PHOTOSC CELEBRATES 100 YEAR ANNIVERSAY WITH SURREALISM TRIENNIAL

Exhibition features unique and diverse photographic images from around the nation.

A scholarly talk and a surreal-fun mask-making workshop.

 

Masked people, spacemen, mannequins, women falling thru time, time suspended, and stuff of unconscious dreams – all of this photographic imagery make up the PhotoSC Surrealism Triennial. PhotoSC joins museums around the world in celebrating the 100th anniversary of the Surrealism art movement with a triennial photographic exhibition, a scholarly talk ‘InConversation on Surrealism,’ and a surreal-fun mask-making workshop, all this October.

The PhotoSC Surrealism Triennial exhibition opening reception is October 17, 2024, from 6-9 p.m. at 918 Lady Street in the Vista. The photographic exhibition features 25 photographic works by photographers from around the nation, with the show hanging a total of 32 photographic prints.

Photographer Francis Crisafio of Pittsburg, Pennsylvania took first place in the Triennial with his image, Hold Up in the Hood 3. The work was created as part of an afterschool program with Pittsburg students exploring “personal and communal exploration of self.” Crisafio was a LensCulture Exposure Award recipient in 2015 for his work with the program.

The group show was juried by Sheryl Conkelton, curator, editor, and writer focusing on photography and modern and contemporary art. She has held senior curatorial positions at the Museum of Modern Art (New York), the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, and Henry Art Gallery (Seattle), and has worked at other museums, including the Art Museum, Princeton University, and the Smithsonian Institution. A noted researcher and writer her books on photography include Lewis Baltz: Works (Steidl), Uta Barth, In Between Places (Henry Art Gallery), Annette Messager (MOMA), Aaron Siskind, The Fragmentation of Language (Robert Mann Gallery), and Frederick Sommer (Clio Pess).

Amid the backdrop of World War II, French writer and cultural theorist André Breton (1896-1966) is credited with authoring the first Surrealist Manifesto in October 1924. The Surrealist movement spans a vast breadth of artistic creation with its roots reaching into the Middle Ages, its influence on the visual arts and the other arts worldwide has inspired the photographic artists, past and present, and lead to the abstract expressionist movement.

Scholars Peter Chametzky, Ph.D and Susan Fellerman, Ph.D will present a fascinating conversation on the evolution of the Surrealist movement and its impact on modern photography and art over the past 100 years. Their InConversation talk will be held Saturday, October 24, 2024, from 2-4 p.m., at 918 Lady Street in the Vista with the gallery opening at 1 p.m. to view the exhibition.

Peter Chametzky is Professor of Art History and has been on the SVAD faculty at the University of South Carolina since 2012. His research focuses on 20th and 21st century German art and culture. He received the 2024 Russell Research Award in Humanities and Social Sciences, University of South Carolina. His recent book, Turks, Jews, and other Germans in Contemporary Art received an honorable mention, art history, Hans and Lea Grundig Prize, Art History, 2021. Peter teaches courses in 20th and 21st Century art, theory, and culture, as well as the art history survey, ARTH 105 and ARTH 106.

Susan Felleman, Ph.D. is a Professor of Art History + Film and Media Studies at the University of South Carolina who specializes in the relationship between film and other visual arts, history and theory of avant-garde film and video and the art film; history and theory of Hollywood cinema; modern art and theory; psychoanalytic theory; feminist theory and videographic criticism. She is the author of four books, numerous scholarly articles and two video essays. She recently wrote and co-directed (with Hannah Shikle) a feature-length, personal essay film, In Production: the Life and Career of George Justin.

