Jeffrey A. Wolin is a celebrated and influential photographic artist and longtime head of the Indiana University’s photography department. Featuring approximately one hundred works, this retrospective exhibition covers Wolin’s entire career with key selections from all ten of his major series, including his earliest landscapes and portraits of stonecutters, Holocaust survivors, war veterans, and people experiencing homelessness. The sum total of Wolin’s creative achievement will be a surprise and inspiration to nearly every viewer. His work is powerful and profoundly humane. Over the years, he has thought deeply about the issues of human history and memory, always attentive to the insights that come from personal storytelling. Best known for his innovative use of image/text combinations, Wolin has explored the living reality of history and the primacy of the personal experience. His work is at once formally inventive and deeply empathetic and sympathetic. His pictures provide fresh and powerful insight into the course of time and the complexity of individual lives. Few others, in fact, have explored these issues with anything approaching Wolin’s insight, generosity of spirit, and artistic invention. His work expands our sense of both the art of photography and the poignance and integrity of human existence.
Measuring Time: The Photographs of Jeffrey A. Wolin is generously supported in part by Martha and David Moore, David H. Jacobs, the College of Arts + Sciences, and the Eskenazi School of Art, Architecture + Design.
The exhibition is accompanied by a definitive monograph published by Kehrer Verlag (Heidelberg, Germany) that is supported in part by Martha and David Moore, David H. Jacobs, and Marsha R. Bradford and Harold Dumes.
Curated by Nanette Esseck Brewer, Lucienne M. Glaubinger Curator of Works on Paper, Eskenazi Museum of Art, and Keith F. Davis, independent photographic historian and former Senior Curator of Photography, Nelson-Atkins Museum, Kansas City.