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Gitterman Gallery is proud to present an exhibition of vintage black and white photographs by
Kenneth Josephson. The exhibition will open with an artists reception on Thursday, February
4th
from 6 to 8 p.m. and continue through Saturday, April 17th.
Throughout his career, from his days as a student at the Institute of Design through his years as a
teacher at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, Kenneth Josephson has explored the
concepts of photographic truth and illusion. Whether his works utilize a single negative, multiple
exposures, collage, or a construction that is photographed, Josephson creates art that challenges
our perspectives and invites us to consider different concepts of representation. Josephson
consistently frames these ideas with dynamic compositions and creates beautiful objects with
seductive printing. Yet, regardless of how exquisite his prints are or cerebral his ideas might
be,
Josephson consciously utilizes humor; for this is just art, and it is meant to be enjoyed.
Kenneth Josephson was born in Detroit in 1932 and became interested in photography at the age
of twelve. Josephson began his formal photography training at the Rochester Institute of
Technology, earning an Associates Degree before being drafted into the army in 1953, where he
spent several months in Germany doing photolithography for aerial reconnaissance. He returned
to R.I.T. immediately after to earn his B.F.A. studying under the new program head, Minor White.
Josephson started his graduate studies at the Institute of Design in 1958. While there, he studied
under Harry Callahan and Aaron Siskind. In evidence as early as his graduate school thesis (a
series of multiple exposures) Josephsons work was, from the beginning, innovative and highly
conceptual. In 1960 Josephson became an instructor at The School of the Art Institute of
Chicago, where he taught until 1997. He enjoyed teaching the Introduction to Photography course
year after year, saying it inspired him to continue experimentation in his own work.
Josephsons work suggests a span of time and perspective beyond the physical boundaries of
the photograph. He often encourages the viewer to consider not just the singular existence of
the image, itself, but to question what may have happened prior. Josephsons art is comprised
of
a series of concepts that invite overlapping dialogues a flow of ideas and images that are
beautiful, thoughtful, and seriously funny.
Josephsons work is in the collection of: The Art Institute of Chicago; Bibliothéque National,
Paris;
Center for Creative Photography, Tucson; Centre de Photographie, France; Fogg Art
Museum, Harvard University; Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; Milwaukee Art Museum;
Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago; The Museum of Modern Art, New York; National
Museum of American Art, Smithsonian Institute; Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Kansas City,
Princeton University Art Museum; San Francisco Museum of Modern Art; and the Whitney
Museum of American Art, New York. His monographs include Kenneth Josephson (Museum of
Contemporary Art, Chicago, 1983), Kenneth Josephson: A Retrospective (The Art Institute of
Chicago, 1999), and Kenneth Josephson: The First Fifty Years (Stephen Daiter Gallery,
2008).
Press coverage:
Links open PDF files (get Acrobat
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The New Yorker
ARTnews
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