Press for "A Stationary Point on a Spinning Planet"

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Bryce Lankard explores time with ‘A Stationary Point on a Spinning Planet’ at Sulfur Studios

By John Singer/For Do Savannah

Get ready for an exhibition based on heavy contemplation as photographer Bryce Lankard displays three separate bodies of work in his latest exhibition at local Bull Street artists haven, Sulfur Studios. From practicing editorial and fine art photography to teaching photography at Duke Universities’ Center for Documentary Studies, Lankard has done it all behind the lens.

“I was really excited when Sulfur Studios offered me their main gallery space for this solo exhibition. It’s a very large space that offered me the opportunity to showcase a large selection from two related bodies of work,” he said. “The two photography projects are at their core a contemplation of the passage of time. ‘Blink of an Eye’ takes a macro view of this idea, while ‘Transience’ takes a micro approach. I also took this opportunity to create the short film for which the show is titled ‘A Stationary Point on a Spinning Planet’ to further unite this theme.”

″‘Blink of an Eye’ investigates the moments and places that one takes for granted and assumes will always be around that can disappear in the blink of an eye,” Lankard said. “The events surrounding both 9/11 and Hurricane Katrina brought this project into a deeper personal focus for me due to my long-standing connection with both of these unique cities. This sense of apparent sudden loss can be applied to physical objects, such as buildings or cities, and even to concepts like summertime, mortality, and youth.”

″‘Transience’ focuses on the randomness and impermanence of elements in motion, from objects moving through space to shifts of light as seen from a stationary point on a spinning planet,” he added. “Drawing from the aesthetic of wabi-sabi, which emphasizes the beauty of imperfection and the transience of time, these images reflect the rhythms of our world unfolding through sequencing, layering or mirroring. I hope these images encourage the viewer to slow down, observe, and take notice of those briefest moments of beauty that happen daily all around us but often slip by unnoticed.”

For the third and final piece of Lankard’s puzzle, he’ll be premiering a new film project that dives into the outer realms of our understanding. ″‘A Stationary Point on a Spinning Planet’ captures the atomic flickers of human existence in the midst of the wonder of nature’s perfect imperfections. It encourages a temporal shift in the viewers’ perception of the moments that pass us by, the innuendos of our brief encounter with this world.

While much of Lankard’s work falls into the documentary tradition, he hopes to express more personal ideas as well. “I hope these concepts also have a universal message, that each viewer will find their own personal connection to the images. It would be great if the audience walks away with the motivation to take pause and appreciate each unique moment in our brief time here.”

Jazzland, New Orleans East, 2008

Jazzland, New Orleans East, 2008

It’s Bryce Lankard’s time

by Rachael Flora for Connect Savannah

January 01, 2020

Disasters have the unique potential to change our perception on things. Photographer Bryce Lankard just so happened to experience two. He was living in New York City when 9/11 happened, and he was a longtime New Orleans resident right up until Katrina hit. The experiences left him with a feeling of impermanence. “What I really found myself thinking about was how there are these things in life that one takes for granted, wanting things to be around forever,” remembers Lankard. “Generally, you can apply that to a big tall skyscraper, you can apply that to a city, but you can apply it to abstract concepts as well.”

That reminiscent feeling is the inspiration behind part of the body of work for “A Stationary Point on A Spinning Planet,” Lankard’s latest exhibition up now through Jan. 4 at Sulfur Studios. The exhibition consists of two bodies of photographic work, “Transience” and “Blink of an Eye,” as well as Lankard’s first foray into video, after which the show is named. “At the same time, I was seeing all this work related to 9/11 and Katrina, which we unfortunately call ‘disaster porn,’” says Lankard. “A lot of destruction, and I’m guilty of that—I took images like that as well—but that wasn’t the thing I wanted to express. I wanted to express the idea of not taking for granted these moments in life.”

To capture that fleeting feeling, Lankard used cheap plastic cameras to photograph familiar scenes, like boardwalks and playgrounds, when they were empty. Those choices contributed to a lo-fi feeling, with a natural vignette and gauzy edges. “These are really organic cameras, so I did this very purposeful double exposed sequences that leave you a mild sense of disorientation, which is again how you feel when something is suddenly gone,” says Lankard.

