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New Light on Land
NORFOLK, VA. (March 17, 2016) – Travel to lands near and far, and survey the history of photography in this exhibition of images rarely on view at the Chrysler Museum of Art.
Whether pastoral or polluted, the landscape has been an enduring subject in the history of photography. The exhibition, New Light on Land, draws from the Museum’s rich photography collection to explore how nature has inspired photographic innovation and creativity since the advent of the medium.
The exhibition complements Edward Burtynsky: Water, the museum’s spring keynote exhibition. While Burtynsky’s photographs depict bodies of water around the world, New Light on Land focuses on the other 29 percent of the world’s surface, displaying snowy mountain peaks, lush forests and fields of wheat. The show offers eclectic viewpoints, from environmentalist statements to grand visions of the untrammeled earth. Both exhibitions are on view until May 15 and admission is free.
The works were selected from the Chrysler’s photography collection by curators Director Erik Neil, curator Seth Feman, and photographer Ed Pollard.
“We scoured the Chrysler’s incredible collection of landscape photographs, looking through hundreds of images until we arrived at the current selection,” said Feman, the Chrysler’s Curator of Exhibitions and Acting Curator of Photography. “We were looking especially for images that tell unique stories about how people have envisioned the land and how the camera has shaped that vision. The results are quite diverse.”
Some of the earliest photographs in New Light on Land show the religious zeal that motivated travelers to use the new technology to document the world as it had never been captured on canvas. Beginning in the mid-19th century, Francis Frith undertook a quest to portray Biblical locales, ultimately presenting more than 500 images to the public in eight published works. His 1857 photograph of the Temple of El Karnak brought Ancient Egypt to the hands of Victorian audiences.
Other photographers featured in the exhibition were motivated by a desire to encourage empathy. Dorothea Lange’s gelatin-silver print Men Cradling Wheat, Near Sperryville, Virginia shows the grace and dignity possessed by the men working the earth. As a photographer for the Depression-era Farm Security Administration, Lange succeeded in the project’s goal to “introduce America to Americans.”
The contemporary photographs included in New Light on Land show modern perspectives with deadpan humor, such as Judy Natal’s Beauty. The 2002 photograph shows a cluster of palm trees forming a backdrop for leaning letters spelling out “Beauty.” Natal is among a wave of contemporary photographers exploring human interactions with nature. The impact of this style of landscape photography is felt in the work of Burtynsky, whose current exhibition at the Chrysler Museum explores the imprint of humans on water around the world. Both New Light on Land and Edward Burtynsky: Water are on view until May 15. Admission is free.
ABOUT THE CHRYSLER MUSEUM OF ART
The Chrysler Museum of Art is one of America’s most distinguished mid-sized art museums, with a nationally recognized collection of more than 30,000 objects, including one of the great glass collections in America. The core of the Chrysler’s collection was given to the Museum by Walter P. Chrysler, Jr., an avid art collector who donated thousands of objects from his private collection to the Museum. In the years since Chrysler’s death in 1988, the Museum has dramatically enhanced its collection and extended its ties with the Norfolk community. The Museum, expanded in 2014 to add additional gallery spaces and amenities for visitors, now has growing collections in many areas. The Chrysler also mounts an ambitious schedule of visiting exhibitions and educational programs and events each season.
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