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BRATTLEBORO

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Your support powers every story we tell. We're committed to producing high-quality, fact-based news and information that gives you the facts in this community we call home. If our work has helped you stay informed, take action, or feel more connected to Windham County – please give now to help us reach our goal of raising $150,000 by December 31st.

Cyanotypes by Tom Fels coming to Mitchell-Giddings Fine Arts in January
A cyanotype made by Tom Fels.
Arts

Cyanotypes by Tom Fels coming to Mitchell-Giddings Fine Arts in January

BRATTLEBORO — “Light & Shade: Cyanotypes and Drawings by Tom Fels” will be on view at Mitchell • Giddings Fine Arts, in downtown Brattleboro, from Jan. 7 to Feb. 7, 2016.

Works on display include large cyanotype prints from the Arbor and Catalpa Series from 2011 to 2014, and a selection of smaller minimalist drawings from the Linea Series of 2014. Concurrent with this exhibition, several of Fels's large drawings from his recent Classics series are included in the biennial Open Call show at the Brattleboro Museum & Art Center.

Fels' cyanotype series stem from his lengthy engagement with a single subject: a tree in his garden and its dappled shadows. These cyanotypes are cameraless photographs, popularly called “sun prints” or “shadow prints.”

There is no negative; each is unique. The prints are life-sized, 1:1 scale renderings of their natural subject matter. The cyanotype is an early process of great simplicity and unique color (a deep blue, or cyan). Typically, the method has been employed to produce silhouettes – of leaves, for example, as in the botanical illustrations of the pioneer British photographer Anna Atkins (1799-1871) – but the same process was also used to make photographic prints from negatives, as well as architectural blueprints.

Fels is a curator and writer specializing in the history of photography, as well as a historian and writer on contemporary history. His curated exhibitions have appeared at the Getty Museum in Malibu and the van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam. He wrote two books on the 1960s, Farm Friends and Buying the Farm.

Fels began showing his recent art in 2013. Cyanotypes from the series on view are now represented in several museum and private collections, including the collection of the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston.

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