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Linda
Butler
Photographer
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visit
www.LindaButlerphoto.com
email LBphoto@aol.com
In
choosing the artifacts of Shaker life as a subject, Butler was able
to hone her eye for inherently abstract patternization. Whether
shooting a symmetrical long view through a doorway, or zeroing in
for an extreme tilted closeup à la Paul Strand, Butler captured
the essence of the Shakers spirit: simplicity encapsulating
harmonious perfection. Her ability to pinpoint the vision of a locality
reached another stage of maturity in her next two endeavors, Rural
Japan: Radiance of the Ordinary (Smithsonian Institution Press,
1992) and the recently distributed Italy in the Shadow of Time
(Rizzoli, 1998), for which Butler also wrote an accompanying essay.
Mostly
self-taught as a photographer, Butler, who was born in Appleton,
Wisconsin, and went to Antioch College and the University of Michigan,
reacted strongly to what she learned in a workshop led by famed
photographer of Western vistas Ansel Adams. Many of her Asian viewsrooftops
in a seacoast village, vistas of melting snow in Yamagatarecall
Adams; however, in Rural Japan: Radiance of the Ordinary,
Butler counterbalances such long exposures with genre scenes, as
well as exquisitely nuanced, cropped views of seemingly mundane
subjects like antique money and drying squid. The play of shadows
is once again critical to her compositions, now taken with a 4 x
5 view camera. That she came to know this area and its inhabitants
intimately is evident in every image. Out of nothingness,
she says, quoting ancient folklore, something is born;
her Japanese works echo the Shaker pictures in proving this aphorism.

Looking
Glass, Genova
© 1998
by
Linda
Butler
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Many
Clevelanders first became acquainted with Linda Butlers precise,
yet lyrical eye when the Gund Foundations 1994 annual report,
illustrated with her elegant photographs of local arts institutions,
was released to much acclaim. Butler, then a relative newcomer to
the area, had already exhibited nationally and published two extraordinary
bodies of work establishing her distinctive personal style. Her
first book, Inner Light: The Shaker Legacy (Knopf, 1985),
while not focusing on Clevelands famous Shaker communitymost
of its selenium-toned pictures were shot in Kentucky near Pleasant
Hill, where Butler then resided, or in New Englandresonates
with the simplicity and perfection equally associated with the Shaker
heritage of our region.

Cave
of the Sybil of Cumae, near Naples
© 1998
by Linda Butler

Remains
of a Chapel, near Genova
© 1998
by
Linda
Butler
When she
went to Italy, Linda Butler found another kind of stunning beauty.
Many of the pictures in her latest book appear to glow from within,
their golden sepia tonality enhanced by a chemical wash during development.
Creating the images for Italy in the Shadow of Time allowed
Butler to investigate that countrys layering of civilizations,
its literal as well as figurative reflections and shadows, and the
seemingly timeless integration of present and past. Although no
humans are actually seen in the Italian pictures, the traces of
humanity are present in each one. Highly sensual in their simplicity,
Butlers latest works project a more mysterious spirituality.
She richly deserves her international acclaim.
text
by
Ellen G. Landau
Chair,
1999 Visual Arts Jury
1991 Winner of the Cleveland Arts Prize for Literature
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