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Exhibition

Particulars of Place: Photo Portfolios from the Collection

April 21–December 9, 2007

This exhibition from the Museum's collections presents six artists who have created portfolios—boxes containing series of prints—that capture a sense of place.

An early and dedicated believer in the power of sequenced pictures, Paul Strand portrays a place close to his heart as well as close to home in The Garden, a tribute to his undisciplined plot of land in Orgeval, France. Paul Caponigro tackles the majestic and spiritual overtones of the ancient menhirs at Stonehenge in his portfolio of a dozen photographs from his extensive series on the subject.

Examining a different man made landmark, James Fee concentrates on Philadelphia's Eastern State Penitentiary with delicate, spooky, suggestive images of the impressive structure. Less sublime in architecture though not in locale is the abandoned beach house in Malibu, California, that served as the inspiration for John Divola's Zuma Series. Laurie Brown presents the unpopulated moonscapes of construction sites in southern California in her portfolio Earth Edges, and Alen MacWeeney's collection of pictures of Ireland is the only portfolio in the exhibition to include portraits in evoking a feeling of place.

James Fee and ESP

James Fee and Philadelphia's Eastern State Penitentiary

A massive architectural complex filling an entire city block, the historic Eastern State Penitentiary is located about five blocks away from the Philadelphia Museum of Art and is open to the public. The focus of interest and controversy since opening in 1829, the penitentiary was situated outside the city limits and was built to reflect progressive, Quaker-inspired ideas about prison reform. The aging and outdated facility was closed in 1971, but the building was later stabilized and it opened to public tours in 1994. The shadowy hallways and peeling paint of this unusual site have made it a favorite location for photographers.

California-based James Fee made his series of photographs there in 1995, using views of the penitentiary's storeroom, machine shop, and infirmary to record some of the left-behind objects that hint at the lives of former inmates. The artist made his negatives using a nineteenth-century wet-plate photographic process and employed other techniques to diffuse the detail of his subjects. The resulting hazy, imperfect quality of his prints suggest the passage of time and, by offering only indistinct glimpses of the penitentiary, reminds us of the many untold stories within its walls.

For a wealth of information about the Eastern State Penitentiary, including special programs and how to visit, see their website at www.easternstate.org.


Main Building

Curators

Katherine Ware • Curator of Photographs, Alfred Stieglitz Center, Philadelphia Museum of Art

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