Saturday, February 22, 2014

QUIET






















Over the last year I have been working on re-designing my website and blog. You can now find posts on my website.
www.dennisdehart.com

Wednesday, September 4, 2013

Revised Website, Taking a Break

I recently updated my website and have decided to include selected blog posts on the homepage. From time to time I will still post on this blog, though my primary blog is now at www.dennisdehart.com

Wednesday, July 3, 2013

Uncertain Futures Exhibition, Dublin, Ireland



Dennis DeHart Interviewed by Maeve O'Neill

Can you tell us a little bit about the work; how did it come together and what are its' main concerns? 

When and where a project begins is an interesting concept in itself. With that, I was born and raised next to the Columbia River near Portland, Oregon, USA. The river, its multiple histories, peoples, and stories are issues I grew up around as a child. It was not until after a 20 plus-year hiatus from the region, that I became consciously engaged through photography. My main concern is in expressing how interconnected everything is; that what we do in our own back yard, has a broader affect on the larger world we live in. The rivers are an apt metaphor, as it is a quantitative thing that illustrates the concept literally. For example, when salmon can no longer travel to their spawning grounds because of damning, it affects the entire ecology of the region in measurable ways. 


Confluences is an interesting word; it means the point where bodies of water meet - and rivers and dams are crucial to this area - but it also means a flow between different things and the coming together of people. The ways in which different social histories fuse in the landscape are obviously important to you. Can you expand on this?

In engaging with landscapes with significant social histories, I am often struck by the presence in the absence. For example, this winter my two sons and I travelled to Doug Bar in Hell’s Canyon between Oregon and Idaho. The site we visited was quite remote-some 40 miles from the nearest town. It was a place in which the United States Calvary drove the Nez Perce Native American’s across the Snake River and out of their homeland. The layers of history imbued in sometimes seemingly banal spaces, emotionally move me.

Politicians in the US are hesitant to publicly accept the seriousness of climate change; how do you feel this impacts on the issue at a grass-roots level? 
US politics have became increasingly polarized, much to the detriment of seemingly common sense solutions. On the grass-roots level, these solutions are often “radicalized”, which can then be used to degrade common sense solutions to the point of ineffectiveness.

The American landscape - rural and urban - holds a symbolic / iconic quality... it's been channeled into the world via cinema and photography. Do you feel influenced by this? 

Indeed, I do feel influenced by the “Myth of the West.” Growing up in the Pacific Northwest of the US, it is nearly impossible not to have been influenced on some level by these narratives. I also went to Graduate school in New Mexico, where the faculty worked to both challenge and inspire us to consider these narratives in a critical and engaged manner. While I am critical in some respects of the concept of the “west”, as an American, I also cannot help but to feel a certain inkling to these stories, problems and all. 

And finally; given that digital and Internet technology have changed the medium forever, what do you see in store for photography?

Photography is a little bit like water these days; we depend on it, yet we take it for granted most of the time. I feel there will always be a desire to make art and tell stories, which photography is well suited to do. 

Friday, June 7, 2013

Featured on New Landscape Photography

Thanks Wilson for featuring my work! 

Tuesday, June 4, 2013

Confluences, Royal City & Othello, Grant County, Washington State

Hone, 30x40 Pigment Print, © Dennis DeHart, 2013
Motel, 30x40 Pigment Print, © Dennis DeHart, 2013

Friday, May 31, 2013

Thinking Local

Our Art Walk 2013 lineup is jaw dropping with talent:
Martha McIver- paintings
Derek Sullivan- art prints
Moscow Wood Turners- wood
Morse Clary- wood

Dennis DeHart- photography

Rachel Jerome Ferraro- photography
Elizabeth Fleming- photography
Ian Van Coller- photography

With live music provided by the BookPeople Banjo Bonanza!!!

