• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer
  • Discover
    • Browse Alphabetically
    • Browse by Genre
    • Browse by Subject
    • Browse by Place
    • Browse by Process
  • Features
    • The States Project
      • Alaska
      • Alabama
      • Arizona
      • Arkansas
      • California
      • Colorado
      • Connecticut
      • District of Columbia
      • Florida
      • Georgia
      • Hawaii
      • Illinois
      • Indiana
      • Iowa
      • Kansas
      • Kentucky
      • Louisiana
      • Maine
      • Maryland
      • Massachusetts
      • Michigan
      • Minnesota
      • Mississippi
      • Missouri
      • Montana
      • Nebraska
      • Nevada
      • New Hampshire
      • New Jersey
      • New Mexico
      • New York
      • North Carolina
      • North Dakota
      • Ohio
      • Oklahoma
      • Oregon
      • Pennsylvania
      • South Carolina
      • South Dakota
      • Tennessee
      • Texas
      • Utah
      • Vermont
      • Virginia
      • Washington
      • West Virginia
      • Wisconsin
      • Wyoming
    • Content Aware
    • DEVELOPER
    • Mixtapes
    • Art and Science
      • Geometry
      • In the Dark
      • Magic
      • Night
      • The Natural World/Nature
      • Women and Earth
      • The Art of Healing
    • Lenscratch Student Prize Winners
      • 2020
      • 2019
      • 2018
      • 2017
      • 2016
      • 2015
      • 2014
      • 2013
    • Notes from a Curator
    • Exhibitions
    • Interviews
    • Articles
    • Photographers on Photographers
  • Resources
    • Artist Residencies
    • Calls For Entry
    • Lenscratch Library
    • Portfolio Reviews
    • Photo Festivals
    • Online Magazines
    • Print Magazines
    • Sites of Interest
    • Organizations and Institutions
    • Photography Charities
    • Grants
Lenscratch

Lenscratch

Fine Art Photography Daily

  • Submit
    • About Submissions
    • Submit to Exhibitions
    • Submit to Student Prize
    • Submit Your Project
  • Shop
  • Subscribe

Gary Beeber: Passages

December 19, 2019 by Aline Smithson

Call-JESUS
©Gary Beeber

“I have become obsessed with the passage of time, what things were and what they are now. I often think about my own mortality.”

Photographer Gary Beeber has knack for finding humor and pathos in the every day, especially in those places that have fallen into decline. He has an innate curiosity and the photographs in his series, Passages, reveal a sense of wonder and amusement about the deteriorating detritus of  architecture and objects. He describes the beginnings of how he sees, “Influential in shaping how I see was the drawing class taught by Jack Potter, Drawing and Thinking, at SVA (New York City). He demanded we students see beyond the obvious and to be active interpreters of what we see. This dictate has been a major influence in my pursuit as a photographer. I engage with my world, led by my curiosity.”

Gary will have  solo exhibition of  his Sylvester Manor series coming up in August at Rhode Island Center for Photographic Arts, curated by Yorgos Efthymiades, that will travel to several venues.

House that nobody
©Gary Beeber

Passages

When I grew up in Middle America life was good, but over time the big factories shut down and those jobs were gone forever.  What was once a thriving community is now filled with abandoned places and broken dreams, my hometown has become the opioid capitol of America. When I returned many years later it was very different, yet familiar.

The “Passages” series is about the passage of time, what things were and what they are now. The subjects of this series are essentially found objects, each one a discovery for me. 

I have often reflected on the brevity of life, perhaps my photographs are a series of self-portraits by proxy as I contemplate my own demise and life cycle. 

Toilet metropolis
©Gary Beeber

Gary Beeber is an award-winning American photographer/filmmaker who has exhibited in galleries and museums throughout the United States and Europe.  His films have screened at over 75 film festivals.  Solo (photography) exhibitions include two at Generous Miracles Gallery (NYC), the Griffin Museum of Photography (2017), and Rhode Island Center for Photography (2020).  Beeber’s work has also been included in juried exhibitions throughout the country. Among Fortune 500 companies who collect his work are Pfizer Pharmaceutical, Goldman Sachs and Chase Bank.

TORNADO-DAMAGE
©Gary Beeber

I am always drawn to subjects I find to be incongruous, and always like to experiment.  As I’m taking pictures I think a lot about the passage of time and how things end up the way they are.  What happened to the people who lived in these places and what were they experiencing?  I’ve often been told that I see things that other people don’t pay attention to. The images I capture come to me subconsciously perhaps; they speak to me in a variety of ways, fulfilling an insatiable curiosity about the world and everything in it.

Through the viewfinder the world is in color, but I imagine what I see as monotone.  I work with color as well, but feel that black and white gives my work a gravitas that can’t be achieved with color.  Black and white is solid, timeless.  I have studied the work of the great Parisian photographer Eugene Atget (1857-1927) and especially like his use of color (or non-color) that came from his printing process. It took me a long time to develop a similar palette, which I use with my own ideas.

Abandoned Jaguar
©Gary Beeber

As I photograph, I make adjustments with the composition and cropping.  I also make changes based on how I foresee the printed image. I’ve used a lot of cameras over the years but have come to prefer digital because I like the quality and the immediate results.  Perhaps this is because when I started getting serious about photography digital cameras didn’t exist.  I used computers early on but they were primitive by today’s standards.

I like to come back to themes.  I’ve been working on the “Passages” and “Sylvester Manor” series for several years.  For me, it’s exciting to see how places and things change over time and sometimes disappear altogether.  I prefer quiet places where I can spend time thinking about each subject without interruption, but sometimes that’s not possible.  Some places I know about and some places I find by accident. I think I’m most successful with what I find by chance.

Abandoned train station
©Gary Beeber
After the season
©Gary Beeber
Big mouth
©Gary Beeber
MAUSOLEUM
©Gary Beeber
Peak
©Gary Beeber
PIXIE
©Gary Beeber
Planetarium
©Gary Beeber
Ruin
©Gary Beeber
Ruined manor house
©Gary Beeber
SEARS
©Gary Beeber
Tree of Life
©Gary Beeber

Filed Under: Narrative Tagged With: Architecture, Gary Beeber

Footer

Recent Posts

  • The State Project: Rhode Island: Theresa Ganz
  • Lindsey Beal: The States Project: Rhode Island
  • Odette England: The States Project: Rhode Island
  • Brian Ulrich: The States Project: Rhode Island
  • Latin America Week: Misha Vallejo

Tags

American South Animals Anne-Laure Autin Architecture Black and White Blue Earth Alliance CENTER Awards College of Charleston Community Conflict Culture Death Donna Garcia Environment Family Gender Greece Halsey Institute Health History History Based Landscapes Identity Immigration Indigenous Indigenous Artists Jennifer McClure Large Format latinx Macaulay Lerman Memory Mental Health Mixed Media Photography Book Race Road Trip Science Shawn Bush Southbound Storytellers Technology Thesis Project Time Typology Vernacular Water

Search

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • RSS
  • Tumblr
  • Twitter

Copyright © 2007–2025 LENSCRATCH // ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.