Richard Skidmore

About Me

Richard Skidmore's Artist Statement

Much of my time is spent combining two of my passions - travel and photography.  Travel photography provides a record of my experiences and brings back many great memories from the beautiful places I have visited. 

I find myself attracted to colors - especially blue skies by day and night, and abstractions - particularly patterns, both natural and man-made.  I enjoy the visual experience that color photography provides. 

My recent focus has been on a series of "nocturnes" - night photography using both film and digital image capture.  Lighting of the subject may be from a full moon, colored flashlights, street lights or any combination of light sources.  The results are sometimes serendipitous, capturing often-photographed subjects and locations in an exciting new light. 

My files contain thousands of stock photography images - cities, national parks and popular travel destinations.  Additional images can be viewed through links on my website at www.rskidmore.com .  All images are available as archival fine art prints, matted to standard frame sizes.  Inquiries regarding availability of images from specific locations should be directed to info@rskidmore.com .  One-time rights are available for editorial or commercial use. 

Select matted prints are available for viewing or purchase at: 

Viewpoint Photographic Art Center
2015 "J" Street
Sacramento, CA  and 

Dolphin Gallery
39225 S. Hwy 1
Gualala, CA 

Mendocino Art Center Gallery
45200 Little Lake Street
Mendocino, CA

Click on my picture at left to return to my SMArt Page, or here www.rskidmore.com for my website.

 

Richard Skidmore's Biography

Individual & Group Exhibitions

Summer, 2012  Dolphin Gallery, Gualala, CA (Featured Artist)
Summer, 2011  Art by the Sea, Open Studio, The Sea Ranch, CA
Summer, 2011  Mendocino Art Center, "Imagine...A Garden", Mendocino, CA
Spring, 2010      The Sea Ranch Lodge (Featured Artist), The Sea Ranch, CA
Fall, 2009            Viewpoint Photographic Art Center, "The Play of Light", Sacramento, CA
Spring, 2009      The Nocturnes, "Blue Nocturnes" On Line Exhibition, San Francisco, CA
Winter, 2009       Dolphin Gallery, Gualala, CA (Featured Artist)
Summer, 2008   Art in the Redwoods, Gualala Art Center, Gualala, CA
                               Environmental Award - Redwood Coast Land Conservancy
Summer, 2008   The Nocturnes, "Biennial" On Line Exhibition, San Francisco, CA
Spring, 2008       Three Columns Gallery, Contemporary American Night Photography
                               Harvard University, Cambridge, MA
Winter, 2008        The Sea Ranch Lodge, Gualala Arts Featured Artists, The Sea Ranch, CA
Fall, 2007             Gualala Arts Center, "Alternatives" Photography, Gualala, CA
Winter, 2007        Blue Canoe Coffee & Tea, Anchor Bay, CA (Featured Artist)
Fall, 2006             Blue Canoe Coffee & Tea, Anchor Bay, CA (Featured Artist)
Summer, 2005    Art in the Redwoods, Gualala Arts Center, Gualala, CA
                               Judges' Award, Color Photography
Fall, 2004             Gualala Arts Center, "Environmental Art", Gualala, CA
Fall, 1998             North Park Arts Competition & Exhibition, Dallas, TX
                               First Place, Color Photography
Spring, 1991       St. Supery Winery, Photos of Paris, Rutherford, CA
Fall, 1990             Sonoma Arts Guild, Photos of Paris, Sonoma, CA

 

My Blog

New Pier 24 Exhibit - "Here"

This year's photography exhibit at San Francisco's Pier 24 - "Here" - is now available for viewing. Pier 24 is the largest gallery space entirely devoted to photography that I've ever seen. There are perhaps 20 separate rooms or alcoves, often featuring a single photographer. Nothing is for sale. There are no wall tags or other identifying text on the walls - simply the photographs, though a gallery guide with the names of the photographers featured in each room is available from the reception desk. It's quite an unusual viewing experience and forces one to think about the photography. "Here" is billed as an exhibition of Bay Area photographers and features images of San Francisco and the Bay Area (among others) by 34 photographers. I visited soon after the exhibit opened and at the time the exhibition catalog was not available. My expectation was to see a number of well-known San Francisco photographers represented such as Ansel Adams, Imogen Cunningham, Minor White, Pirkle Jones, Don Worth, etc. Instead, the exhibit leans more toward contemporary photographers - large, color photographs of empty rooms, landscapes (Misrach's Oakland fire and Golden Gate images), documentary photography (Goldberg's street kids) - not really my thing. Overall, I didn't feel that this exhibit had the depth of last year's showing of the Fisher's photography collection. My feelings may be influenced in part by how overwhelmed I was on my first visit to this magical space. Wandering the exhibition, however, I was pleased to stumble upon some real treasures on view - Muybridge and Mark Klett's panoramas of San Francisco (then and now), Ruth Bernhard and Edward Weston's nudes, and Sugimoto's time-exposures of local theater interiors. There are others I'm sure and I will make a point of getting back to see them again sometime this year. Admission to Pier 24 is free but you must make a reservation in advance through their website: www.pier24.org. There are three times available (10am, 1pm and 3pm) Monday through Thursday. Reservations are limited to a maximum of 20 visitors at any given time to ensure a contemplative environment. (Just two of us had the entire space to ourselves when I visited in May.) I returned in December and spent more time enjoying Stackpole's photographs documenting the building of the Bay Bridge. Also, I liked the night photos (nocturnes) of suburban houses by Henry Wessell (B&W) and Todd Hido (color) - both working on these images in the 1990's. I also found myself more closely viewing Jim Goldberg's street photography (many polaroids and enlarged proof sheet images). All-in-all, another fine exhibition in an amazing space. I look forward to whatever Pier 24 comes up with in 2012! If you've not been to Pier 24, I highly recommend visiting - it's quite an experience. "Here" has been extended and is on view through January 31, 2012. Click on my photo to return to my SMArt Page Home, or www.rskidmore.com to go to my website home page.

