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photo
by Steven Mastroianni
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There
is a quiet majesty in the black and white images of Andrew Borowiec,
a photographer who has captured the social landscape of factory
towns in series of images along the Ohio River, the Gulf Coast,
and Cleveland's industrial landscape. In images devoid of people,
Borowiec suggests the human spirit that thrives in less than ideal
environments.
Born
in New York in 1956, Borowiec spent his early years in Europe and
North Africa, diverse places that honed his eye for the changing
physical and social landscape. He received his BA from Haverford
College in 1979, and his MFA in photography from Yale University
in 1982. He has been a professor at the University of Akron since
1984, serving as Director of the Mary Schiller Myers School of Art
from 1990 to 1995.
Borowiec
places himself squarely in a tradition of American photography that
"seeks to reveal cultural patterns and truths through the precise
description of real places." Those places-such as Moscow, Ohio,
and Wheeling, West Virginia, where rust prevails and industry is
dead or dying-comprise the landscapes in the book Along the Ohio
(Johns Hopkins University Press, 2000).
From
1999 to 2003, he made a series of images of some of the most polluted
landscapes in the country: the Gulf Coast in East Texas and Louisiana.
In those images he conveys "the dizzying, yet meticulously
ordered spaces, the underlying sense of danger, and the strange
beauty of those carefully crafted, man-made environments" of
chemical plants, oil refineries, power plants, and ports. Borowiec's
Gulf Coast photographs were published in Industrial Perspective:
Photographs of the Gulf Coast published by the Center for American
Places.
More
familiar are his photographs of Cleveland's industrial landscape,
created in 2002 for the George Gund Foundation's annual report:
ice formations on Stones Levee with the Terminal Tower in the background,
or the curving pipes of ISG's east side steel operation. In all
of these works, Borowiec suggests the uneasy relationship we humans
have with often monstrous constructions that serve our overwhelming
need for consumption.
Borowiec's
formal and humane images, in combination with our contemporary compulsion
to push past the past, make his work especially appealing. They
have been exhibited widely and are in the collections of the Library
of Congress, the Smithsonian American Art Museum, the Art Institute
of Chicago, the Cleveland Museum of Art, and the Museum of Contemporary
Photography, among others.
Amy
Sparks
Summer
2006
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