Featured Photographer: Jacqueline Walters Weaving Light and Language
Jacqueline Walters, a visionary photographer from Cambridge, England, blends her love for landscapes and language into a unique visual style. In her project "Learning Mandarin and the Language of Lumens," she uses biological materials to create captivating shapes, merging Mandarin script with imagery in a profound way.
Featured Photographer: Wendy Constantine – “Reverie”
Embark on an ethereal journey through Wendy Constantine's artistic practice with her body of work, “Reverie.” From childhood memories in a converted chicken coop to protesting art department cuts, Constantine's life unfolds like a visual poem. Delve into her unique fusion of analog and digital, intention and spontaneity, as she invites you into a dreamlike realm where trees stand as silent witnesses to a life shaped by nature.
Interview: Marcus DeSieno - “Geography of Disappearance”
Spend time with the photographs and words from this interview with photographic artist Marcus DeSieno. His ongoing project, "Geography of Disappearance," is a brutally honest examination of the crisis at the US/Mexico border from the perspective of landscape photography.
Feature: Maureen Mulhern-White: “The Continuum”
Maureen Mulhern-White, a British-American self-taught photographer, creates mystical landscapes that captivate audiences with their dream-like qualities. Her innovative photo series, The Continuum, features photograms printed on vellum paper and backed with silver or gold leaf. These enchanting images showcase a variety of creatures and natural elements, revealing our shared connection to the universe.
Feature: Jim Steg’s Inspired Journey
Jim Steg (1922-2001) was an inventive artist and esteemed educator who lived in New Orleans. A celebrated printmaker, he became interested in photography late in his career. Barbara Hitchcock, who served as Curator of The Polaroid Collection, writes about his explorations with the SX-70 and shares rarely seen instant photography explorations from the artist.
Featured Photographer: Victoria Kosel - “A Cut Above”
Victoria Kosel quite literally destroys her photographs, only to create them anew. Her sliced and diced prints are reborn into fragmented scenes that force the brain to fill in the gaps that challenge the ideas of traditional landscape photography.
Featured Photographer: Liz Albert - "Family Fictions”
Liz Albert’s series, Family Fictions, take us on a journey back in time to explore family and social dynamics in the 50s and 60s through photographic slides that she has found, purchased, and combined into diptychs.
Featured Photographer: Nettie Edwards - "Grave Goods"
Nettie Edwards uses the ephemeral photographic processes of anthotype and chlorophyll printing to create personal meditations on the transitory nature of existence. By embracing processes destined to degrade she confronts the ideas of loss, grief, and mortality.
Featured Photographer: Ed Carr's 5000+ Cyanotype Print Music Video
Alternative process photographer, printmaker, and researcher Ed Carr has created the first-ever music video made from over 5000 hand-printed cyanotypes for Tycho Jones and Globe Town Records. Learn all about his unique creation now!
Featured Photographer: Tara A. Cronin's Series “Winds”
Taking landscape photography to a new level, Tara A. Cronin’s new series “Winds” uses transparency film, archival inks, and her own blood to create work reminiscent of star maps or ancient genetic code.
Featured Photographer: Lori Pond - Learning to Walk in the Dark
Lori Pond's “Learning to Walk in the Dark” illustrates the written word with prints on vellum that are backed with silver leaf that creates objects of depth with tactile qualities and stunning beauty.