CHISELED BY TIME: SCULPTURES OF THE MOJAVE DESERT, a solo exhibition by Tom Sliter

Fallen Boulder ©Tom Sliter

Multiple Exposures Gallery is pleased to present CHISELED BY TIME: SCULPTURES OF THE MOJAVE DESERT, a solo exhibition of photographic work by Tom Sliter. The exhibition opens January 28 and runs through March 9, 2025. 
 
CHISELED BY TIME is set in the vast, sun-scorched expanse of the Mojave Desert, where the boulders of Joshua Tree National Park tell a story written in layers of patience and persistence. The exhibition is an exploration of geological sculpture — a visual narrative of a complex geological dance that began millions of years ago with the earth’s tectonic upheavals and continues today with water and wind. 

The result is nature's own Zen gardens — objects that embody both tremendous weight and an almost ethereal sense of precarious balance. Each boulder tells a story of survival, of gradual transformation, of both resistance and adaptation to some of the most extreme environmental conditions on the planet. 

Through CHISELED BY TIME, viewers are invited to look beyond the immediate, to see the extraordinary in the seemingly ordinary, to recognize the art that exists not just in human creation, but in the patient, persistent creativity of our planet itself.

VIEW THE EXHIBITION VIRTUALLY : CHISELED BY TIME  

Dates:  January 28 - March 9, 2025
Hours: 11am-5pm daily

Location: Multiple Exposures Gallery, Studio 312, Torpedo Factory Art Center [map]                

MEET THE ARTIST OPPORTUNITIES

  • February 2, 15 and 27

  • March 1, 2                               

Tom will be at Multiple Exposures Gallery from 11am-5pm on the dates above. We invite you to stop in to see the exhibition, meet Tom, and engage in conversation about the timelessness of the natural sculptures he presents and the profound beauty of slow, inexorable change. Multiple Exposures Gallery is located on the 3rd Floor in the Torpedo Factory Art Center in Alexandria, VA. [map]

MEDIA + PURCHASE INQUIRIES
High resolution images for media use are available upon request. All images are available for purchase through the gallery

Introducing Guillermo Olaizola + Russell Barajas!

 

We are excited to introduce our newest MEG artists, Guillermo Olaizola and Russell Barajas. They emerged as standout talents during an intense selection process, and we are thrilled to have these exceptional fine art photographers join our gallery. 

Russell Barajas

Russell Barajas

Russell Barajas joins us as an analogue photographer whose favorite subjects are humans, human nature and the echoes of human presence, in whatever form she may find them. Russell, also known as RC, processes and prints her images in her own darkroom, and she continually experiments with different tools and techniques, including pinhole, hand-coloring, and photograms. “My desire is to continue producing photography that amplifies the role of chance and celebrates the hand of the artist rather than muting it,” she says.

Guillermo Olaizola 

Guillermo Olaizola comes to us passionate about using photography as a powerful tool for artistic expression. At its core, he says, his photography is a personal quest to discover, learn from, and appreciate the profound beauty of the world. Guillermo’s photographic work spans a variety of subjects and techniques, from landscapes and macro photography to portraiture, street scenes, and travel, and his portfolios reflect his preference for minimalist images that embody elegance and simplicity. 

“Photography, to me, is an extraordinary field that allows artists to engage with the world in a deeper, more meaningful way. As photographers, we are rewarded for our patience and willingness to slow down, observe closely, and discover the visual gems the world offers,” Guillermo says.

We are delighted Russell and Guillermo are joining us! Their images are now available for viewing in-person at MEG and on the MEG website. The gallery is open daily from 11am-5pm at the Torpedo Factory Art Center, #312 in Alexandria, VA.

Guillermo Olaizola


Making Merry

Thank you to everyone who joined us in December to close out the year at our Holiday Open House. It was a joy to reconnect with familiar faces and to meet new friends.

We were especially honored to welcome the City of Alexandria's new Mayor, Alyia Gaskins, and Alexandria City Council Member John Chapman, who joined us for the festive afternoon. As we look forward to the year ahead, please join us in extending our best wishes to Mayor Gaskins, Council Member Chapman, and the entire City Council as they work together to guide and serve the city we all cherish.


DisCerning Eye, Our Town: Art Review by Mark Jenkins

Solid buildings and ethereal people at Multiple Exposures; burned books and solitary figures at IA&A; nature in motion and under threat at Waverly Street

Van Pulley, “Kennedy Center” (Multiple Exposures Gallery)

GRAND EDIFICES, OFTEN RECOGNIZABLE, FRAME EVERYDAY MOMENTS in "Capital Perspectives," an exhibition of 20 photographs by 12 members of Multiple Exposures Gallery. Sometimes the subjects are the structures themselves, as in Tom Sliter's "Cupola" or Van Pulley's "Dramatic Arts," both architectural interiors. (The latter photo gazes out a building's massive window at ... another building.) More often, however, there are people in the compositions, although they're usually dwarfed by their monumental surroundings and barely warmed by light.

