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Photo exhibit
at St. Thomas captures Lake Superior’s North Shore
A
photography exhibit at the University of St. Thomas captures the
untouched natural beauty of Lake Superior’s North Shore.
Free and open to the public, “Rocks, Trees, and
Moss: North Shore Photographs by Mark E. Jensen” runs through
Monday, March 19, in the lobby gallery of O’Shaughnessy Educational
Center on the St. Paul campus. The gallery is open 9 a.m. to 10 p.m.
Mondays through Saturdays and noon to 10 p.m. Sundays.
An opening reception, also free and open to the
public, will be held from 4 to 7 p.m. Friday, Feb. 23, in the
gallery.
Jensen, whose photographic career spans more than
30 years, lives in Minneapolis and works as a photographer at St.
Thomas, where he also is the university’s visual assets manager. He
earned a B.F.A. in photography and film from the University of
Minnesota and an M.F.A. in visual communications from the University
of Wisconsin. His work has appeared in numerous solo, invitational
and group exhibitions and is included in many private and public
collections. In 1997 he founded the Knife River Photography
Workshops, offering photographers a chance to learn medium- and
large-format film photography along the North Shore.
Jensen created the 21 photographs selected for
this exhibition over the past 25 years. Along the North Shore near
the Little Marais River he found a five-mile stretch of a former
lava flow “geologically peculiar” and visually profound.
Using a large-format view camera and 4 x 5-inch
color transparency film, he reveals a genuine respect for nature.
“The larger film size provides an excellent tonal range, greater
color saturation and overall, more clarity,” Jensen said. “Another
benefit to working in large format is the configuration of the view
camera itself. You can study the image on the ground glass, refining
focus and view, before making the exposure.”
Jensen’s methods and equipment may seem quaintly
foreign to amateur photographers used to the speedy,
point-and-click, digital world. Taking photographs like his takes a
fair amount of time, involves several steps and requires close
attention. The resulting images are more contemplative, according to
Jensen.
The printing process also is more important to
Jensen, who also is a master printer and teacher of printmaking. The
photographs in “Rocks, Trees, and Moss” were printed on rag paper
using pigmented inks, which are more stable than typical dye inks.
For more information about this or other exhibits
at St. Thomas, contact the university’s Art History Department,
(651) 962-5560. To purchase photographs by Jensen, call (612)
824-7621. |