Jessica Eaton

Jessica Eaton (born 1977) is a Canadian photographer living in Montreal, Quebec.

Jessica Eaton
Born1977 (age 4243)
NationalityCanadian
EducationEmily Carr Institute
Known forPhotography
WebsiteOfficial website

Life

She was born in 1977 in Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada.[1][2] and received a BFA in photography from the Emily Carr Institute.[3]

Work

Eaton's photographs focus mostly on some of the basic elements of photography: light, color, and exposure. By manipulating these different aspects in her photos, Eaton is able to explore the different possibilities within photography.[4]

After moving from Vancouver to Toronto and then to Montreal, Eaton produced a career changing series of photos, "Cubes for Albers and LeWitt", for a show sponsored by Red Bull.[4] The series of images are a tribute to artists Josef Albers and Sol LeWitt, taking inspiration from their minimalist and abstract style. Eaton exploits the camera, as she calls it, by continuously taking multiple shots of a cube painted in different colors without winding the exposure. Unlike painting, the added layers of shots on the same piece of film brightens the colors in the pictures.[5][6][7] In some works she shoots only grey cubes and uses different color filters over the lens in order to expose the film.[8][9]

Her photographs have appeared in publications such as Hunter and Cook, BlackFlash, Pyramid Power and Lay Flat 02: Meta. One of her photographs was chosen for the cover of the March 2011 issue of ARTnews. Her work has been included in a number of group and solo exhibitions in Canada and the United States, as well as in South Korea, Amsterdam, and London.[3][10]

Awards

In 2011, Eaton received the Bright Spark Award from the Magenta Foundation.[11] She was awarded the prize for photography at the Hyères International Festival of Fashion and Photography in 2012.[12] In 2019, Eaton was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship in the field of photography. [13]

Collections

Eaton's work is included in the permanent collections of:

gollark: This... seems like an odd relationship with your religion, no offence?
gollark: oops.
gollark: Yes, perhaps apiological profiling *can* be misplaced.
gollark: Religions often lean on the "you are a horrible sinner so go believe X and you'll be saved", and "believe X or you'll go to bad place™".
gollark: I did mean the "find another religion" thing somewhat jokily, but it is still quite weird that somehow people are fine with being implicitly told they're terrible and will be punished horribly because it's religion.

References

  1. Government of Canada, Canadian Heritage. "Artists in Canada". app.pch.gc.ca.
  2. Moser, Gabrielle. "Lenscraft: Jessica Eaton Asks Us to Think About What We See". Canadian Art.
  3. "Works by Jessica Eaton". Clint Roenisch Gallery.
  4. Risch, Conor. "Jessica Eaton." PDN ; Photo District News 33, no. 4 (04, 2013): 63. https://search.proquest.com/docview/1346914156.
  5. "A digital-free photo tribute to Albers and LeWitt - Art - Agenda". Phaidon.
  6. Rosenberg, David (5 November 2012). "Jessica Eaton's Beautiful Photography Is a Little Hard To Explain". Slate Magazine.
  7. Schwendener, Martha (10 April 2014). "Experimental Strategies at Aipad's Photography Show" via NYTimes.com.
  8. O'Hagan, Sean (24 January 2014). "Jessica Eaton: from 50 shades of grey to the hottest photography around" via www.theguardian.com.
  9. Robertson, Rebecca (1 March 2011). "Building Pictures".
  10. “Jessica Eaton.” Artspace. Accessed October 15, 2018. http://www.artspace.com/jessica-eaton.
  11. "Jessica Eaton: Wild Permutations". Museum of Contemporary Art Cleveland.
  12. Rothman, Lily (May 16, 2012). "Jessica Eaton: Cube, Color, Cosmos". Time.
  13. "Montreal Wins Big in Latest Guggenheim Fellowships". Canadian Art.
  14. "Collectors Symposium 2015". MAC Montréal.
  15. "New Acquisition: Jessica Eaton". www.gallery.ca.
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