Showing posts with label exhibition. Show all posts
Showing posts with label exhibition. Show all posts

April 1, 2026

Featured in F-Stop Magazine’s Black and White Issue


Delighted to be in excellent company. View the full exhibition.



John Nordell blogs about the creative process at johnnordell.com Instagram: @john.nordell

July 21, 2025

Words on Art on Words

Participating in a weekly evolving call and response art exhibition at The Lava Center in Greenfield, MA spurred me to new creative heights.  

From the exhibit's call for art and writing.

As artists, we are creatively stirred by the world around us. We create in response to what we experience, both our lived realities and the works of other artists. In the Words on Art on Words installation, we will observe this responsiveness in real time. Each week, at least 4 new visual or written pieces will be added to the installation wall. The only rule is that visual artists must create in response to an already-displayed piece of writing, and writers must create in response to an already-displayed piece of visual art.

Click to join the fun!

Delivering my piece Elements, created in response to Amie Hyson's poem Choose Not to be Moved
Elements
Choose Not to be Moved by Amie Hyson
Explaining to fellow exhibiting artist Collin Ricketts how the background image is a double exposure of clouds and sun overlaid with a masked image of plants and stone.
Showtime

John Nordell blogs about the creative process at johnnordell.com Instagram: @john.nordell

December 1, 2024

My Image "Beam Me Up" Chosen for F-Stop Magazine's "Minimal" Themed Group Exhibition


Beam Me Up

I am beaming that my image was included in F-Stop Magazine's Minimal issue. You can find my image if you scroll halfway down the group exhibit. Jazzed to have my work featured along with tightly composed work by photographers from around the world.

Online

Submitted images I love that were not published:

Shishito
I also grew this pepper - shot on iPhone


Intersecting Lives and Lines
DSLR in-camera multiple exposure


Enduring
Shot with a plastic toy film camera 

Professor John Nordell teaches courses in the Arts, Media, and Design Program at American International College in Springfield, Mass. He blogs about the creative process at CreateLookEnjoy.com. Instagram: create.look.enjoy


April 4, 2024

"The Surveillance Camera at Plymouth Rock" featured in the 2024 MAEA Art Educators Exhibit


Delighted that my image makes its public debut at the Massachusetts Art Education Association Art Educators Exhibit that runs March 14 - April 16, 2024 at The Gallery at Villageworks, 525 Massachusetts Ave, West Acton, MA 01720

A couple of weeks ago I helped hang the show and my colleagues' artworks are seriously inspiring! 

Opening reception 7-8 pm on April 11th.  

The Surveillance Camera at Plymouth Rock, 2023

I have been making a series of digital in-camera multiple exposures called Reality-Based Abstractions since 2008. This image was made technically possible by using a Nikon Mirrorless Z6 II DSLR camera. I had programmed the camera to layer three consecutive shots into a single image file (see below). However, unlike earlier digital Nikons I have used, the Z6, along with combining the three images, also keeps each individual image file. Thus, instead of the flag image used above being solely embedded in an unalterable layered file, it was available to combine in Photoshop with a close-up shot of the surveillance camera.

Mayflower, Columns and Flag

Rock and Camera
The monument in Plymouth, Mass., which purportedly marks the spot where the Pilgrims arrived, was vandalized twice in 2020, 400 years after the landing.

Hence, the surveillance camera.

Legendary History

An in-camera multiple exposure of the edifice:

Time's Grid

So many legends and falsehoods swirl around the Pilgrims arrival. Perhaps abstraction constitutes a more accurate portrayal.

Landing of the Pilgrims, 1825, by Samuel Bartoli

I recently came across this powerful juxtaposition of paintings at the Peabody Essex Museum in Salem, Mass.  The label clarifies some of the myths.

History Through Art
Pilgrim Point, 1947, by Karl Knaths

Near Plymouth Rock, a replica of the Mayflower, one of crafts that conveyed the Pilgrims, bobs in the harbor waters.

The multiple exposure below might look like reality unless you understand how the ship's rigging for the sails actually works.

Life Lines

I layered three views of a raptor that soared above The Mayflower into a single image. 

Soaring Towards Clarity

Accurate history is elusive.  I am intrigued by the power of belief; that you can believe in an idea that my not be true, yet it can give you purpose, direction and meaning.

What's your Plymouth Rock?

Professor John Nordell teaches courses in the Arts, Media, and Design Program at American International College in Springfield, Mass. He blogs about the creative process at CreateLookEnjoy.com. Instagram: create.look.enjoy