Ryan McIntosh: These Ideas Were Not Mine, Yet I Had Them
“…Each venture
Is a new beginning…
…what there is to conquer
by strength and submission, has already been discovered
once or twice, or several times, by men whom one cannot hope
to emulate - but there is no competition -
There is only the fight to revere what has been lost
and found and lost again and again…”
T.S. Eliot
Marshall Gallery is pleased to present a solo exhibition of photographs by LA-based artist and printmaker Ryan McIntosh.
Artist Reception:
Saturday, April 12th, 5:00 - 8:00 pm
Showcasing over two decades of work ranging from early abstraction to topographic urban studies, the installation juxtaposes Ryan’s exquisite silver gelatin prints in homage alongside masterworks of his artistic predecessors including Robert Adams, Edward Weston, Frederick Sommer, and Minor White, among others. Writings by the artist pertaining to the selected works reflect on the influence and importance of each photograph on his contemporary process and practice.
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Ryan McIntosh, 12:38 (night), 2020
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Ryan McIntosh, Hellisheidi Geothermal Power Plant, Iceland, 2021
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Ryan McIntosh, Malarrif, Iceland, 2021
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Ryan McIntosh, Tracy Hills, CA, 2022
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Ryan McIntosh, Bjsrgtangar, Iceland, 2021
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Ryan McIntosh, Solheimasandur, Iceland, 2021
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Edward Weston, Pepper #34, 1930
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Robert Adams, Santa Ana Wash, Next to Norton Air Force Base, San Bernadino County, California, 1978
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Minor White, The Sound of One Hand Clapping, 1957
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Lewis Baltz, Park City, 1979
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Rondal Partridge, Pave It and Paint It Green, Yosemite, 1965
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Ryan McIntosh, Abstraction, Tucson, AZ, 2005
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Ryan McIntosh, Abstraction, Tucson, AZ, 2006
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Ryan McIntosh, Date Farm, Indio, CA, 2023
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Ryan McIntosh, Elysian Park Drive, Elysian Park, Los Angeles, CA, 2022
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Ryan McIntosh, Near Miyazu, Japan, 2024
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Ryan McIntosh, Oil Pipes, Taft, CA, 2024
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Ryan McIntosh, Overlooking Tokyo, Japan, 2024
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Ryan McIntosh, Tire Tracks, Coral Fire, Tracy Hills, CA, 2024
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Ryan McIntosh, Two Palms, Elysian Park, Los Angeles, CA, 2019
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Ryan McIntosh, Windbreak Trees, Lost Hills, CA, 2021
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Ryan McIntosh, Worker's Handprints, Tracy Hills, CA, 2022
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Frederick Sommer, Coyotes, 1945, Printed Later
FROM THE ARTIST:
Despite constant technical advancement throughout the history, photography has always functioned with the same role of discovering and revealing meaning from the details of our current life. Unlike any other art medium, it is dictated by its need to remain attentive to facts, information and the appearances of the world and time in which we live. Although photography can attempt to look forward or back in time, it is best suited looking head-on at this exact moment of our existence.
All art comes out of a background of convention established by one’s predecessors. Nothing is fully original, and everything can be traced back to something that came prior. This comparison is inevitable, and necessary. With some knowledge of photographic history, one’s inspiration and influence becomes apparent when the photographers work is studied next to the work of others. As photographer Robert Adams stated, “Though art must always be new, it is in profound ways never new.”
From the age of sixteen when I was first exposed to fine art photography, there were certain photographs made by my predecessors which have forever haunted my mind, both consciously and subconsciously. Although never attempting to emulate another photographer's images, I can easily identify when certain photographs have directly influenced my photographic vision. As I have always aligned myself with “straight photography”, there are only so many subjects in which one can point the camera before drawing comparison to a previous photographers work of similar subject. This has never deterred me from photographing a certain subject, as I’ve always felt it’s how one sees, not what one sees, that makes any photograph interesting.
Reflecting back on nearly 25 years of image making, I attempt to trace back these visual influences to ten specific photographs that have inspired and affected me. In some cases, these photographs share a similar sense of concern, while other photographs I may have detested and rebelled against. In the end, these photographs helped me continue.
- Ryan McIntosh