Frank Hunter (born August 2, 1947) is an American documentary and fine-art photographer and university educator. He is known for his photographic landscapes and his mastery of the platinum/palladium process. His interest in photographic processes includes the technical process of exposure and development as well as the psychological and spiritual aspects of creating photographic work. "Hunter has always been famed for
transforming the utterly familiar to something rich and strange."
["Visions in Black and White," review of exhibition. Jerry Cullum, Atlanta Journal/Constitution, Sunday, November 5, pg K-10]
Education and influences
Frank Hunter was born in
El Paso, Texas
El Paso (; "the pass") is a city in and the county seat, seat of El Paso County, Texas, El Paso County in the western corner of the U.S. state of Texas. The 2020 population of the city from the United States Census Bureau, U.S. Census Bureau w ...
in 1947. During the early 1970s he studied photography with
Gary Metz
Gary may refer to:
*Gary (given name), a common masculine given name, including a list of people and fictional characters with the name
*Gary, Indiana, the largest city named Gary
Places
;Iran
*Gary, Iran, Sistan and Baluchestan Province
;Unit ...
at the
University of Colorado, Boulder
The University of Colorado Boulder (CU Boulder, CU, or Colorado) is a public research university in Boulder, Colorado. Founded in 1876, five months before Colorado became a state, it is the flagship university of the University of Colorado syst ...
while earning an MA in communications. (1973). At Metz's urging, Hunter studied with the photographer
Nathan Lyons
Nathan Lyons (January 10, 1930 – August 31, 2016) was an American photographer, curator, and educator. He exhibited his photographs from 1956 onwards, produced books of his own and edited those of others.
Lyons was also a curator of photography ...
at the
Visual Studies Workshop
Visual Studies Workshop (VSW) is a non-profit group dedicated to art education based in Rochester, New York, in the Neighborhood of the Arts. VSW supports makers and interpreters of images through education, publications, exhibitions, and collect ...
in
Rochester New York
Rochester () is a city in the U.S. state of New York, the seat of Monroe County, and the fourth-most populous in the state after New York City, Buffalo, and Yonkers, with a population of 211,328 at the 2020 United States census. Located in Wes ...
.
From 1982 to 1985, Hunter pursued a Master of Fine Arts degree at
Ohio University
Ohio University is a Public university, public research university in Athens, Ohio. The first university chartered by an Act of Congress and the first to be chartered in Ohio, the university was chartered in 1787 by the Congress of the Confeder ...
, where he studied with Professor
Arnold Gasson. He was the first graduate student in art to be awarded the university-wide John Cady Graduate Fellowship. Upon graduation, Hunter was awarded an Artist-in-Residency Fellowship from The Issac W. Bernheim Foundation.
" (Louisville/Clermont, KY, 1984)
Career
Hunter's interest in 19th-century processes began in the late 1970s while he working for the
El Paso Public Library
The El Paso Public Libraries is the municipal public library system of El Paso, Texas. The library serves the needs the public in El Paso, Texas, Chaparral, New Mexico and Ciudad Juarez, Mexico. It consists of 14 branches and one Bookmobile serv ...
, where he made prints from glass-plate negatives. After receiving his Master of Fine Arts degree in 1986, Hunter moved to Atlanta
ulton County Georgia, where he taught photography at several universities for the following fifteen years.
In the early 1990s Hunter received a number of grants from the Fulton County Arts Council and the Arts Council for the state of Georgia. With these grants he worked to perfect alternative photographic processes, making large prints in platinum/palladium and using Printing-out paper. It was at this time that Hunter begin a relationship with a Polaroid Corporation, which encouraged his work with Polaroid materials.
The first major exhibitions of Hunter's platinum/palladium work were at Fahey Klein in Los Angeles, California (April 14-May 14, 1994)
and at Jackson Fine Art in Atlanta, "Frank Hunter: Platinum/Palladium Prints" (June - July 31, 1994) Of the latter exhibition, the critic Gretchen Matis wrote, "Palladium is a process very similar to platinum. The two solutions can be mixed, as Hunter has done, for prints that are technically exquisite....This is lush, romantic imagery at its best."
