IU Eskenazi Museum of Art Acquires Archive of Jeffrey Wolin

Image: Jeffrey Wolin, Irma Morgenztern, b. 1933, Warsaw, Poland, 1992/94. From the Portraits of the Holocaust series. Two women embrace each other while holding a photograph of a loved one. The wall behind them contains text.

The Eskenazi Museum of Art at Indiana University has announced the acquisition of the Jeffrey A. Wolin Archive that will include current and future work by Wolin along with the following notable projects: Written in Memory: Portraits of the Holocaust; Inconvenient Stories: Vietnam War Veterans; Life at the Millennium; New Faces at the Crossroads; Pigeon Hill: Then and Now; … Continue reading IU Eskenazi Museum of Art Acquires Archive of Jeffrey Wolin

Acquisition Alert! Indiana State Museum + Historic Sites Acquire Work by Jeffrey Wolin

Image: Bybee Stone Co., Elletsville, 1984 by Jeffrey Wolin

Acquisition Alert! Indiana State Museum + Historic Sites has acquired work by Jeffrey Wolin. Several works from his Stone Country series are now a part of the institution's permanent collection. For more than 25 years, Jeffrey Wolin has combined photographic portraiture with handwritten text, exploring issues about memory and identity. He received an NEA in … Continue reading Acquisition Alert! Indiana State Museum + Historic Sites Acquire Work by Jeffrey Wolin

Vote for Jeffrey Wolin and the Plenoptic Photography Team!

Vote for the plenoptic photography team: Jeffrey Wolin, Andrew Lumsdaine, Zach Norman, and Georgi Ninkov Chunev! They are currently finalist for this year's NSF Visualization Awards for their photograph, Still Life w/ Microlens Array: Homage to Harold Edgerton. Voting closes Tues. Nov. 17th. Click on the image below to VOTE NOW:    

Jeff Wolin at The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art!

Mark your calendars! Photographs from Jeff Wolin's Vietnam War Veterans series will be part of The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art's American Solider exhibition opening January 23rd! The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art's American Solider exhibition explores the impact of war through fifty photographs of American servicemen and women. Don't miss out, the Huffington Post names it as … Continue reading Jeff Wolin at The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art!