After that body of work was completed, Lankard found he didn’t want to give it up. The idea of time passing stuck with him, and he wanted to discover other ways to work that out in his art. “I love spending time in the natural world, and I’m historically a still photographer, and still photography tends to capture things in a faction of a second,” he explains. “Well, how do you express the passage of time?” Lankard answered his question by shooting long sequences of images with his iPhone. “I took these moments which comes back to the title of the show, a stationary point on a spinning planet, which is you’re standing on the edge of a pond and it’s raining and the beauty of the rain droplets and the circles they make on the surface of water and it changes every instant,” he says. The ease of shooting with an iPhone contributed to Lankard’s ability to capture these moments. He points out that he doesn’t always bring his camera equipment out with him, but he’s always got his phone. “When you see a thing happening, if you didn’t have a phone in your pocket, you would observe it but never be able to record it,” he says. “It’s a great tool to capture and observe those moments in life.” Also evident in this body of work is Lankard’s interest in wabi-sabi, a Japanese aesthetic that accepts imperfection and transience. His embrace of that aesthetic, as well as some supportive friends, pushed him to try something new. “I had friends who really encouraged me to push my own limits with that, and because I was working from this wabi-sabi aesthetic, it inspired me to do these long, vertical scrolls on washi paper that capture the real aesthetic of wabi-sabi, and that’s why I also took it to film,” says Lankard. “I wanted something that could tie these two bodies of work together. I’ve been experimenting with making films for a while, but usually they’re really just kind of fun and casual.”

Lankard’s first video project is ten minutes long and not in a narrative format, instead serving as a complement to the photographic portion of the work. “The film was broken up into segments that I think respond to that sense of movement and even the quality of light and the passing of time in a way that makes you slow down and just observe things,” he says, “like fall leaves flowing down the stream or the reflection of light flickering on the surface. It’s the same sort of themes, same subjects as the still stuff, but expressed in a temporal form instead of things frozen in time.”

A resident of Raleigh-Durham, North Carolina, Lankard’s parents have lived in the Savannah area for quite some time. After his father passed away, he came to spend more time with his mother and came across Sulfur Studios. “I was pleased there are places like that here, and that one of the founders [Emily Earl] had a background in photography, which is my thing,” he shares. Photography is, most certainly, Lankard’s thing. He’s been into the medium since high school and did plenty of editorial work post-college. He cofounded Tribe Magazine in the mid-90s, which was distributed internationally. “It was a venue for me and, by extension, all my peers that I was able to hire, and I challenged them and myself to do the stories that would never show up in other magazines, and to do them in the most creative ways you could think of. Don’t be conservative,” he says. “That was a great experience. I’m so jealous of Garden and Gun—I would say we were maybe a predecessor of what they’ve got going on now. We were about alternative Southern culture.”

Notably, Lankard is also the cofounder of the New Orleans Photo Alliance and the Click! Photography Festival in the Triangle in North Carolina. He’s recently had a mid-career retrospective scheduled, which he finds crazy. “They said mid-career, and I was like, ‘Mid? I’m about ready to end this! Do I have to keep making work?” he laughs. “There are times I still think of myself as an emerging artist.” Still, Lankard has enjoyed a full career, even though it’s apparently only halfway over. “I think it’s a pretty rare and lucky person who finds themselves only having to do what they want to do for themselves. We all wish that was us,” says Lankard. “I love my medium—I love photography, I love teaching it, I love enabling others to get their work out into the world. With the magazine and the two festivals, I love supporting my peers and fellow photographers, and it gives me great joy to do that. It enriches my life in other ways.”






Blast from the past: Tribe Magazine

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Big thanks to the wonderfully talented Dan Rosen, who converted and posted this old promo video from Tribe Magazine.

Fashion shot from “Games of Summer” spread in Tribe Magazine. photo: Bryce Lankard

Fashion shot from “Games of Summer” spread in Tribe Magazine. photo: Bryce Lankard

It brought me back to the heady days of the early 90’s, when a small group of us started this extremely fun and trouble-making publication, which became a wildly creative outlet for the writers, photographers and artists of New Orleans. We got a ton of attention and won numerous awards and I was proud to have been its creative director. It was all to short-lived, but was one of the most gratifying times of my professional life.

One of those days

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I woke up today with a warm and fuzzy feeling. 