["Depicting Subtleties of Nature: Landscape Photos Rich in Metaphor," Gretchen Matis, The Atlanta Constitution,Friday, July 15, 1994, page 85/P-17.]
In the catalog of a solo exhibition at Jackson Fine Art in 1998, "Frank Hunter: Laments," (June 4-July 31) the photographer and critic John Rosenthal wrote: "In Hunter's photographs, many of which reach out to a poised moment of ripeness, the journey to darkness is implicit--a sorrow that his quest for the brief moment of perfect light has taught him." This was followed by a two-person exhibition in 2000. This later exhibition drew the following observations from one critic: "Frank Hunter, approaches landscape and human-made structures with an almost entirely formal, surface vision in his series Still Points....Hunter hones in on the delicate detail: the lacework on the edge of a curtain, the curve of a wooden banister, the shadow cast by a windowpane on the floor. The
latinum/palladiumtechnique invests his photographs with an ethereality in which edges often bleed into the creamy paper they are printed on. The works not only resemble the stark compositions in photography's early formalist experiments, they intentionally mimic an even earlier phase in the medium's development and the fragile, aged images taken a century ago."
Atlanta Journal-Constitution critic Jerry Cullum wrote of Hunter's 2006 solo exhibition at Thomas Deans Fine Art, "Rich with the antique technique of platinum-palladium printing, the black-and-white pictures glow as if with an inner light....Hunters work incarnates a sense of aching nostalgia for some of us—there is nothing intrinsically mysterious about his mists and roads and secluded woodlands, but the entire sensibility of the photograph suggests another place and time....But Hunter has always been famed for transforming the utterly familiar into something rich and strange."
The South
Throughout the decade of the 1990s Hunter spent a week each spring photographing in the low country of South Carolina and a week photographing in the mountains of North Carolina around
Asheville.
In the year 2000 he was commissioned by the
Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta to create a series of photographs entitled “Midtown at the Millennium.”
The work became part of a collection of the bank and of the
High Museum of Art
The High Museum of Art (colloquially the High) is the largest museum for visual art in the Southeastern United States. Located in Atlanta, Georgia (on Peachtree Street in Midtown, the city's arts district), the High is 312,000 square feet (28, ...
in Atlanta.
In 2001 Hunter moved to
Chapel Hill, North Carolina
Chapel Hill is a town in Orange, Durham and Chatham counties in the U.S. state of North Carolina. Its population was 61,960 in the 2020 census, making Chapel Hill the 17th-largest municipality in the state. Chapel Hill, Durham, and the state ca ...
. For the next 13 years he taught all the wet-darkroom and alternative-process classes at the
Center for Documentary Studies
The Center for Documentary Studies (CDS) is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit support corporation of Duke University dedicated to the documentary arts. Having been created in 1989 through an endowment from the Lyndhurst Foundation, The organization’s founder ...
at
Duke University
Duke University is a private research university in Durham, North Carolina. Founded by Methodists and Quakers in the present-day city of Trinity in 1838, the school moved to Durham in 1892. In 1924, tobacco and electric power industrialist James ...
in
Durham, North Carolina
Durham ( ) is a city in the U.S. state of North Carolina and the county seat of Durham County, North Carolina, Durham County. Small portions of the city limits extend into Orange County, North Carolina, Orange County and Wake County, North Carol ...
.
In 2009 Hunter participated in the Appalachian Photography Project. (Johnson City Tennessee)
As part of the Atlanta Celebrates Photography festival, Thomas Deans Fine Art presented Hunter's solo exhibition "Nocturnes," which featured nocturnal landscapes in rural Iowa lit only by the light of billboards (October 15 - November 14).
In 2010 Duke University mounted an exhibition of his Appalachian photos, entitled “Still point of the Turning World.”
