Showing posts with label KlompChing Gallery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label KlompChing Gallery. Show all posts

9.28.2019

MESMERIC : SVA Master of Professional Studies in Digital Photography 2019 Class Exhibition

 The Dragon Dream / Film by Sophie Cheung
Showing a pivotal moment from her 10-minute narrative film, The Dragon Dream, and a series of monologues, Sophie Cheung explores the mental-health consequences of the great academic pressure placed on young people in Asian societies.

Inventing the Dog / Photographs by Stephanie Zimmer 
A celebration and typological study of the wide variety of purebred dogs. Bio-engineered over hundreds or even thousands of years to serve a specific purpose for humans, dogs come in a remarkable range of sizes, shapes and personalities. The project’s photographs examine both this variety and the specific physical issues associated with selective breeding.

 Bathhouse / Photographs by Jaichang Sim
A documentary study of the Korean bathhouse and its societal importance, featuring intimate portraits of customers and self-portraits of the photographer, Jaichang Sim, at a bathhouse owned by his father.

Mutations / Image by Huai Yi Tsai
Huai Yi Tsai’s images, prints and handmade book from his series “Mutations” are based on sculptures he has created from found garbage to critique people’s lack of awareness of the pollution caused by their disposal of consumable items.

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The School of Visual Arts presents “Mesmeric” an exhibition of thesis work by the Master of Professional Studies in Digital Photography The Class of 2019 / Curated by NYC gallerist and SVA faculty member Debra Klomp Ching.

Mesmeric” 
Curated by Debra Klomp Ching
Oct 12 – Nov 2, 2019
SVA Gramercy Gallery
209 E. 23rd Street, NYC

Reception
Wed, Oct 23, 2019
6:00 – 8:00pm

"Mesmeric is, fittingly, an exhibition with work by 11 talented photographers and artists who maintained an intense focus on their thesis projects and their ideas, often blocking out other voices and distractions around them. They were in it! The exhibition showcases the class of 2019’s commitment to the continuous improvement, imagination and experimentation needed to produce transfixing bodies of photographic work.” – MPS Digital Photography Chair Tom P. Ashe

Also exhibiting: Yangzi Huang’s photographs in “Indirect Object” transform and elevate common objects using perspective and lighting to create visuals that are reminiscent of 1920s avant-garde still-life photography.

In “Contour,” Luiza Ladeira Lavorato celebrates the female form by bringing new photographic strategies to the classical black-and-white nude. The project is in part a reaction to the debasing of the female figure and the way this has desensitized our culture to the nude’s natural beauty.

Overloaded” is a series of abstract images that capture Qikun Li’s emotional struggles. His goal in this project is to capture these feelings in what are, essentially, psychological landscapes.

The Five Elements” by Kam Lin is a group of fashion photographs inspired by the “Five Elements” of metal, wood, water, fire and earth in traditional Chinese culture. The Five Elements theory explains the interaction and relationship between all things.

Xuanang Tian’s project “[me, you]” is a series of still-lifes containing fragments of mirrors and Mylar that incorporate viewers’ reflection into the image, symbolizing the many personal and social boundaries that restrict us.

The images in Ruojia Wo’s “Color After a Fashion” take the aesthetic of fashion photography into a different realm using a muted palette and a style derived from architectural and landscape photography.

The Chinese Zodiac” by Zhou Zhou explores this important cultural concept by depicting its twelve animal signs through photographic collages that combine styled models with traditional Chinese objects and symbols.

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I'm fortunate to teach a summer course, Book and Brand, in this department! The students concentrate on creating their printed book or portfolio, and design and produce terrific branding and marketing materials. It's exciting to see their completed photographic series in this upcoming exhibition. – EA

The Master of Professional Studies in Digital Photography, chaired by Tom P. Ashe, is an intensive one-year graduate degree program that addresses the digital-image capture, workflow, exhibition printing, sound, video and visual storytelling skills required of professional photographers and photo educators in the vanguard of commercial, fine art, portrait and fashion photography practices. Within the year, students are prepared to excel at producing conceptually compelling and technically outstanding images, and are ideally positioned to pursue gallery representation, editorial or commercial work, as well as high-end digital retouching and consulting careers. 