Tuesday, May 14, 2013

Palouse Project (Notes)

Bioregional Imagination
The Localization Reader, MIT
Lure of the Local, Lucy Lippard
Education: Engagement, human element, experiential
Rob Thayer, UC Davis/
Nature culture courses-bioregion.ucdavis.edu

Everything is in a state of change
 Root of Camas Lily. Photographed at Nez Perce National Historical Park, Spalding, Idaho
Question: What is a natural state?
"Stories are affected by landscape shifts."
Dustin Aherin, 5th Generation Lewiston resident
Photographed at the Snake, Clearwater Confluence
Entropy
Children of the Pleistocene
footprintnetwork.org
Moogs/Distance learning
Place Based Education
CEREO
Office of Undergrad Education
Center for Civic Engagement

Portland State/Harold Fletcher-Art and Social Practice

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

Lumber

Lumber strewn about from train derailment, from Confluences, ©Dennis DeHart, 2013

Thursday, May 2, 2013

Becoming at WSU

https://news.wsu.edu/pages/publications.asp?Action=Detail&PublicationID=36265&TypeID=2


Hi:  I saw the news story on the “Becoming” exhibit—our early childhood faculty are meeting this afternoon and wanted to end with a visit to the gallery—how late is it open?  Thanks and congratulations, looks like a wonderful collection of work.  
 
Brenda Boyd, Ph.D.
Associate Professor, Human Development
Washington State University

Tuesday, April 30, 2013

Becoming:Installation Photos

Installation from the group show Becoming. The exhibition includes Dennis DeHart, Ian van Coller,
 Elizabeth Fleming, and Rachel Jerome Ferraro. 

Saturday, April 27, 2013

Photograph As Object

Preparing for the "Becoming" exhibition this week, I came across two empty display cases in the hall (Thanks Kevin Haas) Letting my impulsive side take over, I decided to go through my archives of cards and catalogs from the last decade. After a bit of digging, I found a multitude of catalogs and cards from when I was a graduate student at the University of New Mexico. Included among the catalogs  was "Photo Objects", an exhibition and catalog curated by Geoffrey Batchen at the UNM Art Museum.
Display cabinets with cards and catalogs referencing photo as object from UNM, 1999-2002. Includes a catalog by Geoffrey Batchen, for the exhibit, "Photo Objects", from the UNM Art Museum. Background, Gallery 3 and video projects outside Gallery 3.
Detail of the photo above, "The Photograph as object", with  catalog by Geoffrey Batchen.Other cards and catalogs include Myra Greene, Kathleen Robbins, John Mann, Patrick Manning, Chris Colville,  Ian van Coller,  Professor Jim Stone, Professor and Adrienne Salinger.
The "Photograph As Object" is period of history and snap shot in time. It also refers to the dialogue and culture being produced at UNM during this period including specifically by Critical Theorist Geoffrey Batchen, and Photography Professors Thomas Barrow and Patrick Nagatani. The catalogs and cards function on two levels, with one being documents of photographers predominately focused on working with the photograph as a physical media, for example. On the other level, the catalogs and cards are actual objects, which, with the rise of the internet and social media, are a document of a diminishing form of media as objects in their own right.
 Installation in process for the show, "Becoming", Gallery 3, Washington State University.
Unpacking and visualizing the installation of framed prints for "Becoming", in the physical space of the gallery,  has been surprisingly satisfying. As much as I value the broad reach of the internet and social media as a way to disseminate photographs to broad audiences, there is still nothing quite like working with, and experiencing photographs as objects in physical space. 

Thursday, April 18, 2013

Confluences Featured on Places: Design Observer

I am both excited and honored that my project Confluences is featured on Design Observer: Places today.


Photographer Dennis DeHart has been following the rivers as his guide to the Inland Pacific Northwest. His photos examine the incredible contradictions of this region, shaped by engineered river systems, New Deal irrigation projects, nuclear production facilities, junkyards and hydroplane races, and ten thousand years of Native American fishing and land use.
http://places.designobserver.com/feature/confluences-photographs-of-the-inland-northwest/37820/

Tuesday, April 16, 2013

Becoming Exhibition, Press Release

BECOMING
Four artists contemplate childhood through contemporary fine art photography
Dennis DeHart         www.dennisdehart.com
Rachel Jerome Ferrao   www.racheljeromeferraro.com
Elizabeth Fleming         www.elizabethfleming.com
Ian van Coller www.ianvancoller.com

Inaugural exhibitions:
Washington State University, Department of Fine Arts, Pullman, Washington.
Gallery 3, Fine Arts Building (Adjacent to the WSU Art Museum)
May 1-25, 2013

Becoming is a fine art, traveling exhibition focused on childhood through the lens of contemporary photography. Initially an exhibition idea spearheaded by native South African photographer Ian van Coller, Becoming examines childhood through poignant moments of family, humor, intrigue, and drama. 

