Peter Miller »
Wayfinding. Photogravure etchings
Exhibition: 28 Aug – 6 Oct 2013
Tue 27 Aug 18:00
ROSPHOTO. State Museum and Exhibition Centre for Photography
ul. Bolshaya Morskaya, 35
191186 Saint-Petersburg
The State Russian Museum and Exhibition Centre ROSPHOTO
ul. Bolshaya Morskaya, 35
191186 Saint-Petersburg
+7-812-3141214
office@rosphoto.org
www.rosphoto.org
daily 11-19, Tue, Thu 11-21
State Museum and Exhibition Centre for Photography ROSPHOTO
Ministry for Culture of the Russian Federation
Wayfinding. Photogravure etchings by Peter Miller
28.08 — 06.10.2013
Opening: 27 August 2013 at 18.00
Front Building exhibition hall, 3 floor
ROSPHOTO introduces the work of American photographic artist Peter Miller who lives in Japan. Peter Miller was born in 1945 in Pittsburg (Pennsylvania, USA). As a child he explored the city with his primitive box camera, attracted by steel mills, streetcars, snowscapes, ethnic neighborhoods, rivers, and bridges. At Columbia and Berkeley in the 1960s and 1970s, he studied sociology, emerging from the latter with a Ph.D. and work as a consultant to Government and industry. An assignment for Honda took him to Japan, where he stayed after meeting the Japanese girl who became his wife. In Japan, continuing his photographic work, he joined the Japan Alpine Photographers Association as the first foreign member. Peter Miller calls year 1989 a turning point in his photographic career. After seeing the 19th-century photogravures of Peter Henry Emerson in New York, he returned to Japan and built a workshop, acquired an etching press, vacuum-frame ultraviolet light source, and a long list of the chemicals and materials required for photogravure etching. He started experimenting with no teacher, relying only on old books and articles.
Peter Miller is one of the few practitioners of photogravure process today. In this process, photographic image is reproduced by printing from a photochemically etched metal plate. The complex photogravure process consists of obtaining a glass plate negative, creation of positive, transfer of positive image to copper plate by etching, hand-coloring the plate and printing the image with a hand-operated printing machine.
In response to the question — 'Why do you go to all this trouble?' — Peter Miller suggests that photogravures are true works of Art expanding reality and enhancing perception. Graphic and pictorial effects achieved by the method of photogravure etching clear the image of documentary details and render it integrity and artistic quality.
The selection prepared for Wayfinding exhibition at ROSPHOTO comprises Peter Miller's landscape images: river currents and waves, mists, trees, cnow-clad peaks, pathways and traditional Japanese villages with their inhabitants. In the course of the last 12 years, Peter Miller has published 300 editions of photogravure etchings. His prints are in the collections of the Kamakura Museum of Modern Art (Japan), the Sackler Gallery of the Smithsonian (Washington, D.C., USA), the National Museum of American Art (Washington, D.C., USA), the Fine Arts Museum of Houston (USA), the Victoria and Albert Museum (London), Musée Jenisch (Vevey, Switzerland), and many other public and private collections. In recognition of his accomplishments in the arts, he was elected a Member of the Cosmos Club in Washington DC in 2011. Since 1991, he has held more than 30 exhibits in Japan, the United States, England, France, Switzerland, Germany, Italy, Finland, Latvia, Lithuania, and Russia.