Stories and interviews
Submit
Info
Subscribe About Contact The Team
Online Exhibitions
Group Show 70: Under the Sun and the Moon Group Show 69: Photo for Non-Majors (part 2) Group Show 69: Photo for Non-Majors (part 1) Group Show 68: Four Degrees Group Show 67: Embracing Stillness Group Show 66: La Frontera Group Show 65: Two Way Lens Group Show 64: Tropes Gone Wild Group Show 63: Love, Actually Group Show 62: 100% Fun Group Show 61: Loss Group Show 60: Winter Pictures Group Show 59: Numerology Group Show 58: On Death Group Show 57: New Psychedelics Group Show 56: Source Material Group Show 55: Year in Reverse Group show 54: Seeing Sound Group Show 53: On Beauty Group Show 52: Alternative Facts Group Show 51: Future Isms Group Show 50: 'Roid Rage Group Show 48: Winter Pictures Group Show 47: Space Jamz group show 46: F*cked Up group show 45: New Jack City group show 44: Radical Color group show 43: TMWT group show 42: Occultisms group show 41: New Cats in Art Photography group show 40: #Latergram group show 39: Tough Turf P. 2/2 group show 39: Tough Turf P. 1/2

Humble Arts Foundation

New Photography
Stories and interviews
Submit
Info
Subscribe About Contact The Team
Online Exhibitions
Group Show 70: Under the Sun and the Moon Group Show 69: Photo for Non-Majors (part 2) Group Show 69: Photo for Non-Majors (part 1) Group Show 68: Four Degrees Group Show 67: Embracing Stillness Group Show 66: La Frontera Group Show 65: Two Way Lens Group Show 64: Tropes Gone Wild Group Show 63: Love, Actually Group Show 62: 100% Fun Group Show 61: Loss Group Show 60: Winter Pictures Group Show 59: Numerology Group Show 58: On Death Group Show 57: New Psychedelics Group Show 56: Source Material Group Show 55: Year in Reverse Group show 54: Seeing Sound Group Show 53: On Beauty Group Show 52: Alternative Facts Group Show 51: Future Isms Group Show 50: 'Roid Rage Group Show 48: Winter Pictures Group Show 47: Space Jamz group show 46: F*cked Up group show 45: New Jack City group show 44: Radical Color group show 43: TMWT group show 42: Occultisms group show 41: New Cats in Art Photography group show 40: #Latergram group show 39: Tough Turf P. 2/2 group show 39: Tough Turf P. 1/2
© Megumi Shauna Arai

© Megumi Shauna Arai

Artist Combines Photography, Sculpture and Japanese Rope Straw as an Open-ended Metaphor for her Bi-racial Identity

In her latest exhibition, Midst, Megumi Shauna Arai uses soft, subtle metaphors to address the many, often ambiguous layers of her Jewish and Japanese heritage. 

While trained as a photographer, Megumi Shauna Arai often combines sculpture, fibers, and exercises with culturally significant materials to emphasize this splintering complexity. Her latest exhibition, Midst at Seattle's Jacob Lawrence Gallery is a series of photographs of bodies suspended in water exhibited amidst three installations referencing Japanese folk practices for honoring sacred space. In a piece in one room titled "did you not know, I was waiting for you?" a hobo bag with elements of Japanese stitching stands propped up in cinder blocks like flowers in a makeshift vase. In another piece titled "Interior Frontiers," sets of rice straw rope resembling a crown of thorns hang from the ceiling and entryway and wrap around the entire space. In another piece, "  simultaneously (the border of a great belonging)," a similar rope connects two small boulders like a tin can telephone, but hangs loosely without the tension one might expect.

While each piece in the show has a very specific origin, there is an open-ended-ness that allows viewers to float through the gallery and gather their own meaning. I spoke with the artist to learn more about her process of making the work, and how her own sense of identity fits into it all. 

Read more …
PostedJune 28, 2018
AuthorJon Feinstein
CategoriesExhibitions, Artists, Galleries
TagsMegumi Shauna Arai, New photography, Seattle Photographers, Seattle Artists, Jacob Lawrence Gallery
Bernice, 2018.  30" x 36" oil on panel. © Justin Duffus. Courtesy of Justin Duffus and Linda Hodges Gallery

Bernice, 2018.  30" x 36" oil on panel. © Justin Duffus. Courtesy of Justin Duffus and Linda Hodges Gallery

Painting Snapshots: Robert E. Jackson in Conversation with Justin Duffus

Snapshot collector Robert E. Jackson speaks with snapshot painter Justin Duffus about his work and inspirations.

