Category Archives: Photography Philadelphia

Philadelphia photographers and photographs.

Art Ability International Juried Exhibition of Art and Fine Crafts @ Bryn Mawr Rehab, Malvern, PA.

Allen Bryan, Art Ability 2011, Bryn Mawr Rehab Center

Allen Bryan, digital photograph collage

The Art Ability International Juried Exhibition of Art and Fine Crafts show at Bryn Mawr Rehab Center in Malvern is an annual event that DoN looks forward to for many reasons.  First, Art Ability is a great art show with outstanding work by hundreds of artists from 35 states and seven countries in all kinds of media from painting, drawing, collage, mixed media, sculpture and DoN‘s personal interest, photography.  Secondly, this is the third year DoN has been included in the show, “light beings (Lorraine and Charles)“, an abstract landscape photo dedicated to my late Great Aunt and Uncle, was selected by the esteemed panel of jurors from hundreds of entries.  DoN is honored to be included in the annual exclusive art event, being featured in the excellent glossy catalog and to be treated to a wonderful evening of dining, meeting artists and collectors at the Patron’s Reception held November 5, 2011.

Photography is well represented in the show, when DoN delivered his piece to Bryn Mawr Rehab he got a sneak peak at the art intake and right away was taken with several large photographs by Allen Bryan.  The wide aspect ratio and densely detailed dream-scapes have all the feel of reality but with unnatural elements, transitions and oblique views, kind of like waking up from a dream.  Indeed, the photo collage Open Box Story won Best in Show, the Charles W. Hennessy Artist Award with proceeds from the Charles W. Hennessy Art Ability Endowment Fund, selected by judges Teresa Jaynes, John Ollman and Ingrid ShaffnerDoN spoke with the artist at the reception and he confirmed the surrealist work is created with his own photographs which he expertly manipulates with Photoshop, the large format print and subtle frame are exquisitely crafted.  The photo above is not the winning piece but if you visit his website, or better yet go to the show which is free and open to the public daily through mid January 2012, you will experience a masterful artwork that will confound and intrigue the senses.

Read more about DoN‘s Art Ability experiences at Philly.SideArts and watch for more reports about this expansive art exhibition.

DoN Brewer

Photograph by DoN Brewer shot with:

Kodak Store

West Collection of Contemporary Art Prize Smart Phone App for People’s Choice Award Now Available for Download on iTunes

Download the West Collects Smart Phone App, available on iTunes.  DoN Brewer is grateful for the opportunity to present his photography for consideration for the prestigious and unique art collection, please vote for DoN and all your Philly favorite artists.  DoNArTNeWs and Philly.SideArts were first to report the announcement of a $100K award set aside for purchase of artwork by Philadelphia artists – we literally had Mayor Nutter’s speech on YouTube within hours.  DoN highly recommends Philadelphia artists take the time to enter their artwork at the West Collection website, it’s free and easy and they offer great tech support.

Out of Africa, digital photo, West Collection entry, DoN Brewer, ©2011

Out of Africa, digital photograph, DoN Brewer  ©2011, one of ten West Collects entries available to vote for on the Smart Phone App.

Find the perfect gift at the Kodak Store!

Allison Kaufman, Artist Statement @ Center for Emerging Visual Artists

Allison Kaufman talks about Dancing with Divorced Men, a series of photos and video at the Center for Emerging Visual Artists, October 27th, 2011.

Hear Ana B. Hernandez‘ artist talk at Philly.SideArts.

Photos and video by DoNBrewerMultimedia.

Jessica Hoffman: Forever and After @ 110 Church Street Gallery

Jessica Hoffman: Forever and After @ 110 Church Street Gallery

Jessica Hoffman: Forever and After @ 110 Church Street Gallery

Dear Mad, I Really Like Your Hair! Love Johnny, hair strands from Jessica Hoffman‘s head in glassine envelopes.

Jessica Hoffman: Forever and After @ 110 Church Street Gallery

Jessica Hoffman: Forever and After @ 110 Church Street Gallery

Slideshow, vials of shavings from photographic slides the artist found.  Hoffman scraped off bits of each slide, saved the scrapings, then presents the slide show with the bits of image removed.  Each vial is labeled with the trip, location and time period the slides were taken.