The SVA Gramercy Gallery, located at 209 East 23rd Street, New York City, is open Monday through Friday, 9:00am to 7:00pm, and Saturday, 10:00am to 6:00pm. The gallery is accessible by wheelchair.

3.30.2017

HELEN SEAR: Klompching Gallery to April 28

 Becoming Forest No. 7 (2017)
39.3" x 39.3" image | 43.3" x 43.3"'' sheet
Archival Pigment Print
Edition: 5+2AP

Becoming Forest No. 2 (2017)
39.3" x 39.3" image | 43.3" x 43.3"'' sheet
Archival Pigment Print
Edition: 5+2AP

Helen Sear (b. 1955) studied Fine Art at Reading University the Slade School of Art, London. Sear's work explores ideas of vision, touch and re-presentation of the nature of experience, with particular reference to the human and animal body and her immediate environment in rural Wales and France.

Writer and curator, David Campany, described Sear as "one of photography's foremost innovators. For her the medium is one of magic as much as realism. It is never pure, fixed or entirely knowable. Each new series presents a new set of challenges that offer up her fascination with craft and our habits of looking."

Sear represented Wales at the Venice Biennale in 2015, has won several artist's awards, including The Major Creative Wales Award from Arts Council Wales (2011) and lives and works in Wales and France.  

HELEN SEAR
February 22–April 28, 2017
89 Water Street, Brooklyn, NY 11201

6.22.2016

FREDERIC WEBER: Primary Light and Memento Mori at Klompching Gallery

 Untitled #53, 1994
from Memento Mori series © Frederic Weber
Courtesy Klompching Gallery, NY

 Untitled #77, 1995
from Memento Mori series © Frederic Weber
Courtesy Klompching Gallery, NY

 Untitled #108, 1997
from Primary Light series © Frederic Weber
Courtesy Klompching Gallery, NY

 Untitled #122, 1998
from Primary Light series © Frederic Weber
Courtesy Klompching Gallery, NY

 
Frederic Weber
Primary Light and Memento Mori

Frederic Weber brings to his photographic practice, a visual sensibility that challenges the viewer to determine quite what they’re looking at. On show at the Klompching Gallery are selections from two bodies of work, Memento Mori and Primary Light, both of which draw attention to Weber’s penchant for making photographs that don’t always look like photographs.

Memento Mori is constructed from a combination of images, that the artist has excavated from comic books, magazines, newspapers, television, paintings and other printed matter. He presents images of tightly cropped heads of black and African subjects, presenting them almost as relics of a time past. The photographs are challenging, almost visually overwhelming, and difficult to fix within a specific framework. At once iconic, they echo historical post-mortem imagery, with a time-stamp that is not fixed or even knowable. Made of several layers of different images, the photographs are rich in color and painterly.

The Primary Light series share this painterly quality. Here though, it is the reference to photography’s Pictorialism past, that is most evident. Weber presents torsos and heads that are rendered in soft-focus, with each emerging from a depth of blue so saturated, the color transforms into an abyss, out of which the human forms glow like fire-flies. The ghostly figures seem nostalgic, classical even and partly unknowable. (text via Klompching Gallery)

Klompching Gallery
89 Water Street, Brooklyn
 through July 9, 2016 

CORNELIA HEDIGER : Puppenhaus

Bono in Lago, Italy, 2014 © Cornelia Hediger
Courtesy Klompching Gallery, New York

Bathtub, 2015 © Cornelia Hediger
Courtesy Klompching Gallery, New York

In Memory of Chancie, 2016 © Cornelia Hediger
Courtesy Klompching Gallery, New York

  Lily’s Dream of Fish, 2016 © Cornelia Hediger
Courtesy Klompching Gallery, New York


 Cornelia Hediger: Puppenhaus


Puppenhaus series, by Cornelia Hediger forms the artist’s third exhibition with Klompching Gallery and showcases the artist’s handmade photo-collages. Made between 2014–2016, the series is inspired by the likes of Hannah Höch, John Heartfield and Grete Stern among others. The photographs are constructed out of a combination of pigment and gelatin silver prints, with imagery originating from various sources including the artist’s studio practice, and scans of wallpaper, paint and cardboard. These are combined with recent photographs of travels in Europe, the patriarchal home in Switzerland and other family artifacts.

