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PHILLIP GUTMAN Invasion of the Pines

From June 06, 2024 to July 12, 2024
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PHILLIP GUTMAN Invasion of the Pines
508 - 526 West 26th Street
New York, NY 10001
Daniel Cooney Fine Art celebrates Pride Month and the gallery’s 20th Anniversary with a debut solo exhibition by Phillip Gutman titled “Invasion of the Pines”. Gutman’s first monograph by the same title will also be released in June. The exhibition consists of 27 large-scale black and white and color photographs hand printed by the artist himself. The subjects are glorious drag queens who have made the annual July 4th pilgrimage to Fire Island Pines from Cherry Grove by boat, a ritual that originated as an act of protest on July 4th, 1976, the American Bicentennial.

Fire Island is a narrow barrier island that runs parallel along New York’s Long Island. In the mid-20th century two communities, Cherry Grove and Fire Island Pines, developed as Queer enclaves. People of all stripes came to the hamlets for the summer to live and socialize in a manner that would have been relegated to the closet mere miles away on the mainland.

The ritual known as the Invasion of the Pines began one summer evening in 1976. A resident of Cherry Grove named Teri Warren was denied service at The Blue Whale restaurant, a Fire Island Pines establishment. Teri was denied service because they came to the restaurant dressed in drag.

On July 4th, 1976, a group of Cherry Grove residents, dressed in drag, embarked by boat to protest this injustice by their sister community. Upon arrival in the Fire Island Pines Harbor, the invading queens gathered and Thom Hansen, known by their drag name Panzi, blessed the harbor and libations were served to the invading queens. This was the beginning of a tradition that exists still today, almost fifty years later.

The Invasion is a vestige of our collective queer history, an intergenerational exchange between those who still remember July 4th, 1976, and those who come to the island now to witness and share in this passage, a ritual born out of resistance.

Phillip Gutman moved to New York from Melbourne Florida to attend school in 2005 and graduated from ICP in 2009. A stark departure from his hometown, the first work he created was about the characters and mentors who shaped his point of view, and the muses he found in the queer spaces he frequented.

Phillip’s work focuses on using photography and film to tell stories about identity, Queer history, and its rituals. His practice prioritizes a slower, more decisive, analog approach to the craft of photography. The risk and the ritual of making photographs is intrinsic to his work.

 Daniel Cooney Fine Art opened in May 2004 at 511 West 25th Street in Chelsea with a mission to advance the visibility of emerging artists. Over time we have evolved to include many other groups of under recognized artists. We have proudly worked with numerous LGBTQ+ artists and estates, artists impacted by HIV/AIDS, women artists, political and activist artists, incarcerated artists and exhibited unknown work by highly visible artists. Our 20th year celebration serves as an opportunity to expand and amplify this important work.
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Issue #46
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Exhibitions Closing Soon

Marlene McCarty and Donald Moffett: ONE DAY
Alice Austen House Museum | Staten Island, NY
From March 01, 2025 to May 24, 2025
Renowned artists Marlene McCarty and Donald Moffett present a previously unseen photo series from the early 1990s at the Alice Austen House. McCarty and Moffett's creative partnership began within the AIDS activist collective Gran Fury, which was the graphic arm of ACTUP (AIDS Coalition to Unleash Power). The collective’s public art interventions used the language of advertising and art to expose the AIDS epidemic as both a health crisis and a political disaster. This shared experience sparked the duo to establish Bureau, a cross-disciplinary design studio in New York City that operated from 1989 to 2001. Bureau's work spanned print design, film titles, and educational initiatives. In 1992, McCarty and Moffett were invited by Princeton University School of Architecture to design the university's Lecture Series Calendar. Princeton's long history, dating back to 1746 and its status as one of the original colonial colleges, inspired the artists to reconsider and queer early American history. For their project, McCarty and Moffett, dressed as pilgrims and women, ventured to the North Fork of Long Island with Bureau colleagues for a photo session, using unstable Polaroid 35mm positive film. While only two images were selected for the Princeton calendar, the remainder of the photos, hundreds of slides in total, were stored away. Over time, the film emulsion naturally deteriorated, becoming a dynamic participant in the artwork itself. For the first time since that 1992 photoshoot, new archival pigment prints of ten performative tableaux from the series will be on display at the Alice Austen House Museum, offering a unique glimpse into McCarty and Moffett’s visionary work. Marlene McCarty and Donald Moffett: One Day is supported by New York State Council on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New York State Legislature, and public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs, in partnership with the City Council, Lily Auchincloss Foundation and the Teiger Foundation. Image: © Marlene McCarty and Donald Moffett
