[image-4] The Santa Barbara County Arts Commission is presenting ā6×6: A Photographic Explorationā at the Betteravia Gallery through Oct. 22. Curated by Steven Lewis, a retired art faculty member from Allan Hancock College, the exhibition features work by photographers who create square images.
Featured artists include David Passage, Karen Carson, Tim Webb, Lynn Andrews, David Stroup, and Lori Bell.
Their work, though diverse in style and content, shares the unifying theme of exploration into a square format, redefining the context of the image.

Rose by Karen Carson
āThis entire series was shot this past spring with my Diana F+ Camera, which is an all-plastic camera with a plastic lens,ā Carson said in an artistās statement. āThe images were taken with black-and-white film, printed, and toned sepia in a traditional darkroom by me. This analog, low-fidelity style of photography is appealing in that, as the photographer, I must be willing to relinquish control (this camera is quite basic with few knobs or settings), and yet be content to capture the moment and its interpretation of reality.ā
[image-2] Papyrus by Lori Bell
āI use vintage plastic cameras for my photographs,ā Bell wrote. āThis one was taken with a Diana-like Banier camera from the ā60s on expired 120 film.ā
[image-3] Cactus and Wall, Mission San Miguel by David Passage
āThis is my favorite image,ā Bell wrote. āIt is from Mission San Miguel. It is a 15 1/2-inch gelatin silver print. It is bled-mounted to 1/4-inch foam core. I love the square because it is so neutralāno vertical, no horizontal. There is a tendency for things to fall toward the center, and one has to work to overcome the centripetal force of the square medium. It is a formal game, and the rules are simple and severe.ā
Arts Editor Shelly Cone is a total L7. Contact her at scone@santamariasun.com.
This article appears in Sep 9-16, 2010.

