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The Robin Rice
Gallery announces “Havana Passage,” a solo exhibition
of photography by Craig J Barber. The opening reception will be
held on Wednesday, September 22nd from 5:30 to 8:30 pm. The show
runs through October 31, 2004.
In this exhibition, “Havana Passage,” Barber documents
a cultural landscape of a country that seems frozen in time –
suspended in 1950’s. Having visited Cuba many times, he is
passionate about sharing his visual diary of a place that has been
a forbidden mystery. Barber’s photographs preserve the character
of a culture in transition – capturing the beauty of urban
decay that is Cuba.
Barber built his own panoramic pinhole camera, with a 90-degree
field of view, exposing the film up to 20 minutes, and printing
contact prints 12” x 20” in platinum/palladium on rag
paper. It is the perfect marriage of an earlier technique and a
21st century vision. The absence of a lens, especially when a human
figure crosses his field of view, creates a dusting of people, an
eerie ghostlike impression. It is reminiscent of an Alfred Hitchcock
film, when something odd has just happened right around the corner.
In the invitational image, “Juxtaposed,” an old American
car stands between decaying colonial buildings, while in the distance
stands modern architecture with a mysterious man in the left corner.
Craig J Barber’s work has been exhibited in Europe, Latin
America and throughout the United States at many leading museums,
such as: the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston; the Victoria & Albert
Museum, London; the Brooklyn Art Museum; the Minneapolis Institute
of Art; and the Museo Nacional de Bellas Artes, Buenos Aires, Argentina.
He has received a number of grants – from the Seattle Arts
Commission, the Polaroid Corporation and the New York Foundation
for the Arts. Barber currently teaches at The International Center
of Photography in Manhattan and at the Center for Photography in
Woodstock. A native New Yorker, he is presently residing in Woodstock,
New York. Barber has been showing at The Robin Rice Gallery since
1991.
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