First Place
“Patient Records”
Matthew Emmett, Reading, United Kingdom
JUROR STATEMENT: The large scale of the print fits the content of open, and apparently emptied, cupboard doors. Their contents spilled onto the floor seemingly echo now not needed information, records of lives and perhaps a catalogue of actions, deeds or accounts. The cupboards, well over a hundred, are
stacked high, obviously necessitating a ladder and each with a designated nameplate on the beautiful woodwork. The situation, the jetsam, reminded me of a Kafka novel such as “The Trial”. It is as if one must wait and wait for a result never to attain it. And to make it more obscure, if it was attained it is now jettisoned. Too, there is a parallel to today with a billion and half of Earth’s 8 billion each spending an hour a day from their compartment of a computer streaming thoughts out into a paperless void. Yes, null and void as culture moves on….so the size of this image reflects the immensity of what it implies, and like many a photograph there is a melancholic tone, yet a wonder of what was it that once was important and now relegated to obscurity. History has been disarmed.
ARTIST STATEMENT: The conditions and treatments of this abandoned Italian asylum's former patients lie scattered across the floor in an administration wing. The patients and staff all left the asylum decades before, but echoes of their passing can be found, helping to tell the building’s story.
WEBSITE: www.forgottenheritage.co.uk
Second Place
“Tension No. 4”
Zsolt Batori, Budapest, Hungary
JUROR STATEMENT: Both of the Second Place Winning images reminded me of a science fiction novel -- the colossal building “Pointing Skyward” as Mr. Mason titles his work and Mr. Batori’s “Tension No. 4.” Each photograph, appropriately silver gelatin prints in well printed qualities of chiaroscuro, inspires the viewer to be in awe. Additionally, they both are surreal images indicating a soulless society such as a hive…yes, a hive mentality. Are we trapped? Will our lives be in hexagonal cells with us devouring. These images harbor an insidious feeling not unlike the drink in Aldous Huzley’s Brave New World” called SOMA, the word related to the Latin somna, or sleep. Be aware, like all heroes and heroines and only then can you be safe.
In “Tension No. 4”, Mr. Batori places us smack dab in the middle of a maze, on a track and about to be whizzed into a tunnel going where we do not know. The articulation of the lit segmented line conveys a feeling of movement within the static image….you can almost feel the pulse of electricity powering our transportation forward to, again, where. There is an expectation but perhaps not a fully known destiny and are we coming, or going?
ARTIST STATEMENT: Tension No. 4 is part of a series that focuses on the visual tension between light and shadow. The individual images in this series all have darker-toned backgrounds which is disturbed by the brightness of various light sources that dominate the picture. I am most interested in the resulting patterns, the way the interplay between darkness and light determines the compositional structure of the photographs. Tension No. 4 explores a space where the light source goes beyond being a functional fixture; it is meant to make a difference, to lend dynamism to the otherwise uneventful space. The parallel light stripes frame the zigzagging black stripe and together they complicate the unusual space. This vague space with its patchy surface, with its curving and indefinite boundaries challenges our perception. The black and white stripe, however, firmly leads our eyes and focuses our attention. It is the unsettling tension between the two components that creates the compositional effect of the image.
WEBSITE: www.zsoltbatori.com
“Pointing Skyward”
Richard Mason, San Francisco, CA
JUROR STATEMENT: Both of the Second Place Winning images reminded me of a science fiction novel -- the colossal building “Pointing Skyward” as Mr. Mason titles his work and Mr. Batori’s “Tension No. 4.” Each photograph, appropriately silver gelatin prints in well printed qualities of chiaroscuro, inspires the viewer to be in awe. Additionally, they both are surreal images indicating a soulless society such as a hive…yes, a hive mentality. Are we trapped? Will our lives be in hexagonal cells with us devouring. These images harbor an insidious feeling not unlike the drink in Aldous Huzley’s Brave New World” called SOMA, the word related to the Latin somna, or sleep. Be aware, like all heroes and heroines and only then can you be safe.
With Mr Mason’s canted view of the building arcing over a slightly dimmed solar disc and both oppressed by an ominous sky, the mood conveyed is one of a possibly omniscient power. Yet, at least for me, there is the feeling that the complexity of the multitudinous levels of the unimaginable structure can be navigated. Whether successfully or not is up to each viewer. The take away from this image is that of feeling a bit helpless, that there may not be enough time left and that one might be designated to a cupboard such as in “Patient Records”. In science fiction, in which I’ll include “Star Wars”, “The Hobbit” and “Lord of the Rings” films of recent years and the more benign “Wizard of Oz”, the imagination is let loose to run amok as to what is yet to come and if we don’t watch carefully what it portends is fearsome.