The hand of the artist is up front and center across the Puppenhaus series—pencil marks, irregular cuts left exposed, paint, hanging string, and individual elements attached in low relief, which together draw attention to the unusual focal planes, angles of view and shifts in scale. All of this combines perfectly with the seemingly whimsical narratives, that take the viewer on a journey through the artist’s fictionalized world. The use of self-portraiture prevails, linking this series back to the previous Doppelgänger work. We see ‘Cornelias’ having tea, balancing cups, acting out in odd domestic spaces and going on journeys. In one piece, reminiscent of the 19th Century Spencer y Cia Chilean Ladies, we see 100 heads—all of the artist—receding back into the distance. Hediger has created theatrical scenes, as if on a stage, images which are extraordinary and which pull you right into their three-dimensional space. (text via Klompching Gallery)

 Klompching Gallery
89 Water Street, Brooklyn
 through July 9, 2016

2.27.2016

RICHARD TUSCHMAN: Once Upon a Time in Kazimierz at Klompching Gallery


 Couple in the Street, 2014
© Richard Tuschman/Courtesy Klompching Gallery, New York

 Pale Light, 2015
© Richard Tuschman/Courtesy Klompching Gallery, New York

Working Morning, 2014
© Richard Tuschman/Courtesy Klompching Gallery, New York

Measuring, 2015
© Richard Tuschman/Courtesy Klompching Gallery, New York

Richard Tuschman’s latest project, “Once Upon A Time In Kazimierz,” will debut at Klompching Gallery from March 2nd to April 9th. The project is Tuschman’s long awaited followup to his well-received “Hopper Meditations.”

“Once Upon a Time in Kazimierz” is a visual novella, which portrays a fictional Jewish family in 1930s Poland. Tuschman's images are visually stunning, his process labor intensive and meticulous—the result of a sophisticated marriage of hand-built miniature dioramas with life-size models. Whereas the 'Hopper Meditations' were an homage to the paintings of Hopper, his new project is a much more personal narrative—his family immigrated from the vicinity of Kazimierz, and his wife went to university in Kazimierz.

"Once Upon A Time In Kazimierz"
March 2–April 9, 2016

Reception: Thursday, March 3rd, 6:00–9:00pm

89 Water Street
Brooklyn, NY 

Text and images courtesy of Klompching Gallery

2.28.2015

DOUG KEYES: Portrait at KLOMPCHING

Martin Schoeller (2014)
by Doug Keyes courtesy KLOMPCHING Gallery

Chuck Close B&W (2014)
by Doug Keyes courtesy KLOMPCHING Gallery

Portrait
"There are many reasons artists have used the portrait as a means of expression throughout history but Keyes is most interested in the cognitive impression left after seeing the work. What is the image in our mind before we consider the idea behind the work? Is it a copy of what our eyes perceive in the world? What does the brain actually “see”? Keyes work proposes that the brain creates collections of layered images over time, not individual snapshots of moments like a camera. When we think of a person it’s not a static, flat impression. We live in time and space, always moving, always inputting new data. And this data is never objective, it’s not a collection of precisely copied information; it’s as imperfect as our memory."

"The genesis of this project was the Chuck Close catalog Keyes photographed in 1998 for his Collective Memory series. What emerged in that multiple exposure image were two portraits representing Close’ body of work. In creating the Portrait work, Keyes chose artists because of their potential to influence his thinking about art and portraiture. He sourced the images from books and the Internet, often after experiencing these artists work in person. Using these same original source materials, Keyes chose images he thought would create an overall portrait reflecting each artist’s portrait work. The resulting digitally layered images condense those many individual works in an effort to portray what the mind actually sees over time." –  DougKeyes.net


March 5–April 11, 2015
Artist Reception March 5, 6pm–9pm

111 Front Street, Suite 206 | Brooklyn, NY 11201
 

1.05.2015

KLOMPCHING GALLERY | DUMBO: ONE UNIQUE PHOTOGRAPHS

Photograph © Matthew-Robert Hughes

Photograph © Ken Rosenthal

Photograph © Diane Meyer 

Photograph © Robert Calafiore

Photograph © Carole P. Kunstadt

Photograph © Max Kellenberger

Robert Calafiore • Matthew-Robert Hughes • Max Kellenberger
Carole P. Kunstadt • Diane Meyer • Ken Rosenthal
Opening Reception: January 8, 6pm–8pm

