Spectrum Art Gallery Annual Print Auction

Spectrum Art Gallery Annual Print Auction & Exhibition

Exhibit: March 3 – April 3rd 2022 • Auction: March 15- April 3 2022

Art Hop Reception: March 3 – 5PM to 8PM

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"Lumenocity #7" -- Travis Rockett
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"Crow's Landing" -- Sue Thorson
Spectrum Art Gallery is hosting its Annual Print Auction! 

Spectrum Art Gallery’s Annual Print Auction is now open for your bidding!!  The auction closes on April 3rd at 5PM.  Select the following link to open the auction website to start bidding:

https://www.accelevents.com/e/2022spectrum

Over 55 items from internationally recognized photographers and well-known local artists will be available to view at Spectrum Art Gallery and posted on Spectrum’s on-line silent auction site hosted by Accelevents.  The link will be available on the Gallery Website at www.spectrumphotogallery.org on March 15, 2022.

For further information regarding either the images or the photographers please contact Spectrum Art Gallery at auction@spectrumphotogallery.org. All sales will be final. No returns or refunds will be provided.

Auction Prints on Exhibit
Spectrum Art Gallery
608 E Olive Ave, Fresno, CA 93728
March 3 – April 3, 2022

Spectrum Art Gallery’s New Hours of Operation:
ArtHop (1st) Thursdays: 4:00 PM to 8:00 PM
Fridays: 4:00 PM to 8:00 PM
Saturdays and Sundays: 1:00 PM to 5:00 PM

Members’ Exhibition

Spectrum Members’ Exhibition

February 3 – 27

ArtHop Artist Reception: Thursday, February 3, 4PM to 8PM

Wheels of the Past, Bodie, CA - Travis Rockett (1 of 1)
Wheels of the Past, Bodie" -- Travis Rockett
Self Esteem, From Captive Isolation Series - Jesse Merrell
"Self Esteem" From Captive Isolation Series -- Jesse Merrell

A Group Exhibition of Works
by Spectrum Art Gallery Members.
 

Spectrum Art Gallery is proud to present the 2022 Member’s Exhibition. We are excited to show new works from our membership, including members who have recently joined our collective. This show will be an open theme, so members are able to highlight their favorite works they would like to share. Our membership is an eclectic group comprised of photographic artists from many different walks of life. We’ve come together to express our joy of photography, and continue to do so well into our current era. Forty years ago, exhibitions of photography as an art form appeared very infrequently, especially in the San Joaquin Valley. It was at that time that a growing number of photographic artists congregated in Photo- Synthesis, a darkroom rental gallery establishment. In 1980, this group formed a not-for-profit cooperative and created a local forum for fine art photography.

Later that year, the group rented a space in Fresno’s Tower District, and referring to the broad variety of work produced by the charter members called itself “Spectrum Gallery.” The present is an exhilarating time in which we now have many traditional photographers, photographic artists, and creatives that push the boundaries of photography. This exhibition will show a collection of our members’ work. Come on down to the gallery for ArtHop and view original and refreshing photographic art by our fine members.

Gabler-Jackson

Ice-elation and Lumine-scent
An Exhibit Featuring the Photography of
Franka Gabler and Caroline Jackson

December 2, 2021 – January 2, 2022

ArtHop Artist Reception: Thursday, December 4, 5PM to 8PM

Ice-elation... Mule's Ears #2 copy
Mule's Ears #2 -- Franka M. Gabler

“Ice-elation”
by Franka M. Gabler

Franka’s ‘Ice-elation’ project began with the 2020 pandemic and the resultant closure of National and State Parks, followed by a period of sheltering in place and self-isolation.  The project helped her to overcome the initial creative block caused by the pandemic. One day, during lockdown, she froze an orchid stem and loved the effect – delicate textures of cracked ice encasing the flowers, revealing parts of them and concealing others. This inspired her to start exploring the forms and patterns of different flowers encased in ice. She photographed the ice blocks with flowers on the light box in her studio.  Backlighting further revealed subtle textures of ice and flowers, their translucency and luminance, exposing their transient nature and fragility. The effect seemed similar to photographing landscapes in fog – her favorite photography subject:  subtle, mysterious, unstable, and unpredictable. 