Later, on the same day, at 918 Lady Street, from 5-7 p.m. Columbia artist Michael Krajewski dives into surrealism by leading a paper bag mask workshop a’la Saul Steinberg. All materials supplied at this highly creative artistic masquerade in celebrating the 100th anniversary of Surrealism. Michael Krajewski, a talented neo-expressionist artist, will conduct a workshop in which participants create a surrealist paper bag mask in a manner similar to Saul Steinberg’s masks. The adult workshop will be held on October 26 and will use collage, paint, pen, and crayon to create the artwork, all of which will be photographed and promoted across PhotoSC’s social media. Both Neo-expressionism and surrealism draw upon a variety of themes including the mythological, the cultural, the historical, the nationalist, and the erotic.

 

The PhotoSC Triennial Exhibition and Surreal Paper bag Mask-Making Workshop, a’la Saul Steinberg: Workshop with Michael Krajewski is sponsored by the SC Arts Commission and Abacus Planning Group.

InConversation with Peter Chametzky and Susan Fellerman on Surrealism is sponsored by the SC Humanities Council.

PhotoSC is a 501C3 non-profit arts organization dedicated to the exploration of photography and visual culture.

Columbia-based Photographer Sean Rayford Releases New Publication Documenting the Final Days of the Old New Brookland Tavern

When we leave this plane of existence, what do we leave behind? Do I make things of enough importance that future generations get to see what life was like during these times, through my eyes?…”

No one has documented the happenings of the Columbia area more than Sean Rayford. Rayford is a photojournalist and documentary photographer. His unmistakable images of his immersion into major national events have been seen by hundreds of millions of people worldwide who viewed the covers of the largest newspapers, print and online editions, around the world. And yet, it seems to those who don’t know him personally, a lot of his free time is spent documenting the range of day-to-day activities in Columbia and the surrounding area. 

On Saturday, April 27th, Rayford is releasing a new photo zine titled For the Record. The zine documents the last three months of the local club New Brookland Tavern, through Rayford’s lens, as it prepared to close after decades of live music at its West Columbia location. “When I learned about the building’s sale in West Columbia, I immediately began this project, knowing the days at the location in West Columbia might be limited. I had been procrastinating a personal photo project about NBT for about a year and I understand the role of photography and the passage of time,” says Rayford.

The more you look at Rayford’s photography the more you understand his burned-in ability to capture the most interesting moment between two mundane seconds of time. This imagery exists on his Soda Citizen Instagram page, and through photo books independently released by him. Part of this is that his point of view is in his DNA, the other part may be his dozen years or so spent behind the bar at the original New Brookland Tavern, watching the night unfold in front of him. Rayford explains “I went to my first show there (New Brookland Tavern) in the fall of 1998 when my suite mate’s band played. I think I was hired by my college radio co-host, Jonathan Dunagin, who was a booking agent at NBT. It’s where I’ve spent most of my adult Thanksgiving holidays.” 

Rayford has published compilations of his photography before, but a zine is a different approach for him and closer to his heart. “I look at zines as physical/analog publications that embrace a D.I.Y. mentality. It’s indie publishing without boundaries. They can be what you want them to be,” he explains. “I have more resources, knowledge, skills - but much higher expectations than when I tackled my previous self-publishing efforts. I’d always been on much smaller budgets — without viewing the project as a personal long-term investment in myself as a creator.” 

The final show at the West Columbia of location of New Brookland Tavern was December 29th, 2023, and the first show at its new Five Points location was the next day. Rayford documented both. 

“I’ve also obviously been a contributor to the smallest and biggest newspapers and magazines in the world. There’s something about challenging yourself, sharing, and delivering creative work. It’s fulfilling - and there is a grasp at immortality going on here,” he continues.

“When we leave this plane of existence, what do we leave behind? Do I make things of enough importance that future generations get to see what life was like during these times, through my eyes? What an immense privilege on multiple levels.”

The release party for For the Record will take place at the New Brookland Tavern in Five Points this Saturday, April 27th. Copies of For the Record will be available for purchase. 

Editor’s note: Rayford has previously been featured and been hired on assignment for Jasper Magazine.

-Wade Sellers

 

For the Record

60 pages / Color / 4.9 inches x 6.7 inches