Gallery of Fine Art Photography - Atlanta GA

Lumiere Gallery
  • Contact
  • Artists
  • Exhibitions
  • Dialogue/News
  • Themes
  • About Us
  • Home
Stephen Lawson  -  2001, Jan 1st - Dec 31st 2001 / Chromogenic Collage  -  8 x 50

Stephen Lawson - 2001, Jan 1st - Dec 31st 2001

Chromogenic Collage - 8 x 50

Stephen Lawson  -  Tempus Fugit, 1992 / Chromogenic Print  -  14 x 31

Stephen Lawson - Tempus Fugit, 1992

Chromogenic Print - 14 x 31

Stephen Lawson  -  Balchraggan Hill-Farm and Loch Ness, 1990 / Chromogenic Print  -  11.5 x 52.5

Stephen Lawson - Balchraggan Hill-Farm and Loch Ness, 1990

Chromogenic Print - 11.5 x 52.5

Stephen Lawson  -  Spring Plumage, 1991 / Chromogenic Collage  -  8 x 34

Stephen Lawson - Spring Plumage, 1991

Chromogenic Collage - 8 x 34

Stephen Lawson  -  Pale Shadow, 2003 / Chromogenic Print  -  6.25 x 30

Stephen Lawson - Pale Shadow, 2003

Chromogenic Print - 6.25 x 30

Stephen Lawson  -  Silver Seed, 2002 / Chromogenic Print  -  11 x 30

Stephen Lawson - Silver Seed, 2002

Chromogenic Print - 11 x 30

Stephen Lawson  -  Laying it Down, 1992 / Chromogenic Print  -  10.5 x 24

Stephen Lawson - Laying it Down, 1992

Chromogenic Print - 10.5 x 24

Stephen Lawson  -  Light of Day, 2002 / Chromogenic Print  -  6 x 30

Stephen Lawson - Light of Day, 2002

Chromogenic Print - 6 x 30

Stephen Lawson  -  Callanish Stone Circle from the N.W. / Chromogenic Print  -  12.5 x 30

Stephen Lawson - Callanish Stone Circle from the N.W.

Chromogenic Print - 12.5 x 30

Stephen Lawson  -  Making the Touchdown, 1994 / Chromogenic Print  -  7.25 x 30

Stephen Lawson - Making the Touchdown, 1994

Chromogenic Print - 7.25 x 30

Stephen Lawson  -  Dancer / Chromogenic Print  -  30 x 12.5

Stephen Lawson - Dancer

Chromogenic Print - 30 x 12.5

Stephen Lawson  -  Cartwheels & Pirouettes, 1995 / Chromogenic Print  -  4.5 x 52

Stephen Lawson - Cartwheels & Pirouettes, 1995

Chromogenic Print - 4.5 x 52

Stephen Lawson  -  Tour de France, 1994 / Chromogenic Print  -  6.5 x 30

Stephen Lawson - Tour de France, 1994

Chromogenic Print - 6.5 x 30

Stephen Lawson  -  Height of Autumn,2007 / Chromogenic Print  -  53 x 6.5

Stephen Lawson - Height of Autumn,2007

Chromogenic Print - 53 x 6.5

Stephen Lawson  -  Gneiss, Schists & Granite, 1998 / Chromogenic Print  -  7 x 31

Stephen Lawson - Gneiss, Schists & Granite, 1998

Chromogenic Print - 7 x 31

Stephen Lawson  -  Spruce Knob, Daybreak, 2006 / Chromogenic Print  -  6 x 32

Stephen Lawson - Spruce Knob, Daybreak, 2006

Chromogenic Print - 6 x 32

Stephen Lawson  -  Abiding Oscillation, 1991 / Chromogenic Print  -  7 x 31

Stephen Lawson - Abiding Oscillation, 1991

Chromogenic Print - 7 x 31

Stephen Lawson  -  Shortcut through the Syncline, 1991 / Chromogenic Print  -  7.5 x 30

Stephen Lawson - Shortcut through the Syncline, 1991

Chromogenic Print - 7.5 x 30

Stephen Lawson  -  Driving from Edinburgh to Glasgow / Chromogenic Print (collage)  -  36 x 10

