Saturday, February 14, 2015

Viewpoint Photo Gallery

It looks bigger on the outside, like a reverse TARDIS.

For my first gallery visit, I decided to take a little trip to the Viewpoint Photographic Art Center and see what they had to offer.


This is most of the gallery, right here.
The short answer is "not very much". This gallery is positively tiny. That doesn't detract from the quality of the art itself, which is actually quite good--more on that shortly--but when the whole experience consists of two very small rooms with less than one hundred photos in all, it all amounts to an underwhelming experience. But on the bright side, it's free.

See those chairs in the picture above? They were facing this wall. I wasn't kidding when I said this room was tiny.

The current exhibit, "Living on a Dollar a Day", is a series of photos by Renée C. Byer of different people around the world living in impoverished conditions. All of these photos have short biographies of the subject explaining who they are, where they live in the world, and what sort of lives they lead. Most of the photos are deeply sobering, showing people surviving in extreme circumstances, but some of the photos do show people in more positive moments. Byer marvelously captures the humanity of her subjects no matter what their lives are like. As the exhibit's title implies, these are people who live on a dollar a day or less, and the photos show many different sides to these people. The skill with which the photos are taken is also impressive, using an array of techniques to emphasize the emotion of every shot, and all of it is in stunningly vivid color.

I suppose I should also mention a small backroom--emphasis on small here--with some black and white prints of landscape photography.
I have no idea what this is, but it's gorgeous.
It's nice and all, but there are maybe a dozen or so photos there. Really, it's nothing I wouldn't expect to see at any other photo gallery. It's nothing against the photographers, but when you can see the almost the entire exhibit at once as soon as you walk into the room, it's hard to feel compelled to stay very long.

I can't say this was a bad visit; the photography in the exhibit was beautiful and thought-provoking, particularly in the case of Byer's work. However, the small selection means you can see the whole thing in well under half an hour. You'd have to be a seriously dedicated photography aficionado to feel compelled to stay any longer than that, but really, if you're that into photography, you could probably find someplace better than this.

Overall, I rate this visit White Chocolate.


2 comments:

  1. Nice review Mela! I love the honesty and the content.

    Byer certainly seems to stand out to you. The emotional content in pictures seems to always have a sort of gravitation pull on me as well. We live so well and lavishly compared to some societies, see depictions of people who live on less than a dollar can be quite a moving spectacle.

    Small museums always grow much larger when their content is deeply observed. That's what is so amazing about art, even simple splatters of paint can be stared at for hours, and millions upon millions of meanings and interpretations can be derived from it.

    Nice post!

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    Replies
    1. Thank you for taking the time to leave a comment!
      Granted, you raise a good point--a small gallery can be worthwhile if the content is high-quality. The photo collection was excellent, but there was another reason I didn't stay very long--the parking meter across the street only allowed 30 minutes at a time. If I wanted to stay, I would have had a park a few blocks away (and still pay for a meter either way).
      Even when the art is good, location still matters.

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