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Take Me To The River @Gallery 263 (Cambridge)

Thu, Feb 19 2015 12:00 pm - 7:00 pm

|Recurring Event (See all)

An event every week that begins at 12:00 pm on Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and Saturday, repeating until Sat, Mar 14 2015

Free

Info via www.Gallery263.org…

TAKE ME TO THE RIVER
MICHAEL KOLSTER
A Curatorial Proposal Series Exhibition

Take Me to the River compares four post-industrial rivers along the eastern seaboard of the United States: the Androscoggin River in Maine and New Hampshire, the Schulykill River in and above Philadelphia, Virginia’s James River, and the Savannah River along the border of South Carolina and Georgia. The exhibition features a selection of ambrotypes and large-scale prints from digital scans of the glass plates. As a result, Kolster covers the history of photographic process from one of its earliest techniques, to one of its most recent.

The four eastern waterways depicted in Take Me to the River have had important, yet somewhat unsung, roles in the settlement and development of our country. Over the past 150 years they served as sewers and depositories of industrial and household waste. Kolster’s photographs suggest that today these rivers and others like them are in transition. As they become cleaner in the wake of the 1972 Clean Water Act, they are also undergoing significant shifts in the way that we see and interact with them. The myth of purity that we ascribe to wilderness, or the pride we feel over harnessing nature to human ends, becomes difficult to sustain on the rivers running through our own backyards, just as it is along the James, the Schuylkill, the Savannah and the Androscoggin.

Kolster employs one of photography’s oldest processes, wet plate collodion, to produce contemporary 8”x10” ambrotypes – unique glass plate positives. In doing so, he explores how the past and present uses of these rivers and their surrounding areas intermingle to affect their appearance. The invention of the ambrotype process in 1851 coincides historically with the movement of our country’s economic output from the field to the factory. With these images, Kolster captures the dynamic quality of the rivers’ surfaces while drawing attention to how photography has been literally complicit in the formation of their troubled legacy.

Venue

Gallery 263
263 Pearl Street
Cambridge, MA 02139
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Age
All Ages
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License(unless otherwise indicated) © 2019