The Kennedy Museum, Athens, Ohio showed a series of photographs made in the 1980s in rural Athens County Ohio (2017)
The Bleeding Pines of Turpentine
In 2010 Hunter was part of a project funded by the Cultural Landscape Foundation entitled “Every tree Tells a Story.” Hunter made a series of photographs of the scarred bodies of long-leaf pines that produce turpentine. The practice dates back before the American Revolution, when slaves would scar for pines to release the sap that was then boiled into turpentine. In Hunter's view the scarred bodies resembled African masks. Hunter's work was used in a back projection of a cultural theater performance piece produced and directed by Ray Owen. In 2016 Washington University mounted an exhibition of Hunter's Appalachian platinum/palladium photographs from their permanent collection: "Director's Cut: Recent Photography Gifts to the NCMA" April 4, 2015 – September 13, 2015.
Bull City Summer: A Season at the Ballpark (2011-2013)
Hunter worked with a group of writers and photographers on a project conceived by Sam Stephenson commemorating the 25th anniversary of the movie Bull Durham, ''Bull City Summer: A Season at the Ballpark''.
Hunter's contribution would become a separate work entitled “Lights in a Summer Night.” “The artists were chosen because we admired and trusted them,” Stephenson said. “Nobody was given an assignment. The artists were allowed to find themselves within the frame of the ballpark.” The work was exhibited at the
North Carolina Museum of Art
The North Carolina Museum of Art (NCMA) is an art museum in Raleigh, North Carolina. It opened in 1956 as the first major museum collection in the country to be formed by state legislation and funding. Since the initial 1947 appropriation that e ...
, Raleigh (2013)
and at the
Contemporary Art Museum of Raleigh (2013).
Frank Hunter retired from teaching in 2013 and now lives and works in
Santa Fe, New Mexico.
Grants/Awards/Teaching
1983 Ohio University: The John Cady Named Graduate Fellowship, 1983
1984 Artist-in-Residency Fellowship from The Issac W. Bernheim Foundation.
(Louisville/Clermont, KY, 1984)
1986 Artist in Residence, Kennesaw University, Kennesaw, GA
1986 Artist in Residence, Lightwork, Syracuse, New York
1987-2001 Instructor, Oglethorpe University and Georgia State University
1992 Fulton County Arts Grant, Atlanta, Georgia
1993 Georgia Council for the Arts Grant
2001-2013 Instructor of Photography, Center for Documentary Studies, Duke University
Selected exhibitions
1989 "Frank Hunter: Photographer of the South,"
Cornell Fine Arts Museum
The Rollins Museum of Art is located on the Winter Park campus of Rollins College and is the only teaching museum in the greater Orlando area. The museum houses more than 5,000 objects ranging from antiquity through contemporary eras, including ...
,
Rollins College
Rollins College is a private college in Winter Park, Florida. It was founded in November 1885 and has about 30 undergraduate majors and several graduate programs. It is Florida's fourth oldest post-secondary institution.
History
Rollins Colle ...
, Winter Park, Florida
1994 "Dick Arentz/Frank Hunter/Chris Rainier" Fahey Klein, Los Angeles, California (April 14-May 14)
1994 "Frank Hunter: Platinum/Palladium Prints." Jackson Fine Art, Atlanta, GA ( - July 31)
1998 "Frank Hunter: Laments," (June 4-July 31) Jackson Fine Art, Atlanta, GA
2000 "Frank Hunter: Still Points," with (June–July)
2003 "Midtown Atlanta at the Millennium," High Museum of Art, Atlanta
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2003 "Meditations on Light and Place," Solo exhibition, Bank of America Plaza, Atlanta, GA
2004 "Selected Works: State of Georgia Art Collection" (April 17 - June 5)
Museum of Contemporary Art of Georgia
The Museum of Contemporary Art of Georgia (MOCA GA) is a contemporary art museum located in Atlanta, Georgia. The museum collects and archives contemporary works by Georgia artists. MOCA GA uses its exhibition schedule to increase its permanen ...
