Feature Articles
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Janaury Issue 2008

Gibbes Museum of Art in Charleston, SC, Features Works by William Christenberry

The Gibbes Museum of Art in Charleston, SC, is presenting the exhibition William Christenberry: Photographs, 1961-2005, on view in the Museum's Main Gallery through Mar. 16, 2008.

Ranging from his Brownie photographs of the early 1960s to his later work with a large-format camera the exhibit is a survey of this artist's poetic documentation of southern vernacular architecture, signage and landscape that captures moments of quiet beauty in a sometimes rustic terrain.

Since the early 1960s, Christenberry has photographed the American South, focusing his attention on his hometown, Hale County, AL. Christenberry has returned to Hale County every year to record its slowly changing landscape and structures. He has recorded many buildings and sites repeatedly, capturing progressive stages of their physical decrepitude. A subtle palette, poetic simplicity and classical compositions give Christenberry's photographs of southern landscapes including kudzu, churches, gravesites and vernacular architecture a compelling power. Straddling the past and present, Christenberry's art evokes the form and power of the passage of time.

Coupling never-before-seen photographs, both old and new, with images that are now iconic, William Christenberry: Photographs, 1961 - 2005 comprises fifty photographic works and one sculpture, and, in turn, conveys the breadth of Christenberry's unprecedented project and singular photographic vision. The unorthodox mix of media, shown side by side, invites the viewer to grasp the full scope and complexity of his very personal investigation of both his own heritage and that of the American South.

Aperture, a not-for-profit organization devoted to photography and the visual arts, has organized this traveling exhibition and produced the accompanying publication entitled William Christenberry by Elizabeth Broun, Walter Hopps, Andy Grundberg and Howard N. Fox.

This exhibition is sponsored locally by Gibbes, etc. and Garden & Gun magazine.

Along with such masters as William Eggleston and Stephen Shore, William Christenberry (b. 1936) is widely recognized as a pioneer in the field of color photography. He is world renowned for his photography, sculpture, drawings and paintings that pay tribute to his roots in rural Alabama. Christenberry has been a professor at the Corcoran College of Art and Design, Washington, DC, since 1968. His work can be found in the collections of the Smithsonian American Art Museum in Washington, DC; Museum of Modern Art in New York; and San Francisco Museum of Modern Art.

Established as the Carolina Art Association in 1858, the Gibbes Museum of Art opened its doors to the public in 1905. Located in Charleston's historic district, the Gibbes houses a premier collection of over 10,000 works, principally American with a Charleston or Southern connection and presents special exhibitions throughout the year. In addition, the museum offers an extensive complement of public programming and educational outreach initiatives. As the aesthetic heart of the Lowcountry, the Gibbes serves the community by stimulating creative expression, increasing economic vitality through tourism, and improving the region's superb quality of life.

For further info check our SC Institutional Gallery listings, call the Museum at 843/722-2706 or visit (www.gibbesmuseum.org).

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