Rahim Fortune: Reflections
Howard Greenberg Gallery | New York, NY
From March 22, 2025 to May 24, 2025
"Reflections" marks the first solo exhibition of photographer Rahim Fortune, a Texas native whose work examines the visual and cultural narratives of the American South. Over the past decade, Fortune has blended documentary and personal storytelling to investigate themes of collective history, migration, and identity. This exhibition presents two major series: *I Can't Stand to See You Cry* (2021) and *Hardtack* (2024), offering a deep dive into the landscapes, communities, and traditions that shape his artistic vision. Born in 1994 and a citizen of the Chickasaw Nation of Oklahoma, Fortune uses photography to explore fundamental questions of American identity. His images, often centered on individual families and communities, trace the shifting geographies of migration and resettlement, revealing how history is inscribed onto the landscapes of Texas and the broader South. His 2021 book, *I Can’t Stand to See You Cry*, published by Loose Joints, was shortlisted for the Paris Photo-Aperture Photobook of the Year Award and won the Rencontres d'Arles Louis Roederer Discovery Award in 2022. His latest monograph, *Hardtack* (2024), has received international recognition, earning a nomination for the Deutsche Börse Photography Foundation Prize 2025. Fortune’s work is held in prestigious collections, including the High Museum of Art, LUMA Arles, the Victoria and Albert Museum, and the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. He is represented by Sasha Wolf Projects in New York. *I Can’t Stand to See You Cry* captures life across Texas and its neighboring states, portraying individuals navigating personal and societal challenges amid environmental and health crises. Fortune’s approach, grounded in intimate encounters, explores the tension between public and private life while reflecting on themes of loss, resilience, and self-discovery. The series is a deeply autobiographical meditation on a transformative period in the artist’s life—marked by a cross-country move, the loss of a parent, and a shifting sense of identity. In *Hardtack*, Fortune examines his community’s historical relationship with photography by drawing from the aesthetics of vernacular and archival imagery. Rather than focusing solely on historic sites, he engages with the cultural and emotional weight these places carry, illustrating the resilience of Black communities in the face of adversity and joy. A key theme in the series is the portrayal of coming-of-age traditions—young bull riders, praise dancers, and pageant queens—all embodying a sense of continuity and pride. Fortune’s lens dignifies these cultural rites, highlighting the discipline, creativity, and intergenerational exchange that sustain them. Through his work, he bridges past and present, revealing the depth and complexity of Black life in the American South. Image: © Rahim Fortune
Christopher Makos: Party
Daniel Cooney Fine Art | Santa Fe, NM
From April 05, 2025 to May 24, 2025
Daniel Cooney Fine Art is beyond thrilled to announce our third solo exhibition (our first in Santa Fe) by Christopher Makos titled PARTY. The exhibition features unseen vintage work from the artist’s early career. PARTY features a selection of over 40 unique vintage photographs, that celebrate the artist’s ethos: daring, climactic and outrageous. Makos has spent the past five decades in the company of legendary cultural icons, most famously as confidant to Andy Warhol and as a key member of the Factory from 1976-86. His position in this notorious circle gained him access to everyone that was anyone including models, celebrities and underground royalty. The likes of Divine, Steven Tyler, Debbie Harry, Peter Berlin, Richard Gallo, Georgia O’Keefe and other tantalizing figures mingle on the gallery walls. Never satisfied as just an observer Makos brazenly includes multiple self-portraits in this exhibition. Young surfer boy Makos can be seen in languid repose with long blonde hair, loyal dog “Snake” at his side, sporting a pair of cowboy boots and nothing else. In another image, the photographer is positioned bare-assed between two mirrors, camera in hand, admiring himself from behind. In a photograph titled Self-Portrait I, 1970s, a nude Makos, seen from the chest down “tucks” exploring his androgynous side in a mirrored hotel room. Perhaps even more exciting are numerous one of a kind darkroom compositions including double portraits of hustlers, artists, drag queens, nude muscle boys and more. Equally compelling is the original contact sheet from Makos’s infamous “Andy in Drag” photoshoot revealing the Father of Pop Art in a curly wig and white bedsheet complete with Makos’s mark ups in grease pencil. Makos is the author of 18 books including White Trash (1977), Warhol/Makos In Context (2007), Christopher Makos Polaroids (2009) and Everything: The Black and White Monograph (2014). His work has been published in Interview, Rolling Stone, House & Garden, Connoisseur, New York Magazine, Esquire, Genre and People. His works have been exhibited at the Brooklyn Museum, the Tate Modern, The Whitney Museum of American Art, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, The National Gallery and The Guggenheim Museum, Bilbao.