Juried by Noe Todorovich, executive director of Exposed DC, the show is split equally between black-and-white and color pictures. But occasional splashes of red or orange just accentuate the generally muted palettes, as in Tim Hyde's "Snow Sisters," in which five cloaked figures navigate a near-whiteout in central Washington. For a frozen instant, the white-dusted pedestrians resemble historical statues of the sort common in nearby parks.

Several of the contributors render people as dark silhouettes, like the two conversationalists seated in an eatery in Pulley's "Face-to-Face." The other shadowy beings include a couple, one with a bicycle, in Alan Sislen's "Tidal Basin Reflections," and the two-museum goers of Soomin Ham's "While You Are Watching," who peer out another huge window from another notable recent D.C. building. In Fred Zafran's "Triangle," a solitary man is secondary to the title subject, a shaft of light. Mists nearly swallow such small figures as the lone nighttime Mall walker in Sandy LeBrun-Evans's "Lincoln Watch" and the workers swathed in steam in Eric Johnson's "Maine Avenue Fish Market."

Water and a lone person feature as well in one of the lighter-hearted pictures, Sarah Hood Salomon's image of a woman, wearing work clothes and clutching a briefcase, who hops past lawn sprinklers outside the U.S. Capitol. Equally witty is Sislen's study of the usually imposing Washington Monument, reduced to being just one of the guys amid a thicket of Smithsonian spires and turrets. The photo is, playfully, the show's only depiction of a crowd.

Through Jan. 5 at Multiple Exposures Gallery, Torpedo Factory, 105 N. Union St., Alexandria. multipleexposuresgallery.com; 703-683-2205.

Source: https://discerningeye.substack.com/p/our-t...

Capital Perspectives, MEG Group Show: Art Review by Louis Jacobson

New Year’s Eve With Sammy Rae & the Friends and Hip-Hop Holiday Honors: City Lights for Dec. 26–Jan. 1

Maureen Minehan, “Bus Terminal” on view in MEG’s exhibit, Capital Perspectives

Capital Perspectives, the latest juried photography exhibition at Alexandria’s Multiple Exposures Gallery, aims to train a lens on D.C. Mostly, though, the participating photographers seek out monumental Washington: Tom Sliter’s soaring rotunda, Sandy LeBrun-Evans’ nighttime Iwo Jima memorial, Van Pulley’s Kennedy Center, Alan Sislen’s Tidal Basin. In fact, in a couple cases, official Washington needlessly intrudes on otherwise compelling action. Sarah Salomon’s charming, briefcase-toting woman races to work through an array of sprinklers, but she’s overshadowed by the looming Capitol dome, while LeBrun-Evans’ intriguing parallel arches of water are overwhelmed by the surrounding edifices of the Mall. The further the exhibit moves from official D.C., the more satisfying it becomes. Pulley captures an aerial tableau in which a figure holding coffee walks through a space in which the floor is made of mesmerizing retro-Deco tiles; Tim Hyde photographs a group of snow-covered figures crossing the street who could have stepped right out of the Korean War Memorial statuary; and Maureen Minehan offers a surprisingly crisp nocturne that features an otherwise ordinary-looking bus terminal. Perhaps the finest images in the exhibit are a trio of black-and-white works by Eric Johnson. One is a moody, fog-shrouded take on the Anacostia River; another is an eerie image of a derelict RFK Stadium; while a third features the Maine Avenue Fish Market, complete with stacked rows of crabs, wafting steam, and a bustling squad of employees. Word to the wise: To capture D.C. best, follow Johnson’s example. Capital Perspectives runs through Jan. 5 at Multiple Exposures Gallery at the Torpedo Factory Art Center, 105 N. Union St., Alexandria. Daily, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. multipleexposuresgallery.com. Free. —Louis Jacobson

CAPITAL PERSPECTIVES, MEG Group Show juried by Noe Todorovich

Cupola © Tom Sliter

Multiple Exposures Gallery is pleased to present CAPITAL PERSPECTIVES, a fine art photography exhibition juried by Exposed DC Executive Director Noe Todorovich. The exhibition extends far beyond familiar postcard scenes and landmarks to present what Todorovich describes as “modern-day life in our capital as seen by the people who live, work, and love here.”.

CAPITAL PERSPECTIVES is on view at Multiple Exposures Gallery through January 5, 2025. The gallery, located in Studio 312 at the Torpedo Factory Art Center, is open daily from 11am-5pm.                           

