Things Only Happen in the Present (Adam Finkelston)
Adam Finkelston
Things Only Happen In The Present
Kallitype print
$400
27.5” x 19.75” Hand-printed using the historic kallitype photographic process
Artist Statement:
I am an artist, educator, and publisher based in Prairie Village, Kansas. My work encompasses photography and print making. These two ways of making images – photography and printmaking – are emblematic of the balance between reality and fiction in my work. The prints each tell their own stories. There are several recurring themes, but no linear narrative or storyline that connects the images. Rather, they represent my own introspective thoughts and feelings about a wide range of topics — themes of transition, metamorphoses, introspection, and ambiguity and their relationships to perceptions of religion, parenthood, magic, masculinity, and everyday life.
Adam Finkelston
Things Only Happen In The Present
Kallitype print
$400
27.5” x 19.75” Hand-printed using the historic kallitype photographic process
Artist Statement:
I am an artist, educator, and publisher based in Prairie Village, Kansas. My work encompasses photography and print making. These two ways of making images – photography and printmaking – are emblematic of the balance between reality and fiction in my work. The prints each tell their own stories. There are several recurring themes, but no linear narrative or storyline that connects the images. Rather, they represent my own introspective thoughts and feelings about a wide range of topics — themes of transition, metamorphoses, introspection, and ambiguity and their relationships to perceptions of religion, parenthood, magic, masculinity, and everyday life.
Adam Finkelston
Things Only Happen In The Present
Kallitype print
$400
27.5” x 19.75” Hand-printed using the historic kallitype photographic process
Artist Statement:
I am an artist, educator, and publisher based in Prairie Village, Kansas. My work encompasses photography and print making. These two ways of making images – photography and printmaking – are emblematic of the balance between reality and fiction in my work. The prints each tell their own stories. There are several recurring themes, but no linear narrative or storyline that connects the images. Rather, they represent my own introspective thoughts and feelings about a wide range of topics — themes of transition, metamorphoses, introspection, and ambiguity and their relationships to perceptions of religion, parenthood, magic, masculinity, and everyday life.