Ian van Coller, a Professor of Photography at Montana State University, will exhibit prints from his series and book “Growing Up in Montana,” which focuses on childhood innocence. Citing the ability to study life through photographs as her primary drive to make pictures, New York-based commercial and art photographer Rachel Jerome Ferraro will be showcasing her personal fine art work in “Family.” Drawing largely from her interest in memory, longing and mystery in the everyday, New Jersey-based photographer Elizabeth Fleming will be presenting work from her project “Life is a Series of Small Moments.” Embracing a philosophical point of view of early childhood education and play, Washington State Fine Art faculty member Dennis DeHart will exhibit photographs from his series “At Play. 
Becoming is a celebratory and thoughtful exhibition that draws from the vernacular of the family. Focusing on such basic human qualities as innocence, play, inquiry, and memory, Becoming innately celebrates the temporal nature of childhood en route to becoming.

Saturday, April 13, 2013

Cowboy

Cowboy, From the Confluences Project, Asotin, Washington.© Dennis DeHart, 2013
Detail, Cowboy, From the Confluences Project, Asotin, Washington.© Dennis DeHart, 2013

Wednesday, April 10, 2013

Help Support Youth in Focus' Double Exposure 2013 Fundraising Event

Youth in Focus’s mission is to empower urban youth, through photography, to experience their world in new ways and to make positive choices for their lives.  We put cameras in the hands of low income, at-risk youth and place them in a challenging environment surrounded by high quality talented teachers, nurturing adult volunteer mentors, and create a strong community of support.  Through photography our students find their voice, identity, creativity, and gain new confidence in their worth and abilities. http://youthinfocus.org

Below is a pieces I donated for the auction. Help support Youth in Focus. Buy art!
Title: When I See You, I Will Show You Our Road 
Pigment Print on 17x22 Hahneumuhle Paper, From Edition of 10, 2007

Original 4x5 Film Image, Found Stereo Card, Postcard from Family Archive
Estimated Value: $500.00

Sunday, April 7, 2013

The Best Camera is the One Thats With You???

Recently I caught my self using the catchphrase "the best Camera is the one you have with you." Doing a quick google search, I noted that this quote comes from Chase Jarvis has been around for a couple of years. The phrase appears to be partly a marketing slogan for Instagram/I-Phones and an ode to the DIY hipster spirit coupled with the basic human desire to make snapshots. In almost every outlet for photography including "serious" art and journalism, you can't help but notice the ubiquitous and stylized "square" photograph, which is generally made with an I-phone and edited with Instagram. 
 A couple of examples include Rock Hushka, an artist himself and curator with the Tacoma Art Museum, who in his recent lecture at WSU, discussed a contemporary photographer he likes (the name alludes me) who publishes Instagram photos of flowers. Rock discussed these photos, without irony, in the same lecture/context that he discussed works by David Wojnarowicz, Michael Kenna, and Edward Curtis. Another example is the recent NY times publication of an  a I-phone/Instagram photo of Alex Rodriguez, by sports photographer Nick Laham, on the front of its March 24, 2013 Sunday times. http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/04/01/ny-times-instagram-photo-front-page_n_2991746.html
Rolling Hills Derby Dames, ©Dennis DeHart
Rolling Hills Derby Dames,  ©Dennis DeHart

The stylized aesthetic that comes with an unobtrusive, low profile camera, is appealing.  For example, I snapped the two photographs above, during a women's roller derby tournament.  My I-phone/Pod allowed me a low fi confidence in which I made thoughtfully composed snapshots, with a pre prepared aesthetic package. I personally think the two photographs are fun and encapsulates a bit of the energy and the spirit of the event. Right now- I don't want to think to much about the impact this kind of photography is and will continue to have on "serious" photography. In this instance, the best camera we had with us was between my wife's old school cell phones or my i-pod. It worked out fine for what it is. In writing this post, the great Andy Warhol comes to mind. I am going to finish the post by including few quotes by him.