Exhibition Artists: Stacy Smith Evans, Soomin Ham, Tim Hyde, Eric Johnson, Sandy LeBrun-Evans, Maureen Minehan, David Myers, Van Pulley, Sarah Hood Salomon, Alan Sislen, Tom Sliter and Fred Zafran

Exhibition Dates: Nov 19, 2024 - Jan 5, 2025

Exhibition Hours: 11am-5pm daily

Location: Multiple Exposures Gallery | Torpedo Factory Art Center | #312

Contact Information For Media & Purchase Inquiries
High resolution images for media use are available upon request. All images are available for purchase through the gallery.

DisCerning Eye, Ghost Towns: Art Review by Mark Jenkins

Timothy Hyde, “Bombed-Out Home, Srebrenica, Bosnia” (Courtesy Timothy Hyde)

Ghost Towns, Photographs by Gary Anthes and Timothy Hyde

Both Gary Anthes and Timothy Hyde are compelled by damaged sites, but where Hyde's "Book of Job" explores several continents, Anthes's "Dust and Destiny on the Great Plains" investigates a single region. This six-state journey, mostly undertaken in 2023, documents a region exhausted by both drought and corporate agriculture.

The Anthes photos at Studio Gallery often focus on buildings, viewed straight-on or occasionally from a slightly low angle. A lot of these aging structures appear abandoned, and many are dwarfed by their surroundings: sweeping brown grasslands and vast and sometimes turbulent skies. Yet among the weathered wood-frame houses and farm buildings are a few edifices that seem to be humming with energy. One of these, appropriately, is an industrial structure whose sign identifies it as an outpost of La Junta Light & Power. Equally vivid is an unidentified building in Amarillo, small and boxy with its bright red facade illuminated by a series of lights embedded in an overhang roof. These two pictures are the only ones made at night, and the outlining blackness intensifies the visual drama.

None of the Great Plains photos include people. Instead, they tell of the region's inhabitants by depicting their environment. Signs of life include a colorful freight train in motion; a new-looking, bright green combine harvester; and the purple wooden frames around a door and a window of a neglected New Mexico building. Cultural change is embodied by the "gourmet coffee" sign in front of a battered New Mexico feed and supply store.

These impeccably composed images sometimes center on a road, accentuating the area's history as a place to move to and through -- and out of. One thoroughfare is paved with asphalt, but most seem to be dirt or gravel. The roadway in "Northwestern Kansas, 2023" rolls jauntily across rolling hills, all drearily desiccated but with a juicy blue sky and pillowy white clouds beckoning in the distance. Most alarming is something that resembles a dirt path but is in fact Kansas's bone-dry Cimarron River, framed periodically by a dead tree. The waterless waterway's course meanders toward a new Dust Bowl.

Anthes almost never enters the structures he photographs, although he does offer one evocative interior: a commercial garage stuffed with grimy, trashed trucks and cars. Hyde includes plenty of exterior shots in this show, his final one at Multiple Exposures Gallery, but his signature shot is one that reveals a shadowy chamber, its details dim but impressively distinct.

Hyde's photos, like Anthes's, document ruined locations. But Hyde tends to visit places that witnessed struggle, cruelty, and sudden violence, whether the responsibility of man or nature. Among the latter are places as distant as an impromptu memorial to a family killed by a 2012 tornado in Indiana and the remains of a Japanese town devastated by the 2011 Tohoku earthquake and tsunami. Inside and outdoors merge ominously in a mud-hued study of a water-logged room after a flood in Iowa. Made in 2008, the picture is the show's earliest entry.

Most often, Hyde is drawn to spots where humans brutalized each other. These reflect the artist's sense that "like Job, we are not entirely innocent," according to his statement. Hyde took his camera to the site of a 1919 massacre of Black Americans in Arkansas; Nazi concentration camps in Poland, Croatia, and Italy; and buildings wrecked or bloodied during the 1990s wars in Bosnia and Croatia. Photographed just this year is a bombed-out streetscape in Ukraine, in which an incongruously cheery Toys-R-Us-like store can be glimpsed through the gap left by a flattened building.

The only picture that portrays humans observes a bonfire surrounded by small figures, silhouetted against a red-tinted breach in the black night. It's one of a half-dozen remarkable photographs that are crisp yet gloomy, legible yet mysterious. Hyde has an exceptional ability to lead the eye into darkened spaces that contain just enough light to be inviting, bracketed by darkness that feels overwhelming.

Gary Anthes: Dust and Destiny on the Great Plains

Through Oct. 26 at Studio Gallery, 2108 R St. NW. studiogallerydc.com. 202-232-8734

Timothy Hyde: Book Of Job

Through Nov. 17 at Multiple Exposures Gallery, Torpedo Factory, 105 N. Union St., Alexandria. multipleexposuresgallery.com. 703-683-2205.