A New Perspective: Carnegie exhibit features photographs taken from ‘Alternative Viewpoints’
Madison, Madison County Record, News, RSS Twitter, Scene & Happenings, Z - News Main
 By  John Few Published 
9:17 am Thursday, August 12, 2021

A New Perspective: Carnegie exhibit features photographs taken from ‘Alternative Viewpoints’

Images of a Sept. 11 memorial, a winter wonderland, a Ferris wheel, basilica and the Milky Way Galaxy transport visitors at the Carnegie Visual Arts Center to New York, Minnesota, Berlin, Paris and outer space.

The Carnegie’s new exhibit, “Alternative Viewpoints,” which opened Tuesday, features 50 images captured by members of the Huntsville Photographic Society. The exhibit challenged the society’s approximately 250 professional and amateur photographers to capture images from alternate viewpoints.

From that challenge came a portrait of a fly by John Shriver, an image of a lone Auburn football fan amid a sea of Georgia fans by Bob Gathany, close ups of milkweed, Hosta plants, calla lilies and day lilies, and the bottom of cracked ballet shoes.

There is “Milky Way Odyssey” by Don Wolfe, which features two bare trees framed against a purple and vivid pink sky. There is “Geese on the Pond, DeKalb County” by Doris Leverett, which shows a body of water with two geese and the reflection of a tree. There is “Timed Show” by Charles Gattis, which pictures the Basilica of the Sacred Heart in Paris through the clock window of the Musee d’Orsay.

“When I think about ‘Alternative Viewpoints,’ I think about perspective and how to give a different perspective to something, which is something you always look for in photography,” said Gattis, president of the Huntsville Photographic Society. “I do a lot of flower photography and sometimes I’ll shoot that flower 80 or 90 times from different perspectives.”

Along with the black-and-white “Timed Show” photograph, the exhibit features color photographs by Gattis of the underside of a pier at St. Augustine Beach, a calla lily lit by a flashlight and a Mandevilla flower.

“I love black-and-white and color. Some subjects lend themselves more to monochrome than to color. It’s the nature of the art. Something that has a lot of shapes, interesting shadows and texture, color may not have much to do with that image. If the color is part of the art, you want to keep it in color. I really enjoy both and there is a challenge in each,” Gattis said.

Photographer and University of Alabama in Huntsville associate professor Jose Betancourt, who the Carnegie featured in a solo show in January, juried the exhibit.

The Carnegie will host an artist reception on Friday from 6-7:30 p.m. Admission is free for members and $5 for guests.

Along with Gattis, Leverett, Wolfe, Shriver and Gathany, photographers selected for the exhibit are Barbara Staggs, Christopher Baker, Dave Edens, C.T. Chi, Charles Leverett, Ed Townsend, Susan Chi, Sam Tumminello, G. Allen Gary, Olin Perry Norton, Julia W. Gary, Diana Lyn Davidson, Tom Bryant, Richard Bumgardner, Curt Haskell, Martha Teal, Carol Eidson, Danny Pugh and Wayne Cummins.

The exhibit will remain on display through Sept. 18. The Carnegie, 207 Church St. N.E., is open Tuesday-Friday, 10 a.m.-5 p.m., and Saturday, 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Admission is free with donations accepted.

Other local exhibits on display include “Hidden Spaces: People & Places of Northwest Alabama” and Helen Keller Art Show of Alabama at the Alabama Center for the Arts on Second Avenue Northeast in Decatur.

“Hidden Spaces” highlights the history and heritage of Old Town, the Northwest Decatur neighborhood where, up to the mid-20th century, Black-owned businesses, from clothing stores, meat markets and barber shops to movie theaters, funeral homes and medical offices, lined the streets. The exhibit will remain on display through Aug. 31.

The 31-piece Helen Keller Art Show of Alabama exhibit showcases works of art created by students who live with visual impairments. The exhibit will remain on display through Sept. 15. The Alabama Center for the Arts is open 8 a.m.-8 p.m., Monday to Thursday, and 8 a.m.-noon, Friday. Admission is free.

At the Huntsville Museum of Art, Recent Acquisitions featuring a mixed media piece by Michael Baggarly, a watercolor by Dean Mitchell and an etching by Pablo Picasso will be on display through Oct. 31. “We the People: Portraits of Veterans in America” by Mary Whyte, which includes 50 watercolor portraits of American veterans, will remain on display through Sept. 26. “Encounters: Greely Myatt,” on display through Aug. 29, features whimsical sculptures and installations made from discarded and found objects by Mississippi-born artist Myatt.

Also on The Madison Record
Rocket City Marching Invitational set for Saturday, Sept. 20 at stadium
Bob Jones High School, Madison, Madison County Record, ...
Gregg Parker 
September 17, 2025
MADISON – Bob Jones High School Bands, in collaboration with title sponsor KODA Technologies, will present the third annual Rocket City Marching Invit...
Mayor Paul Finley bids farewell, reflects on accomplishments at 2025 Madison Update
A: Main, Madison County Record, News, ...
Maria Rakoczy 
September 17, 2025
MADISON - Madison Mayor Paul Finley will be leaving the office of mayor this Nov. after sitting out the Aug. 26 election. Finley addressed the busines...
District 6 seat to be decided Tuesday in runoff election
A: Main, Madison County Record, News, ...
Maria Rakoczy 
September 17, 2025
MADISON - There is one final race to be decided from Madison’s municipal Aug. 26 election. The representative for District 6 on the Madison City Counc...
Heart of the Valley YMCA exits Chapter 11 bankruptcy, renews mission focus
A: Main, Business, Madison County Record, ...
Gregg Parker 
September 17, 2025
HUNTSVILLE – On Sept. 8, Heart of the Valley YMCA announced its successful emergence from Chapter 11 bankruptcy. This development marks a new chapter ...
MCDAB presents check to Parks and Recreation, chairperson steps down
Madison County Record, News, The Madison Recor, ...
Maria Rakoczy 
September 17, 2025
MADISON - After serving as the chairperson for the Madison City Disability Advocacy Board (MCDAB) for nine years, Janessa Crosswy is moving and steppi...
State lawmakers, local city leaders meet with Space Command leader to discuss transition
Madison County Record, News, The Madison Recor, ...
By ALEX ANGLE Alabama Daily News 
September 17, 2025
WASHINGTON — Space Command is moving quickly to bring the headquarters to Huntsville through meetings with members of the state’s congressional delega...
Best-Selling Author Jen Hatmaker to share memoir on Oct. 21
Events, Madison County Record, News, ...
Gregg Parker 
September 17, 2025
MADISON – Jean Hatmaker, “New York Times” Best-Selling Author, speaker and podcaster, will share thoughts from her memoir, “Awake,” at Blue Apple Book...

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *