Press release: “My Time at TCU: Photographs by Luther Smith”

MY TIME AT TCU:
PHOTOGRAPHS BY LUTHER SMITH

AUGUST 23–SEPTEMBER 20, 2018
THE ART GALLERIES AT TCU: MOUDY GALLERY
2805 SOUTH UNIVERSITY DRIVE
FORT WORTH, TEXAS 76129

FORT WORTH, TEXAS, July 26, 2018—The Moudy Gallery at TCU presents My Time at TCU: Photographs by Luther Smith, a mini-retrospective of work by the highly acclaimed Fort Worth artist and professor of photography, from August 23 through September 20. The gallery hosts an opening reception for the show on Thursday, August 23, from 5:00 to 7:00 p.m. The exhibition includes black-and-white and color photographs highlighting Smith’s artistic focus over the past thirty-five years, with subject matter ranging from his early work documenting the intricacies of the human experience to his long and ongoing journey capturing the vast nuance and beauty found in the common landscape.

The Art Galleries at TCU mounts this exhibition on the occasion of Smith’s retirement from TCU, where he has taught photography since 1983. My Time at TCU demonstrates Smith’s evolution as a photographer, giving viewers a window into the visual, intellectual, and technical explorations his photography has encompassed over time. The images have been curated from Smith’s various bodies of work, and include prints from the High School Rodeo series (1985–1986); his book, the Trinity River (1986–94); the Photographs of the American South series (1989–present); the Where I Live series, featuring scenes around DFW (1984–present); coastal scenes from Savannah, Georgia and Carmel, California (2015); and images from his recent trip to Paris, France (September–October, 2017).

A common thread woven throughout Smith’s photography is the constant effort to reveal the underlying substance of the subject. This manifests visually in dramatic tones, invigorating textures, and intriguing spatial relationships among the figures and inanimate objects that populate his work. Further, it appears as he manages to coax a certain vitality from inside the compositions—at times quiet, at times kinetic—to lift the veil on their inner workings.

The phenomenon emerges on a figural level in his early work, shot soon after Smith arrived in Texas. The black-and-white photographs chronicle the artist’s experiences at the High School Rodeo—not a strict observation of the event itself, but a thought-provoking examination of the young participants. “I am especially interested in this transition between childhood and adulthood,” Smith writes. “The High School Rodeo scene was a place I could observe this transition and to photograph individuals.”

Smith shifted focus to his relationship with the landscape in the mid-1980s, and since that time, his oeuvre has revolved around open-air scenes seemingly rife with unmitigated nature, but invariably hosting signs or signifiers of human impact. Black-and-white compositions, such as those from the Trinity River, American South, and Where I Live series, were forged at the edge of civilization and offer unconventional perspectives to evoke the intrinsic drama of places typically driven by, passed through, or discarded into the collective ephemera. Created with large, stationary banquet or view cameras, these prints convey a sense of gravitas through rich, variable tones and dynamic line quality.

Comprising the Where I Live and American South series, as well as his most recent work, Smith’s color photographs explore the endless facets of pigmentation in the landscape as they depict outdoor spaces with a saturated vivacity that seems to blossom from inside the picture plane. Not simply a vehicle for the subject matter, color acts, in part, as the subject. Smith’s landscapes serve as evidence of the realities we navigate every day, both on the surface and in the maelstrom that lies just underneath. The artist’s ability to see deeper, to separate then re-align layers of energy, creates a pictorial authenticity that is at once an accurate representation and hyper-real version of itself, spanning the physical and mental strata it occupies.

“The landscape pictures come from my interest in the world fostered by my time as a child on a farm in Tishomingo County, Mississippi, and my time growing up in Aurora, Illinois,” Smith writes. “I found the spaces near houses both rural and urban fascinating. They provided the fodder for imagination and excitement. Springs, small streams, and creek are the source of great amusement and fun for a child. Most of my work is as simple that, finding magic in green spaces. Even seemingly tragic events contain beauty.”