Stephen Lawson - Driving from Edinburgh to Glasgow

Chromogenic Print (collage) - 36 x 10

Stephen Lawson  -  Up Against The Wall, 2001 / Chromogenic Print  -  12.5 x 23.5

Stephen Lawson - Up Against The Wall, 2001

Chromogenic Print - 12.5 x 23.5

Stephen Lawson  -  Rising of Hunter's Moon, 1994 / Chromogenic Print  -  10 x 30

Stephen Lawson - Rising of Hunter's Moon, 1994

Chromogenic Print - 10 x 30

Stephen Lawson  -  Burning & Building the Bonfire, 1990 / Chromogenic Print  -  7.5 x 30

Stephen Lawson - Burning & Building the Bonfire, 1990

Chromogenic Print - 7.5 x 30

Stephen Lawson  -  Circle of the Seasons, 1989-1990 / Chromogenic Collage  -  30 x 35

Stephen Lawson - Circle of the Seasons, 1989-1990

Chromogenic Collage - 30 x 35

Stephen Lawson  -  Unfolding of Spring, 1987 / Chromogenic Collage  -  35 x 30

Stephen Lawson - Unfolding of Spring, 1987

Chromogenic Collage - 35 x 30

  -   /   -

-

-

previousprevious artist
previousprevious artist
Next
next
artist

Stephen Lawson

  • bio
  • exhibitions
  • themes
  • Videos and News

Stephen Lawson, born in Glasgow Scotland, studied figurative sculpture at Edinburgh College of Art with a pupil of Charles Despiau. He received an undergraduate degree in 1967, and an MFA from the University of Colorado, in 1970. Lawson taught sculpture at Ohio State University for six years, prior to his relocation to West Virginia.

Artist Statement:
The photo-based works grow from my background as a sculptor. These are four dimensional in concept and execution, but only two in the presentation. The concept of space and time is reconstructed in the mind of the viewer.

Almost thirty years ago, I based myself in rural West Virginia in order to be involved in “Earth-art,” that is, art that uses the Earth itself as the physical medium of expression. My concern was in conservation, which required me to develop a non-intrusive and participatory means of working in and with the landscape. This led to work in a manner that required photo documentation, and then to the camera becoming the “central tool.”

The year and day-long works could be thought of as bringing a concentrated gaze; the brief, dynamic shots read as a glance, in the turn of the head, as the eye itself sees, before the mind edits this to a visual memory, often as a “still.” Indeed, all of the images could be thought of as movies presented as stills.

The unique cameras required to produce these time based works have been constructed by me and evolved over the years, one capability leading to the next. The first “rig” was put together in 1980. These have been very labor intensive, built with simple hand tools, hard work and patience, the conceptual skills as with the manual ones deriving from a background in sculpture.

The work is presented in a poetic mode that asks one to stand briefly outside the usual flow of time, hopefully causing us to reflect on our “time-in-the-world,” individually, culturally, and even as a species. – Stephen Lawson

The work of Stephen Lawson is featured in these exhibitions.

(Select the image to view the exhibition page)

Change By Degree, Stephen Lawson

Change By Degree

Stephen Lawson, Summer Selections

Solstice Selections

Silicon To Silver, Bob Weingarten, Chuck Close, 2007

Silicon To Silver

The work of Stephen Lawson is featured in these Theme Collections.

(Select the image to view the theme page)

Farm and Fence Lines in Snow, Lake Junaluska, Haywood County, NC

American South

Peter Essick, Depleted Uranium, Kentucky, 2002

Environment – Color

Peter Essick,Fall colors in Tasermiut Fiord, , Greenland.

Landscape – Color

Stephen Lawson - Camera Evolution

Stephen Lawson describes his evolution as a photographer and the construction of unique cameras that were instrumental in the creation of his art. The series of 4 videos describe Lawson’s unique background and dogged pursuit to create cameras to realize his vision.

First Cameras:
“Cut and Paste” Panoramas

Second Group of Cameras:
“Compiled Strip, One Negative” Panoramas

Third Group of Cameras:
“Continuous Motorized” Panoramas

Forth Group of Cameras:
“Hand-Held Motorized” Panoramas

Outside Time - Documents Lawson's Photographic Achievements

Stephen Lawson describes his artist book, Outside Time, as his “mongrel brain-child.” This description belies the complexity and depth of his lifetime of work in photography, but is surprisingly apt at describing his unconventional career. In the early 1970s, the Scottish-born Lawson studied conceptual sculpture and earth art, which led to his epic exploration of time using photography in his adopted home, Morgantown, West Virginia.READ ENTIRE ARTICLE

