Showing posts with label Museum Acquisition. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Museum Acquisition. Show all posts

Monday, December 5, 2016

MUSEUM ACQUISITION

KEN ROSENTHAL: THE FOREST

We are delighted to share the wonderful news, that the New Mexico Museum of Art has acquired two photographs from the The Forest series by Ken Rosenthal.

Photographed in the Selkirk Mountains in NE Washington State, from 2011–2014, the photographs are dark and densely layered. More than just landscapes, the photographs perform the role of metaphor for thoughts on mortality, discovery, loss and renewal. The series is described by Rosenthal as "the most complicated and personal series I've undertaken".

The acquisition follows Rosenthal's recent success in being awarded a Critical Mass Top 50, by Photolucida, with the same series of work. 

For collectors interested in this outstanding series of photographs, please contact the gallery for more information, availability and pricing.  


Phantoms, from The Forest © Ken Rosenthal


Fallen, from The Forest © Ken Rosenthal

Thursday, March 19, 2015

ACQUISITION by DEUTSCHES TECHNIK MUSEUM

We are delighted to share the news that the Deutsches Technik Museum in Berlin, has acquired fifteen photographs from the Proposition One: Only The Ephemeral series, by Max de Esteban

The portfolio of photographs can be viewed in-person at our gallery. Please make an appointment beforehand. A number of the photographs are close to selling out. Therefore, if you do have an interest in acquiring an image or two from this series, we would highly recommend doing so before they become unavailable.  The photographs are available as follows:

20.7" x 27.6", Edition: 5+1AP
39.4" x 52.5", Edition: 5+1AP 

Archival Pigment Prints on Hahnemühle Cotton Rag

Previous blog posts about the artworks of Max de Esteban can be found here.

PO9, 2011 © Max de Esteban


Tuesday, June 3, 2014

ODETTE ENGLAND: MUSEUM ACQUISITION

It's with much pleasure that we can announce the acquisition of work from the Thrice Upon A Time series (below), by the Museum of Contemporary Photography (MoCP) in Chicago. This follows on from the photographic series, being included in the museum's recent and critically admired Of Walking exhibition.

Mum #3 (Right Foot), 2012 © Odette England


Friday, November 29, 2013

MUSEUM ACQUISITION

MFAH Acquires Jim Naughten Photograph

We are delighted to announce that the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, has acquired Herero Woman in Blue Dress, by the British photographer Jim Naughten. The acquisition was made possible through the museum's Photo Forum Patron Group. 

Herero Woman in Blue Dress, 2012 © Jim Naughten

The photograph forms part of the Hereros series, which was exhibited at the gallery as a solo exhibition in March–April, 2013 and showcased at the 2013 AIPAD Photo Show. The exhibition was accompanied by the release of the photobook Conflict and Costume (Merrell, 2013); Naughten's second monograph.

A selection of the series can be viewed online here, with the portraits available as follows:

24" x 20", Edition of 10 + 2 APs
50" x 41", Edition of 3 + 2 APs


Thursday, April 18, 2013

George Eastman House Acquisitions


We are delighted to announce that the George Eastman House, International Museum of Photography and Film (Rochester, NY), has acquired three photographs (below) from the series Thrice Upon A Time, by the Australian artist Odette England.


This accomplished series of photographs earned England the CENTER Project Launch Award (2012) and was selected for the Photographic Resource Center Exposure 2012 Exhibition. Also in 2012, the series was exhibited at the Klompching Gallery (June 6–July 20), the New Mexico Museum of Art and Galerie Huit, Les Recontres d'Arles Festival.

 Dad #12 (Right Foot), 2012 ©Odette England

Home is the center-weight of Odette England's (Australian, b.1975) artistic practice, with memory and forgetting being the counterbalances. Her photographs are fragile, contemplative and temporal spaces. She works with expired film, vintage cameras, damaged negatives and alternative photo processes; exploring the volatility of identity, emphasizing the unstable nature of the past/present and the parent/child seesaw.

 Dad #4 (Left Foot), 2012 ©Odette England

"I grew up on a dairy stud farm in South Australia. Falling milk prices and rising maintenance costs forced my parents, under the threat of bankruptcy, to sell everything and leave in 1989 when I was fourteen.

Twenty-two years later, Mum and Dad performed a kind of homecoming on my behalf. Every month for one year, from December 2010, they revisited our former family farm, wearing on the soles of their shoes a set of negatives I had made at the farm in 2005, when I took photographs of places where they had made snapshots of me as a child. As my parents walked the farm, the negatives became abraded and imprinted with local dirt and debris. The negatives were then returned to me, some so damaged they had to be pieced together with tweezers.  

This series is a movement of reclamation and transcription. Since I cannot work the land with my hands, I work it through the lens, and allow it to work the lens too, in a sense, through the tread of my parents. The dominant motive for this work is my longing for an idealized vision of home, for the sake of which I remove my parents’ agency, much as I feel my own agency removed. The resulting images mythologize my holy land, an inheritance I ache for. My parents are semi-supervised ghosts; I ask them when and where to haunt. Their repetitive, ritualistic motion helps me remember, depict, and fantasize". —Odette England

Mum #14 (Right Foot), 2012 ©Odette England

The complete Thrice Upon A Time series can be viewed online here.

Photographic prints are available as follows: 

Total edition of 3 + 1AP (available in choice of two sizes)
 27.3” x 36” image on 31.3” x 40” sheet
42.5” x 56” image on 44” x 57.5” sheet

Pigment Print on Museo Portfolio Rag

Purchase enquiries should be directed to Debra Klomp Ching at the gallery.

Tuesday, December 4, 2012

MOMA Acquisition

Paula McCartney

The Museum of Modern Art has acquired two of Paula McCartney's artist books: On Thin Ice, In A Blizzard and As If Everything You Imagined Were True.

On Thin Ice, In A Blizzard ©Paula McCartney

As If Everything You Imagined Were True ©Paula McCartney

We recommended the former in a previous blogpost as a Great Gift Idea and still have copies available in the gallery. More information about the second book can be found here.

MFAH Acquisition

Max de Esteban

We are delighted to announce that the Museum of Fine Arts Houston, has acquired PO5 by Max de Esteban. The acquisition was made possible through the Museum's Photo Forum Patron Group.

PO5 (2011) ©Max de Esteban

The photograph forms part of the Proposition One: Only The Ephemeral series, which was exhibited at the gallery as a solo exhibition in October – December 2011. We wrote a SPOTLIGHT blog post about Max de Esteban in October 2011, which you can revisit here.

The complete series can be viewed online, with the photographs available as follows:

20.7” x 27.6”, Edition of 5 + 1AP
39.4” x 52.5”, Edition of 5 + 1AP