And there it happened…her inspiration came back!  The ‘Ice-elation’ project sparked her creativity and helped her to refocus her thoughts from the doom and gloom of the initial days of the pandemic to something beautiful and uplifting. 

Biography:

Award-winning photographer and scientist, Franka M. Gabler, developed a fascination, admiration, and respect for nature early in her lifetime. Soon after moving to California in 1997, she experienced her first wilderness backpacking trip in the Sierra Nevada Mountains. Ever since that time, she has been photographing the magnificence of the high-country mountains and the California landscape. Her photographs are evocative – the light and atmosphere evident in her photographs often result in sentimental impact and ethereal feeling. She strives to capture the mood and the essence of the place she photographs.

Franka’s photographs have won many awards, including the most recent – a 1st place award for the ‘Intimate and Abstract’ category of the Natural Landscape Photography Awards. Her photographs are published in several books and she has been featured in several photography magazines.  Franka has been invited to speak at several photography conferences. Her work has been featured in numerous exhibits and is represented in private collections throughout the United States and abroad. She is affiliated with Stellar Gallery in Oakhurst, Spectrum Art Gallery in Fresno, Ridgeline Gallery in Mariposa, Viewpoint Photographic Art Center in Sacramento, and Circle Gallery in Madera, CA.

Franka lives in the Sierra foothills, in the small mountain town of Coarsegold, not far from Yosemite National Park.

You can learn more about her work at: www.frankagabler.com.


Pink Tulip Bouquet
Pink Tulip Bouquet -- Caroline V. Jackson


“Lumine-scent
by Caroline V. Jackson

Caroline V. Jackson bought her first camera 10 years ago, and has seldom set it aside. She never settled on a particular genre, and normally takes a mindfulness approach to creating images. Her photographs are not made with intention – such as documentary work – but on free flowing feeling. Always drawn to the range of human experience, and usually a “darker,” lonely or “edgy” mood, her images feature themes of alienation, separation and exclusion and can encompass street scenes, lonely desert landscape, crumbling structures – scenes that convey isolation and being cast aside. Being drawn to the outlier segments of society, her pictures are usually not “pretty.” The goal is always to have the viewer pause, feel, listen and question their relationship to a subject or an idea. The pandemic came, with an about face. Its isolation and travel bans foreclosed most photographic opportunities. But the stay at home orders, along with available time, and a refusal to put down her camera, led to a cloistered genre of photography created with intention and planning – lightbox floral photography. The light coming through her images gives a different take on a familiar subject. The light brings out the beauty of floral arrangement, a twist to her usual style. Through intention, Lumine-Scent conveys beauty, softness, organization, calmness, symmetry – qualities lost to the pandemic chaos. Each featured Lumine-Scent piece begins with a lightbox and fresh flowers selected for potential translucency. An arrangement is made atop the lightbox, with attention paid to symmetry or lack thereof, openness, movement. Each piece is then crafted by taking 4-8 shots of the floral arrangement at varying exposures. The 4-8 exposures are then hand blended in post with layer masks and brushes to bring forth delicate highlights and contrast. The final image is placed on a background or texture complementing the color palette of the individual arrangement. This technique makes the final image appear more as a painting than a photograph.

Biography:

Caroline V. Jackson is an attorney from the San Francisco Bay Area, now making Fresno her home. This structured approach to creating images – with intention and planning – syncs well with legal training.  She is affiliated with Spectrum Gallery in Fresno. Her work has been shown at various exhibitions in the Central Valley. 


Metonymies-Sojourn

“Metonymies – Sojourn”
An Exhibit Featuring the Photography of
John Moses and Joshua Moulton

November 4 – November 28, 2021

ArtHop Reception: Thursday, November 4, from 4PM to 8PM

Mausoleum Door, Highgate Cemetery -- John Mosea
Mausoleum Door, Highgate Cemetery -- John Mosea

“Metonymies”
By
John Moses

Metonymy is the imaginative process that uses a part to represent the whole.  Proximity, or contiguity, is basic to how it operates in figures of speech.  But more than just a literary device in poetry, metonymy is part of everyday communication, a way of understanding and speaking about the world—for example, “hand” for helper, “Hollywood” for American movies, “Rothko” for the artist’s paintings.

