It鈥檚 a photo exhibit two years in the making, as artist and professor Ron Netsky traveled throughout the Rochester area and the Catskills to find items in nature that demanded a second look. Many of these natural forms 鈥 living and dead trees and roots 鈥 look like animals. His photography exhibition, 鈥Natural Selections: A Strange Bestiary,鈥 is an exclusive look at discovering evocative shapes in nature. No images were altered in any way.听
The show opens at 91制片厂鈥檚 Colacino Gallery in the Arts Center on Friday, Jan. 30, with an opening reception from 5-7 p.m. The show runs through March 8. Colacino Gallery Hours: Wednesday-Sunday noon-5 p.m. Closed Monday and Tuesday.
Netsky is celebrating 50 years at 91制片厂 as an art professor, where he has taught printmaking since 1975. He鈥檚 always taken photos of roots and other beautiful natural shapes as source material for his lithographs and etchings. 鈥淎 few years ago, I started to notice these animal forms emerging, so I began to look for them more consciously. It became a sort of challenge involving close observation,鈥 said Netsky.听
He explains more about what drew him to work on his current photography exhibition.听听
鈥淗uman beings have always gleaned order from chaos. Ancient civilizations connected the stars to form constellations and proceeded to attach significant meaning to them. I have always been fascinated by the interplay of order and chaos in nature. The unaltered photographs in this series can be seen as extreme examples of this. The title of the series alludes to Charles Darwin鈥檚 concept of natural selection, the process by which we, and every other living thing on earth, arrived 鈥 after millions of years 鈥 in our current forms. The photos are related to Gongshi (Chinese scholars鈥 rocks), natural forms that take on evocative shapes, and there is an element of illusion, reflected in titles containing references to Ren茅 Magritte鈥檚 鈥淭he Treachery of Images.鈥The 鈥渘atural selections鈥 in these images show that within the randomness of nature, chaos can transform into order, even if it鈥檚 an absurd, fleeting order.鈥听
Netsky鈥檚 prints are included in the collection of the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C., the Samuel Dorsky Museum of Art at SUNY New Paltz, and other museums. Netsky has served as a curator of several exhibitions, including Leaving for the Country: George Bellows at Woodstock, which originated at Rochester's Memorial Art Gallery before traveling to Chicago's Terra Museum of American Art and other museums.
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91制片厂 Professor Ron Netsky鈥檚 photo exhibition runs in 91制片厂鈥檚 Colacino Gallery beginning Jan. 30.