Dayton Visual Arts Center opens an exhibition of three groundbreaking local photographers
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Sunday, September 14, 2025


Dayton Visual Arts Center opens an exhibition of three groundbreaking local photographers
John Sousa, Theophanic Angel-Sapientia, UV cured inks, alkyd and collage on aluminum honeycomb, 60 x 60 in.



DAYTON, OH.- The Dayton Visual Arts Center presents Navigation: Personal and Geographical Landscapes, an exhibition representing three contemporary photographers who utilize alternative image-making techniques through camera-less methods. Navigation opened October 7th and runs through November 5th, 2016. The exhibition is presented in conjunction with FotoFocus Biennial 2016.

“DVAC is proud to present Navigation in conjunction with The FotoFocus Biennial,” said Eva Buttacavoli, Executive Director for DVAC. “Organized around the theme of Photography, the Undocument, the Biennial includes over 60 exhibitions throughout Cincinnati, Dayton and the surrounding region that comments upon, and questions assumption about, the documentary character of photography and the boundaries between fact and fabrication.”

The three artists featured in Navigation are Dennie Eagleson Greenberg, Tracy Longley Cook, and John Sousa. These artists were selected through the 2014 Biennial Call for Exhibitions, juried by Jason Franz, Founding Executive Director & Chief Curator, Manifest Creative Research Gallery and Drawing Center, Cincinnati; John Kortlander, Professor, Drawing & Painting, Columbus College of Art and Design and 2012 DVAC Biennial Call Artist; and Liz Maugens, Co-Founder & Director, Zygote Press, Cleveland.

Dennie Eagleson Greenberg is an organic farmer and makes photographic work using materials from her land as source. She works with a process called lumen printing, which includes putting outdated darkroom paper in contact with plant materials and exposing them to direct sun for a significant length of time.

“The plants draw their own image through the interaction between their own biology and chemical compounds in the emulsion of the paper,” states Greenberg in her artist’s statement. “The process captures the veins of lily pads, the sweet circles of nasturtium leaves, and the delicate hairs of corn silk, a transformation made of sun, time, chemistry, and alchemy.”

Tracy Longley-Cook, an Associate Professor of photography at Wright State University, explains that her interests are strongly influenced by themes relating to place, transformation, and perception. Through the use of experimental and traditional techniques, she incorporates a variety of working methods into her photography and prints.

In this series, she utilizes portions of her body and photographic chemistry to create direct imprints on film. The images mimic aerial landscape photographs, where elements such as skin, hair, and body fluids are abstracted to create visual representations that emulate land and water formations.

“Our bodies reveal the residue of experience,” states Cook in her artist statement. “Skin is a primary reflection of a person as it denotes age, cultural identity and race, wellbeing, as well as identity. Similarly, the surface of various terrains within the landscape offers a comparable record of the earth’s changing topography. Natural and human influenced alterations, both gradual and immediate, modify and transform our environment over time. Our geographic surroundings, like our bodies are etched with a narrative of its own evolution.”

John Sousa’s long-term focus has been photography and language and he believes in using style as well as the formal elements of art (line, shape, color, etc.) to more thoroughly explore his interests. His series features computer-compiled photographic images printed with UV-cured inks over a textured surface of paint and collage fragments (made from photo-silk screened puff-ink on cloth) with transparent glazes on honeycomb aluminum panels.

Sousa states, “In addition to the formal concerns I have with paint and photography, I am examining the concept of “pareidolia,” a phenomenon in which one perceives meaning in abstract stimuli – for example seeing images in cloud-filled sky. It is the essence of our nature to look for meaning. My work is not concerned with portraying the world, but rather our perception of the world.”










Today's News

October 8, 2016

Dutch city of Hoorn celebrates as five stolen masterpieces return home

New species of Jurassic reptile identified from skeletal remains on display in Bristol

Exhibition showcases lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender & queer artistic life in New York City

Christie's Frieze Week Post-War And Contemporary Art Auctions total $115,611,199

Meadows Museum solves mystery following extensive investigation of Murillo paintings

Complete set of 108 Michelin Guides offered at auction at Christie's Paris on 5 December

Exhibition of new paintings by Neo Rauch on view at David Zwirner in London

Exhibition at Martin Gropius Bau traces German identity from a British perspective

Princeton University Art Museum's Asian art collections to be made more accessible to scholars and the public

Sky Arts partners with British Library on new celebrity biography television series

Etchings by Richard Pousette-Dart on view at Del Deo & Barzune

Cecilia Brunson Projects opens exhibition of works by Willys de Castro

Cincinnati Art Museum presents photography from the Bluegrass State

Delaware Art Museum exhibition focuses on Elizabeth Osborne's breakthrough decade

deCordova presents survey of the influential photographer and curator Edward Steichen

Dayton Visual Arts Center opens an exhibition of three groundbreaking local photographers

Moniker reinvents the art fair for the new era of contemporary artists

Swann Galleries' Travel Posters Auction surveys changing trends in transportation

Through the powerful juxtaposition of object and image, artist engages with America's collective past

Dreweatts & Bloomsbury Auctions announce Fine Photographs auction

Private Texas collection reveals early Lui Liu masterwork Interval, 1999




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 




Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)


Editor: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful