new exhibition by SITES and will begin its national tour later this year.

January 04, 2008

More Than Words

Ever get cramps in your hand when you're doing something called "writing"? It's an old-fashioned concept really, putting a pencil or pen (otherwise known as a writing instrument) to the surface of paper and moving it around to form symbols. GeorgiamuseumofartThe once odious task has become totally foreign to most of us as we typity-type on our computers, laptops, and blackberries. I'm proud to say that I know how to write with a pen, but it doesn't come easy. My third-grade teacher would die if she saw how my penmanship has dissolved over the years.

Those of us immersed in the e-world can take heart that actual, hand-written letters still exist. And better still, that some of the most fabulously creative examples of letters from the 19th- and 20th centuries are touring the country. More Than Words: Illustrated Letters from the Smithsonian's Archives of American Art celebrates this vanishing art form with missives from famous artists like Frida Kahlo, Alexander Calder, Andy Warhol, Winslow Homer, and many others. It's a look into the deepest, most surprising recesses of their minds (and their times).

Recently on view at the Georgia Museum of Art, the exhibition obviously inspired a number of visitors who took a shot at creating their own letters, however painful it may have been to their aching hands.

Check out more expressive letters in the More Than Words photo album.

December 07, 2007

Scanner Photography

Transitions: Photographs by Robert Creamer is no ordinary photography exhibition. In fact, at one point we weren't even sure if the term "photograph" was the right word for Bob's innovative imagery. There's no camera involved, and I'm not describing paintings or drawings. So what are we talking about?

PoppyCreamer's images of natural specimens such as flowers, feathers, and animal bones are rendered by a high-end flatbed scanner. The artist/scientist (he considers himself an artist first, but once you see the images, his passion for scientific detail is obvious) lays out elaborate compositions on his glass "canvas" and then uses the technology to produce large-scale, absolutely stunning pictures. Creamer's focus for this exhibition is the process of change that occurs to organic objects over time.

Just before Transitions went on the road with SITES, I chatted with the artist about his technique, his subject matter, and his love of everything natural. Here's what he had to say:

Q. Why use a scanner? Why not a nice, new digital camera?
A. The scanner does remarkable things. The light source is always straight on, making everything look like it was painted with an artist's sense of perfect light refraction. The scanner creates a drop shadow as it illuminates, and suddenly, the light falls off into total darkness. Everything in the picture is crisp and sharp. With a traditional camera the process of capturing something is reductive, trying to record large objects and fit them into a small camera frame. With the scanner, it's like starting with a naked blank slate. This process is totally additive and constructive.

Q. What is it about these images that appeals to viewers?
A. The audience is drawn to the detail in these images. People find the colors to be very curious, wondering whether or not they are accurate. As flowers breakdown, they change color, and the scanner renders those hues as they appear in nature.

Q. What's your favorite subject matter?
A. Irises are my favorite subject because they constantly surprise me. Recently, my daughter's boyfriend brought me an assortment of irises which I put directly into the freezer. When I took the irises out of deep freeze, I broke them apart and placed them on sheets of glass. To my dismay, the freezing destroyed the character of the flowers, including the color, the texture, and the tissues themselves. Instead, the flowers became a gelatinous mush. I was getting ready to trash the entire project when I noticed that mold had started to form on the glass slides. Serendipity. The intricate web of dark mold was ripe with possibilities.

Q. I guess you're never at a loss for things to scan?
A. Everything I do creates a new beginning, and I will never run out of source material. I think three, four, ten project ahead. How about trying seashells, rocks, or something entirely different? But timing is everything. Depending on the object or specimen, I may wait for weeks or even months for the subject to be just right.

Q. Where do you collect most of your specimens?
A. The lotuses [in my images] came from Lilypons Water Garden, near Frederick, Maryland. The irises came from the Botanical Gardens in Florida, and the bones from the Nature Center [a Smithsonian affiliate] in Virginia. I also have a greenhouse at home where I tend to live plants. Outside, there are drying racks for specimens. Inside the house, my wife and kids ask, 'Can we throw this away?' 'No, I'm not done with that yet!' The conversation at dinner usually includes something like, 'Dad took over another room in the house!' The point is just to see what happens with an object.

Bob Creamer teaches digital photography at Catonsville Community College near Baltimore, Maryland. He also teaches digital and traditional photography at the Old Field School in Baltimore.

October 15, 2007

Lasting Light Kicks Off

Plans are really coming together for our new Grand Canyon exhibition, Lasting Light, which opens in February 2009. Recently I sat down with collaborator Richard Jackson of Hance Partners, the Flagstaff studio that printed the stunning photographs included in the exhibition.

Mr. Jackson shared with me the background story of the exhibition, and his enthusiasm for the subject was evident.

Lasting Light: 125 Years of Grand Canyon Photography grew out of a conversation Mr. Jackson had with staff at the Grand Canyon Association. As a fine-art printer, Mr. Jackson has extensive experience working with landscape photographers, and thought that in addition to the images themselves, a bigger story could be told: that of the photographers themselves.

"Pictures are only part of the story," Mr. Jackson says. "The stories of the photographers are also amazing. Think of the dedication they have, the effort to go day after day, year after year, sometimes to the same place time after time just to find the right weather, the right conditions to take the picture that truly expresses the place. They're carrying 80-pound backpacks into the canyon, and then there is the artistry and skill to be able to communicate their vision to those who don't make the trek."

SITES is pleased to be able to bring these stories and the resulting photographs to the public through this new traveling exhibition. Stay tuned for more updates on Lasting Light!

--Devra Wexler
Exhibition Project Director

September 06, 2007

Jim Henson Exhibition Makes National News

Henson2 The Associated Press just picked up the story about our most creative and lively show on the road: Jim Henson's Fantastic World. The exhibition opens on September 7th in Little Rock at the Arkansas Art Center. From the deep South, it's headed to Arizona, and then it will criss-cross the country until 2011.

SITES registrar Josie Cole was interviewed for the article and talked about how this show was the most comprehensive Henson show to date, with objects dating back to 1946 when Henson was only 10 years old. "A lot of these things have never been seen before," she noted, speaking about various doodles and sketches drawn on typewriter paper, notebooks, and legal pads. Works of art on paper tend to be fragile, easily damaged by light, excessive humidity, and other environmental factors, so the fact these items were available for travel is particularly exciting. Equally as exciting are the works themselves, revealing Henson's elaborate creative process and how it began to blossom during high school and college.

This is one of those rare exhibitions that's got all of its bases covered--something for everyone: there's that element of art and creativity, but there's also a sense of fun and whimsy that will inevitably appeal to families. The entrance to the exhibition says it all: "There are no rules, and those are the rules."

If you're a Muppet fan, or if you just need a creative shot in the arm, check this one out!

August 16, 2007

Elvis Lives!

Yesterday was the 30th anniversary of Elvis's death, and the faithful descended on Graceland. Fans come from all over the world to witness the graveside procession that winds around the property. The crowds can be 40,000 thick in the week leading up to the ceremonies at Graceland, and if you're lucky, you can actually see what's going on.

If, however, you missed it all--stuck behind your computer, checking out customers, or playing with the kids--you can still catch Elvis on this side of the beyond. Although it's in the early planning phases, SITES is putting together an exhibition of early, pre-King images of Elvis. They're really stunning photographs artistically and offer a vision of this man that you didn't even know existed. Look for more in our next issue of SITELINE! Visit http://www.sites.si.edu/education/siteline.htm.

-Heather Foster Shelton, Writer/Editor