Kelli Connell's photographs delve into relationships, encounters, and their complex dynamics. Spanning across two exhibitions at the Elmhurst Art Museum in Chicago, Connell's expansive body of work will be showcased for the first time in the largest-ever display of her work in the city.
The traveling exhibition "Living with Modernism: Kelli Connell" co-organized by the Center for Creative Photography at the University of Arizona, Cleveland Museum of Art and High Museum of Art in Atlanta, offers a thought-provoking look into Connell's photographic journey. The show includes 45 large-scale images from her well-known series "Pictures of Charis," which was inspired by Edward Weston's iconic photographs.
Connell had initially discovered Weston's work as a student but was intrigued when she came across one of his photographs taken in California, featuring a woman known only as "Nude." Research led her to discover that the mystery woman was Charis Wilson, an aspiring writer and muse who supplied text for Weston's famous 1940 photography book.
The new series of images showcases Connell's contemporary re-interpretations and responses filtered through her research on Wilson. The large-scale photographs will line the walls of the Elmhurst gallery, creating a visual connection between Connell's work and Weston's vintage prints displayed in flat vitrines.
Concurrently, "Double Life," a series featuring eight fresh images commissioned by the Elmhurst Museum, continues Connell's exploration of identity and truth in photography. The latest images were taken in Mies van der Rohe's 1952 McCormick House, an iconic modernist single-family home that now forms part of the museum's campus.
Connell's body of work offers a glimpse into her nuanced portrayal of relationships and personal encounters, inviting viewers to reflect on the complexities of human interaction.
The traveling exhibition "Living with Modernism: Kelli Connell" co-organized by the Center for Creative Photography at the University of Arizona, Cleveland Museum of Art and High Museum of Art in Atlanta, offers a thought-provoking look into Connell's photographic journey. The show includes 45 large-scale images from her well-known series "Pictures of Charis," which was inspired by Edward Weston's iconic photographs.
Connell had initially discovered Weston's work as a student but was intrigued when she came across one of his photographs taken in California, featuring a woman known only as "Nude." Research led her to discover that the mystery woman was Charis Wilson, an aspiring writer and muse who supplied text for Weston's famous 1940 photography book.
The new series of images showcases Connell's contemporary re-interpretations and responses filtered through her research on Wilson. The large-scale photographs will line the walls of the Elmhurst gallery, creating a visual connection between Connell's work and Weston's vintage prints displayed in flat vitrines.
Concurrently, "Double Life," a series featuring eight fresh images commissioned by the Elmhurst Museum, continues Connell's exploration of identity and truth in photography. The latest images were taken in Mies van der Rohe's 1952 McCormick House, an iconic modernist single-family home that now forms part of the museum's campus.
Connell's body of work offers a glimpse into her nuanced portrayal of relationships and personal encounters, inviting viewers to reflect on the complexities of human interaction.