UMF Art Gallery presents “Photographic Approaches to Nature,” Sept 12-Nov. 3

FARMINGTON, ME  (September 13, 2019)—The UMF Art Gallery proudly presents, “Life and Times: Photographic Approaches to Nature Today,” an exhibit that looks at three artists’ poetic photographic approaches to the fragility, mutability, and ephemerality of nature today. The exhibit will be on display from Sept. 12 thru Nov. 3 on the University of Maine at Farmington campus.

Michel Droge, Allen Morris, Dean Randazzo: “Life and Times: Photographic Approaches to Nature Today”

Michel Droge’s cyanotypes from her Audubon Project directly record the shadow impressions of native Maine plant species living at the Gilsland farm sanctuary. Her work is inspired by the 19th-century British botanist Anna Atkins. Cyanotypes rely upon the natural elements of sun and water to record an image and the process itself aligns with the transformational life cycle of plants.

b/w image Allen Morris, ISO - 46 (Okoboji)
Black and White image Allen Morris, ISO – 46 (Okoboji)

Allen Morris approaches landscapes cultivated by the hands of humans to control natural processes in the service of the endless driving needs and desires of society. His images capture places and objects of stability within a flowing temporal environment, questioning our geographical and psychological understandings of place.

Dean Randazzo uses photography and holography to explore the containment of time on a piece of glass or film, the relationship between loss and recovery, and the relationship between memory and photographic and filmic record. He uses images of the last individuals of extinct species and fleeting moments from the lives of insects to articulate the moments when experience transitions to memory.

color image Fred Dearnley, Untitled
Color image Fred Dearnley, Untitled

Fred Dearnley: “New Work”

A complementary exhibit will be on display by colorist Fred Dearnley who taught traditional photography at UMF for many years. In his new work, he fully embraces a digital approach to the documentation of nature. His closely processed images become intimate portraits and textural studies of plant subjects, despite their digital remove from the original objects.

The UMF Art Gallery hours are noon-4 p.m., Tuesday through Sunday and by appointment. For more information or to make an appointment, contact Sarah Maline at maline@maine.edu or 778-1062 or visit artgalleryumf.org.

More on the UMF Art Gallery

The UMF Art Gallery is a teaching gallery dedicated to bringing contemporary art and artists to campus and the regional community. In its focus on innovative and challenging new work, the gallery reinforces the academic vision of the university and the Department of the Visual and Performing Arts in celebrating art as a powerful agent of community and cultural identity. The gallery develops interdisciplinary educational opportunities for students and community and works with local schools to integrate art into their curricula.

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EDITOR’S NOTE:
Image: RP190-008A
Photo Caption: b/w image Allen Morris, ISO – 46 (Okoboji)
Photo Credit: Submitted photo

Image: RP190-008B
Photo Caption: color image Fred Dearnley, Untitled
Photo Credit: Submitted photo

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