Stephen Lawson
Lawson, himself is an interesting contradiction, a photographer in his 70s who never used a traditional darkroom, but built cameras from the screws up to create his own brand of time-lapse pictures. This Scotsman is not interested in f-stops and shutter speeds, but his photographs, some of which take a calendar year to expose, must be calibrated down to the smallest increment of time in order to succeed.
Lawson has spent much of the last three years creating Outside Time so future artists and scientists will be able to understand his mechanical process. Though artists using digital technology can approximate his methods, his one-of-a-kind cameras render his pictures different from other images, both in theory and in practical execution.
“The photo-based works grow from my background as a sculptor. These are four dimensional in concept and execution, but only two in the presentation. The concept of space and time is reconstructed in the mind of the viewer,” Lawson wrote. “The year and day-long works could be thought of as bringing a concentrated gaze; the brief, dynamic shots read as a glance, in the turn of the head, as the eye itself sees, before the mind edits this to a visual memory, often as a “still.” Indeed, all of the images could be thought of as movies presented as stills.”
Though Lawson has used a variety of techniques, he is perhaps best known for his collage like images that combine narrow strips of photographic prints, each strip depicting a place at a specific time, and taken in equally specific increments, such as every 10 minutes or once an hour on the hour. When Lawson assembles these strips into one whole picture, the viewer can see the landscape over a year or a day or whatever unit of time Lawson employed for that particular photograph.
“The unique cameras required to produce these time based works have been constructed by me and evolved over the years, one capability leading to the next. The first “rig” was put together in 1980. These have been very labor intensive, built with simple hand tools, hard work and patience, the conceptual skills as with the manual ones deriving from a background in sculpture,” he wrote. “The work is presented in a poetic mode that asks one to stand briefly outside the usual flow of time, hopefully causing us to reflect on our “time-in-the-world,” individually, culturally, and even as a species.”
Outside Time is more than an artist’s monograph, it is a metaphor for his career: hand-made, hard-won and unique. Many distinguished institutions, including The Chicago Art Institute and the Princeton University libraries, have acquired the handmade version of Outside Time, in recent days. Lawson is looking for a publisher to issue a commercial version of the book.
Like his cameras, some versions of Outside Time were made by Lawson with a stainless steel cover and back that contain nearly 200 pages of text and pictures describing his artistic roots, development, tools and ideas. The book is a house for his legacy, much as his cameras provide a sturdy home for the film he must protect during long exposures.
Lawson writes that the book came together in a piecemeal fashion much like the trajectory of his career – winding from sculpture to earth works to photography. “Youth is not the best vantage in writing an autobiography. So now I have a better stance to make a panoramic picture of my own landscape,” he wrote.
Lawson first began to think of writing a book, as he was preparing for a 2011 exhibition at Lumière, because his cameras were on display along with his photographs for the first time.
Though technical details are crucial to Lawson’s work, more so than most photographers, all of his mechanical creations are in the service of an almost literary interpretation of time. Lawson proves himself a poet when he writes:“Time can be tedious, time can be fleeting. Time is elastic to our emotions, in response to our awareness. Like the air we breathe, we live within it, unnoticed until a sensation draws out attention to it. Now at a certain age, I wonder where so much of it went; it is no longer here. Mostly, I swam in it, luxuriating in the buoyancy, assuming it an ocean, an endless resource, if thought of at all.”
Despite such modesty, Lawson most certainly thought of the hours and the moments and what they mean – Outside Time is the proof.
More of Lawson’s work can be seen on his Lumière Artist Page.

Stephen Lawson - Vero Beach Museum of Art

Closing: May 11, 2014

The remarkable work of Stephen Lawson was the subject of a one man exhibition at the Vero Beach Museum of Art, the exhibition entitled: Images Of Time, opened January 25 and closed May 11, 2014. Lawson’s photography almost defies description, a 12 minute video gives insight to the uniqueness of his work, it can be seen on his Lumiere artist page and the exhibition, Change By Degree, images are also included in the THEME collections Landscape, Environment and American South.

Balchraggan Hill-Farm and Loch Ness, 1990 © Stephen Lawson

  • enablewpts: 0
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Twitter
  • Vimeo
  • YouTube
PH 404 261 6100

Subscribe to our mailing list

Powered by Robly™

site by the Media Kitchen
COPYRIGHT 2021 LUMIERE LTD.     PRIVACY