Agnes (gallery)

Agnes was a Birmingham, Alabama photography gallery from 1993 to 2001. Shawn Boley, Jon Coffelt and Jan Hughes opened the gallery with the mission of attempting to raise awareness of social issues — such as cancer, AIDS, death and dying, the environment, homelessness, ethics, racism, classism, imprisonment — through photojournalism, film, video, poetry, and book arts. Controversial, Agnes was picketed on several occasions, one of which resulted in a USA Today article on December 5, 1994.[1]

Agnes worked closely with Video Data Bank in Chicago Illinois for short film/vido screening which included work by Sadie Benning, Jim Cohen, Ana Mendieta and Susan Share among many others.[2]

Contents

Notable exhibits

Artists

Agnes artists list included: Sara Garden Armstrong, Pinky Bass, Sadie Benning, Ruth Bernhard, Kevin Bubriski, Dan Budnik, Clayton Colvin, Paul Caponigro, Timothy Ely, Karen Graffeo, James Herbert (director), Jenny Holzer, Lee Isaacs, Janice Kluge, O. Winston Link, Spider Martin, Julie Moos, Hermann Nitsch, Ed Ruscha, Mary Ann Sampson, Jack Spencer, Maggie Taylor, Arthur Tress, Thomas Tulis, Jerry Uelsmann, Marie Weaver and Randy West (photographer).

External links

Notes

  1. ^ USA Today, A4, December 5, 1994
  2. ^ USA Today, A4, December 5, 1994
  3. ^ PDF link
  4. ^ Faking death: Canadian art photography and the Canadian imagination by Cousineau-Levine, 2004
  5. ^ Faking death: Canadian art photography and the Canadian imagination by Cousineau-Levine, 2004
  6. ^ UpSouth at Agnes