Laura Letinsky

Laura L. Letinsky (born 1962) is a Canadian photographer. Born in Winnipeg, Letinsky is known for her still life photographs.

Laura L. Letinsky[1]
Born1962 (age 5758)[2]
Winnipeg, Canada[3]
NationalityCanadian
Alma materUniversity of Manitoba , Yale University
Known forPhotography
Websitehttps://lauraletinsky.com/

Education

Letinsky has received fellowships from the John Simon Guggenheim Foundation[4] and Anonymous Was a Woman.[5] She is a professor of visual arts at the University of Chicago.[5][6]

Subject matter

Letinsky's still life work alludes to human presence without including any actual figures. For example, in the Morning and Melancholia (c. 1997–2001), and the I Did Not Remember I Had Forgotten (c. 2002–2004) series, Letinsky seems to document the aftermath of a sumptuous gathering or dinner party.[7]

The Somewhere, Somewhere series (c. 2005) explores similar themes of recently vacated domestic settings.[8]

Solo exhibitions

  • 2017 : "Infinite Gamers", Open House Contemporary, Chicago, IL
  • 2016 : Still Life Photographs 1997–2012, School of Art Gallery, University of Manitoba
  • 2015 : Focus, Mumbai Photography Festival, Mumbai, India & A Moment on the Lips: Illinois State Museum Gallery, Normal, IL
  • 2014 : Yours, more pretty, Yancey Richardson Gallery, NYC, NY & Creases Turn Sour, Carroll and Sons Gallery, Boston
  • 2013 Ill Form and Void Full, The Photographers Gallery, London, UK
  • 2012 Ill Form and Void Full, Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago
  • Hot and Cold All Over, Joseph Carroll and Sons, Boston
  • Ill Form and Void Full, Yancey Richardson Gallery, NY; Valerie Carberry Gallery, Chicago, Museum of Hagen, Germany
  • Laura Letinsky: Still Life, Denver Museum of Art, CO
  • 2004 Hardly More Than Ever at the Renaissance Society, 2004[9]

Collections

Her work is included in the collection of the Getty Museum,[10] the Winnipeg Art Gallery,[11] the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago[12] and the Art Institute of Chicago.[13]

gollark: I would, nevertheless, have to actually position all the cube faces, or make an entirely new isometric-only renderer and paint on hexagons.
gollark: If you want the thing on the left, then that has cubes in it, see.
gollark: Also, it would be *worse*, since you can't see the interior.
gollark: The thing on the left is technically possible, I just don't really want to have to actually render cubes.
gollark: Well, I was very lazy, so the 3D mode just takes the 2D grids, stacks them vertically and not horizontally, and rotates them around certain axes.

References

  1. "John Simon Guggenheim Foundation | Laura L. Letinsky".
  2. "Musée des beaux-arts le Locle - LAURA LETINSKY".
  3. "Laura Letinsky: Still Life Photographs, 1997-2012".
  4. "Laura Letinsky".
  5. "Laura Letinsky | Frieze". frieze. Archived from the original on 10 August 2016. Retrieved 26 June 2016.
  6. "The University of Chicago, Department of Visual Arts, Faculty: Laura Letinsky". Archived from the original on 24 November 2012. Retrieved 21 January 2013.
  7. Emma Pearse, "Photographer Laura Letinsky Fails to Clean Her Plate," New York Magazine, Entertainment, Vulture, 11 April 2008. Archived 14 June 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  8. "Laura Letinsky: SomewhereSomewhere," 28 April 2005 until 2005-05-28 at Monique Meloche gallery, Archived 20 August 2008 at the Wayback Machine review, AbsoluteArts.com: Indepth Art News. Archived 23 July 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  9. Laura Letinsky at the Renaissance Society Archived 9 September 2012 at Archive.today
  10. "Laura Letinsky (Canadian, born 1962) (Getty Museum)".
  11. "G-90-15 Parrot Club Exhibition, Polo Park, Winnipeg, 1988 Laura Letinsky » WAG".
  12. "Laura Letinsky, to say it isn't so, series #19, 2006".
  13. "Laura Letinsky".
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