HomeCommunity NewsBrand Library to Celebrate ‘If Memory Serves’ With Reception

Brand Library to Celebrate ‘If Memory Serves’ With Reception

Brand Library & Art Center will hold an opening reception for its “If Memory Serves: Photography, Recollections and Vision” exhibit on Saturday, Dec. 16, from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. The artists will be in attendance.
The exhibit, which is in collaboration with Glendale Library, Arts & Culture and the Los Angeles Center of Photography, will be on view through Feb. 24 at 1601 W. Mountain St. in Glendale.
Curated by LACP Executive Director Rotem Rozental, “If Memory Serves” features artworks by Aurora Wilder Collective (Jennifer Pritchard in collaboration with Patrick Corrigan and DALL-E), Elizabeth Bailey, Annette LeMay Burke, Dena Elisabeth Eber, Sarah Hadley, Diane Hemingway, Rohina Hoffman, Susan Lapides, Annie Omens, Lori Ordover, Rosalie Rosenthal, Safi Alia Shabaik and Aline Smithson.
“Our hard drives may fail. Our phones might break. We may forget an image that was once cemented in our minds. Our relationships with the images and devices that hold our memories define how we understand our position in the world. “If Memory Serves” emerges from the moments those devices fail us, our recollections betray us, and our pictures refuse to bring back the people they once captured,” the city said in a statement. “This exhibition emerges from the intersection of our haunting pasts, possible futures, and our connections to photographic images, technologies and the systems that ask to speak for our photographs.”
These projects are defined by the viewpoint and lived experiences of their creators: female-identified, immigrants, descendants of inherited traumas, caregivers and providers.
“Photography is key to efforts to claim visibility, capture narratives and elicit conversations about the lives of vulnerable bodies and communities,” the city said.
The exhibit begins with and honors Aline Smithson, a mentor, photographer and educator, whose work with artists is redefining photographic practice. The exhibit celebrates Smithson’s contribution to photography and further comments upon the reach of her stewardship and pedagogy. The participating artists have all been studying with and from her. Seen together, their works offer profound insight into our co-existence with photography, suggesting meeting points between personal experiences and broader societal issues and conflicts — from privacy to grief, from representation to immigration.”

First published in the December 9 print issue of the Glendale News-Press.

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