MURFREESBORO,
Tenn. — Part model-maker, part
painter and part photographer, artist Richard
Tuschman blends both classic and 21st-century techniques in his work,
currently on display through Sept. 28
in an exhibit, “Beautiful Terrible Things: The Work of Richard Tuschman,”
at MTSU’s Baldwin Photographic Gallery.
The internationally recognized artist, who lives
and works in New York City, is scheduled to speak on his work Wednesday, Sept. 5, in a free public
lecture set at 6:30 p.m. in Room 103 in the Bragg Media and Entertainment
Building. A reception will follow in the gallery upstairs.
Tuschman’s MTSU exhibit features 24 images from his
major bodies of work, “Hopper
Meditations” and ”Once Upon a Time
in Kazimeirz.” He began experimenting with digital imaging in the early
1990s, developing a style that synthesized his interests in photography,
painting and assemblage that included dioramas and live subjects.
He creates his images by building, painting and
photographing dollhouse-sized sets in his studio, keeping everything to a scale
that allows his cat, Smithers, to fit inside. He then photographs his live
models against a plain gray backdrop and combines the images into digital
composites with Photoshop.
“The idea of digitally marrying dioramas and live
models evolved quite organically over many years of working in both the fine
art and commercial spheres,” Tuschman said in a recent interview with Nashville
Arts magazine. “It is really a product of my temperament, sensibility and
acquired skills.”
Tuschman holds a Bachelor of Fine Arts from the
University of Michigan in Ann Arbor and has been exhibited and received awards
both internationally and in the United States, including the CENTER Awards’
“Project Launch” First Place Award. His photographs have been published in
numerous online magazines and journals, including Slate, LensCulture, LensScratch
and Huffington Post, and his commercial work has been featured by Adobe
Systems, The New York Times, Penguin, Sony Music, Newsweek and Random House.
MTSU’s Baldwin
Photographic Gallery, part of the university’s College of Media and Entertainment, is located in Room 269 on the second floor of the
Bragg Media and Entertainment Building. A campus parking map is available at http://tinyurl.com/MTSUParkingMap.
Off-campus guests
visiting the Baldwin Gallery should obtain a special one-day permit from MTSU’s
Office of Parking and Transportation at http://www.mtsu.edu/parking/visit.php.
The
gallery is open from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. weekdays when MTSU classes are
in session.
Public
tours can be arranged by contacting gallery curator Jackie Heigle
at jackie.heigle@mtsu.edu.
For more
information about MTSU’s Baldwin Photographic Gallery, visit http://baldwinphotogallery.com or http://www.facebook.com/BaldwinPhotoGallery.
To learn more about Tuschman’s work, visit his website, http://www.richardtuschman.com.
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