TWOSOMES @ THE GAUVIN GALLERY
Friday, November 27, 2015 9:00 AM through Sunday, November 27, 2016 10:00 PM
NEWS PROVIDED BY
Oct 17, 2015, 10:17 ET
BOSTON, Oct. 17, 2015 /PRNewswire/ -- Mark Chester's Twosomes touring exhibit and award-winning companion book from Un-Gyve Press represents images culled from his forty years of traveling with a camera, presented in pairings related by subject matter, graphic interest or, as the photographer puts it, "a stretch of the imagination." — a wide-reaching body-of-work that connects architectural icons with sidewalk signage; Japan with Iowa; 1979 with 2002; celebrity with passerby in a manner that reveals, as novelist Paul Theroux describes, "tremendous humanity and humor...In this juxtaposition of matching moods and paraphernalia, Mark Chester shows us in an ingenious way how the world is related and how we matter to each other."
Photo - http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20140618/119302
Mark Chester has been a professional photographer since 1972. He was Director of Photography and staff photographer at ASCAP (American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers), in New York City. His photographs are widely published and exhibited.
"...one of our finest...a wonderful eye and consummate skill..."
— Charles Kuralt on Mark Chester
Published in 2011 by Un-Gyve Press the 218 page hardcover book Twosomes features 202 plates, 101 image pairs representing forty years of photography by Mark Chester. The 11" x 13" hardcover book with dust-jacket retails for $75. ISBN: 9780982919804. Designed by Un-Gyve Limited. Introduction by Julia Courtney, Curator of Art for the Springfield Museums, Springfield, Massachusetts.
CONTACT:
THE GAUVIN GALLERY MT. AUBURN: through 2016
The Gauvin Gallery | Mt. Auburn Hospital 330 Mt. Auburn Street, Cambridge, MA 02138 | (617) 492-3500
Twosomes books and postcard sets will be available in the gift shop at Mt. Auburn.
Un-Gyve Press E: info@un-gyve.com T: 617.350.7884
SOURCE Un-Gyve Press
The Roger Lonsdale archive, at Balliol College, Oxford, includes his reflections, in 2005, on his poetry, with lists of his ninety poems—alphabetically by first lines, and chronologically—as well as his notebooks as a poet; and, at that time, he noted, in reference to these sixteen poems from Un-Gyve Press in a numbered, limited edition of seventy-five: “At present the following seem worth preserving for one reason or another.”