Many are the days that are filled with frustrations, when one wonders if any of the things you do make any difference at all. This was not one of those days. 

Yesterday I drove through rush hour traffic to meet up with Aaron Zalonis to go to the opening of Tama Hochbaum’s wonderful show, "Over/Time; Imaging Landscape,” at Cam Museum.  It is a beautiful show and I recommend it to everyone. I have the good fortune of knowing Tama, who is a remarkable and multi-talented woman and artist. Some time ago I was working with Eric and Gab at Cam on a public art project related to the building going up across the street, The Dillon. Over the course of that I thought that Tama’s work might be a great fit for the idea. I was able to introduce Tama and her work to the CAM team. Neither Tama nor I were selected for the project, but the folks at CAM fell in love with her work. Now, a year or so later, here was her work gracing the walls of CAM. I am so proud of Tama and her amazing project.

"A Palette of Rust and Dreams" by Karen Healy at the Raleigh Train Station

"A Palette of Rust and Dreams" by Karen Healy at the Raleigh Train Station

Aaron and I stepped outside of CAM to look at the nearly completed Dillon building. There on the exterior of the building was the first of what will be an ongoing series of giant banners of art. While my own work wasn’t chosen for this, (Not colorful enough…too many people) I did get to negotiate the contract that hopefully will get all the future artists who show there paid and collected. The first banner was up! We walked down the street to check out the newly opened Train Stations. All sparkly new and modern, it has been years in the making. Walking through the lobby, right next to the ticket booth, was an installation of photographs. Lo and behold, it was the work of my prize student, Karen Healy! Karen has been working and hustling on her great documentary project on commuter train travel across NC called “A Palette of Rust and Dreams” and now a selection of it is on permanent display! Amazing.

It was nice driving home thinking about the successes of these talented and deserving artists and ideas. It was heart-warming to think that even in the tiniest way, something I may have done helped lift up my fellow artists. It does matter after all I suppose. Like I said, warm and fuzzy.

 

Drawn to Water Opens at SE Center for Photography

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Thanks to Michael Pannier for hosting my exhibition at his very fine new space. And thanks to all who have contributed to this project and came out for the opening.

I am pleased to be adding first person accounts of special relationships with bodies of water. Thanks to all who have allowed me to use their thoughts and words. They say it so much better than I ever could.

I was born of water.  Baptized in the sea and salt of the Atlantic Coast.  Even now, walking a city’s streets, I can hear the ocean pulsing in my left ear. 
Summer days, at our tiny cottage on Wrightsville Beach, my mother would lean into the screen door, and my brothers and I would empty out into sunlight.  I was only eight or nine, but the beach, with the ocean on one side and the sound on the other, was an enchanted playground.  We were taught to swim within our limits, and always to respect the water.    
Down from our street was Johnnie Mercer’s Pier, where you could buy an orange sherbet push-up or a frozen candy bar for five cents.  Sometimes the fishermen would catch a mako shark off the deepest pilings, and “gaffers” would drag the creature to shore, its carcass usually ten times or more my size.  
Those were the days—yes, privileged times—when I ran fleet of foot by the surf with my gull-chasing dog.  When I waited on the porch each afternoon for my father to come home from work so we could swim together before supper. 
My love of being on the water began on a small island in North Carolina and has traveled with me all my life—to the Pacific Ocean on both sides of the equator, to the Black Sea, to the rivers and lakes of Upstate New York.  Today, I am happiest and most free when I am paddling my kayak quietly on an Adirondack flow.  I know that I am just a small part of a vast ecology—no more important than any smallmouth bass, or yellow birch, or great blue heron.  Yet able to plead in words: We must protect our waterways and our wild places for generations to come.  We must make sure that young people can navigate a clean and healthy planet, that they will have vibrant oceans, rivers, and lakes to teach them their place in the natural order and to fill them with wonder.   
Kristin V. Rehder
August 28, 2017

 

2016 Daylight Photo Awards

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I am so thrilled and honored to have just been selected as a Juror's Pick for the just announced 2016 Daylight Photo Awards

My work was chosen by none other than the inimitable WM Hunt! Who had this to say:

"It's true. Bryce Lankard was indeed my 2016 Daylight Photo Award Juror pick for his work in his "Drawn to Water" series. 

