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Joel-Peter Witkin: Journeys of the Soul

Past exhibition
September 14 - November 27, 2021
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Joel-Peter Witkin Anna Akhmatova, 1998 toned gelatin silver print 30" x 40", edition 9/12 16" x 20" edition AP2s signed, titled, dated, and numbered
Joel-Peter Witkin
Anna Akhmatova, 1998
toned gelatin silver print
30" x 40", edition 9/12
16" x 20" edition AP2s
signed, titled, dated, and numbered
View works
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Etherton Gallery Turns 40 with New Exhibition

Joel-Peter Witkin: Journeys of the Soul

 

Etherton Gallery celebrates the gallery’s 40th anniversary with the exhibition, Joel-Peter Witkin: Journeys of the Soul. The exhibition runs from September 14 to November 27, 2021 andopens with a reception 7:00–10:00 pm, Saturday, September 18. Joel-Peter Witkin will attend. Terry Etherton has represented Witkin since 1988, only a few years after he opened his eponymous gallery.

 

The day after the opening, Sunday, September 19 at 2:00 pm, The Loft Cinema will screen Witkin & Witkin, a film about estranged twin brothers, Joel-Peter Witkin and figurative painter, Jerome Witkin. Terry Etherton will introduce the film. To watch the trailer visit https://youtu.be/Xe5b5vPxxcY. Find more information about the screening at  https://loftcinema.org/film/witkin-witkin/.

 

“On this 40th Anniversary, inaugurating our new space at 340 South Convent Avenue with an exhibition of Joel-Peter Witkin’s work is a fitting tribute to both the gallery’s and Joel’s legacy, and our longstanding friendship,” said Terry Etherton.

 

The exhibition is a career survey featuring rare and iconic photographs and drawings made over the last four decades. Before he picks up his camera, Joel-Peter Witkin puts his ideas down on paper and makes a series of preliminary sketches. He is known for fabricating elaborate sets to be photographed. It can take weeks or even months before he has found models and built the sets. As a result, he makes few photographs per year and makes only a limited number of his sumptuous prints. After he makes a photograph, Witkin goes into the darkroom; he takes tremendous risks with his master negative, scraping, tearing, sanding, writing, and scratching its surface. Witkin also works the surface of his prints, finishing them with paint, retouching, cutting, collaging and hand-coloring them with encaustic. As a result, although Witkin editions his photographs, no two are exactly alike. As he said in 2017, “I printed it myself because, that for me, is the decisive moment: you can change the meaning of a photograph by how you print it.”

 

As Witkin noted in a 2010 interview, “The body is the armor of the soul.” The subjects of Witkin’s images – the body, the nude, the still life – are controversial, because Witkin finds as much beauty in the grotesque – for example Head of a Dead Man, which references Italian Renaissance portraits of John the Baptist -- as he does the exquisite women who inhabit his photographs -- as in La Giovanissima, a portrait of the wife of an art dealer whom Witkin met in Milan, which refers to Raphael’s painting, Portrait of a Young Woman or La Fornarina, c. 1518-19, a portrait of Raphael’s lover and muse, Margerita Luti. Most western male artists have personified beauty in the form of a noncisgender white woman, but Witkin unravels these stereotypes.

 

Using the non-mainstream body, Witkin addresses tensions between heaven and hell, sexuality and death and multiple notions of beauty. His models, found through random encounters and classified ads, are often deformed and include amputees, cadavers, little people, sadomasochists, transexuals, and beautiful women. Through them he points out social, religious and political contradictions in contemporary culture, incorporating a “history of conscience” into his images. For example, Witkin understands that a sculpture is always admired even if limbs are missing, whereas a handicapped person arouses feelings of uncertainty and shame. In many ways, Joel-Peter Witkin has made a space for disabled and trans people, confronting the viewer with the act of reclaiming these bodies, as political, and social subjects.

 

Witkin’s vanitas and memento mori images have their precursors in the work of the great Romantic painter, Théodore Géricault, who painted dismembered bodies of condemned prisoners, and the mentally ill inmates of the Pitié-Salpêtrière Hospital in Paris. In the end, following in the footsteps of these and other great artists, Witkin upends convention, creating his own thoughtful meditation on the human condition.

 

Don’t miss the opening reception for Joel-Peter Witkin: Journeys of the Mask, 7:00 – 10:00 pm, Saturday, September 18, 2021. Etherton Gallery’s new address is 340 South Convent Avenue in Tucson. We have returned to regular business hours: 11:00 am – 5:00 pm., Tuesday – Saturday. For more information, call (520) 624-7370 or info@ethertongallery.com.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Etherton Gallery

340 S. Convent Ave, Tucson, AZ 85701

Gallery Phone: (520) 624-7370

Gallery Hours: Tue - Sat  11:00am - 5:00pm

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