SANTA MONICA, CA.- ROSEGALLERY is presenting, Down by the Hudson, an exhibition of photographs by Caleb Stein. The show exhibits a selection of works from Steins ongoing project of the same name.
Wappinger Creek is a 41.7-mile-long creek that connects the waters of Thompson Pond to the mouth of the Hudson River in Dutchess County, New York. Carved by the creeks path is a hidden Eden nestled in a small wooded area behind the Overlook Drive-In Theater on the outskirts of Poughkeepsie. Amongst the trees and muddy banks, residents congregate in and around this watering hole. Physical and social dissonance is forgone in this haven. The maple leaves rustle in the soft breeze, and rushed footsteps progress into a subsequent splash. Placid conversation fills the air, accompanying the slow trot of those wading in the water.
Caleb Steins Down by the Hudson series is an ongoing ode to the small town of Poughkeepsie, New York. Rendered in black-and-white, his photographs provide an intimate glimpse into the lives of Poughkeepsies residents amidst the current backdrop of de-industrialization and political tension in the U.S. The watering hole serves as a neutral zone, a side-step from the dayto-day turbulence of life. It is a communal ground that provides a place of recreation and refuge.
The watering hole became a central component of the project because it represented an idyllic space where people from all walks of life came together and let their guard down. The more time I spent at the watering hole, the more I wanted to convey the struggles and beauties of this town with care and tenderness. - Caleb Stein
Caleb Stein (b. 1994, London) graduated from Vassar College in 2017 with a degree in history of art. His work explores the fragility of memory through an embrace of community and the dynamic, energetic interactions that occur within it. Questions surrounding mythology and narrative as they relate to the United States and the international influence it exerts sit at the core of much of Steins work, as he grapples with his relationship to the country that has become his adopted home. Steins work embraces the lyrical potential of photography; his work often contains a tension between the poetic and the emotionally confrontational.
The creek is flowing but time has stopped still. There is no burden of history here. You are with your friends, afloat in the water. It is not only your body it appears even your breath is finally weightless. - Amitava Kumar