“Thirteen Ways” , “Shadowtime”, “Such Sweet Thunder”, & “Strange Fruit”
Read MoreDecember 2020 - January 2021: Wendy Fulenwider Liszt, Louise Marshall, Azita Moradkhani, & Nicole Buchanan
“Critical Mass” , “New Work”, “The Creator”, & “Strange Fruit”
Read MoreOctober - November 2020: Bruce Myren, Bill Franson, & Vanessa Leroy
“Fort Juniper” , “Mason Dixon: American Fictions”, & “there’s a place i want to take you”
Read MoreSeptember - October 2020: John Willis, Robin Behn, Matan Rubinstein, Astrid Reischwitz, & Vanessa Leroy
“Requiem for the Innocent” , “The Fabric of Memory”, “Mni Wiconi: Honoring the Water Protectors”, & “there’s a place i want to take you”
Read MoreMarch - August 2020: Peter Kayafas, Logan Nutter, & Peter Chan
“The Way West” , “Late Nights” & “You & I”
Read MoreJanuary - February 2020: Jonathan Gitelson & Robert Moeller
“Free!” & “Sit Down”
Read MoreDecember 2019 - January 2020: Edie Bresler, Yorgos Efthymiadis, & Joseph Wheelwright
“Blues & Other Possibilities” , “There is a Place I Want to Take You” & “Sticks, Stones & Bones”
Read MoreOctober - November 2019: Anne Lilly, Alicia Rodriguez Alvisa, & Joel Janowitz
“Abstractus” , “You are Here”, & “Rising”
Read MoreSeptember - October 2019: Tara Sellios
“Infernalis”
Read MoreJuly - August 2019: "Water: A Summer Celebration" // Curated by Gus Kayafas
Water: A Summer Celebration
wat · er (noun) a colorless, transparent, odorless liquid that forms the seas, lakes, rivers, and rain and is the basis of the fluids of living organisms.
Water covers 71% of the Earth’s surface. Water cleanses the body and soul.
WATER is a group exhibit curated by Gus Kayafas with more than 60 artists represented. Invited from the Gallery’s artists, Palm Press’s artists, friends, and a private collection, the exhibit shaped itself as artwork was presented, considered, and sequenced… Photography, video, painting, sculpture, and works on paper comprise a celebration of looking at and experiencing work by:
Robert Adams, Brett Angell, Karl Baden, Richard Benson, Jon Blumb, Edie Bresler, Harry Callahan, Caleb Charland, Caleb Cole, Bruce Cratsley, Susan Derges, Harold Edgerton, Frank Egloff, Marc Elliott, Kevin Foley, Wm. Franson, Lee Friedlander, Jon Gitelson, Burt Glinn, Frank Gohlke, Audrey Goldstein, Charles “Teenie” Harris, Greg Heins, Julee Holcombe, Yoav Horesh, Joel Janowitz, Joe Johnson, Aaron Kayafas, Gus Kayafas, Peter Kayafas, Roger Kizik, Robert Knight, Jack Lueders-Booth, Wm. MacFeeley, Liam MacCormack, Robert Moeller, Greer Muldowney, Edweard Muybridge, David Mussina, Bruce Myren, Toru Nakanishi, Logan Nutter, Timothy O’Sullivan, Zoe Perry-Wood, Daniel Ranalli, J. Baylor Roberts (NGS), Richard Rogers, Lynn Saville, Rüdiger Schellong, Aaron Siskind, Rosalind Solomon, Eleanor Steinadler, Mark Steinmetz, Jessica Straus, Alan Strassman, Brian Unwin, August Ventimiglia, Tabitha Vevers, Clara Wainwright, Henry Wessel, Garry Winogrand, Lee Wormald, Richard Yee
May - June 2019: Minoo Emami
“Wounded Beauty”
Read MoreApril - May 2019: Rebecca Doughty, Daniel Ranalli, & Kimberly Druker Stockwell
“Here We Are” , “Iconic Cape Cod Paintings (This is Not a Photograph)” , & “Just What I Came For”
Read MoreMarch - April 2019: Emily Belz, Laura Chasman, & Kimberly Witham
“Forward from Where We Came” , “Barely Visible” , & “On Beauty”
Read MoreFebruary 2019: Jules Aarons & Jack Lueders-Booth
“West End & North End c. 1947-70” & “Chinatown to Jamaica Plain 1985-87”
Read MoreDecember 2018 - January 2019: Judy Haberl, August Ventimiglia, & Harold Edgerton
“The Chef’s Hand & Traces” , “Recent Work” & “Rarities”
Read MoreOctober - December 2018: Roger Kizik & Clara Wainwright
“154 Years of Serendipity”
Read MoreSeptember - October 2018: Ann Strassman & Daphne Confar
“You Are There” & “My People”
Read MoreJune - July 2018: TREES II
Trees II
Twelve years ago, in June of 2006, the gallery curated an exhibition entitled TREES. The show featured the works of 25 photo-based artists. TREES II, opening June 2018, will be exhibiting the works of 40 artists, many represented by Gallery Kayafas as well as invited guests. All artists were asked to respond to the notion of “Tree”. Over 55 pieces, including photographic processes from ambrotype through 3D Images — paintings, works on paper, and sculptures, both still and kinetic, will fill the gallery!