Jessica Hoffman: Forever and After @ 110 Church Street Gallery

Jessica Hoffman: Forever and After @ 110 Church Street Gallery

Talent Show, split screen video footage projected on the wall.

DoN saw this show two weeks ago and has thought about it often as he scooted around town seeing art over the Philadelphia Open Studio Tours 2011 festival, leaving little time to report.  But Jessica Hoffman‘s show is about memory and the passage of time.  Forever and After incorporates three major narrative elements used in ways that look at the passage of time in abstract even obtuse angles.  “Slideshow is an investigation of memory, using a collection of found slides from the 1960s and 1970s shot throughout Europe and the United States by the same person.  Talent Show is a split screen video piece using footage shot at a school talent show on the left and my own version of the performances on the right.  Dear Mad, I really like your hair today! Love, Johnny is an installation inspired by a box of hundreds of love letters found on the street. – HeavyBubble website”  Each element of the installation recaptures moments in time that are personal, private, secret presenting them in Dada-ist style – should DoN believe that the love letters were found on the street?  Did Jessica really sit and scrape off bits of image from hundreds of slides?  The split screen throw back style to the Woodstock movie era of the video could have been shot over the Summer.  It doesn’t matter if it’s real or not, making found objects or finding found objects, then arraying them exquisite corpse style creates a strange narrative as the mind tries to grasp the connections.  At 110 Church Street Gallery, Jessica Hoffman‘s installation, Forever and After, combines sweet nostalgia, contemporary oblique strategies and pure, clean, simple presentation to take the viewer on a time trip back from the future.

Read more at Philly.SideArts

Photos by DoN.

Bluestone Fine Art Gallery: Amie Potsic, Danielle Bursk and Gregory Brellochs – Lay of the Land

Bluestone Fine Art Gallery: Amie Potsic, Danielle Bursk and Gregory Brellochs

Bluestone Fine Art Gallery: Amie Potsic, Danielle Bursk and Gregory Brellochs

DoN had not been to Old City in a long while for a First Friday art crawl, parking and traffic sucks, so, DoN took the bus.  $2.00! with live entertainment included ; ), and a chance to watch the cityscape go by, delivering DoN to the intersection of Market & 3rd Streets right into the hubbub of street artists, musicians and even a puppeteer capitalizing on the monthly crowds of young couples and art lovers.  A short stroll down Third to Vine Street is the new Bluestone Fine Art Gallery, just around the corner from the Painted Bride.  The current show includes work by three artists – Amie Potsic‘s photographs, Danielle Bursk‘s ink on paper and Gregory Brellochs‘ charcoal and ink drawings.  The artists are using different media but the theme of the wonders of nature run through the show like a stream of consciousness.

Bluestone Fine Art Gallery: Amie Potsic, Danielle Bursk and Gregory Brellochs

Bluestone Fine Art Gallery: Amie Potsic

Bluestone Fine Art Gallery: Amie Potsic, Danielle Bursk and Gregory Brellochs

Amie Potsic, Made in China: Yangtze River, archival pigment print

“My mission is to create a process, an action comes from that, whether it’s experiencing more art or it’s doing something political.  That’s the hope, I mean, so,  you see something like this, you see something in these images and you have a conversation about it, then you see images about that in the news, then you get an e-mail about signing a petition, and then you see a thing about going to a demonstration and you do something!”  Amie Potsic‘s scroll-like photographs of trees have a sense of being foreign, the Chinese calligraphy, done by a poet in Taiwan, and the perpendicular typography subtly leads the mind’s eye across the ocean to a distant land.  But these trees are probably shot right here in Philly presenting the bewildering notion that maybe China owns these trees and therefore made them.

“Because it’s a cumulative effect of impressions and influences and with all that, nobody does anything.  Part of the reason I do this work, some of it was done in Rittenhouse Square, the most chic section of Philly, and there was a very graphic demonstration by a Chinese group that follow the Falun Gong religion, which essentially is Buddhism.  But you’re not allowed to practice organized religion in China in that way.  So people were jailed and tortured physically and there was a demonstration in the middle of Rittenhouse Square with patients on gurneys being mock-tortured, it was shocking, I got the materials they were handing out and that made me reference my audience with the Dalai Lama and learning about what happened in Tibet and putting those two things together.  At the same time I was photographing images of trees in this sort of long scroll format and realized they look like Chinese scroll prints, I saw the demonstration and had been thinking of these issues and all these things came together to form this project.”  The metaphors, memes and memories exuding from Potsic’s photographs are like an epic poem which stirs the mind with beauty, mystery, wonder with trepidation for the future and forgotten lessons from the past.

