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CLASS:PUBLIC
DTSTAMP:20260408T062123Z
UID:10000906-1762453800-1762457400@griffinmuseum.org-1775629284@towncommon.org
DTSTART:20251106T233000Z
DTEND:20251107T003000Z
SUMMARY:Stories from A Yellow Rose Project Photographers (Online
  Presentations)
DESCRIPTION:The Griffin Museum is pleased to present an online evening of
  presentations featuring artists from A Yellow Rose Project: Sheri Lynn
  Behr\, Tsar Fedorsky\, Marina Font\, Ashley Kauschinger\, Molly Lamb\,
  and Rachel Phillips. Each artist will share 20 slides\, speaking for
  just 20 seconds per slide\, offering quick\, intimate glimpses into
  their work in under seven minutes. 
 
 Please join us on Zoom for this engaging event to learn more about the
  artists\, their creative practices\, and A Yellow Rose Project.
  Presentations will highlight the work created specifically for the
  project\, as well as expand into their broader artistic practices and
  how these connect back. 
 
 Sheri Lynn BehrTsar FedorskyMarina FontAshley KauschingerMolly
  LambRachel Phillips
 
 Event Details
 
 Date: One session on November 6\, 2025 
 
 Time: 6:30 - 7:30 pm EDT 
 
 Format: Live online via Zoom 
 
 Event Fee: FREE for members (RSVP required) / $5 for non-members. 
 
 If you can\, please consider donating -- your support helps the
  Griffin Museum champion photography\, uplift artists and educators\,
  and inspire a vibrant creative community.Level: Open to All! 
 
 About the Artists
 
 About Sheri Lynn Behr 
 
 Sheri Lynn Behr is a photographer and visual artist with an interest
  in technology\, photography without permission\, and the ever-present
  electronic screens through which we view the world. Her work shifts
  between highly manipulated\, digitally-enhanced images and
  traditional\, documentary-style photographs. Behr studied photography
  and digital imaging in New York City and began her career
  photographing musicians and celebrities. Her rock and roll photographs
  were featured in most music publications of the time\, and are still
  collected\, exhibited\, and licensed for publication. 
 
 After several years working in the music business\, Behr decided to
  concentrate on personal work. Her photography projects have explored
  Polaroid manipulations\, New York City's Chinatown\, the iconic Lucky
  Cat\, and several series on surveillance and privacy. 
 
 Behr's work has been exhibited extensively\; venues include the
  Griffin Museum of Photography\, the Amon Carter Museum of Art\, MIT
  Museum\, Center for Creative Photography\, Soho Photo\, and SRO
  Gallery at Texas Tech. Her photographs appear in publications
  worldwide and online\, and she has received a Fellowship in
  Photography from the New Jersey State Council of the Arts\, a grant
  from the Puffin Foundation\, and a New York City Artist Corps Grant.
  She is currently based in Los Angeles. 
 
 About Tsar Fedorsky 
 
 Tsar Fedorsky is a photographer based in Gloucester\, Massachusetts.
  She is a Guggenheim Fellow\, a Fulbright Scholar\, and the recipient
  of a Massachusetts Cultura Council Artist Fellowship. Her photographs
  have been exhibited and published nationally and worldwide. Her work
  conveys personal yet relatable narratives\, such as her photo book The
  Light Under the Door published by Peperoni Books in 2017. Tsar
  recently collaborated with Marc Zegans\, a California-based poet\,
  during an artist residency at the Manship Artists Residency. Their
  collaboration resulted in a limited-edition photo book titled Ghost
  Book\, published in 2024 by Kite String Press. Tsar holds an MFA in
  Photography from the University of Hartford and a BA from Amherst
  College. 
 
 About Marina Font 
 
 Born in Argentina\, 1970. She studied design at the Malharro School of
  Visual Arts\, Mar del Plata\, Argentina. In the summer of 1998 she
  studied Photography at the Speos Ecole de la Photographie\, Paris. She
  earned a MFA in Photography from Barry University\, Miami in 2009. 
 
 Her work is present in public collections such as the MDC Museum of
  Art+Design\, Miami\, Boca Raton Museum\, Frost Art Museum at FIU\,
  LOWE Art Museum at The University of Miami\, FoLA\, Argentina\, The
  Bunnen collection\, Atlanta \, The Girls' Club collection\, Fort
  Lauderdale and various private collections throughout the world. 
 
 She has exhibited extensively at galleries\, museums and cultural
  institution in the US and abroad. Her work has been featured in
  Harper's Magazine\, ArtNexus\, Photo+ Magazine\, (Korea)\, The Miami
  Herald\, Pagina 12\, (Argentina)\, Fraction Magazine\, aPhotoEditor\,
  Aint-bad Magazine\, F-stop Magazine\, Lenscratch\, One Twelve
  Publishing\, Fototazo\, Elisabeth Avedone PhotoBlog\, Hamptons Art
  Hub\, and Nuevaluz among others. 
 
 Her first monograph Anatomy is Destiny was published by Minor Matters
  Books and it was selected for the Aperture Foundation's Photo Book
  Spotlight at Aipad\, The Photography Show\, NY\, 2019. Marina is also
  part of the multidisciplinary collaborative RPM Projects. She
  currently lives and works in Miami. 
 
