Wendy Ewald

Wendy Ewald

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Wendy Ewald @ Stephen Bulger Gallery, September 8 – October 21, 2020

Wendy Ewald @ Stephen Bulger Gallery, September 8 – October 21, 2020

Exhibition Dates: September 8 – October 21, 2020

Please use the online booking or call the gallery to schedule your visit

*The gallery is open by appointment and by chance from Tuesday to Saturday from 11am-5pm. 

To schedule a visit please use stephenbulgergallery.appointlet.com or call the gallery at 416.504.0575.

For more information about the gallery’s new procedures visit bulgergallery.com

The gallery is honoured and excited to announce its representation of Wendy Ewald. In advance of a larger survey exhibition, we’re presenting a selection of her work made in Kentucky, Mexico and Durham, North Carolina to coincide with the release of Portraits and Dreams, a documentary film she co-directed with Elizabeth Barret, as well as a book of the same title, published by MACK.

For over forty years Wendy Ewald has collaborated in art projects with children, families, women, and teachers in Labrador, Colombia, India, South Africa, Saudi Arabia, Holland, Mexico, and the United States. Starting as documentary investigations of places and communities, Ewald’s projects probe questions of identity and cultural differences. In her work with children she encourages them to use cameras to record themselves, their families, and their communities, and to articulate their fantasies and dreams. Ewald herself often makes photographs within the communities she works with and has the children mark or write on her negatives, thereby challenging the concept of who actually makes an image, who is the photographer, who the subject, who is the observer and who the observed. In blurring the distinction of individual authorship and throwing into doubt the artist’s intentions, power, and identity, Ewald creates opportunities to look at the meaning and use of photographic images in our lives with fresh perceptions.

Wendy Ewald has received many honors, including a MacArthur Fellowship, a Guggenheim fellowship, and grants from the National Endowment for the Arts, The Andy Warhol Foundation, the Rauschenberg Foundation, and the Fulbright Commission. She was also a senior fellow at the Vera List Center for Art and Politics at the New School from 2000-2002. She has had solo exhibitions at the International Center of Photography in New York, the Center for Creative Photography in Tucson, the George Eastman House in Rochester, Nederlands Foto Institute in Rotterdam, the Fotomuseum in Wintherthur, Switzerland, the Corcoran Gallery of American Art, and The Queens Museum among others. Her work was included in the 1997 Whitney Biennial. She has published twelve books, her fifth, a retrospective documenting her projects entitled Secret Games, was published by Scalo in 2000. Two books were published in 2005. A third, To The Promised land was published in 2006 to accompany an outdoor installation in Margate, England with “new starts” and refugees commissioned by ArtAngel. She was an artist in residence at Amherst College for eleven years where she taught the class, Collaborative Art: The practice and theory of working with communities since 2005. Her latest book, This Is Where I Live, which maps Israel/Palestine through 14 different communities, was published by MACK in 2015 in conjunction with a traveling exhibition, “This Place”.  America, Border, Culture, Dreamer a collaboration with young immigrants to the US was published by Little, Brown in Fall 2018 to accompany a public art installation in Philadelphia.

1 comment

kathi freeman

hi wendy, just woke up in the middle of the night to pee and your pov film was on. i love it. thank you. i have a background in photography in eastern ky.. through my ggrandparents. you might enjoy my book about him. he worked in e. ky from 1880 to 1940 when he went blind. he lived to be 95. he traveled by way of a farm wagon, with a telescopic darkroom of his own design down dry creek beds throughout the mountain counties of ky . here’s a link to a full preview of my first book on his work. i continue to research his work. thank you the wonderful work in e. ky . side note: i grew up down the street in hazard ky from elizabeth barret. i was a little younger. she was a friend of my older sisters. here’s the link to the book: Ogg land. https://www.blurb.com/books/4818248-ogg-land

all the best,
kathi freeman

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