Photography from A-Z


Opening reception Saturday, September 18th 6-9pm. closes November 21st 2004


Hogar Collection 111 Grand street, Brooklyn, NY 11211 tel: 718.388.5022 info@hogarcollection.com
Gallery hours: Thursday – Monday 12:00 – 7:30 and by appointment www.hogarcollection.com

 


Hogar Collection is pleased to announce the upcoming group exhibition Photography from A- Z.

In this show, the works of 7 Argentinean photographers come together to explore a range of subjects

including the portrait, the document, architecture, landscape and time.

 
   
          Julio Grinblatt´s small-scale black and white photographs of empty corridors poetically bring attention to architecture with a distorted funhouse feel, creating scenes where the potential energy is charged and unknown. The complete series wasshown at The Museo Nacional de Arte Reina Sofia, Spain 2001.
 
           
                   
                     
 
In Nicolás Goldberg’s color prints, the narrative takes control where the moments, as dramatic as they appear, are ephemeral moments that drift away into their own solitude. He was recently in Field of depth: Landscape as Metaphor in Emerging Photography,Latin Collector gallery, NY, NY.
       
         
                       
                           
        Mariano Farinaccio’s playful digital color prints are
layered with collage and photography. Through
deconstruction and reconstruction the works reveal a portal
into themselves.

         
                           
                     
 

Pablo Abuliak’s anthropological snapshots depict a sense of the collective ideal, recording in a journalistic manner and capturing rhythmic moments of life. He was a finalist in PhotoEspaña03, Casa de America, Madrid, Spain, 2003.

             
                     
                           
Cecilia Biagini’s abstract color prints invoke a
metaphysical like air as she examines where the lines
of understanding are hidden and the focus of attention
becomes distorted in animation. She shows
internationally and is co-director of Hogar collection.
 
       
             
In Richard Etkin’s flower portraits, the
dramatic use of light and focus brings our
attention to the subtle character of the subjects.

             
                     
 
  In Bibi Calderaro’s 8mm “Blinking landscape”, a single blinking image is portrayed on one screen
and a landscape with changing shadows in the other. It is a work about landscape, memory and contemporary perception of time She recently participated in AIM23, Bronx Museum for the Arts, New York City, NY, 2003