Images by Nadine Levin Selected by the PH21 Gallery
Ellen Gilkerson | Published on 10/18/2024
Two images by PACC member Nadine Levin were selected for inclusion in the Monochrome Exhibition at the PH21 Gallery in Budapest. The exposition will take place from November 16 through December 10. Images in the exposition can be seen online at: https://www.ph21gallery.com/monochrome-24.
Monochrome photography is usually associated with black and white images. However, today there are countless examples of monochromatic images whose photographic qualities are based on the tonal range of various other colors. While monochromacity used to be a technological limitation, today it is an artistic choice. The lack of color range is significant and meaningful, not merely a technological limitation. PH21 Gallery solicited black and white or other monochromatic images from all photographic genres, including abstract compositions. The curators were Zsolt Bátori, a philosopher of art, a photography theorist, and photographer; and Borbála Jász, a philosopher and an art and architecture historian.
Nadine says: My interest in a gallery like PH21 is the international focus and my own familial origins are not far from that part of the world. Introspection is a multiple exposure with ICM. It began life as a bird of paradise plant. Seeking was captured in a small village in Japan. Both of these images are included in the PACC exhibition, Visions of the Mind, at the Pacific Art League in Palo Alto.
Nadine Levin:
Introspection
Nadine Levin:
Seeking
PH21 Gallery is a contemporary exhibition space that was established in 2012 in Budapest. The mission of the gallery is to provide group and solo exhibition opportunities and international exposure for contemporary photographers around the world.
Details:
PH21 Photography Gallery:
https://www.ph21gallery.com/
Ráday utca 52
Budapest, Hungary
H-1092
ph21.gallery@ph21gallery.com
Monochrome Exhibition:
November 16 – December 10
https://www.ph21gallery.com/monochrome-24
Gallery hours: Tuesday, Thursday, Saturday, 2 to 6 pm; also by appointment