Same Same Only Different

Stephen Tomasko

In Collaboration with Kendal Gallery

March 29 - May 16

Virtual Artist Talk: Apr 8, 2022 4:00 PM Eastern Time

This online exhibition is in cooperation with with the Art Committee of Kendal at Oberlin and Robert Taylor, Curator of the Kendal Gallery.

**Kendal at Oberlin Galleries are currently open to the public for in-person viewing by checking in and getting a pass at their visitor kiosk. **

If you are interested in purchasing any of these works, please contact Robert Taylor at kailuum@oberlin.net



Delira and Excira

Print Options for Delira and Excira, Stones, and Cannonballs:

13” x 19” (Edition of 9), $950 print only, $1150 matted and framed

17” x 25” (Edition of 7), $1150 print only, $1450 matted and framed

Selected images from Delira and Excira are available as 60” prints for $2700

Civil

These photographs are drawn from my ongoing project titled Civil. Taken at night, lit entirely by the artist in the pitch black of the battlefield at Gettysburg, they bring us face-to-face with stones that stood witness to, and indeed played an important part in, many of the battle’s most heated moments.


Stones

The Devil’s Den had been a prominent geologic feature of this part of Pennsylvania for millennia. Before the war, it was already a tourist attraction, drawing many visitors from near and far to admire the natural beauty of its formations. During the battle, it became something else. Strategic and deadly just below Little Round Top, it played host to sharpshooters and skirmishes. In fact, one of the Civil War’s most iconic images, that of a fallen sharpshooter, was taken on one of these exact spots. Beauty and tragedy intertwined.


Cannonballs

This photographic work is drawn from my ongoing project, Civil, which to date has examined 15 states and more than 250 battle-fields, cemeteries, and related historic sites surrounding the American Civil War, its causes, and its aftermath.

These cannonballs mark the outer boundaries of several hallowed areas on the Shiloh battlefield, which still, to this day, serve as mass graves for those fallen during the gruesome days of conflict there.

What continues to strike me as both beautiful and relevant about these objects is the way that they have aged. Photographed over many days and several visits, they become reminders of planets or even galaxies. Suggesting all the wonders that could have been, for these men and all their potential family members, if not for the horrors of human conflict.




Artist Talk

Coming Soon

 

Stephen Tomasko Bio:

For over thirty years, Stephen Tomasko has been creating photographs, collages, drawings, and paintings inspired by American history, life, and landscape. His work is held in many permanent collections throughout the world, including the Smithsonian Institution Archives of American Art in Washington, D.C.; the Karuizawa New Art Museum in Japan; Museum Schloss Moyland, Bern, Switzerland; and the Akron Art Museum, Akron, Ohio, where his works were also exhibited in 2011 and 2016. Other recent shows include Stephen TomaskoLoyal to The Lot, the inaugural solo exhibition of the Paul Brown Museum at MassMu, Massilon, Ohio; A Book About Death at the Islip Art Museum, Long Island, New York; Mother Tongue at the Griffin Museum of Photography gallery in Boston, Massachusetts; and Stephen Tomasko—Historic Figures at Snow College in Ephraim, Utah.

Stephen is the recipient of both an Individual Excellence Award and a grant from the Ohio Arts Council and an Akron Soul Train Fellowship, where he is now a member of the selection committee. He presented an artist talk as part of the first FRONT International Triennial, and a monograph of his work, Delira + Excira, was published by the Shanti Arts Press.

He holds a BA in Art History and Philosophy from Bowling Green State University and an MFA from the University of Delaware. He currently lives and works in Bath, Ohio.

Artist Statement:

I fully embrace chance as an exciting and fundamental element in my work. For example, the way things are never exactly repeatable in photography. Elements of nature, light, and human hands are constantly coming into play, scrambling and reconfiguring potential images in front of me.  

Chance is also key to my collage work. Items cross my path in the world. I compile and collect them. Allow them to suggest to me how they might interact with each other, both visually and thematically. Cut some paper, arrange it, turn it over, see how the scraps that remain might actually be just what I was looking for all along. Many of the pieces in this show happened to start with a small tourist guide to Chartres Cathedral, printed in beautiful black and white, that I bought from a heap of books recently for ten cents. Memories of my visits to the cathedral mixed with my glee over the sumptuous black tones of the pages started me down paths where the end destination was exciting but unknown.

And so goes the title for the show. A small workbook, in a pile of paper at a thrift shop. The sweet hand of a young girl from many years ago, Doris Peat, practicing her words. My mind begins to spin. I like like things, and what I look at is often the same same. But, of course, it never quite exactly is.

       – Stephen Tomasko