 About Ashley Kauschinger 
 
 Ashley Kauschinger is an interdisciplinary artist whose work explores
  themes of identity\, time\, and material. Her photographs have been
  exhibited and published internationally and are included in the
  collections of Vanderbilt University and Sir Elton John. She holds a
  BFA from the Savannah College of Art and Design and an MFA from Texas
  Woman's University\, and she is currently an Assistant Professor of
  Art at Georgia Gwinnett College. 
 
 In addition to her studio practice\, Kauschinger is an independent
  curator and active member of the arts community. She has collaborated
  with organizations such as the Atlanta Center for Photography\,
  Lenscratch\, The Light Factory\, MINT\, and Swan Coach House. From
  2012 to 2019\, she founded and edited Light Leaked\, an online
  photography magazine dedicated to contemporary image-making. 
 
 About Molly Lamb 
 
 Molly Lamb's work is a meditation on the resonance of loss\, memory\,
  and healing through the language of nature. Using photography and
  poetry\, she explores the fragments and layers that shape her personal
  landscape\, its erosion\, and its transformation. 
 
 Molly Lamb holds an MFA in Photography from the Massachusetts College
  of Art and Design. Her work has been exhibited nationally\, including
  at Rick Wester Fine Art\, the Griffin Museum of Photography\, the
  Danforth Art Museum\, the Ogden Museum of Southern Art\, and the
  Georgia Museum of Art. Recent awards include being named a
  Massachusetts Cultural Council Fellow in Photography\, a finalist for
  the New Orleans Photo Alliance's Clarence John Laughlin Award\, a
  Critical Mass Top 50 recipient\, one of Photo District News' 30 New
  and Emerging Photographers to Watch\, and one of LensCulture's 50
  Emerging Talents. Her work has been featured in Harper's Magazine\,
  Oxford American\, Musée Magazine\, Photograph\, Lenscratch\, and
  Fraction\, among others. Molly is represented by Rick Wester Fine
  Art\, New York. 
 
 About Rachel Phillips 
 
 Rachel (b. 1983) began photography while completing her undergraduate
  degree at Skidmore College\, graduating in 2005. In numerous group and
  solo exhibitions she has presented a series of projects exploring the
  photograph as object\, often resulting in unique works incorporating a
  specialized transfer printing technique as well as other processes
  like encaustic wax and materials ranging from old envelopes to 19th
  century cabinet cards. A frequent theme in the work is a desire to
  reanimate the vernacular photographs and paper ephemera in her
  collection by reworking them in a variety of ways to create imagery
  that is resonant with the past yet has a new vitality and reflection
  of our own time and perspective. 
 
 In addition to photography\, Rachel works in the San Francisco Bay
  Area as a tutor for children with learning differences\, and served as
  the Executive Director of the community-based nonprofit PhotoAlliance
  from 2022-2024. 
 
 About the Co-Founders
 
 About Frances Jakubek 
 
 Frances Jakubek is an image-maker\, independent curator\, and
  consultant for artists. She is the co-founder of A Yellow Rose
  Project\, past Director of the Bruce Silverstein Gallery in New York
  City\, and past Associate Curator of the Griffin Museum of Photography
  in Massachusetts. 
 
 Recent curatorial appointments include Critical Mass\, Potential
  Space: A Serious Look at Child's Play featuring works by Nancy
  Richards Farese\, Filter Photo\, The Griffin Museum of Photography\,
  British Journal of Photography\, Les Rencontres d'Arles\, Save Art
  Space\, and Photo District News. Jakubek's photographs explore the
  boundaries of private and personal space and the emotions that bind
  them. Private Publicity looks at images paired with text that
  investigate the demanding language of our social outlets. The Sensual
  Subway embraces the New York City transit system and all it has to
  offer in its intimacy and delusion. Archive of the Ego is an ongoing
  series of self-portraits that have evolved and changed over the past
  20 years. 
 
 Jakubek has been a panelist for the Massachusetts Cultural Council's
  Photography fellowships\, speaker for SPE National and Colorado
  Photographic Arts Center\, and lecturer for the School of Visual
  Arts\, Boston University\, University of New Mexico\, and Washington
  and Lee University. She has taught workshops for The Southeast Center
  for Photography\, The Center for Fine Art Photography\, Maine Media\,
  and the University of Iowa. 
 
 About Meg Griffiths 
 
 Meg Griffiths is an artist\, educator\, and the Co-Founder of A Yellow
  Rose Project. 
 
 The wide arc of her work grapples with the various modes of domestic\,
  cultural\, and political engagement that structure female experience
  in the United States. Her inquiries are driven by a desire to
  capture\, develop and share a closer understanding of
  (self-identifying) female subjects. Each project she creates\, whether
  individual or collaborative\, focused on the personal or the
  collective\, are at heart about the intrinsic connection between self
  and other\, between interiority and positionality\, as much as kinship
  and community. 
 
 Her work has traveled nationally as well as internationally\, and is
  placed in collections such as Center for Creative Photography\,
  Capital One\, and the Museum of Fine Arts Houston. Her book projects\,
  both monographs and collaborative projects\, have been acquired by
  various institutions around the country such as the Metropolitan
  Museum of Art\, Yale University Library\, Duke University Library\,
  Museum of Modern Art\, The Getty Research Institute to name a few. 
 
 She currently lives in Denton\, Texas where she is an Associate
  Professor of Photography in the Visual Arts Division at Texas Woman's
  University.
LOCATION:https://griffinmuseum.org/event/ayrp online talks/
URL:https://griffinmuseum.org/event/ayrp-online-talks/
CATEGORIES:Cultural\,Education
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