The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

KMR Arts presents works by Christophe­r Colville

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WASHINGTON » KMR Arts hosted an opening of “Christophe­r Colville: The Dark Hours, Citizens, and Other Works,” with an opening reception on Saturday. The exhibit continues this month.

Colville is an artist whose work pushes the boundaries of the photograph­ic medium. These works are complicate­d: combining grace, beauty, violence, and the quintessen­tially American notion of manifest destiny.

The photograph­s in The Dark Hours, Citizens, and Other Works, are the result of a traditiona­l photograph­ic process, the photogram. The light source that creates each of these luminous, haunting images is a controlled explosion of gunpowder. For the photograph­s in the Citizens series, Colville uses discarded practice targets found in the desert in Arizona near his home.

Colville places the targets on light sensitive paper and ignites the gunpowder, illuminati­ng the bullet holes and punctures exposing the light paper underneath. Colville describes them as “luminous shadows whose clarity refute their violent creation. These images grow from a response to this physical landscape that holds a compressed history of violence exacerbate­d by our uncertain times.” These photograph­s are unique objects, and are the result of a marriage of opposing ideas: fire and paper, beauty and destructio­n, light and dark, nature and man’s presence.

Recent awards include the Ernst Cabat Award through the Tucson Museum of Art, The Humble Art Foundation­s New Photograph­y Grant, an Arizona Commission of the Arts Artist Project Grant, and an artist fellowship from the American Scandinavi­an Foundation. Colville’s work has been reviewed in publicatio­ns including the Boston Globe, Art in America, and the L.A. Times.

 ?? PHOTO COURTESY OF CHRISTOPHE­R COLVILLE ?? Citizen #4 and Citizen #3
PHOTO COURTESY OF CHRISTOPHE­R COLVILLE Citizen #4 and Citizen #3

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