Florida Museum of Photographic Arts/Photo courtesy of Raf Willems/via FMoPA
The public can visit the Florida Museum of Photographic Arts in downtown Tampa to see two current exhibitions and an upcoming exhibition called The Landscape Architecture Legacy of Dan Kiley (1912-2004) starting on Feb. 18. The current exhibitions are Paul Caponigro: Impact+ Influence and Suzanne Williamson: The Language of Light.
For tickets, go to tickets or call 813-221-2222 for museum operating hours, how to become a member and general information. The museum is located at 400 N. Ashley Drive Cube 200.
Paul Caponigro, Galaxy Apple, New York City, 1964 January 28, 2022 – May 29, 2022 Exhibition Paul Caponigro: Impact+ Influence American landscape and fine art photographer Paul Caponigro is known for his spiritual approach to image-making, celebrating nature and life, using his intuition rather than common composition rules. Caponigro is the recipient of two Guggenheim Fellowships and three National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) grants. His images are found in the photographic collections of most museums, texts on the history of photography. He is universally acknowledged as one of the undisputed masters of photography. This retrospective of his work will also feature photographers David Dennard and Pradip Malde, who have been inspired and influenced by Caponigro. Paul Caponigro, Reflecting Stream, Redding, Connecticut, 1958, silver gelatin print © Caponigro February 4, 2022 – April 3, 2022 Exhibition Suzanne Williamson: The Language of Light Suzanne Williamson is an American artist working primarily in the landscape, creating works that illuminate layers of beauty and pain in places over time. This exhibition focuses on her images tracing the shoreline of Tampa Bay in the hours before and at sunrise, which she combines to make luminous color-washed photographs. Suzanne Williamson, Sunshift Yellow Blue Yellow, 2020 © Williamson February 18, 2022 – April 10, 2022 Exhibition The Landscape Architecture Legacy of Dan Kiley Dan Kiley (1912-2004) was one of the most important and visionary Modernist landscape architects of the 20th century and worked with equally significant architects, such as Eero Saarinen, Louis Kahn, and I.M. Pei, to create internationally acknowledged design icons. Produced by the Cultural Landscape Foundation (TCLF), this traveling exhibition is a retrospective of Kiley’s life and career and chronicles the current state of 27 of Kiley’s more than 1,000 projects worldwide. © Alan Ward, Fountain Place (Originally Allied Plaza), Dallas, TX, 2013, chromogenic print, Courtesy of The Cultural Landscape Foundation |
All of the exhibition images via the Florida Museum of Photographic Arts.