Photography Atelier

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Catching My Eye

I have a collection in my house. It isn’t the usual group of snowglobes or pebbles or china dolls. It grows in fits and spurts: objects are added after trips to the grocery store, whilst I am cleaning the basement, or when I return from vacation to discover a forgotten orange. All of the collection have ended up in front of my camera. Some things I photograph once, others appear again and again, transforming as they age.

In my studio, I find myself moving closer and closer, seeking to share what draws me in. A wrinkle here, a dent there: I am fascinated by the small details that make each unique.

The Paris I Know

This project aims to visually connect the physical and the metaphysical beauty of Paris, allowing the viewer to step into the image and then imagine what might lie beyond its boundaries. I’ve lived in and worked in the City for many years, but I haven’t often had the time to thoughtfully reflect on what it is that makes it beautiful. Paris is unique. The project helped me to see how the interrelationship of its buildings, bridges, people and the river that winds through it make the city the magnet that it has been for artists, writers and musicians.

The present selection examines how architecture, trees and people resonate to create the harmony that makes Paris so appealing to me. In the poetic geometry of the trees and paths, and buildings, even their interiors, I feel a certain continuity and peaceful calm. I’m able to take the time simply “to be”.  The interplay between this state of mind and the often rhyming, symmetrical visuals contribute to the beauty that I see and feel.

The Ripening

This project was inspired by the realization, in a visceral way, that I was indeed getting older and joining the demographic of aging women. This stark reality set in when I saw a musician from my past. Seeing the changes in her made me reflected my own. My thought was that she looks different and so must I. It made me be think about  the ways women experience  aging,  discrimination, invisibility, freedom, and acceptance. This project called The Ripening, is my expression of some of those facets through metaphor.

Patio Life

There is a mean-looking wasp sitting on the arm of a teak chair in my backyard patio. Every day the wasp visits. Why does it keep landing on the chair?

I want answers.

I live in a densely populated town in Greater Boston that is 5.5 square miles with 42,000 residents and an abundance of tiny, often unseen critters lurking in its yards—yards measured in square feet, not acres.

With a couple chairs and a few flowers, a small suburban oasis was created on the patio.

But those wasps…and these tiny spiders that seem to jump into thin air? What else is living around me?

I need answers.

The camera provides an up-close peak at my fellow patio dwellers whose respective behaviors pique my curiosity and intrigue me.

Whether planting a single container or large garden—you won’t have to travel far to find interesting neighbors if you look close enough.

If you plant it, they will come.

Johnsons Quarry

Granite quarries of Cape Ann are visual evidence of a once vital industry that employed hundreds and produced the granite building blocks of some of the nation’s most iconic buildings. This abandoned industry has left scars on the landscape: deep water-filled quarries, rusting machinery and tools, and the hand-hewn marks of laborers over the century.

The derricks, steel cables, drills, and tools at Johnsons Quarry are relics of excavations begun over 100 years ago. Recently, the grandson of the former quarry owner has decided to breathe new life into this site, revitalizing contracts with local stone-cutters. Newly cut stone, hand-hewn as in time past with drills and wedges, lies on top of massive granite blocks quarried decades ago.

I am drawn to the beauty and scale of the elemental landscape as a backdrop for the remnants of an industry unique to this place. By focusing on the artifacts, tools and hand-cut marks, this project honors the legacy of Johnsons Quarry stone workers both past and present.

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Exhibition
March 5 - 29, 2015
Reception
Thursday March 5, 2015 6:00 - 8:00 PM Exhibition
September 10-27, 2015
Reception
Thursday September 10, 2015 6:30 - 8:00pm Exhibition
March 10 - April 3, 2016
Reception
March 10, 2016 6:30 - 8:00 PM Exhibition
September 8 - October 2, 2016
Reception
September 8, 2016 6:30 - 8:30 PM Exhibition
March 9 - 31, 2017
Reception
March 9, 2017 6:30 - 8:30 PM Exhibition
September 7 - October 1, 2017
Reception
September 7, 2017 6:30 - 8:30 PM Exhibition
Mar 8 - Apr 1, 2018
Reception
March 8, 2018 7:00 - 8:30 PM Exhibition
September 11 - October 5, 2018
Reception
September 16, 2018 5:30-7:30 PM Exhibition
March 7 - April 7, 2019
Reception
March 10, 2019 4-6PM Exhibition
September 5 - 28, 2019
Reception
September 8, 2019 4:00 - 6:00 PM Exhibition
Mar 5 - 27, 2020
Reception
Exhibition
September 5 - September 27, 2020
Reception
September 13, 2020 4:00 - 6:00 PM Exhibition
February 20 - March 26, 2021
Reception
February 21, 2021 7:00 PM - 9 PM Exhibition
September 8 - November 8, 2021
Reception
September 26, 2021 4pm Exhibition
March 15 - April 10, 2022
Reception
Sunday March 20, 2022 4 to 6pm Exhibition
September 21 - November 27, 2022
Reception
September 25th, 4 to 6pm Exhibition
September 2023 - May 2024
Reception
Exhibition
Dates - 1 August - 1 September, 2024
Reception
Reception Date - 3 August 4 to 6pm Exhibition

Reception
Exhibition

Reception
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Evening Group

  • Connie Lowell
  • David Feigenbaum
  • David Poorvu
  • Don Harbison
  • Frederica Matera
  • Guy Washburn
  • Jackie Heitchue
  • Jeff Larason
  • Julie Williams-Krishnan
  • Katalina Simon
  • L. Jorj Lark
  • Larry Bruns
  • Lee Cott
  • Marcy Juran
  • Michael King
  • Michele Manting
  • Mike Slurzberg
  • Scott Newell
  • Shravan Elapavuluru
  • Stephanie Arnett
  • Sue D’Arcy Fuller
  • Susan Green

Instructor

  • Meg Birnbaum

COURSE ASSISTANT

  • Amy Rindskopf
  • Sue D’Arcy Fuller

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