But what does that have to do with photography, you may be wondering.  Linguists and artists have long extended the concept to the visual arts—from painting to the cinema.  Roman Jakobson contrasted the metaphors of surrealist art to the metonymies of Cubism.  Sergei Eisenstein theorized about the metonymies inherent in distinct categories of cinematic montage, the relations of shot to shot.

Photographers constantly make judgments involving contiguity.  Whether in the viewfinder or the darkroom, they reveal what is in the frame and what is beyond it.  Sometimes the subject is complete and surrounded by empty space—a still life, a building, an object from nature.  Just as often, the subject is only implied by the part shown, sometimes so abstracted as to be ambiguous even in its concreteness.

The images of “Metonymies” play with these possibilities. They imply what is not there as much as present what is.  Some are abstract, minimalist images—a light shining on a reel of film; a detail from a 6-foot bronze; a hoist drum from a Cornwall mine.  Others are more recognizable parts of some whole—a building façade, a tree within a forest, components of a steam engine.  And others are of images connected to concepts like flag for country.  Each illustrates how metonymy is as basic to visual language as it is to verbal.

Functionally, metaphors are the opposite of metonymy, based on imagined similarities rather than recognized proximity. Yet the two creative processes often operate together. A flag connects to country but also evokes ideas about honor or dishonor. The closeup of a sunflower’s center may epitomize the beauty of the flower but can also remind us of Van Gogh’s fields of yellow or a dreamlike scene from a Busby Berkeley musical.  So, while I present the images in this exhibit as examples of metonymy, I invite you to imagine the metaphoric possibilities as well.


Kirkjufell -- Joshua Moulton


Sojourn
By
Joshua Moulton

Hiking through the Icelandic mountains on a deary, late afternoon and coming over the rise of the hilltop, I finally get my first glimpse at the Geldingadalir volcano and my heart skips a beat. As I draw nearer to the eruption I feel heat from the lava warming my face just like I’m sitting in front of a campfire even though the source is thousands of feet away. The sound of stones grinding upon each other as the hardened uppermost layer of molten rock flows past in a river of fire fills my skull. And then comes the eruption-a magnificent, glorious and violent explosion of lava directly from the heart of the volcano high into the sky as more pours down the side. This could be Mordor. 

At my core I love fantasy. I love fantasy books, movies, games, and the wide-sweeping vistas that detail the epic quests and scenes that drive these stories. In essence that is what Sojourn is to me. Sojourn features photos from around the world that share that common sense of adventure and wonder. From the Martian landscapes of the Tron a Pinnacles to the abundant waterfalls of Iceland, each location weaves a story for my camera to capture. 

California is home to many captivating and varied landscapes and I take every opportunity to explore my native state, but nothing excites me more than the call of an exotic land. My latest sojourn to Iceland, the land of ice and fire, did not disappoint. There are waterfalls everywhere you look, erupting volcanos, glacier bays and epic canyons that transport you to a time before humans roamed the earth. In this collection I’ve gathered moments from Iceland, California and afar to bring viewers along with me on my adventures. 

So, come sojourn with me through these epic landscapes and maybe, if you’re feeling up to it, you can hum along to the Lord Of The Rings soundtrack like I always find myself doing when I’m out there. 


Environments-BlueSkies-SecretSpaces

“Environments, Under Blue Skies, Secret Spaces”
An Exhibit Featuring the Photography of
Larry Cusick, Sally Stallings and Kathy Wosika

 

October 7 – October 31, 2021

ArtHop Reception: Thursday, October 7, from 4PM to 8PM

Cusick 1
Larry Cusick -- Untitled

ENVIRONMENTS
by
Larry Cusick

My journey into the world of photography began in college when I took a photojournalism class. I was hooked by the idea that you could tell a story with pictures. Each assignment challenged me to find an image that spoke words. And the opportunities seemed limitless. Everywhere you look there is a story playing out. Even now, I find the work of photojournalists to be most compelling.

Since then, I have been a shutterbug, taking pictures of family and vacations. I became more seriously involved in photography after retirement when I discovered birding and bird photography. The challenge of capturing wild birds in the field rekindled something in me that I found mysterious and rewarding. I thought of this quest as environmental photojournalism. I see stories everywhere–in wildlife and in human interaction. My goal is always to capture a story.