Justin Duffus makes paintings from twentieth-century snapshots and snippets of Americana, highlighting the strange, humorous, often lonely, and sometimes inconsequential moments of everyday life.

In one painting, a boy sits at the edge of a motel swimming pool – shivering with arms crossed – swathed in cyan and blue tones. In another, three business-suited men in a nondescript room walk in a circle around another man, wrapping him in pastel streamers like a human maypole while two women watch. In other paintings, masked figures confront the viewer head-on, the harsh light of a cheap camera flash rendered with jarring elegance. Hung together, Duffus’ paintings embolden a mysterious, open-ended narrative, giving new energy to images with an anonymous or discarded past.

While his sources vary, some of them are based on images acquired from the collection of Robert E. Jackson, the Seattle-based vernacular collector-extraordinaire, whose collection currently boasts more than 12,000 American snapshots from the past century. Like Duffus’ paintings, many of Jackson’s snapshots have a similar attention to the peculiar, absurd or unintentionally artful. Following Duffus’ recent exhibition, Fear of Drowning at Seattle’s Linda Hodges Gallery, we asked Jackson – who is also a collector of his work – to speak with the artist about his practice and the ideas behind it.

Read more …
PostedMay 7, 2018
AuthorRobert E. Jackson
CategoriesExhibitions, Artists, Portfolio
TagsJustin Duffus, Contemporary Painting, snapshots, vernacular photography, Seattle Artists, Robert E. Jackson, Linda Hodges Gallery
Day 62: 2/3/17. The same world that made you feel so bad was the one that made you feel so good.

Day 62: 2/3/17. The same world that made you feel so bad was the one that made you feel so good.

Artist Serrah Russell Responds to 2016 Election With "100 Days of Collage"

The 2016 presidential election results left many feeling a wave of shock and unease. Seattle-based artist Serrah Russell channeled this disquiet into 100 Days of Collage, a series of daily meditations reflecting on the past and the ambiguous future of a newly changing world.

Russell’s collages are simple, yet layered - fusing disparate images from issues of National Geographic and various fashion magazines to build a narrative that combines defeatist confusion with a glimmer of Molotov, hope, and resistance. She captions each piece with titles like "And how we have kept quiet," "This is to protect you, they said," and "The stars have died, but we won't know for years to come," – words that could serve as their own book of poems or revolutionary wall scribblings, and recall many of the cryptic passages in Margaret Atwood's classic The Handmaid's Tale. An appropriate subtitle for the project could be the novel's line of resistance: "Nolites Te Bastardes Carborundorum" ("Don't Let The Bastards Grind You Down.")

Behold Serrah Russell's 100 Days of Collage. We've included her statement at the end of this post, so scroll, look and read on.

To learn more about Serrah Russell's larger practice, read this interview on Lenscratch.

Read more …
PostedMarch 16, 2017
AuthorJon Feinstein
CategoriesGalleries, Artists, Portfolio
TagsSerrah Russell, 100 Days of Collage, Seattle Artists, political art
Voyager 01 © Bill Finger
Voyager 01 © Bill Finger
Voyager 02 © Bill Finger
Voyager 02 © Bill Finger
Voyager 03 © Bill Finger
Voyager 03 © Bill Finger
Voyager 04 © Bill Finger
Voyager 04 © Bill Finger
Voyager 05 © Bill Finger
Voyager 05 © Bill Finger
Voyager 06 © Bill Finger
Voyager 06 © Bill Finger

Photographing Time and Space From an Artist's Studio

Growing up in the early 1970’s, Seattle-based photographer Bill Finger and his family would routinely gather around the television to obsessively watch the Apollo space launches. Even into into his early adulthood, he recalls being particularly moved by an NPR segment about sending a manned mission to Mars. This initially inspired Ground Control, a series about a fictitious character who tried, in vain to go to space; and more recently emerged in Voyager, circular photographs of immaculately produced dioramas that explore the complicated boundaries between fact and fiction, and self exploration.

Read more …
PostedJune 28, 2016
AuthorJon Feinstein
CategoriesArtists, Portfolio
Tagsouter space photography, studio photography, Seattle photographers, round photographs, new photography, black and white photography, Bill Finger, Seattle Artists

Founded in 2005, Humble Arts Foundation is dedicated to supporting and promoting new art photography.