Fine Art Photography Daily

Tom Brennan: States Project: Vermont

Hummingbirds(courtesy of Redpath Museum,Mcgill University)

© Tom Brennan

I first met Thomas Brennan in 2013 at the University of Vermont (where he teaches) during the same trip that I wrote about in my post on Bill McDowell. I was familiar with his work before my visit because he had been the undergraduate photography professor of my dear friend Matt Siber. I fell in love with the photograms in his Collecting Feathers and Collecting Shadows projects as soon as I saw them, they have such heaviness and scientific strangeness to them.

Thomas Brennan received an M.F.A. in Photography from the University of Arizona. His work has been exhibited at the Los Angeles Center for Photographic Studies; UC-Berkeley Extension Gallery, San Francisco; Photographic Resource Center, Boston; Kohler Arts Center, WI; Portland Museum of Art, Portland, ME; University of Puerto Rico, Rio Piedras, PR; Usdan Gallery, Bennington College, VT; Burlington Center for the Arts, Burlington, VT., and he has received three Artist Grants from the Vermont Council for the Arts. Brennan is an Associate Professor and the Chair of Art and Art History at the University of Vermont. He resides in Hinesburg, Vermont.
LS_STATES_LOGO-03-651x4231-651x423

Collecting Shadows

Scotophorus pro phosphoro inventus, written by Johann Schulze in 1727, was the origin of experiments with light-based imaging that would lead to William Henry Fox Talbot’s camera-less photogenic drawings. The ability to record ‘marks of light’ without a lens, first explored in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, provides the foundation for my new series of light-based works titled Collecting Shadows.

I work with objects of natural philosophy to record museum display specimens and theoretical models using modern processes derived from Schulze’s description of the light sensitivity of silver salts. The resulting abstract representations reflect upon a history of symbolic thinking about the natural world.

Black-throated Diver(courtesy of National Museums, Liverpool)

© Tom Brennan

Blue bird of Paradise(courtesy of National Museums, Liverpool)

© Tom Brennan

Double helix_built by Francis Crick, c1953_(courtesy of Laboratory of Molecular Biology)

© Tom Brennan

Electron density map of penicillin_model built by Drothy Hodgkins(courtesy of Museum of the History of Science, University of Oxford)

© Tom Brennan

Flamingoes(courtesy of Cornell University Museum of Vertebrates)

© Tom Brennan

Galilean telescope_Passemani, Louvre.c1760(courtesy of Science Museum Group)

© Tom Brennan

Model of Chymotripsin(courtesy of Science Museum Group)

© Tom Brennan

Model of t-RNA_(courtesy of MIT Museum)

© Tom Brennan

Myoglobin_model built by John Kendrew(courtesy of Laboratory of Molecular Biology)

© Tom Brennan

Orrery_William Newton and Company, London.c1863(courtesy of Science Museum Group)

© Tom Brennan

Orrery(courtesy of Science Museum Group)

© Tom Brennan

Polypeptide Chain, model built by Crick and Rich, c1955(courtesy of Laboratory of Molecular Biology)

© Tom Brennan

Ptolemy and Copernicus_planetaria(courtesy of Museum of the History of Science, University of Oxford)

© Tom Brennan

Resplendent Quetzal(courtesy of National Museums, Tring)

© Tom Brennan

Posts on Lenscratch may not be reproduced without the permission of the Lenscratch staff and the photographer.


NEXT | >
< | PREV

Recommended