Richard Avedon: Among Creatives
Phoenix Art Museum | Phoenix, AZ
From December 06, 2024 to May 25, 2025
Richard Avedon: Among Creatives brings together over 50 works from the collection of the Center for Creative Photography (CCP), celebrating the iconic photographer’s masterful portraits of artists, writers, actors, and other visionaries, alongside his groundbreaking contributions to fashion photography. Born in New York City, Richard Avedon (1923–2004) developed an early passion for photography, first making his mark in the industry through his work for Harper’s Bazaar. Over time, his lens turned toward the most influential cultural figures of his era—capturing fellow creatives across art, literature, music, film, and design. Through his stark, revealing portraits, Avedon stripped away glamour and artifice, urging viewers to confront the nuances between public identity and private self. Avedon, a celebrity in his own right, famously remarked, “My portraits are more about me than they are about the people I photograph.” His images of creative individuals, in particular, reflect his own meditations on fame, mortality, and artistic legacy. Spanning both portraiture and fashion photography, this exhibition highlights Avedon’s singular ability to capture artistry in all its forms—offering an intimate, unfiltered glimpse into the lives of those who shaped culture as much as he did. Image: Richard Avedon, Marian Anderson, contralto, New York, June 30, 1955. Gelatin silver print. Center for Creative Photography, University of Arizona: Purchase, 87.34.1. Copyright © The Richard Avedon Foundation
Kelli Connell: Pictures for Charis
Cleveland Museum of Art | Cleveland, OH
From January 26, 2025 to May 25, 2025
In Pictures for Charis, American photographer Kelli Connell reimagines the relationship between writer Charis Wilson (pronounced CARE-iss) and photographer Edward Weston by delving into Wilson’s writings and Weston’s iconic images of the Western landscape and the female form. Connell intertwines the stories of Wilson and Weston with her own relationship with her partner at the time, Betsy Odom, offering a fresh, contemporary queer and feminist lens on the couple’s dynamic. Guided by the publications of Weston and Wilson, Connell and Odom recreate portrait and landscape photographs at the locations where the couple once lived, worked, and shared time together. The exhibition contrasts Connell’s new images with Weston's classic figure studies and landscapes from 1934 to 1945, a pivotal period in his career during his relationship with Wilson. The accompanying monograph, Kelli Connell: Pictures for Charis (2024), co-published by Aperture and the Center for Creative Photography, includes Connell’s reflections, portraits of Odom, newly captured landscape views, and original materials from both Wilson and Weston, further expanding on the depth of the exploration. Image: Betsy, Lake Ediza, 2015. Kelli Connell (American, b. 1974). Pigmented inkjet print; 101.6 x 127 cm (40 x 50 in.). High Museum of Art, Atlanta; Purchase with funds from the Friends of Photography © Kelli Connell
Collection in Focus: Banu Cennetoğlu
Walker Art Center | Minneapolis, MN
From December 12, 2024 to May 25, 2025
Banu Cennetoğlu (Turkey, b. 1970) is known for her cross-disciplinary practice that delves into the collection, circulation, and presentation of data, images, and information. By focusing on the smallest details, she brings a humanizing lens to global geopolitical issues that might otherwise be reduced to mere statistics. In her work 1 January 1970 – 21 March 2018 · H O W B E I T · Guilty feet have got no rhythm · Keçiboynuzu · AS IS · MurMur · I measure every grief I meet · Taq u Raq · A piercing Comfort it affords · Stitch · Made in Fall · Yes. But. We had a golden heart. · One day soon I’m gonna tell the moon about the crying game (2018), Cennetoğlu explores the interplay between personal memory and historical narrative. The video installation H O W B E I T compiles a decade's worth of visual archives, spanning from June 10, 2006, to March 21, 2018. It weaves together stills and moving images sourced from her cell phones, computers, cameras, and hard drives, resulting in what Cennetoğlu describes as an “intro-spective.” The earliest files in the work document the year before Cennetoğlu first shared The List, an ongoing project by UNITED for Intercultural Action, which tracks the deaths of over 60,620 migrants seeking refuge in Europe since 1993. The final files in the series coincide with the lead-up to Nowruz, the Persian New Year, which also marks the production deadline for her first exhibition of this work. Throughout the installation, political themes coexist with everyday moments and vibrant encounters, rejecting boundaries and hierarchies. In doing so, Cennetoğlu invites viewers to reflect on their own experiences of navigating complex realities. HOWBEIT spans more than 127 hours of footage, encompassing 46,685 digital files, presented chronologically. The immersive nature of the work encourages visitors to return multiple times, each time encountering a different segment of the narrative.
