Charles Hedgcock (Day 3)

Charles Hedgcock
He, Him

About the Artist

Charles "Chip" Hedgcock has combined his love of the outdoors with more than 30 years of experience photographing in medicine, the life sciences, and fine arts, to create a unique vision of the natural world. He is known for his images that explore nature, and the natural world.
  • https://www.charleshedgcock.com

How to Purchase

Cash, Paypal, Creditcard

About this Event

I will have a selection of my Black & White gelatin silver prints as well as Lumen prints, a camera-less photographic process. I will have framed as well as unframed pieces for sale.
Several other artists will also be showing work in the gallery

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Other 2024 OST Events from this Artist

About the Studio

City of Tucson Ward: Ward 6
Pima County District: District 2
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About the Art

About the Process

For more than 37 years I have been a professional photographer, exploring the biodiversity of the South West and Sonora Mexico. Influenced by such masters as Karl Blossfeldt and Edward Weston, my subject has always been the natural world and my tools have always been cameras; 4x5 view cameras, 35mm film cameras and the latest digital SLRs. Working in the field, alone, or with biologists and activists, collecting images, creating art. The latest digital technology notwithstanding, I am always drawn back to the darkroom, the process performed by hand, and the traditional tools of my trade; film and archival gelatin silver prints. A few years ago, adrift on the internet, in that tangential way that the web can get us lost, I discovered lumen prints. With conversations and encouragement from fellow photographic artist, Kathleen Velo, I began experimenting with the process, and found it to be an amazing mix of alchemy and serendipity. An extremely experimental process that uses only sunlight and expired photographic paper. Many hours of solar exposure cause the paper's gelatin silver emulsion to gradually change color. After fixing and toning the paper in my darkroom, I am left with a subtle negative image. I have been experimenting with lumen print images of plants, feathers, and even insect parts, anything translucent enough to pass light. Combining silver gelatin paper with sunlight and the juices of herbaceous plants, creates subtle, pastel colors, in a paper designed to render only shades of gray. These unique, one of a kind images help me share the story of the natural world.

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