MURFREESBORO
— Timothy McCoy is bringing new pieces of history to MTSU’s renowned
Baldwin Photographic Gallery with a new exhibit of his work on egg white- and
metal-treated papers, “The Mark of Time.”
McCoy’s albumen and palladium prints are on display
through Thursday, Oct. 15, in the Baldwin Gallery, located on the second floor
of the Bragg Mass Communication Building on the east side of MTSU’s campus.
The Baldwin
Gallery is open from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through Friday and closed on
weekends and state and university holidays.
McCoy also will present a free public lecture
Monday, Sept. 21, at 6 p.m. in Room 103 of the Bragg Mass Comm Building. A
public reception upstairs in the gallery will follow the lecture.
A searchable campus
parking map is available at http://tinyurl.com/MTSUParking2015-16.
Off-campus visitors attending the event should obtain a special one-day permit
from MTSU’s Office of Parking and Transportation at http://www.mtsu.edu/parking/visit.php.
McCoy, who lives and
works in Cumming, Georgia, regularly displays his work at single-artist and
group exhibitions around the country.
His albumen prints
reproduce the technique that dominated photography from the 1850s until the
1890s, when consumers could buy albumen portraits and photos mounted on board
as souvenirs. Small mounted albumen prints, roughly the size of today’s
wallet-size photos, became extremely popular during the Civil War as soldiers
exchanged keepsake photos with family and friends before they were separated by
battle.
McCoy’s 21st century technique still uses the
yellow liquid from dozens of separated eggs to create a solution that turns
sketching paper into light-sensitive photographic paper. He sandwiches the
treated paper in a vacuum frame with a large negative transparency, exposes it
to ultraviolet light, then washes, tones and washes the paper again to create the
photo.
The palladium prints McCoy creates also follow
historic methods popular from the 1890s to the 1930s. The process involves a
solution, created from the lustrous metal palladium, that is brushed onto
vellum paper to again create a light-sensitive photographic medium. The
palladiotype process became popular because of its ability to create archival
prints with better tonal ranges, warmer tones and deeper blacks in photos.
“I create images to transform the ‘reality’ seen
through the camera lens into expressions of the ‘oneness’ and wonder found in
Buddhist/Taoist philosophy and on illustrations of those psychological
archetypes found in cultural remnants left behind rather than the evanescence
of contemporary culture,” McCoy said.
Special Baldwin
Gallery tours can be arranged by contacting gallery curator Tom Jimison, a
professor in MTSU’s Department of Electronic Media Communication in the College
of Media and Entertainment, at 615-898-2085 or tom.jimison@mtsu.edu.
You can
learn more about McCoy and his work at his website, http://www.timothymccoyphoto.com.
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