Exhibition Dates: March 2-April 21, 2018
Opening Reception: Friday, March 2 from 6-8PM
CULT | Aimee Friberg Exhibitions is pleased to present Terri Loewenthal: Psychscapes, the artist’s first solo exhibition with the gallery, on view from March 2 through April 21, 2018. An artist reception will take place on Friday, March 2 from 6 until 8 PM.
Terri Loewenthal investigates the sublime expanse of land and sky romanticized in the still-potent mythology of Utopian California with her new series Psychscapes. Using the California landscape, she continues her exploration of the medium of photography, specifically drawing attention to the relationship between illusion and materiality. These single-exposure, in-camera compositions utilize optics developed by the artist, to compress space instead of time. The results are complex evocative environments of saturated colors and a disorienting configuration of foreground and background, that reference the history of romantic landscapes while peering into the psychology of perception.
Image Credit: Terri Loewenthal, Psychscape 18 (Banner Ridge, CA), 2017, 42 x 56 inches, Archival pigment print
Exhibition Dates: March 2-April 21, 2018
Opening Reception: Friday, March 2 from 6-8PM
CULT | Aimee Friberg Exhibitions is pleased to present Terri Loewenthal: Psychscapes, the artist’s first solo exhibition with the gallery, on view from March 2 through April 21, 2018. An artist reception will take place on Friday, March 2 from 6 until 8 PM.
Terri Loewenthal investigates the sublime expanse of land and sky romanticized in the still-potent mythology of Utopian California with her new series Psychscapes. Using the California landscape, she continues her exploration of the medium of photography, specifically drawing attention to the relationship between illusion and materiality. These single-exposure, in-camera compositions utilize optics developed by the artist, to compress space instead of time. The results are complex evocative environments of saturated colors and a disorienting configuration of foreground and background, that reference the history of romantic landscapes while peering into the psychology of perception.
Image Credit: Terri Loewenthal, Psychscape 18 (Banner Ridge, CA), 2017, 42 x 56 inches, Archival pigment print
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