I looked at it, and it made me grin each time I went back to it, a strong edit of well seen images with a sense of childlike wonder, classically sensitive, seemingly well printed, etc. 

Great stuff."

wmh

SCOPE: The Southern Landscape

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I am very honored to have had an piece of mine selected by juror Marshall Price for this wonderful show at the VAE in Raleigh. SCOPE features variations on the southern landscape; looking at the region through the eyes of its artists. Works feature visual interpretations of metropolitan, coastal and rural areas of the southern states.

Lost Cove Creek, NC by Bryce Lankard

from the interview with the juror, Ph.D Marshal Price, Nancy Hanks Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art, Nasher Museum of Art:

Q  What is your broadest definition of landscape work?

A  The idea of the land, or landscape, is one that transcends mere representation in art or literature and is an inherent part of the American consciousness. Since the years of the early Republic, the land has played a tremendous role in providing artistic inspiration, shaping governmental legislation, causing violent disputes between factions, furnishing economic opportunities, presenting a perceived resource to be consumed, and even serving as a spiritual metaphor. My early graduate education was focused on artists of the Hudson River School and I’m interested in the changing strategies and approaches to the land by artists since that time.


Lori Vrba's art trifecta in the triangle

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I am pretty sure she never sleeps. Without a doubt she seems to always be working. This month Lori Vrba has THREE VERY LARGE art happenings here in the triangle. The release of her first monograph, The Moth Wing Diaries, has been published by Daylight Books. I doubt it will be her last. I have been lucky enough to have held a copy in my hands. It is a lush and beautiful art object by itself and contains a wonderful and elegantly designed collection of her photographs.

The Moth Wing DiariesFriday, March 27th 6-9pmDaylight Project Space121 W. Margaret LaneHillsborough, NC

The Moth Wing Diaries
Friday, March 27th 6-9pm
Daylight Project Space
121 W. Margaret Lane
Hillsborough, NC

That would be enough for most people. Not Lori Vrba, who also has not one, but two exhibitions this month. The first has opened at Daylight's Project Space in Hillsborough and is also called The Moth Wing Diaries and greatly reflects the look and feel of the book. The second opens this Sunday, April 12th at the historic Horace Williams House in Chapel Hill. It is called Drunken Poets Dream after another large body of work.

Drunken Poet's DreamSunday, April 12th 2-4pmHorace Williams House610 E. Rosemary StreetChapel Hill, NC

Drunken Poet's Dream
Sunday, April 12th 2-4pm
Horace Williams House
610 E. Rosemary Street
Chapel Hill, NC

Both of these wonderful exhibitions contain unique presentations of photographs, assemblage, and installation in Lori's distinctive style. Each offering speaks to the other and to the book in such a layered and personal way. This dialogue promises to give a viewer who has made the effort to take in all three a great sense of the depth and range of Vrba's voice. It is this honest and southern and feminine and introspective viewpoint that has brought Vrba much of the attention she has received. Lori credits moving to North Carolina and living in Chapel Hill with much of the inspiration and landscape that permeates her imagery, but most of her exhibitions and acclaim have come from elsewhere, other states and other countries, most notably in her native Texas. These two exhibits give our area an all too rare chance too bear witness to a special talent, to one of our own. Do yourself a favor. Go. See.


3rd Friday Artwalk @Golden Belt Durham 3/20/15 6-9pm

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Blink of an Eye

roadside fireworks stand, sc

roadside fireworks stand, sc

Greetings one and all,
I am pleased to announce that this month I have moved into a new space at Golden Belt Studios in Durham, NC. I am looking forward to seeing what comes of this social and arts experiment. I hope to produce new work in a space surrounded by friends and artists, and to share work, both new and old, with the public. I am very excited to take part in my first 3rd Friday art walk. My friends Warren Hicks, Heather Gordon and Ben Bridgers will all be here in their studios, and taking over the building will be Rachel Herrick and her great "Northern Obeast" project. To inaugurate this space I have pulled out a large selection of work from my project "Blink of an Eye" to showcase. Large parts of this have been exhibited around the country, but never in one single chunk.

blink of an eye - a very short time (as the time it takes the eye to blink or the heart to beat); - an indefinitely short time.

Blink of an eye, and it’s gone.