ARTIST STATEMENT: This image is part of a new series I started last year called “From the Ground Up”. I decided to start this project when I realized that I’ve lived here for nearly ten years and not once had I really taken the time to stop and simply point my camera skyward. No matter where you go in the city there’s so much fabulous architecture to enjoy; and you don’t necessarily have to be in some tall building or major vista point to take it all in. Simply walk through the Financial District or the vastness of Golden Gate Park and tilt your head up. You’ll likely be amazed by what you see. The different styles of architecture (old and new) and the way they mesh with the sky…. it’s pretty breathtaking. This image was taken at the De Young Museum in Golden Gate Park on a typically overcast afternoon.
WEBSITE: gingerworksphotography.com
EMAIL: reecardov@mac.com
Third Place
“Perseid Meteor Shower Above Mount Whitney”
Fritz Carlson, Palo Cedro, CA
JUROR STATEMENT: Ahh, “The Perseid Meteor Shower Above Mt. Whitney”. Not so easy to get to but oh so easy to lie there and experience. I remember reading that the darkest skies in the continental U.S. were to be experienced about 50 miles outside Tonopah, NV on Pole Line Road. So I drove out there and camped, watching the sky and listening to the coyotes. Nothing. Silence but for wind whisking and animals chatting. The Sierran ridge of snowed white, granites of its mass and salt sprinkled sky striated by fiery bits of matter plunging into our atmosphere. And the shape of the tall print implying an infinity of time, which will return again and apparently again into the future for the few sure to observe….if you take the time to get there.
ARTIST STATEMENT: The 2015 apparition of the Perseid meteor shower peaked during the night of August 12-13. It was the best apparition in years since the moon was a just a thin crescent that rose right before dawn so dark skies lasted almost all night. It took 4 days to hike into this remote spot on the Great Western Divide where the Mt Whitney group of peaks could provide a nice foreground for the celestial show.
Back-country photography presents some unusual challenges in that I had to decide whether to bring a tripod or food for another 2 days. I chose food, so my tripod consisted of a jury-rigged assembly of three trekking poles and an ultralight ballhead. Camera batteries were charged during the day using solar panels.
EMAIL: fritz.carlson@gmail.com
“Overboard”
Heidi Clapp-Temple, Lithia, FL
JUROR STATEMENT: “Overboard” by Ms. Clapp-Temple is another story-telling image of a possible about-to-be disaster of the blue sea and dark night. It is a fine use of color in photography to provide a certain plausible truth to what water is and how dark night can be. A swimmer, a mer-person, seems to swim with some large fish, kelp and perhaps flotsam, now sinking to the ocean floor. Those on the ocean vessel are in a lively well lit situation perhaps dancing and dining. The flashlight’s beam picks out the steamship as it plies the night water. Is everything okay? Will it just be another ship passing in the night? The two of us, meeting by chance, on the sea of life.
ARTIST STATEMENT: Overboard is based on a vivid dream I had recently. In the dream, I was on a cruise with my husband and son. Suddenly it was night and I found myself in the ocean near the cruise ship. I had a spot light and I was frantically trying to find my room number which was visible on the door on deck. For some reason, that seemed to be the key to getting back on the ship. I could not find it and I started to panic. Next thing I knew, I looked around me and there were a lot of dolphins all around me hovering over the water. I felt relieved they were there with me as if they were guiding the way.
I created this piece by building a set in my studio using images, threads, and various papers. The set was then backlit behind a sheet of white paper. I came around to the front of the paper to view the scene illuminating through the paper. Working with light, shadows, reflections, and silhouettes I created a final composition which I photographed.
WEBSITE: www.HeidiClappTemple.com.
“Magic Hill”
Alan Wood Allentown, PA
JUROR STATEMENT: “Magic Hill” feels like a wondrous computer game, a Tim Burton film set of curiosity and playfulness for the adult child. The question mark, Christmas, the building’s name, the delightful creepiness of the print, overlaid with hints of having been discovered after many years lying in a drawer. It is a map to wondrous experiences on a dark and stormy night with that question mark asking us to wonder what is going to happen. Sort of like going to a strange carnival in an unknown city and having a psychic ask to read your palm.
ARTIST STATEMENT: I feel magic really does exist in our lives. Who can doubt it, when there are rainbows and wildflowers, the music of the wind and the silence of the stars? Anyone who has loved has been touched by magic. Magic is both a simple and an extraordinary part of the lives we live. Mystery is the basic appeal of magic and I feel that photographers can create magic with photos that evoke emotions by the subjects they choose, the time they choose to shoot them, and how they choose to process or manipulate the final image.
