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Emerging Artist Gallery

RUNNING THROUGH THE WIND
Photographs By Frank Rothe
January 24 - March 30

 

William Ropp photoWilliam Ropp photo
Images © Frank Rothe

Growing up in what was once East Berlin, Germany, 12-year-old Frank Rothe missed an opportunity to attend a Russian summer camp because his name was deleted from the list of campers. Twenty years later, he visited the camp, photographed the boys and girls and, he says, "rediscovered some big and small pieces of my childhood."

Those moments are captured in Running Through the Wind, which is featured in the Griffin Museum's Emerging Artist Gallery January 24 through March 30.

When Rothe arrived at the camp, Artek, in 2004, he says he "found what I was looking for; the new generation of the East. I photographed them as they were, with no flash, no tripod, only using natural light at day and night time.

"For me, as a photographer, it was a journey back in time," he says. "I traveled back into a period of my life that does not exist anymore. This generation belonging to neither West nor East I call Running Through the Wind."

"Frank Rothe's color images of students at a pioneer camp on the Crimean peninsula in the Ukraine exude the confidence and freedom Rothe has spent his whole life racing to find," says Paula Tognarelli, executive director of the Griffin Museum.

"Running Through the Wind illustrates Rothe's coming to terms with his own freedom and self confidence in the years after the fall of the Berlin Wall. His photographs are visual narratives that focus on the faces and characters of his adolescent subjects and the atmosphere of the present world in which they live."

Rothe, born in 1972, began his career as a journalist in Berlin, Germany. He also wrote a novel. He was inspired to become a photographer, he says, because "over the years as a journalist, I wrote many stories that formed pictures in my head. I developed a sense of what people think and about their characters, as well as their inner life and dreams."

And, he said, "I was often unhappy with the photographers who supplied the pictures for my stories. I thought I could do better. . . . That is why I started taking pictures for my own articles." He later was mentored by Berlin photographers Arno Fischer and Ute Mahler.

An opening reception for Running Through the Wind is January 24, 7-8:30 p.m.. It is open to all. Please RSVP by January 18.

The Griffin Museum of Photography is open Tuesday through Thursday, 11:00 am - 5 pm; Friday 11:00 am - 4 pm; and Saturday and Sunday, 12:00 - 4 pm. The Museum is closed on Monday.

Admission is $5 for adults; $2 for seniors. Members and children under 12 are admitted free. Admission is free to all every Thursday. For more information, call 781-729-1158.