This body of work examines moments and places we can often take for granted - those we think will always be around, and then, in the blink of an eye, can be gone.

This project is my personal response to the events surrounding both 9.11 and Hurricane Katrina. Having been saturated with images of destruction, the intent in "Blink of an Eye"  is to examine a more psychological and emotional response to a sense of loss, dislocation and isolation. I have used toy cameras and the soft, gauzy look they provide in order to create images depicting more of a sense of nostalgia, tinged with sentimentality and even optimism.

I feel that this notion of loss can be applied to physical objects such as buildings or cities, but also to more ephemeral concepts such as summertime, mortality and youth. My photographs reflect these recurring themes through iconic childhood and leisure-time subjects such as playgrounds, carnivals and midways, such as the final days of Coney Island, quiet moments, and off-season vignettes. By occasionally using double exposures and image sequences arranged out of order I also want to cause a sense of discomfort and disruption.


 

In the days of Dean

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After listening to much heart-rending testimony the past couple weeks on the life and life force of the late Dean Smith, I have been motivated to dig out a few old prints from the archives. I was lucky enough to have been a student and photographer for a great stretch of Dean Smith's Tarheel teams. I got to see the last game at Carmichael, which wasn't, in fact, the last game. And the first in the Dean Dome. I was blessed to see many great opposing players, foes like Ralph Sampson, Jay Bilas, Spud Webb, Johnny Dawkins and Len Bias. But even more blessed to photograph and witness many Tarheel greats like Sam Perkins, Brad Daugherty, Michael Jordan, Kenny Smith and more. We were fortunate to learn to shoot our color slides in the "sports illustrated" style, which meant we mounted studio strobes in the rafters of Carmichael and synched them by direct pc cord to one camera. These images are not those however, these are the Tri-X pushed to 1600 available light images. A few quick scans and not spotted. I hope you enjoy.
Bryce
2/25/15

Off the Radar: Artists at Golden Belt

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I want to thank Heather Gordon and Warren HIcks for inviting me to do a show installation at the Golden Belt Studios this month. It was the first chance that my project "Transience" had a life outside of its portfolio and got on some walls. I also added a kinetic piece that was site specific and finished editing a short companion film called "precipitate" that ran during the opening. It was a real joy to participate and I would also like to thank all those that came out on Friday.

Installation View of Transience at Golden Belt

Installation Views of Transience at Golden Belt

Blue Library 2014

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I am so pleased to be included in this years edition of the blue library at the press street gallery in new orleans. tammy mecure did a wonderful job organizing and curating this exhibit and i am tickled to be in this show with both old friends like owen murphy and new ones like eric pickersgill. photonola once again looks to be a fantastic event, and i only wish i could be in attendance this year.

thebluelibrary.com


Analog Slide Night

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hey all, i am looking forward to rocking old school at this slide show for the Click! photo fest. putting together my carousel right now. why don't you do the same, or at least come out and see what is projected. did i mention the free pizza????

Click! Triangle Photo Festival, FRANK Gallery, Cultural Arts Division, Town of Chapel Hill Parks & Recreation, and Cassilhaus present BYOCLC (Bring your own Carousel and Lawn Chair) Slide Show Night. Analog 35mm Slides Only!

Click! Triangle Photo Festival invites you to an old-school slide night. Bring the family, a carousel slide tray (maximum 80 slides) and lawn chairs and share your 35mm masterpieces. Slides will be screened without narration, but you may make a brief introduction for a total presentation time per person of 10 minutes. Projectors and screens provided. Work should have originated in 35mm slide format.

RSVP/get info at slideshownight@cassilhaus.com

Free Pizza generously donated by Old Chicago Pizza and Taproom.

On the Plaza

140 West Franklin Street, Chapel Hill, NC United States

Posse Pop Up Exhibition SlowExposures 2014

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music This Little Light of Mine by Odetta all rights reserved.
Time, Place and Eternity: Flannery O'Connor and the Craft of Photography...A photographic exhibtion created in honor of the 50th anniversary of Flannery O' Connor's death. We, The Posse were inspired by her writing and her life.
This installation on Split Oak Farm in Zebulon, GA was built by Anne Berry, S. Gayle Stevens, Bryce Lankard, Ann George and Lori Vrba. Our beloved advisor and roadie Dennis Kiel was invaluable...as usual.