TREES II exhibits a wide selection of photographs. The 27 photographers work in a variety of processes including gelatin silver prints, pigment inkjet prints, photogravures, and alternative processes. The earliest images, from the 1870s, are Woodburytypes by Andrew Young. Young photographed specimen trees in Wales and Scotland from 1870-1879. N. W. Gibbons has employed early alternative processes making landscape ambrotypes, wet plate collodion tintypes, and salt-prints toned in gold.
Eight of the photographers work in traditional gelatin silver. Included is a beautiful print by Aaron Siskind, The Tree #35, (Martha’s Vineyard), 1972, and an intimate 6x6” vintage image of Aix-en-Provence, France, 1958 by Harry Callahan. A 1986 photogravure by Lee Friedlander, Tokyo, 1977, from his series Cherry Blossom Time in Japan reveals tonality as delicate as its subject.
Jerry Uelsmann, Frank Egloff, and Caleb Cole combine images either by the layering of actual objects or collaging in the darkroom using multiple enlargers. Uelsmann’s work, made before Photoshop, produces optically combined gelatin silver photographs using multiple enlargers each with an original negative to be seamlessly printed onto the same sheet of gelatin silver paper. This labor-intensive process can sometimes take up to 18 hours to finish the small edition.
The photographers who are working in color demonstrate a broad range of effects and possibilities: Yoav Horesh’s Rosh Hashana Dinner (45 Minutes) Zofar, Israel, is a timed exposure! The outcome, the tree is in perfect focus while the family blurs as they move around the table during their meal. Viewing Matthew Gamber’s The Field (2), is a rewarding visual puzzle with an astounding revelation when viewed with 3D glasses.
The Endless Tree, is 80” tall! Meg Alexander’s tree grew from India ink, acrylic gesso, and absorbent ground on Nepal paper, while Catherine Headrick’s delicate, detailed etchings measure just 4x3” on 6x5” paper.
Cristi Rinklin’s constructed abstract realities are sourced from details of paintings, scenic wallpapers, and collected photographs…her color palate adds a playfulness to the viewing experience. It Turns Out That Liam Loves the Neighbor, Daphne Confar’s painting, reveals Liam standing in front of his home, tie blowing in the breeze with a naked tree behind.
Like modern dancers, Jospeh Wheelwright’s hand-carved Manzanita Tree figures appear as captured moments, still, buth with a real sense of dynamisim. Steve Hollinger has created two msied media sculptural pieces which react to light and change, even while being viewed. And for a comfortable vantage point, we invite you to take a seat on one of Andrew Mowbray’s pieces, A Milk Crate Tree of Heaven.
Over 55 pieces and no two trees are the same! Artists are a wonderful resource, give them a concept, TREE, and they will provide endless examples.
April - June 2018: Joe Johnson & Christine Collins
“The Playing Field” & “Oil/Cloth”
Read MoreMarch - April 2018: Yoav Horesh & Shawn Bush
“Serene Oasis” & “A Golden State”
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