Overall, Smith’s photographs pluck overlooked yet fascinating aspects out of the everyday, uncovering the unexpected allure of a Metroplex subdivision, a deserted Southern field, or a trendy Paris street. Such intense juxtapositions between unsettled and settled, wild and tamed, natural and manufactured make up the fundaments of his art. “Photography is about the photographer,” says Smith, underlining his core tenet that subject matter is secondary to the unique vision and interpretation of every artist.

During his decades-long tenure, Smith saw many changes in the medium of photography, most notably the shift from analog to digital media. He presided over the change at the university, approaching it in what he calls a hybrid fashion, converting first to digital printing processes, and later to cameras, once he felt their quality was up to par.

The dawn of digital photography changed how Smith related to subject matter within his own practice as well. “It sparked a whole new idea about photography,” he says of the paradigm shift. He dove headlong into the new order, replacing his film cameras with digital and converting his darkroom into a studio space filled with monitors, scanners, and printers. “Digital opened up color possibilities that I hadn’t experienced before,” he says. “It allows me to emphasize things that I really wasn’t that aware of when I was making black-and-white pictures.”

Before arriving at TCU, Smith began his teaching career at the University of Illinois, where he was on the faculty for nine years, including a stint as the head of photography. Prior to embarking on a teaching career, Smith received his MFA in photography from the Rhode Island School of Design and his BFA from the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. He describes his time at TCU as “an ideal situation,” in which he was able to do the two things he loves to do: teach and make art. “I got to introduce students to photography, and I had the opportunity to make a lot of photographs I really love,” he remarks. “It is a great place, and it was a great job. I worked with a lot of good people.”

ABOUT LUTHER SMITH
Throughout his long career, Smith has exhibited his photographs extensively across Texas, in local and regional shows in Fort Worth, Dallas, Arlington, Austin, Houston, San Antonio, and Waco, to name a few. Nationally, he has exhibited work from California to Maine, including venues in New York, San Francisco, Boston, Chicago, Kansas City, New Orleans, Philadelphia, Santa Fe, and St. Louis, among others.

Smith’s photographs appear in many public collections, including the Amon Carter Museum of American Art, the Library of Congress, the Art Institute of Chicago, the Dallas Museum of Art, Fidelity Investments, the High Museum of Art in Atlanta, the Illinois State Museum, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Houston’s Museum of Fine Arts, the Pacific Telesis Collection in San Francisco, the Phoenix Arts Commission, and the Arkansas Arts Center in Little Rock.

Publications featuring Smith’s work include the books Photography 9, Photography 8, and Photography 7, published by Prentice Hall; the Trinity River, a monograph published by TCU Press; and the Book of 35mm Photography by Curtin & London. Periodicals that have printed Smith’s work include Fort Worth Magazine, D Magazine, Chicago Magazine, American Artist Magazine, and Mademoiselle.

CONTACT
The Art Galleries at TCU, Moudy Gallery
2805 S. University Drive
Fort Worth, TX 76129

817.257.2588
theartgalleries@tcu.edu
www.theartgalleries.tcu.edu

EXTRAORDINARY/ORDINARY—EXHIBITION OF NEW PHOTOGRAPHS BY LUTHER SMITH

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

EXTRAORDINARY/ORDINARY

AN

Early Spring Where I live


TO OPEN MAY 4 AT WILLIAM CAMPBELL CONTEMPORARY ART

FORT WORTH, TEXAS, April 20, 2017—Extraordinary/Ordinary, an exhibition of new photographs by Fort Worth artist Luther Smith, will be on display May 4 through June 10 at William Campbell Contemporary Art. An opening reception will be held Thursday, May 4, from 6:00 to 8:00 p.m. The show will include nearly two dozen new color photographs consisting of everyday outdoor scenes shot in and around Fort Worth. The large scale of the prints, in conjunction with Smith’s ultra-amplified light and color and overt depth of field, create a microenvironment around each piece that allows viewers to more fully enter the visual spaces and interact with the subject matter.