“Art is what you can get away with.”-Andy Warhol

“A picture means I know where I was every minute. That's why I take pictures. It's a visual diary.” -Andy Warhol

“I believe in low lights and trick mirrors.” -Andy Warhol

“Isn't life a series of images that change as they repeat themselves?”-Andy Warhol

“You need to let the little things that would ordinarily bore you suddenly thrill you.”-Andy Warhol


Saturday, April 6, 2013

At Play 2013

From the Series At Play, April 2013. © Dennis DeHart

Thursday, March 14, 2013

Bessie

Bessie, Digital Capture, Archival Pigment Print, © Dennis DeHart, 2013

Tuesday, March 12, 2013

Then.Now.Here.

Six of my photographs will be included Then. Now. Here., which is a photography exhibition curated by guest juror Motoya Nakamura. The projected/slideshow exhibition  is part of Portland Photo Month and will be included in the following venues. 


PORTLAND PHOTO MONTH OPENING RECEPTION 
Date/Time: Wednesday, April 3rd 8pm-9:30pm
Location: Oregon Historical Society (1200 SW Park Avenue)
Details: Help us kick off Portland Photo Month in style. The evening will include the first screening of "Then. Now. Here." with live music by Portland jazz/swing trio Boy and Bean. Light snacks and drinks will be served and Photolucida's photography monographs will also be for sale. Join us for a festive evening.
FIRST FRIDAY SCREENING
Date/Time: Friday, April 5th 6-9pm
Location: Newspace Center for Photography (1632 SE 10th Avenue)
FIRST THURSDAY SCREENING
Date/Time: Thursday, April 4th 8pm-9pm
Location: Regional Arts & Culture Council building facade (411 NW Park Avenue)


UMPQUA COMMUNITY COLLEGE (Roseburg, Oregon)
Date/Time: Thursday, April 25th
Location: Auditorium (1140 Umpqua College Rd, Roseburg, OR)


PHOTOLUCIDA'S PORTFOLIO WALK 
Date/Time: Thursday, April 18th 6-9pm
Location: Castaway (1900 NW 18th Ave.)

Date/Time: Saturday, April 20th 8-9pm
Location: DeSoto Building facade (122 NW 8th Avenue)

Date/Time A continuous slideshow will also run throughout the month of April in the window. 
Location: Blue Sky Gallery (122 NW 8th Avenue)

Friday, March 8, 2013

Backlight Artist Residency


I am very honored to be included in the Backlight Photo Festival's artist residency this summer in Finland. The line up includes:
ZoƩ Beausire, Switzerland
Nathalie Belayche, France
Dennis DeHart, USA
Clare Gallagher, UK/Northern Ireland
Thanks Tuula and Backlight! Looking forward to meeting everyone soon.

Sunday, March 3, 2013

Two Recent Portraits

 Mother and Daughter, Bovil, Idaho, Digital Capture, ©Dennis DeHart, 2013
 Barista, Spokane, Washington, Digital Capture, ©Dennis DeHart, 2013
Detail, Barista, Spokane, Washington, Digital Capture, ©Dennis DeHart, 2013

Saturday, March 2, 2013

Open Range

Open Range, C-Print, 22.5x30, ©Dennis DeHart, 2013


Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Wallula

Near the site of the original Fort Nez Perce and home of the Walla Wallas tribe, 
Digital Capture, color print, 22.5x30, © Dennis DeHart, 2013

Monday, February 18, 2013

Lower Granite Dam

Lower Granite Dam at Dusk, Snake RIver, Feb. 18, 2013, Digital Capture. © Dennis DeHart