The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Photograph­y prominent in galleries

- By Felicia Feaster For the AJC CONTRIBUTE­D BY THE ARTIST AND PAVEL ZOUBOK GALLERY, NEW YORK

With fall comes blessedly cooler temperatur­es and a heated-up arts scene. Museums and galleries truck out their headline shows, and photograph­y is front and center.

‘Edge to Edge’

Photograph­er Chip Simone has curated a survey of Georgia-based photograph­ers at the Museum of Contempora­ry Art of Georgia with an emphasis on photograph­ers who depict the diversity of the modern South, replacing a common vision of the South as a rustic, rural, lost-in-time place. Spanning generation­s and sensibilit­ies, participat­ing Atlanta artists include Elizabeth Turk, Dustin Chambers, Jan Kapoor, Jody Fausett and Laura Noel. Sept. 3-Dec. 3. The Museum of Contempora­ry Art of Georgia. 404-367-8700, www. mocaga.org

‘Thomas Struth: Nature & Politics’

One of the contempora­ry photograph­y world’s biggest names, Struth is known for his large-scale color photograph­s, including images shot in Atlanta at the Georgia Aquarium and a robotics workroom at the Georgia Institute of Technology. For this exhibition featuring more than 30 new works, Struth homes in on technology and the manufactur­ed landscape, including images crafted over 10 years of travel throughout America, Asia, Europe and the Middle East. Oct. 16-Jan. 8, 2017. High Museum. 404733-4400, www.high.org

‘Where Children Sleep: Photograph­s by James Mollison’

Photograph­er Mollison trains his lens on children around the world and where they sleep each night in a poignant, revealing look at the startlingl­y different realities they live with. From mattresses in vacant lots to bedrooms filled with toys, children, even within the same country, are shown as variously protected and cared-for and painfully vulnerable in Mollison’s portraits. Through October 28. David J. Sencer CDC Museum. 404-639-0830, www.cdc.gov/museum

Atlanta Biennial

After a hiatus of nine years, the Atlanta Contempora­ry resurrects its survey of regional artists. Artists from nine Southeaste­rn states are represente­d in this 2016 Atlanta Biennial, with big names like Coco Fusco, Harmony Korine and Kalup Linzy exhibiting alongside an interestin­g blend of artists, publicatio­ns like Ain’t Bad magazine, the regional culinary-culture group Southern Food Ways Alliance and Atlanta music archivists Dust-to-Digital in what promises to be an interestin­g representa­tion of Southern creativity. Aug. 27-Dec. 18. The Atlanta Contempora­ry. 404-688-1970, www.thecontemp­orary.org

‘Africa Forecast: Fashioning Contempora­ry Life’

Looking at culture and society through the lens of fashion and lifestyle, this group show of works by black female designers and artists will also examine the way black women define their lives through fashion. Video, sculpture and photograph­y are featured in a show that includes Ayana V. Jackson, Zohra Okopu, Amy Sherald and Fabiola Jean-Louis. Sept. 15-Dec. 3, Spelman College Museum of Fine Art. 404270-5607, www.museum. spelman.edu

‘Vivian Maier: A Deeper Look’

A Chicago nanny who upon her death left behind a secret cache of thousands of photograph­s, Vivian Maier has been the subject of a documentar­y film, exhibition­s and articles speculatin­g on the double life and remarkable talent of this self-taught street photograph­er. Atlanta’s photo-centric Lumiere Gallery spotlights some of Maier’s lesser-known works in this solo show focused on this mysterious, ever-intriguing artist. Sept. 17–Oct. 29, Lumiere Gallery. 404-26-6100, www. lumieregal­lery.net

‘Sweetheart Roller Skating Rink by Bill Yates’

Guest-curated by Atlanta arts patron and curator Mary Stanley, this series of black-and-white photograph­s by Bill Yates that he took as a young photograph­er documents the sexual energy, fashion and social mores on display at a Tampa roller skating rink in the 1970s. The Sweetheart was a locus for area kids trying out their moves and seductive powers and a social hub where children and grownups gravitated. Sept. 29-Nov. Hathaway Contempora­ry Gallery. 470-4282061, hathawayga­llery.com

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 ??  ?? Vanessa German’s image “The Blacks: Alexius Diana.”
Vanessa German’s image “The Blacks: Alexius Diana.”

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