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August 28, 2008

Hometown press release

Peter Hay Halpert Fine Art is pleased to announce their second exhibition of work by New York photographer Ron Diorio. The show, titled Hometown, will begin 4 September with an opening reception for the artist and will remain on view until 31 October.

Hometown

Hometown groups nineteen photographs taken in the artist’s native New York City. Through the juxtaposition of intimate scenes hung alongside cityscape views, Diorio builds on his previous exhibition with Peter Hay Halpert Fine Art (titled Around Here). Edward Hopper’s paintings are often cited as an influence and inspiration for Diorio’s photography, and the pieces in Hometown continue the artist’s exploration of themes and aesthetics that make the comparison with the painter apt. The exhibition emphasizes urban landscapes where figures remain disconnected and somber. Moreover, people often appear in hunched positions, signaling the intensity of living in the city. While his photographs are often melancholic, and even sometimes quietly foreboding, Diorio’s redactive technique allows figure and color to bleed. This gentle abstraction gives the work’s formal qualities a serene and tranquil impression, and ultimately places his imagery somewhere between memory and reality.


In the age of digital manipulation Diorio’s artistry resists the literalness of photography and embraces an imaginative vision. His work reflects the technological progression of photography, while undermining some of its fundamental suppositions. He writes, “It is not the decisive moment frozen. It is a more measured purposeful encounter -- the creation of the physical object. This is what I consider to be the ‘art.’ The screen image or the photographic print is the object, the document of my process where the image becomes an image of itself. An event takes place but the viewer doesn't experience that. They experience the idea of that.”

This exhibition will be accompanied by a catalogue, and a limited edition, hardbound publication incorporating Anytown, Around Here, and Hometown, and featuring a tipped-in print will also coincide with the show.

Diorio's photographs have been exhibited most recently in London, and his work has been included in shows at the Griffin Museum of Photography in Massachusetts and the Center for Photography at Woodstock in New York.


Peter Hay Halpert Fine Art is located at 511 West 25th Street, Suite 306, New York, NY. Gallery hours are Tuesday through Saturday from 10AM to 6PM. For further information, or to schedule a viewing, please contact the gallery at phh@phhfineart.com or call 646.827.9890.

August 25, 2008

One thng I would do differently ....

Yesterday I was asked, what I am planning to differently in preparation for the "Hometown" exhibition and I rattled off a number of task related items about the catalog and advertising. Now having had my first cup of coffee I have decided I will also 1.) spend more time at the gallery during the run and 2.) make sure I find two or three things to do after the show ends!

August 24, 2008

Signing the work

From F. Lennox "Lenny" Campello at Art-Tistics
blog

Amateur photographers are especially fond of signing their photographs with gold or silver pens. Did you notice that I wrote “amateur?” The visual presentation of a photograph should not be marred by that kitschy practice. if you sign your photo on the front, do it discreetly on the margin; otherwise sign it on the verso, also on the margin. I’ve also seen the practice of signing the mat in pencil, and I am OK with that, although I know some gallerists and museum symbiotes do not like that practice either.

Let me be clear: the art must be signed.

If the signature distracts from your own personal aesthetic, then sign it on the back of the work. To be blunt, most collectors demand signatures and there’s ample empirical data that shows that unsigned works always get less in auctions than signed pieces.

DIY Web

As I am in the market for an updated website, I took some interest in Liz Kuball's recent relaunch which handled herself.

It looks good! Selling the template?

She compared it to cooking ... all I can do well is make cold cut sandwiches.