FotoWeek - Washington, D.C.

I happened to be in Washington, D.C. at the same time FotoWeek was happening. I visited the main exhibition space - two floors of a former Borders location - featuring selected prints from photographers around the world. There were amazing photos in multiple categories: environmental, street photography, documentary, landscape, nature, wildlife, etc. Concurrent with FotoWeek the Corcoran Gallery of Art sponsored lectures and an exhibit of Gordon Parks' photographs from their collection. The Gordon Parks exhibit continues through January 16, 2012. At the National Gallery of Art a retrospective of Harry Callahan's work, "Harry Callahan at 100" includes an early experiment capturing a flashlight on film in a dark room (or outdoors?). His color work features neon signs and camera movements - similar to what many people are doing today, decades later. "Harry Callahan at 100" is on view through March 4, 2012.

Edward Weston: American Photographer

There is an excellent retrospective of Edward Weston's photographic legacy currently showing at the Monterey Museum of Art's La Mirada venue. Two galleries contain many images from Weston's career as a portrait and fine art photographer. Besides the well-known photographs of nudes, seashells, vegetables, kitchen objects, etc. a number of Weston's portraits are displayed. I was particularly moved by his photograph of the poet Robinson Jeffers. La Mirada, the museum's satellite venue, was also a pleasant surprise. It's an older home with lovely courtyards and a rose garden. Two large galleries have been added and the Edward Weston exhibit fills both. Edward Weston: American Photographer continues through October 9th, 2011.

Night Photography Exhibits in New York

I was excited to see the exhibit "Night Vision: Photography After Dark" at the Metropolitan Museum of New York (through September 18, 2011). The show includes the usual suspects - Steichen, Brassai, Bill Brandt, etc. plus a number of contemporary photographers who have focused on night photography and light painting, such as Giuseppe Albergamo. The exhibit was smaller than I anticipated, just 40 or so photographs from the Met's collection spanning the last century (1890's to present). It would be nice to see a more comprehensive nocturnes-themed exhibit, pulled together as a collaborative effort from a number of museums, then touring several cities. Berenice Abbott's night photo of buildings in New York City was accompanied by an interesting description by the photographer. She wanted as many lights on in the buildings as possible so she knew that the photograph had to be made just before Christmas around winter solstice. People would still be working until 5 pm when it was dark outside and lights would then start going off as they left the buildings. Abbott took the photo from an open window because she said that if you ask for permission to go on the roofs, building managers thought you may want to commit suicide! With the longer exposure, she was surprised at the sharpness of the photo because buildings tend to sway in the wind. The exhibit "Lyonel Feininger: At the Edge of the World" at the Whitney Museum (through October 16, 2011) includes only a couple of his night photographs. The showing is, however, a wonderful survey of Feininger's capabilities as an artist within many mediums - painting, prints, wood carving and photography. Though Feininger's photography is given minimal respresentation in this show, an exhibit of his photography is scheduled this fall/winter at both the Harvard Museum in MA and The Getty Museum in CA.

Eadweard Muybridge at SF MOMA

I returned to see "Helios - Eadweard Muybridge in a Time of Change" at San Francisco's Museum of Modern Art last week.  The first time I visited the exhibition I was overwhelmed - by the sheer number of images displayed (over 100) and, because it was soon after opening, overwhelmed by the crowds.  I'm glad I went back. 

The exhibit is an extensive representation of Muybridge's accomplishments as a photographer.  Born in England in 1830, he is best known for his photographic achievements in California.  In addition to his human and animal locomotion photographs, the exhibit includes his 19th century landscapes of Yosemite National Park and the city of San Francisco. 

Rebecca Solnit noted when this exhibit was at the Corcoran that, "Muybridge's lifespan from 1830 to 1904 really spans from the beginning of railroads to the rise of the automobile and the early experiments in aviation, as well as the birth of photography.  He is born before the birth of photography and dies after the achievement of motion pictures as we know them now in their essential form.  So just in his life span alone is the life span of perhaps the greatest technological change in the history of the world."  (PBS NewsHour, 5/5/2010)

Solnit is the author of the biography River of Shadows: Eadweard Muybridge and the Technological Wild West, which is recommended if you want to learn more about the life and accomplishments of this extraordinary man.  The Muybridge exhibit continues at SF MOMA through June 7, 2011.

Click on my photo at left to return to my SMArt Page home, or www.rskidmore.com to return to my website.

 

My Friends

Listed in random order. Click picture to view.

Contact Information

Richard is a color landscape photographer with a focus on travel, cities, night photography and the Sonoma/Mendocino CA coast.