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Sal Lopes

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Salvatore Lopes
NationalityAmerican
Alma materUniversity of Hartford
Known forPhotography, Platinum print
Notable work
AwardsAnchor Award 2013[1]
Websitelopesphotographs.com

Salvatore Lopes is an American photographer and printer.

He was a recipient of the 2013 Anchor Award from the University of Hartford's Alumni Association.[1]

Lopes received his BA and MA from the University of Hartford in Connecticut.[2] After teaching in the Hartford school system and devising a photographic program to promote reading and writing skills, he joined Richard Benson's studio in Newport, Rhode Island, in the 1970s. There, exhibitions and edition portfolios were produced from images by Paul Strand and Edward Weston.[2]

Later, Lopes continued the printing business on his own and specialized in the archival 19th century technique of platinum prints, developing his own style of hand-coated prints.[citation needed]

Photographic work

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Over a period of five years in the 1980s Lopes created a body of personal work documenting the newly built Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington, DC, in which he focused on capturing the intense emotions of mourning, healing and loss among its visitors. Lopes’ work culminated in his book, The Wall: Images and Offerings From The Vietnam Veterans Memorial and was displayed at the Chrysler Museum,[3] International Center of Photography,[4] the Art Institute of Chicago, and the San Francisco Museum of Art. Additionally, Lopes’ work was shown on the ABC television news show Nightline in 1986.[citation needed]

Lopes’ next project was another memorial, but this time dealing with AIDS. He produced a documentary in three sections: First, covering the traveling AIDS quilt in Boston and Washington; second, a volunteer Buddy program through the AIDS Action Committee in Boston which paired volunteer companions with persons with AIDS; and third, documenting the daily life of a childless couple John and Sharon Boyce who adopted five HIV siblings, and of the care and love given to the youngest, Brianna, who received home treatments for AIDS for four years and died shortly before the book, Living with AIDS: A Photographic Journal, was published.[5] There was a subsequent series of traveling exhibitions.[citation needed]

More recently, he has resumed his work in street photography, which dates back to the late 1970s. He also continues the abstract work: Images of Water. Some are printed in platinum, although he has also experimented with digital imaging and color printing. Other projects include: surrealistic macro images,[6] Newport Jazz, Images of Horses, Macro Images, and Tree Forms. His photographs are found in permanent museum collections.[citation needed]

Lopes has had experience as a workshop instructor, teaching at the Maine Photographic Workshops, Savannah Photographic Workshops, in Turin, Italy, in California with Cole Weston, and at his studios in Newport and Boston.[citation needed]

Photographic printer

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Lopes' range of printing encompasses the Civil War photographers Mathew Brady and Alexander Gardner to many contemporary photographers. His biggest client was Horst P. Horst until Horst's death.[citation needed] Lopes has printed the work of: Carrie Mae Weems, George Hoyningen-Huene, Alfred Stieglitz, Robert Mapplethorpe, Herb Ritts, Mary Ellen Mark, Ruth Bernhard, Helen Levitt, Robert Rauschenberg, George Platt Lynes, Anderson and Low, James Fee, Linda Connor, Lisette Model, Lotte Jacobi, Peter Lindbergh, Richard Gere, Phil Trager, Greg Gorman, Mark Seliger, Keith Carter, Henry Horenstein, Philippe Halsman, Nadav Kander, Ralph Mecke, Jill Freedman, Louis Faurer, and others.[citation needed]

He has had commissions from the Nickolas Muray Archives (portraits of Frida Kahlo),[7] Aperture Foundation for David Wojnarowicz, the estate of Paul Strand, Edward Weston, Barbara Morgan, Dorothea Lange, Minor White, from the estate of Edward Weston, Life Gallery of Photography (Margaret Bourke-White), Vision Gallery (Ruth Bernhard, Judy Dater, Paul Caponigro, Otto Hagel, Hansel Mieth, Mario Cravo), the estate of Edward Weston, Staley-Wise Gallery, Fahey/Klein Gallery, Debra Heimerdinger Fine Art (David Halliday), Light Work, Camera Work, Berlin, and Roger Urban.[citation needed]

Publications

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  • The Wall: Images and Offerings From The Vietnam Veterans Memorial. Collins, 1987
  • Living with AIDS: A Photographic Journal. Bullfinch/Little Brown, 1994
  • Life behind the Metaphor: Rudolf Nureyev and the Dutch National Ballet. The Nureyev Legacy Project, 2007

Awards

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  • 2013: Anchor Award, University of Hartford's Alumni Association.[1] The award recognizes alumni "who have distinguished themselves by achieving the highest level of professional accomplishments and who possess absolute standards of integrity and character".

Exhibitions

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Collections

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References

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  1. ^ a b c "Past Anchor Awards Recipients", University of Hartford's Alumni Association. Retrieved August 18, 2021.
  2. ^ a b c Exhibition notice for Sal Lopes, the Water Project, Telfair Museums. June 2018. Retrieved August 18, 2021.
  3. ^ a b c "Over West Wall from the series Vietnam Veterans Memorial", Chrysler Museum of Art. Retrieved August 18, 2021.
  4. ^ Sal Lopes: The Wall Vietnam Remembered Retrieved August 18, 2021.
  5. ^ Cole, Diane (June 26, 1994). "The Face of AIDS". The New York Times. Retrieved August 18, 2021.
  6. ^ Smith, Rosalind. 2003. "The Microscopic World of Sal Lopes: Images of Worlds Often Hidden to Our Eyes." Shutterbug.net, Features.
  7. ^ Grimberg, Salomon. "The Nickolas Muray story: The rediscovered photographs of Frida Kahlo and Nickolas Muray". Retrieved August 18, 2021.
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