Devour the Land: War and American Landscape Photography since 1970
Sep
17
to Jan 16

Devour the Land: War and American Landscape Photography since 1970

  • Harvard University Art Museums (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

Devour the Land will be on display September 17, 2021 through January 16, 2022 in the Special Exhibitions Gallery at the Harvard Art Museums. The accompanying illustrated catalogue will present a range of voices at the intersection of art, environmentalism, militarism, photography, and politics, including an essay by Abrahm Lustgarten, senior environmental reporter for ProPublica. The publication is also enhanced by two poems by award-winning poet Ed Roberson and interviews with several of the foremost contemporary artists working in the landscape photography tradition: Sheila Pree Bright, Terry Evans, Ashley Gilbertson, David T. Hanson, Stacy Kranitz, Jin Lee, Richard Misrach, Barbara Norfleet, and Oscar Palacio.

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public presentation
Oct
12
2:00 PM14:00

public presentation

Join us Saturday, October 12 at 2pm for a walking exhibition of Oscar Palacio's photographs. Displayed in the buildings and structures of the Park, Oscar's work will be in conversation with our land and sculptures to illuminate familiar stories with new light and unearth unfamiliar tales of history, place and American collective memory. This is the final event of our 2019 season.

Walking path will be along our gravel road. Indoors if weather mandates.

Presentation followed by light refreshments and conversation with Oscar.

Always admission free.

image: Ellington Garden, Dorchester, MA, 2019 from Uprooted series

4280 Boston Post Road· Enosburg, VT 05450· 512.333.2119· coldhollowsculpturepark.com

CHSP_09_Ellington_Dorchester_DSF0796-Edit.jpg
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exhibition
Sep
3
to Jul 31

exhibition

  • Center for American political Studies, Harvard University (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

CAPS is pleased to present the work of Oscar Palacio, the latest in an on-going series of artist collaborations that reflect and spark conversations around American politics. This series of photographs investigates the construction of place and history in the United States by focusing on popular historic sites which have both embedded meanings and assumed historical narratives, as well as sites of more recent historical and political import.

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