ONE | UNIQUE PHOTOGRAPHS
January 7-February 14, 2015
KLOMPCHING GALLERY
111 Front Street, Brooklyn

4.12.2014

AIPAD 2014: Touring With Students

 Monroe Gallery's Sidney Monroe, Booth #421

SVA Photography student, Mo Walbrook, Monroe Gallery

Steven Kasher Gallery, Booth #205

SVA Student, Pelham Goddard, KlompChing Gallery

KlompChing Gallery, Debra Klomp and Darren Ching, Booth #216

Chris McCaw, series Sunburned
Yossi Milo Gallery, Booth #

Photograph by Saul Leiter
Howard Greenberg Gallery, Booth #401

AIPAD Photography Show
through Sunday, April 13, 2014

more later...


1.04.2014

PAULA McCARTNEY: A Field Guide to Snow + Ice opens at KLOMPCHING Gallery

White Sands #4, 2009  © Paula McCartney 
Image: courtesy of Klompching Gallery, New York


 Black Ice #1 and Black Ice #2, 2011 © Paula McCartney
Image: courtesy of Klompching Gallery, New York


 Backyard Snow #2, 2010  © Paula McCartney 
Image: courtesy of Klompching Gallery, New York


“I see winter everywhere, in every environment, in every season and categorize it by pattern, shape, and line rather than merely by substance”– Paula McCartney

A Field Guide to Snow and Ice is a sophisticated set of photographs, continuing Paula McCartney’s visual exploration of truth and fabrication in the photographic image and natural world. The 29 artworks that make up the exhibit at KLOMPCHING GALLERY, are a sequential installation of modestly-sized photographs, interweaving natural elements and constructed environments—we see snowfalls, frozen waterfalls, stalagmites and snowdrifts.

McCartney’s representation of abstracted elements, reveal a nuanced ambiguity of scale and substance, causing what has been photographed, to transcend its origin. This is not an exhibition to take for granted, but one to explore carefully, particularly its use of a collapse between the creative and scientific languages.

Paula McCartney
A Field Guide to Snow and Ice
January 10 – February 15, 2014
Artist Reception: Thursday, January 9, 6m–8pm

111 Front Street, Brooklyn

Paula McCartney gained an MFA in Photography from the San Francisco Art Institute in California (2002). She has been the recipient of several awards including a 2013-2014 MCP/McKnight Artist Fellowship. McCartney’s photographs have been widely exhibited and her work is held in the collections of the Deutsche Bank, Walker Art Center, MOMA and Yale University amongst others. Accompanying the exhibition is On Thin Ice, In A Blizzarda limited edition artist book, featuring a selection of photographs from A Field Guide to Snow and Ice. (Text: courtesy of Klompching Gallery)

12.10.2013

PHONE IN BIDS: Tonights Friends of Friends Photography Auction Absentee Bidding

S144 Saul Leiter
Street Scene, 1963
C-print. Printed in 2002. 13½ x 9". Signed in ink on the verso
Estimate $4,000. Donated by the artist courtesy of Howard Greenberg Gallery
http://www.howardgreenberg.com

S150 Daido Moriyama
Untitled from the series Japan: A Photo Theater, 1968
Gelatin silver print. Printed in 2012. 13 x 9⅛". Signed in pencil on the verso
Framed. Estimate $3,000. Donated by the artist courtesy of Daido Moriyama
Photo Foundation. www.moriyamadaido.com

 S75 Ken Rosenthal
Not Dark Yet #ZVB-52-9, 2002
Gelatin silver print. Printed in 2002. 15 x 15"
Signed, titled, editioned and year of work in pencil on the verso
Edition no. 4/25. Estimate $1,000
Donated by the artist courtesy of Klompching Gallery and Anne Reed Gallery

S85 Richard Gere
Gilmore Pond II, 2012
Pigment print. 6¼ x 9½". Signed and titled in pencil on the verso
Estimate $1,600. Donated by the artist courtesy of The Gere Foundation
www.gerefoundation.org

Sign up NOW! for Absentee and Phone Bidding
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Friends Without A Border
16th Annual Friends of Friends Photography Auction
December 10, 2013, 6-8:30 p.m.
Metropolitan Pavilion, NY