MAIN STRƎƎT: The Lost Dream of Route 66 Photographs by Edward Keating
Edition One Gallery | Santa Fe, NM
From May 02, 2025 to May 30, 2025
MAIN STRƎƎT: The Lost Dream of Route 66, is an exhibition of photographs by Pulitzer Prize-winning photographer Edward Keating. The exhibition is accompanied by Keating’s eponymous book of 84 photographs (Damiani, 2018). MAIN STRƎƎT: is the result of 11 years of travel along Route 66 — the 2,400-mile stretch between Chicago and Santa Monica. Called the “mother road” in John Steinbeck's The Grapes of Wrath, Route 66 has inspired countless artists and writers, including Andy Warhol and Jack Kerouac. Following the path of migrant farmers and others, Keating has ventured westward and back along Route 66, documenting the lives of Americans along the way. Keating approaches the route as both a journalist and memoirist. His photographs bring attention to the lives and myths scattered along the stretch of Route 66 and serve as a metaphor for the deterioration of middle-class America. For New York Times journalist Charles LeDuff, “This book is about those who traveled its length and those who settled along the way, wherever their bones and their broken cars dropped them.” His book is also personal mythology, constructed from the artist’s recollections of the road: Keating's mother grew up in Saint Louis along Route 66 where her father owned the city’s first Ford dealership. In his early 20s, he embarked on a cross-country trip on Route 66, but found himself, rock-bottom, in a broken-down motel in Flagstaff, Arizona. In 2000, he returned to Route 66 as a New York Times staff photographer, traversing all 2,400 miles in three weeks. The book is a milestone for an artist who has spent a life wandering along the main streets and back roads of America’s most mythic highway Edward Keating had served as a photojournalist for nearly 40 years for such publications as the New York Times, New York Magazine, Vanity Fair, and Time Magazine. In 2001, Keating received the Pulitzer Prize for Breaking News Photography, as well as the John Faber Award for International Reporting, Overseas Press Club, for his series of photographs on the September 11 attacks. He additionally shared the 2000 Pulitzer Prize for National Reporting with New York Times staff for the series, “How Race is Lived in America,” and was nominated for the Pulitzer Prize for the 1997 series “Vows,” co-authored with Lois Smith Brady. In 2003, Keating joined Contact Press Images photography agency. MAIN STREET was Keating’s sixth monograph. Tragically, Keating died of cancer in Sept 2021, contracted as a result of his long exposure to toxic materials at Ground Zero in the days after 9/11. He was 65. Image: Ed Keating, October, 2018 by Mark Berndt
It Matters by Jan Janssen
All About Photo Showroom | Los Angeles, CA
From May 01, 2025 to May 30, 2025
All About Photo presents It Matters by Jan Janssen, on view throughout May 2025 — a moving journey across Europe capturing the shared moments of humanity that connect us all. It Matters It Matters' or 'Pieces of Europe' is a long-term photography project, started in 2016. In this series, I show the moments I recognise in my fellow human beings. Things that are common to our human existence, such as love, play, growing up, loss and need for contact. Things that are present everywhere in the world, in anyone. Several times a year, I travel to destinations in Central and Eastern Europe. For these photos, I travelled to Turkey, Azerbaijan, and Armenia, among others. Once arrived in the country, I work together with the locals to find entry into these communities. I find it very important that I approach them as an equal, and not as a western outsider just using them to take a photo. I build a bond with my portrayed people by following them for weeks, sometimes months. I may return regularly after my visit or stay in touch with my portraits online or remotely. Through this long-term contact, I get to know their traits and discover when they are at their most beautiful, their most vulnerable or their purest. It is at these moments that the most beautiful photos are created. The series is growing and will culminate in a book of the same name in 2026. Travelling is inseparable from my practice. It is an opportunity to discover who I am. By travelling to other places, I seek precisely the things we have in common. It is also a way for me to remind myself of the gratitude of a simple existence in places elsewhere in the world: things I take for granted in the West.
