The Philippine Star

Looking and lingering: Tom Epperson and Denise Weldon at Art Fair PH

- — PRISTINE L. DE LEON

P

hotography today has largely been about quickness, that split-second shot of a player launching a ball into the hoop, or the habit of instantane­ously clicking the phone shutter then posting, sharing, and promoting, until an image is only data and content. In this age saturated with speed and spectacle, Tom Epperson’s and Denise Weldon’s photograph­s read like visual pauses, drawing us to things that are minute and overlooked: drops of water on glass, objects suspended in melting ice. Through their lens, the world is either still or gradually unfolding.

For the upcoming Art Fair Philippine­s running from Feb. 22 to 24, Epperson and Weldon have come together for their first two-man show, titled “Works.” Done with the help of Migs Rosales and Gino Eraña of Caramel Art Advisory and Creative Consultanc­y and Baby Imperial Anne of B&C Design, the show samples a selection of photograph­s. “I believe Denise and I have known each other for the better part of 20 years,” says Epperson. “The only thing we collaborat­ed on in the past was for the Philippine Yearbook. We both shot portraits.”

Both raised in the US, Epperson and Weld on have made their names as commercial photograph­ers working in publishing and advertisin­g. Lifestyle shots, fashion portraits, advertisin­g campaigns, and corporate projects were part of the daily grind. Epperson first landed in Manila in the ‘80s, while working for Sydneybase­d animation studio Burbank Films. A photograph­y major from Wheaton College Massachuse­tts, Weldon worked in magazine production in Hong Kong where she met her husband and eventually settled in the Philippine­s.

“Through the years we have shared stories about our lives as photograph­ersand working in the Philippine­s. We have great respect for each other and our work,” says Weldon. Epperson adds, “I admire Denise’s work so much so I remember telling her not to bother with commercial as- signments and to shoot fine art work. I like the way she views the world around her.”

Following Art Fair Philippine­s’ photograph­y highlight last year, the highly anticipate­d art event is now set to exhibit E pp er son and Weldon’ s latest series. Both are excited to see how their works will manage to converse when shown side by side and how it will be received by the fair’ s growing audience. Quiet and focused, their photograph­s often appear like meditation­s on small things, the ones that drip, melt, and dissipate like soft ephemera. They’re concerned not so much with telling, but rather looking, pausing, and lingering.

“I’ ve always tried to communicat­e through my work the idea of slowing down and taking a good look at what we are surrounded by. Most people only see the big picture and miss the details,” says E pp er son. In 2007, E pp er son began a series of photograph­scapturing flowers frozen on ice, and has since shot other objects — the balisong, toys, and sampaguita garlands — on blocks of ice, like fossils on crystals .“This is the first time in avery long time that I will be showing color images with a couple of black and whites ,” says the photograph­er, who in a 2014 interview with The STAR, confessed he’s color blind and he realized the importance of color when he discovered William Eggleston’s enigmatic 1970’s portrait of a tricycle. “This series of work (for the Art Fair) takes me back to when I first started shooting, for the pure joy of shooting with no set agenda. In fact, I was on vacation in the US with my family and I took a walk with my son and came across a dried riverbed.” Rather than scenes and objects meticulous­ly setup, Epperson’s series shows images discovered and chanced upon. He says, “I went out and had fun like the first time I picked up the camera as a kid .”

Weldon’ s body of work revealspho­tographs that are delicate and quiet. In a 2010 group show, “Six6,” that Weldon was part of, its curator Isa Lorenzo writes, “(Weldon’s) personal work has always been about finding the spaces in between life’s daily grind, and harvesting the good out of them.” In 2014, she released a series focusing on drops of water, highlighti­ng order, symmetry, and the play of light. Titled “Water Spirit,” her previous series imagines the artist standing still, crouching, peering in, and hounding smallness. For her work at the art fair, Weldon returns to nature and this state of contemplat­ion. “I have been a quiet observer of life, via the innate connectivi­ty and cycles that transcend faith, color and creed. What are our common threads? How are we more similar? How do we live? How do we love?” she says. “This collection of my recent work is an extension of these themes, and of falling deeper into that state, into that awareness.”

Weldon’s many interests involve the study of faiths, healing modalities, yoga and meditation. Although she never shows them directly, her photograph­s carry the sense of calm we get from the act of looking — be it at patterns made of water or at the organic contours of flora and fauna. Like in meditation, it is as though her photograph­s tell us to pause, promising a fullness that comes with those pauses. And ina busy Art Fair, it seems like just the thing we need.

“Things are on the rise with photograph­y in the Philippine­s,” says Tom Epperson. “It is so much better than it was 30 years ago. It is now more accepted as art and people are seeing value in buying images. It will only get better and the Art Fair serves as a great venue to show one’s work.” “I am grateful to those private collectors who have seen the value of photograph­y,” says Denise Epperson. “It is my wish that Philippine and Asian art collectors broaden their perspectiv­es and understand­ing of photograph­y as a creative medium and a form of artistic expression.”

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