Sunday, September 30, 2012

Jon Strymish branches out with “TURN: Spring Leaves” photo exhibit



Turn
Photographs by Jon Strymish


AVIARY Gallery & Art Boutique
48 South Street 
Jamaica Plain, MA 02130

“Never say there is nothing beautiful in the world anymore. There is always something to make you wonder in the shape of a tree, the trembling of a leaf.”
- Albert Schweitzer

Long before he famously put together “These Are From Negatives In My Car,” a rock and folk photography exhibit printed from negatives salvaged from a vehicle so filthy that plants had spontaneously grown around his strips of film, there was no question that Jon Strymish has an uniquely organic approach to photography. For decades, he’s been best known for his grainy, black and white, iconic images of musicians from Boston and beyond, always shot with film, frequently in the darkest conditions possible. Respectful of roots and obsessed with origins, Strymish once told Tommy Ramone that punk rock began with Bob Dylan. To those who know Strymish’s work, his new photography exhibit, “TURN: Spring Leaves,” may seem like a radical departure. To those who know him intimately, it’s an organic extension of his music photography and a natural progression.

An ability to draw light out of the darkest shadows is, stylistically, what he’s known for. Across the years, his work has appeared on albums by Peter Wolf, Mission of Burma, countless folk musicians and rockers and on the walls of folk and rock haunts including Club Passim and CBGB.  Despite the drastically different subject matter between his images of musicians and leaves, the stylistic similarities are strong and unmistakably the work of the same photographer.

His decision to finally photograph the leaves after decades of thinking about the series was triggered by some turbulent changes in his life during the past two years. Around the time that he and his family decided to sell The New England Mobile Book Fair, the bookstore his father founded over 50 years earlier,  Strymish was diagnosed with a heart condition.

With its inherent theme of rebirth, it’s appropriate that the exhibit’s September run coincides with the opening of the Portsmouth Book and Bar, a bookstore and cafe in Portsmouth, New Hampshire that Strymish is launching with two of his closest friends, David Lovelace and John Petrovato, both bookselling veterans he has known since college.

From leaving an old bookstore to opening a new one. From crouching at the front of stages in dark, loud, cramped music clubs to standing before branches sprouting signs of new life in dimly-lit paths through silent woods. Always searching for light in the darkest of shadows, only Jon Strymish would spend decades embedded in rock, folk, books and blues to find a new muse in the first leaves of spring.

Monday, September 17, 2012

Nicole White at Gallery UNO, Chicago




NICOLE WHITE – THE SURROUND

Gallery UNO
Fine Arts Building
410 S Michigan Ave
Chicago, IL 60605

Opening Reception: September 14, 6-8pm
During: September 1 – October 31, 2012
Artist Talk: October 12, 6pm

“If the figures and intended subjects of photographs were cut away, the mass of photography—the acreage of prints and slides and screens and posters and digital frames—would be comprised of overlooked, un-needed and unwanted details. … the surround, which is often enough unwanted…is only noticed when it helps identify the place the photograph was taken, or when it adds a general atmosphere.” 1 Nicole focuses the attention of the viewer on the overlooked in her new body of work, The Surround. The expected compositional reference points are absent, leaving the viewer to reconsider the photograph’s function. 

1James Elkins, What Photography Is, 117.
- Curator Barbara Goebels-Cattaneo



Saturday, September 8, 2012

Pilgrims


This summer I photographed two groups of people. The first was at a book signing event held at Harris Cyclery in West Newton for my friend Grant Petersen who’s new book Just Ride had just been published.  A group ride had been planned for after the signing but as light and time were fading we ended up with just the picture.  Grant’s book is a fine one, well worth reading for anyone with an interest in riding a bike.  In addition to cycling and photography Grant and I have shared the trials and tribulations of beginning and operating smallish businesses through the years.  His counsel has proven invaluable.  



The second group was the annual Chmura family reunion held on July 7th at the old Donohue family farm in Krumville (pop. 7, I’m told), NY, in the Catskills.  This reunion has been held without interruption for 47 consecutive years.  This year it served also as a double memorial service: for my Uncle Paul who grew up in this house (the empty chair front row center was his) as well as cousin Moira’s 18 year old son Tobias who was lost in a tragic fall off of Sleeping Giant in Hamden, CT in February.  I have made this picture many times now. Faces present in years past, now no longer with us, are still well represented and remembered by the DNA comprising this years group.  





423,194


Our 1996 Toyota Corolla on it’s last day here.  Our main small package delivery vehicle since 1997, it covered 423,194 miles with nary a complaint.  As pictured it was still running like a champ.  I had planned to keep it until we hit 500,000 and then bring it to Toyota’s attention, secretly hoping that they would embrace their aged warrior and bestow a new one upon us.   Over the last few years it was being used less and less, mostly Wayne going to the bank and running errands, and it was becoming increasingly clear that at that rate 500k was unlikely – not because it couldn’t get there but rather we just didn’t need it to.  When this year’s insurance bill arrived it pretty much seal it’s fate.  Original engine and transmission (never even opened either up), original most everything else.  All it ever needed was tires, brakes, wheels (potholes), oil changes and gas.  Not bad.