I’ve seen a lot of stuff lately, so I thought I’d throw up some pictures of some of what I liked:
Portraits of people at a bar, nursing drinks, looking into space, looking like regulars from Sarah Stolfa caught my eye first. She is one of 18 students in the Drexel University Senior Photography Thesis show at Nexus Gallery. Stolfa’s people were filled with individuality, confronting a familiar milieu. We see people in the movies in these poses, with these affects, but never in a photograph. (image, “Joanna”).I was also intrigued by Jeffrey Stockbridge’s photos and installation of found objects and book. The objects were things people left behind in abandoned homes, including portraits and writings. The photos of those homes and some of the writing were collected in a book. And four of the photographs were up on the wall. It was the whole installation, “Occupied,” and the book that caught my interest.Regine Repale’s “La Miche” stood out from her other work for any number of reasons. I liked the stripes and the plaids, which play out over and over in the room. I liked the space behind bracketed by the drapes. I liked the addytood of La Miche. The picture reminded me of the Malick Sidibe photographs in the African Art show at the Art Museum (see Sidibe’s photo here).Finally, George McCardle’s close-up studies of nature and things, although not totally unfamiliar, were beautiful (image, “Untitled 2”).At Fleisher/Ollman, Huston Ripley’s ink on tissue dot matrices reminded me of a sexy version of Adolf Wolfli’s bordered and rohrshach-looking creations, little faces embedded in big ones embedded in big figures. (Ripley’s “Untitled,” 12 1/2 x 19 inches).