(c) Fred Zafran |
What do beauty, art, Alfred Stieglitz, and MEG have to do with each other? Tom Beck, chief curator at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County, and the juror of MEG's current exhibit, explains:
Many think that the beauty of a photograph is a result of having a camera with an exceptionally fine lens or special powers over subject matter. In his 1923 essay (“How I Came to Photograph Clouds”) Alfred Stieglitz said: “I wanted to photograph clouds to find out what I had learned in 40 years…Through clouds to put down my philosophy of life—to show that my photographs were not due to subject matter—not special trees, or faces, or interiors, to special privileges—clouds were there for everyone.” He wanted people to be excited by his creations, not the technique or technology that made them. The photographs that I judged for the exhibition, indeed call attention to the artfulness of the imagery and not the mechanics, a virtue in our technology dominated era.
The success of the imagery selected for this exhibition reveals that beauty is necessary to the photographers. The pursuit of beauty is their way of making images that are true to themselves as artists. “Beauty is the universal seen,” said Alfred Stieglitz. He was defining his approach to making, understanding, and appreciating photographs, and, in a sense, setting a standard for making art photography in the future. The images in this exhibition compare favorably to Stieglitz’s standard. It has been my pleasure to judge this exhibition and discover the beauty in these photographs.
(c) Five Cherries |
An opening reception will be held Thursday, November 14th, from 6pm-8pm, in Studio 312 at the Torpedo Factory Art Center. Exhibit end date: November 24, 2013.
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