Bluestone Fine Art Gallery: Amie Potsic, Danielle Bursk and Gregory Brellochs

Amie Potsic @ Bluestone Fine Art Gallery in Old City, Philadelphia.

Bluestone Fine Art Gallery: Amie Potsic, Danielle Bursk and Gregory Brellochs

Danielle Bursk, Avalon, ink on paper @ Bluestone Fine Art Gallery

Bluestone Fine Art Gallery: Amie Potsic, Danielle Bursk and Gregory Brellochs

Danielle Bursk, ink on paper @ Bluestone Fine Art Gallery

Bluestone Fine Art Gallery: Amie Potsic, Danielle Bursk and Gregory Brellochs

Danielle Bursk, ink on paper @ Bluestone Fine Art Gallery

DoN commented to Danielle Bursk that he noticed her drawings now include a defined horizon.  “The horizon line is the most control you can exert as an artist and I just wanted to try something that was more of a landscape…but the work is also inspired by the ocean.  I grew up in Florida, I spent a lot of time at the beach, I still go to the beach quite a bit, if you just sit and stare at the ocean there’s a lot that goes on.  I don’t like it to be too representational, so if you approach it thinking that way you can see that it also looks like hills or a tidal wave, with all my work I like an open ended-ness where you can bring what you want to it and interpret it how you want.  So, yes, there’s definitely a horizon line, it’s sort of a landscape but not quite.”  DoN also noted that Bursk’s drawings could be considered still life like a close up of fabric or fur, “…even something under a microscope.”  Danielle Bursk explained to DoN how she’s trying new things like working with a square image as opposed to rectilinear and smaller works using oblique strategies to force changes in her work with arbitrary constraints.  Even though the horizon line is consistent across the smaller works in the show, each one is unique and separate from the others.  “In fact, I took each one off the wall before I started the next one because I didn’t want to be influenced by it, I was excited when I looked back because some are really dark, some are a little lighter, some have bigger movements, so they all work very differently.”

Bluestone Fine Art Gallery: Amie Potsic, Danielle Bursk and Gregory Brellochs

Gregory Brellochs @ Bluestone Fine Art Gallery

Bluestone Fine Art Gallery: Amie Potsic, Danielle Bursk and Gregory Brellochs

Forest Floor, graphite on paper, Gregory Brellochs @ Bluestone Fine Art Gallery.

Gregory Brellochs is an art professor at Camden County College and is a father of two, “I came on there seven years ago now, they brought me in to teach sculpture and design…and it really gives me the opportunity to shape the program, work with the curriculum, and have direct contact with a lot of the students and we’ve turned it into a much stronger transfer program.”  DoN asked where Brellochs finds time to create his heroically scaled drawings?  “I just got done with these large curving drawings, you saw one at the CFEVA gallery, that was the fourth one that I’ve done and there’s one that I thought I had finished maybe a year ago and then I just had to go back in and basically quadrupled the detail.  The minuteness of the branches and roots, that became the longest drawing that I’ve ever done, the most labor intensive went over four hundred hours of drawing.  Um, but, it’s something I love to do.  And once the kids are in bed, I make a pot of coffee and up to the studio I go to work until I’m too tired.”

DoN asked if the images came out of Gregory’s mind?  “Yeah, I always work from my imagination and it’s really important to me that that’s how I arrive at that image because it’s not meant to be just a facsimile of Nature, a repetition of something that exists but something that really comes out of the mind’s eye.  All as a process of drawing, so that sometimes I don’t start with a composition in mind but a general form language…working with tree root-like structures I kind of allow it to evolve and I find that I am much more in tune with the work when I approach it that way without preliminary sketches or some kind of fixed idea in mind, it allows me to breathe life into the work because it evolves organically.”

The Bluestone Gallery of Fine Art will be open this weekend, October 15th and 16th, as part of the Philadelphia Open Studio Tours 2011Gregory Brellochs will be hosting.

 

Photos by DoN