67 Shore Road
Winchester, MA 01890
Joy Bush, Anton Gautama, Judi Iranyi, Charles Mintz, Colleen Mullins, Roberta Neidigh, Jane Szabo, Brandy Trigueros, Kathleen Tunnell Handel, Ira Wagner and Melanie Walker
As we head back inside after a summer exploring outdoors and the world around us,
The Griffin Museum of Photography in Winchester, Massachusetts showcases eleven
photographers' presenting solo exhibitions under the overarching idea of "Home".
Home Views opens on Tuesday October 26th contrasting eleven different visions of the
emotional and physical spaces we inhabit.
During the course of the exhibition, we will hear from these eleven artists with a
series of panels and artist talks, telling their stories and showcasing the works
from each of their series featured here.
Joy Bush- Places I Never Lived
The series Places I Never Lived is an exploration of the way that people put their
mark on the world. While photographing the facade of each house in a sleuthlike
fashion, I fantasize about who lives there and what life is like on the inside. It
is not spying or voyeurism. It is about imaging my life in a different place.
Anton Gautama - Selections from Home Sweet Home
Home Sweet Home is a one-year journey into the evolution of the Chinese-
Indonesian culture. It is the story of a harmonious marriage of two beautiful
cultures, three centuries in-the-making. It was not a journey without obstacles,
but it certainly was one with countless rewards.
Judi Iranyi - Mantel
For some time, I have been interested in mantels and fireplaces and the
symbolisms they represent. In all my travels, I have photographed fireplaces and
mantels throughout the world. Some cultures believe them to be a shrine, idols
or images of deities were placed on the mantle, a fire was lit, prayers were
offered and, in some cultures, offerings were made by burning possessions or
trinkets of a departed person.
Charles Mintz - Lustron Stories
Lustron Stories video explores the course of the Great American Dream since
that unique time immediately after the Second World War. At the same time, it
looks at the history of prefab and manufactured housing that began with the
Bauhaus ideal of using industrial methods and materials to produce affordable
housing.
Colleen Mullins - The Bone of Her Nose
The Bone of Her Nose documents a phenomenon, I call, the grayification of San
Francisco. The genesis of this work was my volunteer work pruning trees with the
Friends of the Urban Forest, starting in 2015. This work brought me to
neighborhoods throughout the city, and everywhere I went, massive renovation
was happening, or already had happened. The end result was always the same:
gray exteriors, punctuated with sans-serif fonts for house numbers, a brightly
colored door, and horizontally-slatted redwood garage doors or glass variants.
Roberta Neidigh - Property Line
Where two plots of suburban land meet, a visual dialogue begins. This point of
contact, on the property line, reveals communication between neighbors
through landscape as an extension of the self. There is no margin here. Are we
connected or divided by the place our land touches the land of another? How
is this line drawn? In this body of work, I explore the way we protect our
boundaries by creating a buffer in a place that has none, and how we cling
more strongly to our own identity as our space near its edge.
Jane Szabo - Somewhere Else
The series Somewhere Else maps an emotional route of exploration and escape.
When I am here, I want to be there. Yet once I get there, I am left to wonder if
this place answers or fulfills my quest. Somewhere Else features simply made
homes covered in a wide array of maps, photographed in natural settings and
within architectural interiors. The maps that cover these homes do not reflect the
location of the image, but rather lead back to places I explored as a child or
long to escape to in the future.
Brandy Trigueros - There's No Other Like Your Mother
Through memory, metaphor, and imagined destinies, "There's No Other Like
Your Mother" seeks to explore the complexities and constructs of female identity
and the maternal subject as I reconceive my fertile state of being. The sudden
death of my mother prompted the (re)birth of my artistic self at the age of 29
and the emergence of this series which contemplates my own shifting identity,
once firmly rooted in the domestic tradition but now seemingly unmoored.
Kathleen Tunnell Handel - Where the Heart Is: Portraits from Vernacular
American Trailer and Mobile Home Parks
As the availability of affordable housing continues to erode, and housing and
financial instability reach crisis proportions, Where the Heart Is: Portraits from
Vernacular American Trailer and Mobile Home Parks investigates this deeply
affected, primarily American housing form. This ongoing photographic study
challenges the ingrained stereotyping of both the estimated 20 million
Americans who live in manufactured housing (as stigmatized trailer and mobile
homes are being rebranded) as well as of the rapidly vanishing mobile home
parks themselves within which this project is focused.
Ira Wagner - Twinhouses of the Great Northeast
The Twinhouses of The Great Northeast neighborhood of Philadelphia
reflect how people share a common border. Some families choose to mark their space with a fence or shrubbery. Others differentiate themselves with varying
architectural elements and subtle changes to trim, windows and paint colors.
One family chooses to hide completely behind a tall hedge; another lives in
front of the house with common backyard elements - chairs, grills, patio tables,
open for all to see. Common upkeep, such as mowing the lawn, ends at a
rough approximation of the property line rather than being shared. One side of
a structure shows pride of ownership, the other is missing a shutter on a window.
When borders are such an important issue in the world, these images reflect a
human inclination to mark and delineate one's space rather than share it.
Melanie Walker - Wanderlust
Connected by metaphor, place and association, disparate images are woven
together as are life experiences in dreams. Wanderings through memory, body,
mind and world are synchronized into a rhythm of thought, like a chord...walking
and falling...
The word wanderlust designates a strong desire for and an impulse to wander.
This body of work is the result of allowing myself to wander through influences,
impulses and all of those ideas that I left behind on the cutting room floor, so to
speak.
The works are drawn from images that I have taken over the years during my
wanderings. This work combines landscape images and glimpses of daily routine
in ways that address the layered and fragile nature of time, sense of place and
memory. Home is a memory...