NYPH'09: Affiliated Exhibitions

Visualizing Climate Change: The Work of GHG Photos at Henry Gregg Gallery

Location: 111 Front Street, Suite 226
 
Telephone: 718.408.1090
 
 

The Henry Gregg Gallery presents Visualizing Climate Change: The Work of GHG Photos. Named after the scientific shorthand for Greenhouse Gases, the photographers of GHG Photos are committed to documenting the causes and effects as well as the attempts to adapt and mitigate to climate change.
 
The show features the work of Gary Braasch, Ashley Cooper, Benjamin Drummond, Peter Essick, Steve Kazlowski, and Joshua Wolfe. It will run from May 14th through June 21st.

 
 

For more info, please click here.

 
 
 
 
 

Fish-Work: Sea Stories at Caption Gallery

Location: 55 Washington Street, #802
 
Telephone: 917.921.8125
 
 

Corey Arnold will inaugurate Caption, Dumbo’s newest photo gallery, with an exhibition of photographs titled Fish-Work: Sea Stories. The show follows his successful debut at Chelsea’s Sara Tecchia Roma New York Gallery.
 
Corey Arnold is one of a group of emerging photographers who overturn the barriers between editorial and art photography by making their life experience the basis of their work. The stunning color photographs of Fish-Work are based on Arnold’s experience as a fisherman and crabber aboard commercial vessels in the rugged waters off Alaska and Arctic Norway. “I discovered a world that people back home [in Southern California] hardly knew existed,” he says. “I know how fish think, and the smell of the sea and motion of the boat are part of me.” That intimacy yields a portrait of the sea that is harrowing and humorous.
 
Corey Arnold’s work has been exhibited in galleries worldwide and featured in The Paris Review, Juxtapoz, Artweek, The Sunday Telegraph, Italian Rolling Stone, Outside Magazine and online with National Public Radio.  He is represented by Sara Tecchia Roma New York.
 
 
Caption is a gallery showcasing leading artists whose projects bridge the gap between art and editorial photography, as well as emerging visual storytellers.




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