Malick Sidibé: Regardez Moi
Jack Shainman Gallery | New York, NY
From April 17, 2025 to May 31, 2025
Jack Shainman Gallery is thrilled to announce Regardez-moi, an exhibition of photographs by the Malian photographer Malick Sidibé. The exhibition, the title of which translates to "Look at Me", marks the gallery's latest celebration of Sidibé’s unparalleled ability to capture the heartbeat of Bamako, Mali following the country’s liberation from colonial rule in 1960. Featuring a vibrant selection of photographs — some of which have never before been exhibited — this presentation invites viewers into the bustling parties, joyous gatherings, and tender moments that defined the transformative era of a young nation relishing to establish its own national identity. In today’s cultural climate, where visibility and representation hold immense weight, Sidibé’s work and legacy remain as significant as ever. Presented in conjunction with this exhibition is the publication of Painted Frames, a monograph by Loose Joints, and the first exploration of Sidibé’s synergistic painted frame photographs. In these works, Sidibe collaborated with local Malian artists to blend his iconic photography with the traditional West African art of reverse-glass painting. Regardez-moi presents a selection of these painted frames; reaffirming the sanctity of African photography as a medium of memory and identity. The publication also features an essay by writer, independent researcher, and collector-archivist Amy Sall, in which she makes a case for the continued and ever-expanding importance of Sidibé’s oeuvre: “Malick Sidibé was witness to, and preserver of, a nascent, burgeoning postcolonial society in which a new modernity was being constructed by way of transcultural osmosis. From his studio to the soirées, and even to the banks of the Niger River, Sidibé and his camera were at the center of it all. He was not only chronicling Malian history and culture, but making pivotal contributions to it…. The night clubs, living rooms, and courtyards he photographed were spaces of freedom and community. Sidibé’s oeuvre reflects dialectic expressions of being because he captured his subjects as their imagined and authentic selves. From his widely recognized Nuit de Noël (Christmas Eve, Happy Club) (1963) to his series Vues de dos, the framed images carry the same undercurrents of power and rebellion, tenderness and joy that flow throughout Sidibé’s entire archive.” Regardez-moi underscores Sidibé’s role as a pioneer who sculpted the visual identity of the African diaspora, offering a window into a Malian nation that boldly joined a global youth movement. His photographs transcend their historical context, speaking to contemporary dialogues about identity, agency, and the power of being seen. Sidibé's photographs don’t just freeze time, they transform these scenes into vibrant stages where his subjects — young couples excited to be married, or older men or women reclaiming their freedom of expression — assert their presence and identity. In Dansez le Twist (1963-2010), Sidibé captures a young man and a woman in a state of joy while dancing the twist, an American rock ‘n’ roll dance that became a global cultural phenomenon from 1959 to the early 1960s, which was known for its simple yet lively steps that encouraged freedom of movement and expression. By providing his subjects with ways to be seen and celebrated, Sidibé’s lens offers a powerful counterpoint to our tech-filtered world, reminding viewers of the raw, unscripted joy of human connection. One of Sidibé most celebrated series, Vues de Dos — with examples from the series held in the collections of numerous museums such as the Getty Museum, The National Gallery of Art, as well as the Metropolitan Museum of Art — provides viewers with a deeper understanding of the photographer’s curatorial eye, depicting women in his studio with their bare backs to the camera against a signature backdrop of striped walls. Sidibé’s photography serves as both a reflector and a loudspeaker, magnifying the vibrant, intimate essence of Bamako’s people in the wake of gaining independence from French colonial rule. The works capture a liberated people that resonates with a contemporary urgency now more than ever.