I found my “Magic Hill” photo in one of my most favorite places to shoot at night and that is Hudson, NY. A small little town just two hours North of New York City in Rip Van Winkle Country. I felt that a black and white effect rather than color was what this photo called for. The dark of night added to the mystery of this formidable and intriguing three story brick building on Hudson’s Warren Street signed Magic Hill. The two Gothic turrets on the roof and an unexplainable question mark in the second floor window and the unexpected Christmas Trees on the main floor, all illuminated by the glowing streetlight, enhance the feeling of mystery and create the magic. Finally, I used a little grungy processing which helps to pile on a few more layers of mysterious atmosphere.
WEBSITE: www.alanwoodphotography.com
Honorable Mention
“Defiance”
Jeff Bader, Bozeman, MT
JUROR STATEMENT: "Defiance" by Jeff Bader is a politically astute photograph. If the snake offers you a fruit, don’t take it says Genesis. Here, in the turmoil of what only can be construed as industrial pollution, a flower, a sign of life in peril, stalwartly stands strong and still defying negativity. Hence it is a metaphor that each of us today must represent in the ongoing plight of global warming. It is good to see such photography take on the challenges of our time.
ARTIST STATEMENT: Documentary style photography as art is my passion. The artistry in this type photography involves the ability to capture moments or scenes in a way that tell a story and grab the viewers’ attention. Our lives are so inundated with information that we tend to take what surrounds us every day for granted. I think photography can help us sort through the clutter and better appreciate the environments in which we live. I prefer black and white for this purpose because it further reduces the captured scene to its basic elements.
WEBSITE: jbaderphotography.com
EMAIL: jrbader09@gmail.com
“Stopping for Water”
James Canter, Redding, CA
JUROR STATEMENT: A most intriguing swift capture during a train stop for taking on water….the engine steams in the stopped power of the engine’s huffing, This man and woman tend to their duties at the proper speed, she reflected, he barely seen but engrossed, the visual his adds to the quaint components of the railroad stop.. This very active photograph captured by leaning out the window caught it all in a perfect moment.
ARTIST STATEMENT: Steam railways always fascinated me because of their historical significance and intrinsic beauty. Recently, I accomplished a longtime desire to ride one in England, the country where the steam train was invented. While visiting there, I rode the Kent and East Sussex Railway in rural southeast England, and as the train chugged along through the beautiful countryside, I realized that it was stopping for water, an essential ingredient to power the train. Without hesitation, I leaned as far out the window of the coach as I could and captured this 19th century-like scene, “Stopping for Water.”
EMAIL: jfcanter@gmail.com
WEBSITE : jfcanter.com
“A-68”
John Gehl, Brookings, OR
JUROR STATEMENT: This is essentially the only abstract image in the exhibit, laden with color, appearing as a portion of some steel fabrication with markings meaning something. It jumps out at you yelling and screaming hard edge, hard edge. It isn’t a close-up of a microscopic piece of something but perhaps a straight-on of lovely detritus stopped midst an explosion.
ARTIST STATEMENT: John Gehl is an award winning photographer and metal sculptor living in Brookings, Oregon and Manitowish Waters, Wisconsin. John and his camera are intrigued by landscapes, portraits, and abstract forms. His aim is to photograph ordinary objects such that they take on attributes of the extraordinary and evoke emotion in the viewer.
“A68” was shot in the Port of Brookings - Harbor with a Fuji XPro1 mirrorless digital camera, processed in Photoshop and printed on metallic paper.
A pile of broken and discarded commercial fishing totes, this photo brings together all the elements needed to create a striking abstract image — vivid complementary colors, intriguing forms, and strong value contrast.
John is a member of the Coos Art Museum, Pelican Bay Arts Association, Manito Art League, North Valley Art League, Chetco Photographers Association, Artist Blacksmith Association of North America, British Artist Blacksmith Association, California Blacksmith Association, and The Guild of Metalsmiths.
“Forgotten #1”
George Grubb, New York, NY
JUROR STATEMENT: Mr. Grubb has been here before and photographed with film but has now returned and dived into the digital realm and wisely employed Photoshop to exemplify the dangers continuing to exist in our less green Earth world. Such work is important for the denying world to understand the potentials of pollution. This place is pristine yet those who came have refrained from removing their litter. This image portends disaster and urges us to
return paradise back to its origin. It is good lyrical political photography: simple, direct, obvious.
