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Fredrik Marsh
    Current
      PARKERSBURG (West Virginia, 2014 - 15)
      I AM LOST TO THE WORLD (Italy, 2012)
      TO THOSE WHO COME AFTER (China, 2008 - 09)
      TRANSITIONS: THE DRESDEN PROJECT MONOGRAPH & DELUXE LIMITED EDITION (2009)
      TRANSITIONS: THE DRESDEN PROJECT Interiors (2005 - 06)
      TRANSITIONS: THE DRESDEN PROJECT Interiors (2003 - 04)
      TRANSITIONS: THE DRESDEN PROJECT Panoramas (2002)
    Installations
      Technische Sammlungen Dresden. European Touring Exhibition.
      Weston Art Gallery, Cincinnati, Ohio. USA Touring Exhibition.
      Urban Arts Space, Columbus, Ohio. USA Touring Exhibition.
    Touring Exhibition
    Archive
      Heroes of Horticulture Commission, George Eastman House (2007)
      Topographic Landscapes (1999 - 2001)
      Experiments in Cliché-verre (2000)
      ReVisioning the Shenandoah Valley (1988 - 1989)
      Maka Sica: South Dakota Badlands (1986 - 1987)
      Constructions (1981 - 86)
    Artist Statement
    News
    Pricing
    Biography & CV
    Contact

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ACTUAL SIZE

 

Exploring the Photographic Contact Print

 

Cassilhaus Gallery, Chapel Hill, NC | Curated by Frank Konhaus

 

December 15, 2015 – March 15, 2016


Eugène Atget, Edouard Baldus, George Barker, George Barnard, Mathew Brady, Manuel Alvarez Bravo, Harry Callahan, Paul Caponigro, Linda Conner, Binh Danh, Eliot Dudik, John Dugdale, James Fee, Eugene Omar “E.O.” Goldbeck, Lisa Gray, Roger Haile, Alex Harris, David Alan Harvey, Tama Hochbaum, Frank Hunter, Thomas Kellner, Sally Mann, Fredrik Marsh, Chris McCaw, Geanna Merola, Andrea Modica, Karl Moon, Timothy O’Sullivan, Olivia Parker, Eric Pickersgill, Michael Prince, Tom Rankin, F.A. Rinehart, Linda Foard Roberts, David Scheinbaum, MJ Sharp, David Simonton, Lauren E. Simonutti, Leah Sobsey, Frederick Sommer, Ralph Steiner, Burk Uzzle, and Caroline Hickman Vaughan.

Fredrik Marsh, Yellow Mounds, Badlands National Park, near Interior, South Dakota.  Vintage 14 x 17" Selenium-toned Silver Gelatin Print, November 1986.


Fredrik Marsh, Yellow Mounds, Badlands National Park, near Interior, South Dakota.  Vintage 14 x 17" Selenium-toned Silver Gelatin Print, November 1986.


Actual Size: Exploring the Photographic Contact Print was curated by Frank Kon­haus with copious and thoughtful assistance provided by Eliot Dudik. The use of the word “Exploring” in the title was intentional as not all of the images in the exhibition are contact prints and, given that virtually all photographs prior to the early 1900s were contact printed, a comprehensive survey of the subject would be above my pay grade. A little less than half of works in the exhibition are drawn from the Cassilhaus Collection with the balance being generously loaned by artists, collectors, and galler­ies across the county. As with many of our exhibitions, this one started with a simple and innocent enough notion—in this case to pull together some of the contemporary contact prints from our collection and do a small show. Never wanting to miss an op­portunity to make my life vastly more complicated, however, I fell deeply down the Contact Print rabbit hole. A very short and crazy 2 1/2 months later we have a beauti­ful exhibition of nearly 80 works by 46 artists spanning 150 years of the history of pho­tography and a score of different formats and negative sizes from 35mm to 30”x40.”

This exhibition would not have happened without the assistance of Ellen “vinyl girl” Cassilly, Hannah Frieser, Jessina Leonard, Alyssa Miserendino, Michaela O’Brien, and Susan Harbage Page, and the generous loans from Catherine Edelman Gallery, Terry Etherton Gallery, Scheinbaum and Russek LTD, Schneider Gallery, Lisa Sette Gallery, Eliot Dudik, Alex Harris, Tama Hochbaum, Roger Haile, Frank Hunter, Fredrik Marsh, Chris McCaw, Geanna Merola, Eric Pickersgill, Tom Rankin, Linda Foard Roberts, MJ Sharp, David Simonton, Leah Sobsey, and Burk Uzzle. A special shout out to Linwood Hart and Mark Mooney with Craven Allen Gallery who are always there for my all too frequent framing “emergencies.” I am particularly in the debt of Jim and Jane Finch for the loan of all of the historical works in the exhibition. Jim’s enthusiasm for photogra­phy collecting in general and historic sub-genres in particular is practically explosive and he is incredible generous with his time and knowledge.

Many of the works in the exhibition are for sale and, as always, we encourage you to support the work of participating artists by purchasing and living with their amazing work. Even those works listed as NFS are often from limited editions that are available for purchase directly from the artists or their galleries.


Frank Konhaus
December 2015

Cassilhaus
Integrating Art Into the Community
www.cassilhaus.com