Brian Ulrich: The Centurion
Pictura Gallery | Bloomington, IN
From April 04, 2025 to May 31, 2025
The Centurion refers to a fabled and exclusive credit card only available to a select few of the ultra wealthy. It’s also the title of Brian Ulrich’s newest photographic series, which examines the lure of exclusivity in the world of extreme luxury. Ulrich has photographed the American culture of commerce and consumption for over a decade. The Centurion turns to the country’s fascination with wealth and all its promises.
TIME CAPSULE: Ronit Porat - Man Ray
L'Space Gallery | New York, NY
From April 10, 2025 to May 31, 2025
L’Space Gallery proudly presents TIME CAPSULE, the first U.S. solo exhibition by Israeli artist Ronit Porat, on view from April 10 to May 31, 2025. The exhibition will be accompanied by a curated selection of 1920s-era vintage photographs by Man Ray. TIME CAPSULE opens with a public reception on Thursday, April 10. Porat’s work delves into Germany’s interwar period (1919–1933), a time of intense social transformation and photographic experimentation. Through an intricate process of collecting, layering, and reassembling archival materials—including postcards, newspapers, and historical documents—she constructs poetic collages and immersive installations that blur the boundaries between personal memory and historical narrative. Deeply influenced by the Weimar Republic era, Porat explores a period when photography both empowered and objectified, shaping new representations of the human body in advertising, art, and surveillance. This era’s themes resonate with her own personal history and the communal life of the kibbutz where she was born. TIME CAPSULE draws from her most significant series of the past decade, offering a layered visual dialogue on identity, power structures, and the intersection of personal and collective memory. At the heart of the exhibition is Porat’s exploration of crime photography—specifically, a chilling 1931 murder case in Berlin. A sixteen-year-old girl, Lieschen Neumann, along with two accomplices, killed a watchmaker named Fritz Ulbrich. The investigation revealed that Ulbrich had been operating a secret photography studio in the back of his shop, where he took exploitative images of young women, including Neumann. These photographs, produced in an era when photography was increasingly used for surveillance and social control, serve as a foundation for Porat’s examination of visual manipulation and historical power dynamics. Porat’s artistic practice is inherently fragmented and non-linear, incorporating forensic imagery, historical documentation, and elements of investigative storytelling. Her process begins in photo archives, where she gathers and recontextualizes images, merging disparate histories with personal autobiographical references. She first assembles these into “index sheets,” which then take shape as intricate collages and large-scale mural installations. Rather than recounting history in a traditional sense, Porat seeks to map human behavioral patterns and the shifting roles of victim and perpetrator—where the photographic gaze plays a pivotal role in constructing power and identity. TIME CAPSULE compels viewers to question the truthfulness of images and the narratives they shape. Alongside Porat’s work, the exhibition features a selection of Man Ray’s photographs from the 1920s and 1930s, a period of radical artistic exploration after his move to Paris in 1921. His avant-garde approach to the female form—oscillating between objectification and creative liberation—parallels Porat’s interrogation of gender, power, and representation. Both Porat and Man Ray navigate the complexities of sexuality, identity, and perception. Where Man Ray’s poetic depictions of desire and fantasy examine the fluidity of the human form, Porat’s archival compositions deconstruct the mechanisms that define and control it. Together, their works create a compelling dialogue about the evolving portrayal of women in photography—one that examines the tension between objectification and agency, history and reinvention. Image: Ronit Porat, Untititled, 2023, Photographic Collage © Ronit Porat
2024 CPA Artist Grant Recipients
The Center for Photographic Art (CFPA) | Carmel, CA
From May 10, 2025 to June 01, 2025
The Center for Photographic Art is pleased to present the work of the 2024 CPA Artist Grant Recipients. Visit the gallery to see new photographs, installations, and mixed media pieces by grantees Debra Achen, Matthew Finley, Maria Isabel LeBlanc, and Katie Shapiro. All four artists will be speaking about their projects prior to the opening reception in a special artist talk in Carpenter Hall at 3pm, so don't miss this opportunity to hear these fearless photographic artists talk about their processes and their journeys. We are honored and excited to support these talented artists and bring their work to Carmel. Image: Maria Isabel LeBlanc, Sweet Kiwi
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