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John Brook
Jan. 9 - Feb. 14, 2021
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November 6 – Feb 12, 2021
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Jan 3 - February 20, 2021
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Davis Orton Gallery/
Griffin Museum
January 7 - March 26, 2021
Reception TBA
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January 7 - Feb 14, 2021
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January 7 - Feb 14, 2021
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January 20, 2021, 7 PM, ET
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January 28, 2021, 7 PM, ET
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Lou Jones, Gary Samson, Jessica Roscio and
Thom Adams
January 31, 2021 4 PM, ET
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February 3, 2021, 7 PM, ET
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February 7, 2021, 4 PM, ET
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Thomas Adams, Szari Lewis Bourque, Jean Gibran, David Herwaldt and Pat Nelson
February 14, 2021 4 PM, ET
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photo above © Elizabeth Libert
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February 18, 2021 7 PM, ET
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SAVE THE DATE
More Details Coming
photo above © Vaughn Sills
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A Facilitated Panel Discussion and Presentation
with Vaughn Sills and two speakers who are experts in the areas that Vaughn Sills' work is about - mortality, beauty, grieving, and the planet's crisis.
January 20 - February 28, 2021.
Dr. K. Melchor-Quick Hall
Nancy Frumin Styron
SAVE THE DATE
February 20, 2021 4 PM, ET
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Featured image above:
Weegee, “Their First Murder,” 1941,
© International Center of Photography
Jason Tannen is a photographer, gallery curator, and educator.
From 1998 to 2014, he directed the University Art Gallery at California State University, Chico, where he also taught the History of Photography and Film Studies. Prior moving to Chico, he directed the San Francisco Art Commission Gallery, and before that he was Visual Arts Coordinator at Sushi Performance and Visual Art in San Diego.
He received his MFA in Photography from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago and his BFA from Tyler School of Art in Philadelphia, PA.
In today’s world, with a plethora of cameras, cellphones, laptops, and tablets, it’s remarkable if any activity, noteworthy or not, fails to be recorded and posted on social media.
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In the 1930s and 40s however, this ability to capture the highs and lows of human existence was distilled into one notable character: Weegee.
Weegee was the alias for Arthur Fellig (1899–1968). He was the archetypal news photographer of the twentieth century. From the mid– 1930s through the 1940s, his photographs offered gritty tales from the urban jungle to readers of the New York City tabloids.
Weegee condensed whole lives into a single picture, from the grievous to joyous, printed on the fly for the next day’s edition. He was the quintessential hard–boiled, cigar smoking, flashgun–popping character we’ve come to know from numerous pulp fiction and movie story lines. His nightly beat covered fires, automobile crashes, gangland murders, and so much more.
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morning and evening offering on Zoom
with Molly Lamb
Begins March 2 and 4, 2021
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8 session course
Evening offering on Zoom
Begins March 16, 2021
6:30 PM
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Feb 20 - March 26, 2021
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Feb 13 - April 16, 2020
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photo @ right © Gordon Saperia
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Feb 15 - April 18, 2021
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The Griffin Museum of Photography is a nonprofit organization dedicated solely to the art of photography. Through our many exhibitions, programs and lectures, we strive to encourage a broader understanding and appreciation of the visual, emotional and social impact of photographic art.
As an institution, we are committed to insuring that our mindset, our practice, our outreach, our programming and our exhibitions set a framework with priorities for building programs and exhibitions that consider diversity, equity, accessibility, and inclusion through our mission that is centered around the photograph.
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