Oh l’amour ~ Contemporary Photography from the Stéphane Janssen Collection |
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| Wednesday, 26 November 2008 01:32 |
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“The Center for Creative Photography is pleased to have this opportunity to display contemporary photography as part of our mission to represent all aspects of the medium and its history,” said Britt Salvesen, Director and Chief Curator for the Center. Combining elements of fantasy and physicality, exuberance and emotion, these photographs depict love in myriad forms and guises. Although this theme has not been a literal one guiding the collector’s intent, it effectively captures the affirmative aspects of his patronage. Janssen discovered his vocation at age sixteen, when he purchased a small painting by Spanish artist Oscar Dominguez. Photography became a special interest in around 1993. Among the 32 international artists included in Oh l’amour are: Gregory Crewdson, Anthony Goicolea, Zhang Huan, Philip-Lorca diCorcia, Sally Mann, Vik Muniz, Pierre et Gilles, Spencer Tunick, Hellen van Meene, Charles White, and Joel-Peter Witkin. The exhibition totals 52 works, ranging in size from 6 x 6 inches to 72 x 97 inches. Visitors are advised that some artworks include nude imagery and potentially challenging content. Janssen has acquired selected earlier examples along with new work by leading and emerging artists. A staged image of David and Goliath, made by George Platt Lynes in 1937, makes a perfect comparison with Charlie White’s Champion, a large-scale vision of the same theme made in 2005. Several artists in the Janssen Collection are also represented in the CCP’s permanent collection and have appeared in previous exhibitions here: Duane Michals, Vik Muniz, and Arthur Tress, among others. Janssen’s dedication to supporting individual artists over many years is in keeping with the CCP’s archival mission. In both collections, the breadth of an artist’s body of work is as important as the exceptional pieces that become well known. The Center for Creative Photography's Polaroid Library is one of the world's greatest collections of photographic materials. It holds more than 26,000 volumes on the history of photography along with more than 100 periodicals, rare books, and the personal book collections of photographers such as W. Eugene Smith. Of special note is an exceptional collection of nearly 1,000 artists' books that use photography, hundreds of hours of videotaped lectures at the Center by photographers, and oral histories related to photography that can be screened in the Library video viewing room, and a rare book room. Visit : www.creativephotography.org/ Click on logo below to add this article to your favorite Social Website ~ |
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“The Center for Creative Photography is pleased to have this opportunity to display contemporary photography as part of our mission to represent all aspects of the medium and its history,” said Britt Salvesen, Director and Chief Curator for the Center. Combining elements of fantasy and physicality, exuberance and emotion, these photographs depict love in myriad forms and guises. Although this theme has not been a literal one guiding the collector’s intent, it effectively captures the affirmative aspects of his patronage.
Janssen has acquired selected earlier examples along with new work by leading and emerging artists. A staged image of David and Goliath, made by George Platt Lynes in 1937, makes a perfect comparison with Charlie White’s Champion, a large-scale vision of the same theme made in 2005. Several artists in the Janssen Collection are also represented in the CCP’s permanent collection and have appeared in previous exhibitions here: Duane Michals, Vik Muniz, and Arthur Tress, among others. Janssen’s dedication to supporting individual artists over many years is in keeping with the CCP’s archival mission. In both collections, the breadth of an artist’s body of work is as important as the exceptional pieces that become well known. 
