Brigitte Carnochan

 

Still Beauty

On View: 11/06/21 to 12/23/21

Artist Reception: Saturday, 12/04/21, 4pm-7pm

  • Yellow Lilies

    30 x 39 inches; Edition of 5

  • Roman Head

    30 x 39 inches; Edition of 5

  • Peonies Roses and Warega Figure

    20 x 26 inches; Edition of 10

  • Birthday Flowers II

    30 x 39 inches; Edition of 10

  • White Peonies and Roman Glass

    22 x 22 inches; Edition of 10

  • Orange and Rose

    22 x 22 inches; Edition of 10

  • Hydrangeas and Caterpillar

    22 x 22 inches; Edition of 10

  • Bowl of Peaches and Grapes

    52 x 40 inches; Edition of 3

  • Coral Peonies and Sunflowers

    39 x 30 inches; Edition of 5

  • Bowl of Cherries

    39 x 30 inches; Edition of 5

Planning the Exhibition

Video documented by Ray Day.

Artist Statement

 

The love of the beauty of the world . . . involves . . . the love

of all the truly precious things that bad fortune can destroy. . . .

Simone Weil

Beauty had a struggle to survive the latter quarter of the 20th century.  Artists who nonetheless found creative energy in the redemptive power of beauty were considered passé at best and patronized at worst.  The “love of all the truly precious things” to which Simone Weil refers found no favor in the art establishment.  Fortunately, the strength of beauty is such that—elusive and perhaps even undefinable—it has survived in all its mystery.

My own goal in photography is to create beauty in my images compelling enough to establish its own legitimacy—whether beauty as a concept is  in or out of fashion. I find a ramble around my garden—in a good season or a bad—to be deeply satisfying. There’s something about the patterns and designs—even of barren branches—that is inherently beautiful. It lifts my spirits to choose a bouquet, especially variegated and with oddities—maybe a few weeds—among the flowers and bushes I’ve planted over the years. The return of old favorites and the surprising newness of annual blossoms inspire me to photograph.

In the past year I’ve been fascinated by the lighting effects possible using a small flashlight in a dark room to illuminate my still life arrangements. Like the Dutch, Spanish, and Italian Old Master painters, using brushes and oils to create light, my small flashlight allows me to paint light onto my still lifes with precise control.* It was an especially fortunate time to discover this technique—in the time of Covid, it was a balm and has given me joy. 

Brigitte Carnochan

*Many thanks to Larry Shapiro for his patient tutoring in the technique and to the friends who loaned me their vases and shared the bounty of their gardens with me—or who surprised me with lush bouquets (from which I pilfered blossoms) on my birthday. Thank you Carolyn, Susan, Elizabeth, Tricia, John, Erika, Rich, Ania, Hedwige, Lisa, Sarah, and Sibyll. 

Still Beauty images are archival pigment photographs available 3 editions:

40 x 52 / 45 x 45 inches, archival pigment photograph, Edition of 3

30 x 39 / 34 x 34 inches, archival pigment photograph, Edition of 5

20 x 26 / 22 x 22 inches, archival pigment photograph, Edition of 10

Artist Bio

 

Brigitte Carnochan’s photographs are represented nationally and collected globally by museums, corporate and private collectors. She has had solo exhibitions in Latvia, Italy, Chile, and Hong Kong as well as in New York, Houston, Boston, Palo Alto, Los Angeles, Santa Fe, Ketchum, Woodstock, Albuquerque, Carmel and San Francisco. In addition to the publication of three monographs (Bella Figura 2006, Shining Path 2006, Floating World 2012), The German publisher, Edition Galerie Vevais, launched a monograph of her images in 2014 at Paris Photo. For many years she taught workshops and classes through the Extension Program at UC Santa Cruz and Stanford’s Continuing Studies Program. She is on the Advisory Councils of Center, in Santa Fe and The Center for Photographic Art in Carmel.

Exhibition View

Previous
Previous

John Bucklin

Next
Next

Kelly Duffield