"Solo Flights: The Aerial Photographs of Robert Hartman
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Thursday, September 11, 2025


"Solo Flights: The Aerial Photographs of Robert Hartman



OAKLAND, CALIFORNIA.- The Oakland Museum of California presents "Solo Flights: The Aerial Photographs of Robert Hartman," on view through January 12, 2003. Exotic colors, abstract geometry, infrared color film. Aerial photography becomes a window of vivid forms in the exhibition Solo Flights: The Aerial Photographs of Robert Hartman, on view from Sept. 14, 2002 to Jan. 12, 2003 at the Oakland Museum of California. Similar to abstract paintings on first look, the 20 photographs featured in the show were taken from approximately 1,000 feet above the ground, most of them as Hartman flew 100 miles an hour in his 1949 Piper Clipper.

Hartman’s photographs are more than aerial maps of land. He uses infrared film to capture the landscape, resulting in photographs that transform the land into riotous colors and shapes. “As an ex-painter,” Hartman explains, “I really react to color. Infrared film has color galore. It also puts a measure of ambiguity and non-recognition on the image.”

One photograph, Field Near Sutter Buttes (2000), suggests the calm, wavelike pattern and muted color of land, while photographs like Rio Vista X (1998), with chaotic streaks and arbitrary shapes of bold color, expose the exploitation of the land that the naked eye cannot see. Of the collection on display, the most striking photographs are often the images of debris, toxic waste and runaway development.

Exhibition curator Drew Johnson explains, “Robert Hartman’s aerial photographs reveal a California landscape that is both familiar and unsettling. In transforming environmental destruction into gorgeous abstractions, he raises questions about the nature of both photography and conservation.” The photographs document and open for discussion the damage to the land that is often ignored because it cannot be seen.

Hartman recognizes the important role of his airplane in the creative process. He fell in love with flying on his first flight at around age five. As a high-school graduation present his father gave him flying lessons, and, when Hartman was 21 years old, he had earned his pilot’s license. In 1969 he bought a plane and, until recently, flew solo while taking snapshots of the land below. He would shoot pointing the camera out the rear half of the window, his left shoulder turned and his knees and feet controlling the plane. He says, “I celebrate the nobility of the one-to-one, equal encounter between a man and a miraculous machine, and the departed time when that was possible.”

As an Oakland resident and professor of painting at UC Berkeley for 30 years, Hartman spent much of his life laboring in the studio. He taught academic realism until he followed the call of abstract expressionism in the 1960s. For years while he worked in the studio, Hartman felt a yearning to be in a plane, to get out of the studio and make art by experiencing life. “There’s so much to see and revel in,” Hartman says. His photographs are not composed. They are, instead, a document of his wonder and enthusiasm for the beauty of the land, a testament to the important role of conservation, and a record of his experience in the plane as he discovered the environment from above.

Honored with numerous awards as both a painter and photographer, exhibited in many solo shows throughout the country, and included in group exhibitions at the M.H. de Young Museum in San Francisco, the Whitney Museum in New York, and the Photo Museum in Osaka, Japan, Hartman has established an international reputation. His photographs are included in the collections of museums such as the Princeton Art Museum, The Corcoran Gallery, Long Beach Museum of Art, North Dakota Museum of Art, San Jose Museum of Art and the University Art Museum in Berkeley. Yet, Solo Flights: The Aerial Photographs of Robert Hartman is the first exhibition in a major West Coast museum to highlight only his recent photographic work.

Exhibition curator Drew Johnson is curator of photography in the art department of the Oakland Museum of California and a recent winner of a California Book Award presented by The Commonwealth Club for his book Capturing Light: Masterpieces of California Photography, 1850 to the Present (Norton, 2001).

A panel discussion on landscape photography and a gallery walkthough with Robert Hartman are among the programs complementing the show.











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