Join me: GEM Gallery Talk

Saturday, July 15, 2017, 1 p.m., George Eastman Museum
Please join me as I guide visitors on a tour of the exhibition The Run-On of Time, the first museum retrospective of Eugene Richards‘s work, while I share my own experience working in Rochester, New York as a photojournalist, photography artist-in residence and teaching artist at the Flower City Arts Center where I offer the Social Reportage class covering the issues that face our time while raising a visual awareness through thoughtful immersion.
Eugene Richards (American, b. 1944). Henry’s boots, Still House Hollow, Tennessee, 1986. Gelatin silver print. Collection of Eugene Richards. © Eugene Richards
Free to members; included with museum admission.
Saturday, July 15, 2017
1 p.m.
George Eastman Museum
Members Free

Listening while Capturing

Most people do not listen with the intent to understand; they listen with the intent to reply.” ~Stephen R. Covey

Sometimes in the excitement of capturing an image, we lose sight of the story that makes up the person by not being present.

One of the most important lessons I hope for participants of my photo field trips and social reportage classes to learn is one of being able to truly listen to their subject. Listening is a highly effective habit of the socially engaged photographer. Taking the time to not only listen but to understand the message helps to capture an image that is filled with emotion. This past Saturday, the Photo Field Trip Session II, put their listening skills into practice as we explored the southwest quadrant of Rochester, NY. Strolling along West Main Street, the group met several people who shared their stories with us as we enjoyed colorful conversations about, race, the community and politics. By listening to the members that make up a community, especially a community in distress, we can then create those conversations for change. Imagery combined with life stories can become the foundation for solutions.

When you listen, you not only hear the emotion in your subject, you see it in their expressions. The longer you spend time getting to know them, you become aware of those nuances that make a memorable photo. 

AIR Introduction: Arleen Thaler

I’d like to introduce myself to the Genesee Center for the Arts and Education community, my name is Arleen Thaler and I am the new Photography Resident. For those of you who do not know me, I am a Rochester, NY based socially engaged photojournalist. As I begin my second year as the NW Team Leader for Flower City AmeriCorps, I will be sharing the work I do as a foot soldier helping to raise an awareness of poverty, homelessness, addiction and those issues our community struggles to find answers to. Through my lens, I use photography as a conduit to engage the community and elicit conversations that will hopefully create solutions. I look forward to working with friends new and old while sharing my passion, my vision and my heart work.