ARTIST STATEMENT: Bluie East Two is just one of the abandoned U.S. Air Force military bases in Greenland, that was operational during World War II from 1942-1947. The U.S. government operated several military bases in Greenland during this time to defend the country from the Germans. To this day, the clean-up of these military bases remains yet to be done. At this base, those remains consists of thousands of fuel drums strewn across the landscape that continue to leak fuel seventy years later. The Inuit call these rusting barrels, "American Flowers."
The stench coming from the fuel drums made it quite difficult for me to photograph. At times, I felt the onset of nausea and would leave the area to recuperate before returning to photograph. The leaking fuel made the site especially dangerous as well. Following the capture of these digital photographs in 2012, I would later experiment with alternate methods to present this material to an audience.
In 2016, I revisited these photographs again and began exploring a digital technique that involved processing each image twice: once as a historic-appearing black & white image to metaphorically set the scene back in the World War II timeline, and again, as a contemporary full-bleed color image. By digitally masking the separate layers, I was able to combine them in a way so as to represent the passage of time and responsibilities that still remain to address this destructive ecological problem.
This project illustrates how evolving techniques can be applied to older images to re-emphasize their meaning in innovative and experimental methods. By revising older images with newer techniques, the message of these images continues to further highlight how the cost of war haunts us many decades later.
The images are printed in pigment ink on acid-free 100% cotton rag, and displayed in simple rustic wood frames. The images were originally photographed digitally in 2012, but this digital technique would not be applied until 2016.
EMAIL: mail@georgegrubb.com
WEBSITE: www.georgegrubb.com
“Losing Ground”
Shery Larson, Dunsmuir, CA
JUROR STATEMENT: Will that tree topple into the moving stream? Time erodes the roots of life as this aging woman reads in this beautifully printed photograph of lively color, open shadow and full highlight details. This studio is Nature herself and the point is to relish it.
ARTIST STATEMENT: My friend asked me to take a picture of a tree. She was aware I often employ an antiquated black apparatus used ‘back in the day’ to create photo images. I imagined a gnarled oak from the movie set of Lord of the Rings, a snowy aspen or an enormous weeping willow. I was led to the Sacramento River and to indeed a most unusual tree—two conjoined trunks teetering on the river bank with roots exposed, as if floating in mid air.
Remarkably, the tree had green leaves, still provided shade and shelter, purified the air and supported someone leaning against it to read a book. It seemed unaware of impending doom. We make a yearly pilgrimage to the tree, camera gear in tow, to check on its survival, to try new lenses, and different times of day.
Photography can illustrate an important life lesson or universal truth. Who has not experienced the erosion of personal infrastructure by some external force threatening our very core? Who has not felt the ground slipping away beneath our feet?
Our pilgrimage pays homage to the survivors of this world, to the tenacious tree, and encourages us to PERSEVERE: to NEVER GIVE UP!
EMAIL: flyingartiste@finestplanet.com
“Sheeted Figure in Room With Cone”
Jon McCallum, Redding, CA
JUROR STATEMENT: To hear, to speak, that is the question. I was particularly fond of this image due to a childhood hearing difficulty. It is soft in imagery yet fully contemporary, printed on a curved sheet of aluminum to perhaps act as a sounding board. The mysterious shrouded figure, neither male nor female speaks with muted voice with another cone on the floor. Is that a hearing trumpet to listen better, or a tiny dunce cap. We don’t know.
ARTIST STATEMENT: The sheeted figure confronts, and yet denies, the probing eye of photography. Countering our material culture, the figure seems to say, “Know me by my voice––by what’s inside of me––by who I really am––rather than mere appearances.”
As a child I experienced difficulty in speaking and in being understood by others, and this informed my sense of self and my perceived ability to navigate through the world. A strong and mysterious force, the human voice has thus become a lifelong curiosity and is regarded as both a transmitter and a metaphor of our human essence.
WEBSITE: www.jonlynnmccallum.com
“Tammy and Alex #14”
Jim McKinniss, Orcutt, CA
JUROR STATEMENT: Here is a contemporary inkjet print toned and worked on in Photoshop to represent the yellowed albumen prints of the late 1800’s. The incoming small wave, two young women frolicking, two gulls tandemly echoing their freedom. It is as if a time machine has been employed to revisit the photographers of Pictorialism and/or the Photo Secessionists such as Gertrude Kasebier, Alvin Langdon Coburn et alia. Particularly Ms. Kasebier who, like the painter, Mary Cassat, concentrated on the lives of women. This is a good example of such appreciation.
