JASON HOUSTON: “Family of Mine” @ Ferrin Gallery

January 17, 2010toFebruary 27, 2010
From 'Family of Mine'

Jason Houston, Mardi Gras 2007 , 30 x 40”.

Opening Date: Thursday, January 21, 2010
Reception: 5:00-6:30 pm
Exhibition Dates: January 21 – February 27, 2010

Ferrin Gallery is pleased to announce a solo show of photography by Jason Houston called “Family of Mine.”  The show features eleven large scale prints of moments captured at Houston’s family get-togethers between 2002 and 2007.  The images, although intimate and personal, are poignant reflections of relationships, traditions, values and family dynamics that are universally identifiable.  As Houston explains, “my photographs of family events are spontaneous, mutely observant, and never staged. Blood, love, and obligation draw us together in a place where worldviews mix, match, confuse, and clash.

Click here to visit www.jasonhouston.com

As an embed in this intimate, interpersonal world, I document my particular and familiar reality and explore the sometimes tense dichotomies that define American family life.”  The images are printed as 30×40″ color prints – the exact opposite of the 4×6″ family snapshot.

The title off the show, ”Family of Mine,” directly refers to “Family of Man”, an exhibition curated by Edward Steichen for theMuseum of Modern Art in 1955.  Both the show and the book, a collection of photographs by over 250 artists that represent the human condition, are important inspirations for Houston.

“Family of Mine” was first exhibited at Rayko Gallery in San Francisco.  Two works from this series were shown at the BerkshireMuseum in a show of Berkshire Living Photographers and this is Houston’s third exhibition at Ferrin Gallery.

Jason Houston, an independent documentary photographer, focuses on social and environmental issues across the country and around the world. He has photographed the small family farms throughout the Berkshire region for over a decade and traveled to over a dozen countries documenting community-based conservation in the developing world. His environmental portraits, landscapes, and elemental details focus the viewer on the global issues and processes that define how we live on this planet.

Houston is a frequent contributor to Berkshire Living Magazine and serves as the photo editor of Orion Magazine.