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Larry Towell (Canadian, b. 1953)
Lambton County, Ontario, Canada.
Two-year-old Isaac Towell is carried into the Sydenham River by his older
sister Naomi to introduce him to water.
1996
Credit: © Larry Towell/Magnum Photos


Larry Towell:The World From My Front Porch

Organized by George Eastman House
International Museum of Photography and Film

September 18 – November 13, 2009
Opening reception, September 18, 6-8pm

Magnum photographer focuses on his home in Canada as well as the issue of
‘landlessness’ – Mennonites and Palestinians plus El Salvador, Mexico, New Orleans


The McDonough Museum of Art on the campus of Youngstown State University presents Larry Towell: The World from My Front Porch, the Magnum photographer’s largest U.S. exhibition to date. This multi-media retrospective focuses on the impact of social unrest on cultural identity as seen through Towell’s lens as he traveled from Canada to the Middle East, Central America, and the United States. The exhibition of more than 120 black-and-white images will be on view in the McDonough galleries September 18 through November 13, 2009. These photographs will be accompanied by related artifacts such as Mennonite clothing, shell casings from war zones, martyr posters, a water-soaked photo albumfrom a Katrina survivor. Also included are Towell’s essays, musical recordings, and video presentations, some as twenty-five foot projections. The opening reception for the exhibit will take place on Friday, September 18, from 6:00 to 8:00pm.

Larry Towell: The World from My Front Porch will include photographs from Towell’s thirty-year portfolio of activity and involvement in contemporary international issues of land use and control. Included are images of Mennonite migrant workers of Mexico, the Palestinian/Israeli conflict, civil war in El Salvador, victims of Hurricane Katrina, and other areas in social crisis where Towell has witnessed the “landless poor.” The exhibition will also feature images from a rare personal reportage of his own family and land in rural Ontario, Canada.

His business card reads “Larry Towell, Human Being.” Experience as a poet and a folk musician has done much to shape his personal style. Towell grew up in a large family in rural Ontario, Canada. As a visual arts student at Toronto’s York University, he was given a camera and black-and-white film. The photographs he has captured over the last three decades, from an intimate perspective, are from journeys to a variety of destinations, such as Nicaragua, Guatemala, Alaska, El Salvador, Palestine, and Mexico.

The journey has led to his current body of work, The World from My Front Porch, in which he explores his own world and documents what he calls “a crisis of landlessness … a phenomenon caused by the agro-export economy, globalization, free trade, and national building without respect for indigenous populations.”

“Today, one human being in six lives in a ‘squatter city’ as farmers throughout Asia, Africa, and Latin America migrate from the plots of land they farmed for generations and on which they can no longer subsist, to live in urban slums,” Towell said. “A growing number, 35 million persons, also live in exile, cut off from their rural origins, often due to conflict over land.”

“Although I travel extensively, it is usually with a sense of exile. From Hanoi to Managua, from San Salvador to East Jerusalem and the Occupied Territories, the longing for home persists. Although a journalist must work in the arena of international events, when I am not traveling, I turn the camera inward.”

“An anthropologist never collects Persian carpets or jade heads with beady eyes. He goes straight to the garbage piles of past cultures because that which is thrown away, tells him everything. I’m a rag picker myself, a collector of useless debris, things left behind, children’s art, and junk. It all started for me as a boy along the goldenrod paths and cow pastures that led to the river and into the hardwood forests where I
began to listen to nature and collect insects, flowers, and animal bones. It led me to the abandoned farmhouses and barns of southwestern Ontario where I discovered the unofficial museums and the meaning of personal photography. That led me to the war-ravaged landscape and burned-out villages in Central America and from there to the refugee camps of Palestine. It made me look at my own land
differently.”

Towell’s photographs and essays have been published extensively, in publications such as LIFE, GEO, Stern, Elle, Esquire, Rolling Stone, and The New York Times. A montage of these clippings will be displayed as part of the exhibition. He is the author of ten books chronicling his travels including his most recent volume, The World from My Front Porch.

http://www.eastmanhouse.org/exhibits/container_89/index.php
http://inmotion.magnumphotos.com/essay/frontporch

360º Gallery Tour
Larry Towell:The World From My Front Porch
McDonough Museum of Art

Click and Drag to View


Gallery A





Bridge





Gallery B





Raw Space Gallery





Installation Gallery








Larry Towell (Canadian, b. 1953)
Chihuaha. Cuervo Casas Grandes.
Mennonites, Mexico.
1992
Credit: © Larry Towell/Magnum Photos






Larry Towell (Canadian, b. 1953)
EL SALVADOR. Morazan.
A young guerrilla recruit bathes on a Sunday morning.
Young women usually made up the ranks of brigadistas
performing emergency medical care with very little training.
1991
Credit: © Larry Towell/Magnum Photos






Larry Towell (Canadian, b. 1953)
ISRAEL. Gaza City, Gaza.
Triangle of sunlight (caused by roof lines) on ground in Palestine Square.
1993
Credit: © Larry Towell/Magnum Photos






The Ohio Arts Council helped fund this program or organization with state tax dollars to encourage economic growth, educational excellence and cultural enrichment for all Ohioans.

The exhibition and the performance are free and open to the public.

For more information contact Leslie Brothers at 330.941.1400 or labrothers@ysu.edu

Printer Friendly Press Release


Printer Friendly Towell Bio


Collected Works Poster























 

 

   
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