ARTIST STATEMENT: The idea for this photo of Tammy and Alex came from an 1890's vintage photo that I saw on-line titled "Sweeping back the sea" which showed a woman dressed in period clothing standing in the ocean and using a broom to sweep back the approaching waves.
As a result I started a project with the same title featuring Tammy and her broom. That project morphed into a new project featuring both Tammy and Alex enjoying each other and engaged in carefree play in the ocean.
I am a great admirer of Pastoralist photography and so I decided to emulate that style in this photo.
WEBSITE: JimMcKinnissPhotography.com
EMAIL: JimMcKinniss@gmail.com
“A Lifetime of Work”
Hendrik Paul, Greenbrae, CA
JUROR STATEMENT: "A Lifetime of Work" by Hendrik Paul is as sweet and dear as it can be. An older person, grandma, with her walker, not totally feeble, dressed nicely, bends over doing something in the kitchen. She represents each and every one of us as we age and slink toward infirmity but she is bathed in the warmth of light illuminating our very selves to comprehend what time and the meaning of life are about. Living life, having personal liberty and pursuing happiness is what it is about. The punctum here is simply ‘doing’.
ARTIST STATEMENT: My journey began some years ago in an ancient monastery tucked between the mountain ridges of northern India. On a particularly dark evening, I noticed a long staircase leading to a rooftop. Its dim glow caught me, and I felt compelled to ascend despite its narrow, steep path. Moving closer, I saw each step as a new period in my life. For so long I had resisted changing, climbing, yet the urge to surmount some unknown summit drove me forward. As I crept up each step, the voices of the past echoed, “you are not good enough,” “the journey is too hard,” “you are not doing anything new.” But I reached the roof, and the voices faded, and I understood. I had found a path.
My photography is deeply rooted in the conventional film format; silver gelatin developed by hand and printed in the darkroom. The meticulous hand crafting of each print is an integral part of my work. Sometimes I hear voices of disapproval from my fascination with a historical process rather than evolving into digital, but then I see an image appearing in a tray of developer under an amber light, and I know I’m exactly where I should be.
Walking up the steps in the monastery I discovered the one true voice that I had been waiting to hear: my own.
WEBSITE.hendrikpaul.com
EMAIL: hendrikgpaul@gmail.com
“Savannah”
Michael Randolph, Stockton, CA
JUROR STATEMENT: "Savannah" by Michael Randolph is made of three separate photographs stapled together with Photoshop. It is a photo-montage and made for the viewer to descend in that myriad of calla lilies. I see music in here, music like a 3-part Bach fugue and if you are not aware of the fugue, it is three separate melodies fused into one and where all the parts co-mingle. The bowed boughs and swoop of flowers lead us toward paradise.
ARTIST STATEMENT: Today I am transitioning from traditional darkroom and silver gelation printing, to computers and Photoshop, from large format 4x5 cameras to digital. After a Workshop with Jerry Uelsmann, I learned to see photography more as an art form enabling me to express myself like a painter.
The image “Savannah” was made from three images from a road trip down the coast to create this print.
EMAIL: mjr161@earthlink.net
FACEBOOK: michael.randolph.39
“Three Falls”
Gary Wagner, Paradise, CA
JUROR STATEMENT: “Three Falls” by Gary Wagner who is from Paradise, California an appropriately named place pretty much out there in the woods and clean water. What makes this photography is the gyre of white water in relationship to the two streams of freer flowing water. That gyre, a vortex visually sucks you in as the viewer stands on shore in the roar of flowing water with an eye of wonder on the gyre, waiting in this frozen second of time to see what it will capture.
ARTIST STATEMENT: Wilderness, nature, and the world around me is the studio I use for my photographic work. I find freedom, and inspiration to create my interpretations of the natural elements and scenic vistas that come to my view at these locations.
The landscape is an exciting and challenging environment to work in, for it is constantly changing with the light of the day and the changing seasons. On many occasions I have revisited my favorite locations repeatedly throughout the year and found them to be completely different in their appearance, from the leaves on the trees, the depth of water in the streams, or the light striking the rocks. This environment and the many faces it reveals, bring me endless excitement, for creating my art.
I work exclusively in black and white. This medium best relates the shapes, lines, and tones of the landscape and more fully captures what I am viewing when I look at a scene. Color imagery for me is too close to reality and more of a visual record, than an artistic interpretation. I understand that the world is in color and we see in color but I find the magic of light on the land to best be conveyed in black and white.
With my work, I have tried not only to pay respect to the natural order and beauty of the earth but also to show reason for its preservation.
WEBSITE: www.garywagner.com
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