Affinity of Form

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Some photographers take their pictures; others make them. Neither notion seems right in describing Stanford Lipseys work, however, for the spirit behind these pictures is one of natural discovery, something that comes before process.
Anthony Bannon, Director of Eastman House

Stanford Lipseys passion for fine art photography began in Aspen, Colorado 30 years ago with the sight of a simple pine cone seen through a macro lens. Ever since this revelatory moment, Lipsey has dedicated himself to revealing simple truths and a visual language of the natural world hidden around us. Whether it be cloud formations in an azure sky, light ripples in shimmering water, a dense pine forest, gentle ice crystals, or austere glass architecture, Lipseys photographs suggest a sense of the inexplicable universal links that bond the elements and matter.

Affinity of Form, Lipseys first monograph, brings that vision to bear on a wide array of commonplace subjects from our everyday world. In the vein of Aaron Siskind, Lipseys camera fixes frequently on surfaces, abstracting them in such a way that they become visual objects unto themselves, independent of their sources and newly compelling. Other images take a longer view, allowing monumental structures, both natural and man-made, to revert to basic shapes. A newspaperman by profession, Lipsey draws on a long-honed ability to capture events at precisely the right momentin this case, the moment when mundane objects cease to be themselves, transforming within the frame into something far more artful and mysterious. Im rather eclectic in what I shoot, he says, but all forms of nature, abstracts, and architecture inspire me to create imagery that escapes the naked eye.