Nature—in bloom and dormant—looms large in Extraordinary/Ordinary, both a nod to the splendor of unspoiled land and a symbol of freedom within a controlled, structured environment. A number of the compositions illuminate the simple beauty revealed in combinations of line, color, and texture found in the undeveloped landscape. Still others center on the natural spaces that abut neighborhoods and manmade structures, and how the two coexist physically and aesthetically.

Smith describes this collection of photographs as the manifestation of how his imagination would view the spaces, rather than a simple physical record of them. In fact, the work possesses a hyper-lucid, crystalline quality that transcends what we might disregard with the naked eye as the monotony of brush-filled, overgrown, suburban sprawl. It conceives of the outdoors as a dreamlike space, infusing otherwise mundane scenes with a mesmerizing allure. In turn, the images of familiar (if not overlooked) surroundings belie their origins with saturated colors and light that emphasize the complex arrays of organic and geometric shapes, along with layers of texture. Layers of history emerge as well, in overlapping strata of natural and manmade formations struggling for dominance.

“A literal, factual view of the world is less interesting than my spiritual response to it,” says Smith. “My response to color and light and the changes to the environment over time fuels my photography. I have an emotional attachment to plants, light, and nature.” As a result, this collection recalls time the artist spent as a child exploring the woods and farmland in rural Mississippi and Illinois. It reminds him of the innocence and simplicity of childhood, of the spaces children often inhabit. The pictures evoke a “spiritual connection to environmental space” for Smith, offering glimpses of an ideal past amid the tedium of the present.

Smith is as fascinated by the process of making photographs as he is by the content he presents. He has embraced new technology as of late, shooting with a digital camera and employing imaging software to create photos that are at once contemporary signposts and mementos of his past. In this manner, he engages the medium on its most advanced level, as a whole new art form. According to Smith, “Photos aren’t found, but made.”

ABOUT THE ARTIST
A highly acclaimed photographer, Luther Smith has exhibited his work across Texas and throughout the United States for nearly four decades. His photographs have appeared in local and regional venues in Fort Worth, Dallas, Arlington, Austin, Houston, San Antonio, and Waco, to name a few. Nationally, he has exhibited work from California to Maine, including venues in New York, San Francisco, Boston, Chicago, Kansas City, New Orleans, Philadelphia, Santa Fe, and St. Louis, among others.

Smith’s photographs appear in many public collections, among them the Amon Carter Museum of American Art, the Library of Congress, the Art Institute of Chicago, the Dallas Museum of Art, Fidelity Investments, the High Museum of Art in Atlanta, the Illinois State Museum, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Houston’s Museum of Fine Arts, the Pacific Telesis Collection in San Francisco, the Phoenix Arts Commission, and the Arkansas Arts Center in Little Rock.

His photographs have appeared in many books, including Photography 9, Photography 8, and Photography 7, published by Prentice Hall; the Trinity River, a monograph published by TCU Press; and the Book of 35mm Photography, by Curtin & London. Periodicals that have included Smith’s work include Fort Worth Magazine, D Magazine, Chicago Magazine, American Artist Magazine, and Mademoiselle, to name a few.

Smith has taught photography for more than thirty-five years, and began his career at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. He joined the faculty of TCU in 1983, and currently serves as professor of art there. Luther Smith received his MFA in photography from the Rhode Island School of Design and his BFA from the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign.

ABOUT THE GALLERY
Founded in 1974 by William and Pam Campbell, William Campbell Contemporary Art exhibits high-quality contemporary art in a variety of media, including paintings, works on paper, mixed-media constructions, photography, prints, ceramics, and sculpture. By exhibiting nationally recognized artists, along with new and emerging talent, the gallery aims to nurture an awareness and appreciation of the exciting diversity found in contemporary art.

CONTACT
William Campbell Contemporary Art
4925 Byers Avenue
Fort Worth, Texas 76107
817.737.9566
www.williamcampbellcontemporaryart.com
Tuesday–Friday, 10:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m. and Saturday, 11:00 a.m.–4:00 p.m.