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CLOSED FOR INSTALLATION. REOPENING SEPT. 6, 2024 WITH 3 NEW EXHIBITIONS

AMY LYNN POWELL:

Only let people that love you photograph you

Jan 13, 2023 – Mar 26, 2023

THE DR. ROBERT BRANDT, JR. GALLERY

“These images showcase reality. Real people living real lives in poor neighborhoods, in average neighborhoods, in better neighborhoods. With sorrow, delight and simple pleasures. A dead squirrel in the backyard, Sunday clothes, a little kid drinking from a hose, sunset, sitting by a friend in his hospital room. Being in love. There is a wordless understanding. A relevance. A weight. A time and a place.”

 – Amy Lynn Powell

Only let people who love you photograph you is a new body of work by Dayton-based photographer, Amy Lynn Powell. The installation itself manifests in over 200 images, portraits and snapshots that Powell culled from Instagram accounts location tagged “Dayton, OH,” which are installed in a cascading salon hang in The Co galleries.

The project addresses several issues within both the present state of photography and its larger historical context. Powell considers the veritable tsunami of images in which we currently live using the Instagram platform as a curatorial undergirding for issues of social media as photographic vessel of our personal narratives and a deep expression of self. Powell’s endeavor also deftly considers the tradition of street photography; of images taken directly from the flux. Powell then frees herself from her ongoing practice of seeking out the poetry the world presents through the camera lens. Instead she adopts a curatorial perspective that is, in fact, deeply linked to the sensibilities and disciplines of her normal work. In doing all of this, Powell opens a dialog about the ownership of images that are simultaneously private and public in their very nature.

The images, individually, serve as glimpses into a torrent of lives, stories, places and observations while also collectively acting as a singular portrait of a midsized, midwestern American city. Powell also develops a connection, albeit fleeting, with each person in the form of a request to use their image in this project.

As part of The Contemporary Dayton’s 2022 FotoFocus: World Record, Powell’s work plays off of both Teju Cole’s Blind Spot and James Nares’ STREET as a consideration of both the history and present state of both street photography and the decisive moment tradition. In this way, Only let people who love you photograph you reconsiders other decisive moment photographers as diverse as Edward Weston, Diane Arbus, Henri Cartier-Bresson, Dorothea Lang and Katy Grannan. It opens a dialectic with the viewer that implores them to consider a thing that is arguably one of the most familiar and perhaps habitual aspects of our lives: pictures taken and shared of ourselves and those we love.

“These images showcase reality. Real people living real lives in poor neighborhoods, in average neighborhoods, in better neighborhoods. With sorrow, delight and simple pleasures. A dead squirrel in the backyard, Sunday clothes, a little kid drinking from a hose, sunset, sitting by a friend in his hospital room. Being in love. There is a wordless understanding. A relevance. A weight. A time and a place.”

Amy Powell: Only let people who love you photograph you is courtesy of the artist and is organized by The Co as part of the 2022 FotoFocus Biennial.

ABOUT THE ARTIST

Amy Lynn Powell (b. 1979) is a photographer and educator living in Dayton, Ohio. Powell studied photography at Columbus College of Art & Design (BFA) and earned a Master of Fine Arts from The Ohio State University. Powell‘s work has been published in TIME and collected by the Dayton Art Institute. Her clients have included The New York Times, Rolling Stone and The Washington Post among others.

Sponsors

Exhibition Sponsor

Stene Projects, Stockholm

Programs

Dr. Robert L. Brandt, Jr.

Production Partner

Hospitality Partner

Operating Support

The Co receives operating support from Culture Works, Montgomery County Arts & Cultural District, Ohio Arts Council, the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA), the Andy Warhol Foundation, and the Virginia W. Kettering Foundation, and Members.

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