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19 results for Photography--Exhibitions
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Record #:
28783
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The North Carolina Museum of Art’s new exhibition, Panorama: North Carolina, features black-and-white photos taken by local photographers. In more than thirty photos, the exhibit surveys the changes that have swept across rural North Carolina, casting light on the Old North State.
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Indy Week (NoCar Oversize AP 2 .I57), Vol. 33 Issue 51, Jan 2017, p23, il Periodical Website
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Record #:
29850
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Toe River Arts Council (TRAC) presents The Interbeing Project, the Interface of Woman and Nature, a photography exhibit by Bonnie Cooper. The exhibition reveals female nudes composited with representations of nature, creating a merger and relationship between the two. Cooper hopes that viewers will experience the exhibit as a celebration of woman’s natural beauty as well as the beauty of the natural world.
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Record #:
29877
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The North Carolina Arboretum has a new photography and video exhibit that captures the flora and fauna of a small Asheville-area bog over the course of four seasons. The images highlight the native and non-native residents of the habitat, as well as document The Nature Conservancy’s bog restoration efforts and related research-oriented projects.
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Record #:
34988
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Hugh Morton, the “state’s unofficial photographer” according to many, began photographing North Carolina landscapes and everyday life when he was a child. Throughout his lifetime, Morton took over 25,000 images, had a handful of them grace the front of “The State” magazine (precursor to "Our State"), and used his photography to bring awareness to causes such as protecting Grandfather Mountain and preserving the USS North Carolina.
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Our State (NoCar F 251 S77), Vol. 84 Issue 8, January 2017, p108-112, il, por Periodical Website
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Record #:
35344
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This collection contained nearly 600 photographs, some labeled, others not, of fossil invertebrate specimens. Paul Brinkman believed the discovery of this collection compiled in the late nineteenth century could contribute to new research ventures in paleontology.
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Record #:
27420
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In October, Reframing Food will be on exhibit at the Carrack Modern Art in Durham. The exhibit features photography by members of the Food Youth Initiative, a network of four groups across North Carolina working toward food justice in their communities. Their work intimately portrays a powerful personal perspective uncommon in the mainstream food world.
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Indy Week (NoCar Oversize AP 2 .I57), Vol. 33 Issue 37, Sept 2016, p22, por Periodical Website
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Record #:
29712
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The Mountain Gateway Museum in Old Fort, North Carolina has a new exhibit titled, Appalachia a Century Ago, Craft Through the Lens of William A. Barnhill. The exhibit showcases the work of photographer William Barnhill, who captured the process of making baskets from the bark of young poplar trees in the early twentieth century.
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Record #:
24269
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The Triangle Photography Festival entitled \"Click!\" is a month-long celebration of photography that occurs annually in the Triangle Area. The festival includes 70 exhibits and events in 40 different venues. The festival also features a variety of art displays, workshops, portfolio reviews, and museum tours, among other activities.
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Indy Week (NoCar Oversize AP 2 .I57), Vol. 32 Issue 40, October 2015, p42-43, il Periodical Website
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Record #:
29513
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Allen G. Thomas, Jr. of Wilson, NC recently donated over 60 contemporary photographs to the Museum. Select photographs will be exhibited through this spring. The works cover a range of photographic techniques and processes and show the diversity of contemporary photography. Thomas’s collection has proved as a catalyst for the expansion of the Museum’s permanent photography collection.
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Preview (NoCar Oversize N 715 R2 A26), Vol. Issue , Fall 2014, p26-29, il
Record #:
29516
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Photographer Brian Ulrich’s Copia: Retail, Thrift, and Dark Stores, 2001-2011exhibition shows a decade-long investigation of consumer culture. The photographs show the excess of big-box stores, the discarded items at thrift stores, and the landscape of empty shopping centers in urban areas. Ulrich’s photography is intended to help us learn about our behaviors, habits, comforts, and purpose. The exhibit starts with the events of September 11, 2001 with the “call to spend” by politicians through the financial collapse of 2008 to the present.
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Preview (NoCar Oversize N 715 R2 A26), Vol. Issue , Fall 2013, p16-19
Record #:
19506
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North Carolina is full of communities that are devoted to success through remaining connected to their heritage. They farm or clam, gather or dig to provide for their families and their community. A new photography exhibit--North Carolina at Work: Cedric Chatterley's Portraits and Landscapes of Traditional Labor--displays these working relationships and highlights the rich holdings of North Carolina folklore they represent.
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Record #:
29608
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A Discerning eye: Julian T. Baker Jr. Photography Collection The photography collection of Julian T. Baker, Jr. of Raleigh was recently acquired by the museum and will be on display through December. Baker’s collection is one of over 700 photographs spanning from 1903 to 2005 and focuses primarily on black and white images. His collection includes works from celebrated photographers such as Ansel Adams, Brett Easton, Alfred Stieglitz, and Dorothea Lange.
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Preview (NoCar Oversize N 715 R2 A26), Vol. Issue , Fall 2012, p20-21, il
Record #:
29735
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A new exhibit by the Museum presents 23 large-scale photographs by a diverse group of contemporary photographs who are expanding the size and pushing the boundaries of photography. The photographs include portraits, landscapes, cityscapes, and fabricated worlds and all are unusually large in size. The exhibition addresses the themes of personal identity, fantastic narratives, environmental issues, the changing landscape of cities, systems of power, the passage of time, and images of contemporary life.
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Preview (NoCar Oversize N 715 R2 A26), Vol. Issue , May/June 2007, p10-13
Record #:
29736
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The BIG Picture is a new photography exhibition that showcases work on loan from Allen G. Thomas, Jr., Dr. Carlos Garcia-Velez, and the Museum’s expanding photography collection. Previewing the collection, the work of photographers Lorna Simpson, North Carolina’s elin o’Hara slavick, Anthony Goicolea, and Chris Jordan are featured. Their work looks at the role personal and cultural identity plays in our everyday lives. The style, composition, and criticism of 6 works from the 4 artists are detailed.
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Preview (NoCar Oversize N 715 R2 A26), Vol. Issue , July/Aug 2007, p6-9
Record #:
26047
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UNC photography teacher, Jeff Whetstone, says observation and attention to details are the most important skills photography students should have. Animal Planet, Whetstone’s latest exhibition, is a commentary on how humans relate to nature.
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