
A portion of the museum's
general operating funds for this fiscal year has been provided through
grants from the Massachusetts Cultural Council, a state agency.
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Williams
College Museum of Art Presents "Wait Until Dark: Night Photography
from the Collection of Jay Richard DiBiaso"
February
8-July 6, 2003 at the Williams College Museum of Art
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Williams College Museum of Art (WCMA) will present Wait Until Dark:
Night Photography from the Collection of Jay Richard DiBiaso, an exhibition
of nocturnal photographs. The exhibition will open on February 8, and
it will run through July 6, 2003.
Wait Until Dark presents a range of photographs, both in color
and black and white, selected from the photography collection of Jay Richard
DiBiaso, Williams College Class of 1978. Wait Until Dark is organized
by Patricia Hickson, Williams College Graduate Program in the History
of Art, Class of 2003, and Deborah Rothschild, Curator of Exhibitions.
"Williams College's strong reputation in the visual arts extends
beyond the many museum directors and curators the school has produced,
and beyond the vitality of the current art departmentit is also
to be found in the collections of countless alumni around the country,"
says Director Linda Shearer. "It is our great pleasure to be featuring
these photographs from the collection of Jay DiBiaso, Class of 1978, to
coincide with his class's 25th Reunion. His knowledge of and dedication
to contemporary photography is formidable, and I am delighted that he
is sharing his passion with WCMA. He has worked closely with Patty Hickson,
who is a second year graduate student at Williams. As part of her graduate
internship with curator Deborah Rothschild, she has been able to organize
this exhibition."
Wait Until Dark: An Overview
The word photography comes from the Greek and means "writing
with light." In the creation of night images, this definition takes
on new connotations with the natural restrictions and artificial lighting
conditions that the artists must necessarily manipulate after dark. The
photographer's results in this milieu evoke a wide variety of sensationspending
danger, overwhelming curiosity, and profound beauty.
The photographs in Wait Until Dark stretch across a wide range
of subjects. George Tice's Telephone Booth, 3 a.m., Rahway, New Jersey
(1974) conveys the extraordinary stillness of a distinctly American landscape.
In Case Study House #22 (1960), architectural photographer Jules
Shulman captures a dramatic view of Los Angeles from a modern home of
glass and steel in the Hollywood Hills. Australian photographer Michael
Corridore presents an exhausting sense of perpetual motion in Vanishing
Point (2001), his grid of photographs taken from a car's dashboard.
The other artists included in Wait Until Dark are Lewis Baltz,
Jeff Brouws, Harvey Caplin, William Grenier, Todd Hido, Michael Kenna,
David Levinthal, O. Winston Link, Richard Misrach, Thomas Tulis, and Henry
Wessel.
The Williams
College Museum of Art is open Tuesday through Saturday, from 10 a.m. to
5 p.m., and Sunday, from 1 to 5 p.m. Admission is free and the museum
is wheelchair accessible.
Contact: Jonathan Cannon, Public Relations Coordinator
413.597.3178; WCMA@williams.edu
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