I entitled my small part of the show Environments. This awkward title is a perhaps best ignored, and to just let my photographs say it all. You’ll see some birds and some nature, as well as people, in their own environments. I hope that each picture says something to you. It might not be exactly what I intended, but that is okay.


Golden Fields -- Sally Stallings


Under Blue Skies
by
Sally Stallings

Starved for color, beauty, and a piece of blue from above. I craved splendor of the California I have always loved. This was my focus.

Recently we lost our California. Acres of fiery infernos have incinerated homes and forests once teaming with wildlife and cherished irreplaceable memories. Homes that hosted family dinners, wedding celebrations, children off to school, graduation parties all gone… charred beyond recognition into smoldering black crusts, stumps, slabs of blackened concrete, and grey powdery earth. Grey ash, like fish scales, wandering from putrid skies poisoning every breath you take.

We lost security and safety from a horrifying pandemic that smacked everyone in the face with fear of sickness, death, and necessary isolation from family and friends. This unrelenting oppression from Covid and smoke saturated skies has been suffocating. I have felt psychologically imprisoned in a smothering nightmare…

There were times, however, on 8:00 o’clock morning walks I found relief in my 1920 neighborhoods. Stretches of sidewalks threaded together cared for homes, neighbors, and grassy colorful front yards. There were “good mornings” and “hellos, and “how are you”? from residents watering flower beds, pruning bushes, and mowing lawns while pajamaed kids roller skated in driveways…all home because of the shutdown.  

Wearing my N95 I heeded friendly neighbors conversing from one side of the street to the other.  Social distance maintained. I nodded to straw hatted mothers planting flowers with babies close by in netted play pens. All were friendly. All courageous. Everyone a warrior struggling to maintain some sort of normalcy exerting sheer will and smiles to keep going forward.

Some of these photos were taken on these morning walks.

I dedicate my portion of this show to all our 2020-2021 medical personnel who fought and are still fighting the spreading Covid and to our fire fighters who suffer beyond measure, but continue on, braving the all -consuming firewalls of hell. 

I am so profoundly grateful.



Phalaenopsis old age-Close-up -- Kathy Wosika

Secret Spaces
by
Kathy Wosika

In February of 2020, right before the Covid virus sent us all running for cover,  I had my first ever photo exhibit at Fig Tree Gallery here in Fresno.  The photos in that exhibit were taken over a 20+ year period of time from airplanes, flying between the East and West Coasts of the U.S. at 30,000 feet!  Originally, these photos were never taken as Art Photography per se – they were primarily collected as resource materials – ideas for use in teaching design, or to be incorporated into my creative work in ceramics or fibers. From such a distance, the earth below offers us a rich canvas filled with beautiful yet ephemeral compositions.  This amazing “aerial art gallery” is created by rock, water, soil and plants, as well as man’s interactions with these elements.  Change is ever the constant.

All of the images in this exhibit, Secret Spaces, were taken under the sequester imposed on all levels of our lives and society by the SARS-CoV-2 (COVID-19) virus.  Just 2 weeks after my exhibit closed, life as we knew it also shut down as we faced, too often alone and apart from loved ones, a devastating world pandemic that has yet to release its’ grip on us.

The images that had previously captivated me from my airplane flights were vast and expansive, but I now found myself turning inward and looking deeply into the plants, and especially flowers growing in our garden.  I found myself wanting to crawl around the interior of a flower – much like its’ pollinators do by nature – and experience its’ internal secret architecture.  And so, I spent many hours a day working with flowers, tripod and an iPhone fitted with a macro lens, while the news of the year played out in the background.  Here too, I found that Change is ever the constant. A flower’s passage from youth through old age exposed some amazing visual surprises.  I very often found a suggestion of bird-like forms in these internal spaces.  There were also figures which seemed to have large bulging “eyes”, but actually were the flower parts that contained the seeds of the next generation.  I used to tell my Papermaking students that once you’ve made paper out of your own garden plants, you’ll never see the plant world the same again.  I can now truly say the same about the experience of exploring the mysterious interiors of a flower!  I hope you enjoy this journey.