, Atlanta. (Hunter was one of 17 artists featured in this exhibition of Georgia artists working between years 1938–1990.) See catalog of the exhibition.
2006 "Images in October," Thomas Deans Fine Art, Atlanta, Georgia (October 14-November 14, 2006)
2009 "Nocturnes," Thomas Deans Fine Art (October 15 - November 14)
solo exhibiiton of nocturnal landscapes in rural Iowa lit only by the light of billboards
2010 "Still Point in the Turning World," solo exhibition, Duke University, Durham, NC
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2011 “From Polaroid to Impossible: Masterpieces of instant Photography,” Westlicht Collection, Vienna Austria (June 26-August 28)
2013 "Inspired Georgia: 28 Works from Georgia's State Art Collection." Touring exhibition, September 2013-December 2014.
2014 "Bull City Summer," North Carolina Museum of Art, Raleigh, February 23–August 31. "Highlights include.... Frank Hunter's dramatic skyscapes, such as Light in a Summer Night #3, capture the power of nature and the magic of twilight as it settles over the stadium."
2015-2016 "Actual Size: Exploring the Photographic Contact Print," Cassilhaus, Chapel Hill, NC (December 15, 2015 - March 15, 2016) Catalog of the exhibition.
2016 "Director's Cut: Recent Photography Gifts to the North Carolina Museum of Art" (April 4, 2015 – September 13, 2015).
Collections
Frank Hunter's photographs are included in following museums, archives, and private collections (partial listing):
The John and Mable Ringling Museum of Art /
The Hunter Museum of American Art /
The
Museum of Contemporary Art of Georgia
The Museum of Contemporary Art of Georgia (MOCA GA) is a contemporary art museum located in Atlanta, Georgia. The museum collects and archives contemporary works by Georgia artists. MOCA GA uses its exhibition schedule to increase its permanen ...
/
The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston
The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston (MFAH), is an art museum located in the Houston Museum District of Houston, Texas. With the recent completion of an eight-year campus redevelopment project, including the opening of the Nancy and Rich Kinder Buil ...
/
Denver Art Museum /
Mint Museum /
Speed Art Museum
The Speed Art Museum, originally known as the J.B. Speed Memorial Museum, now colloquially referred to as the Speed by locals, is the oldest and largest art museum in Kentucky. It was established in 1927 in Louisville, Kentucky on Third Street ...
/
High Museum of Art
The High Museum of Art (colloquially the High) is the largest museum for visual art in the Southeastern United States. Located in Atlanta, Georgia (on Peachtree Street in Midtown, the city's arts district), the High is 312,000 square feet (28, ...
/
Kennedy Museum, Ohio University /
Eskenazi Museum of Art
The Eskenazi Museum of Art at Indiana University opened in 1941 under the direction of Henry Radford Hope.Baden, Linda J. Indiana University Art Museum: Dedication. Bloomington, IN: Museum, 1982. Print. The museum was intended to be the center of ...
(Indiana University) /
North Carolina Museum of Art
The North Carolina Museum of Art (NCMA) is an art museum in Raleigh, North Carolina. It opened in 1956 as the first major museum collection in the country to be formed by state legislation and funding. Since the initial 1947 appropriation that e ...
/
Ackland Art Museum
The Ackland Art Museum is a museum and academic unit of The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. It was founded through the bequest of William Hayes Ackland (1855–1940) to The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. It is located a ...
/
Asheville Art Museum The Asheville Art Museum is a community-based nonprofit visual art organization in Western North Carolina (WNC) and is accredited by the American Alliance of Museums. The Museum is located on the center square of downtown Asheville, 2 South Pack Squ ...
/
Booth Western Art Museum
Booth Western Art Museum, located in Cartersville, Georgia, is a museum dedicated to the Western United States. It is one of only two museums of its kind in the Southeastern United States, the other being the James Museum of Western and Wildlife ...
/
Georgia Museum of Art /
Morris Museum of Art /
Akron Art Museum
The Akron Art Museum is an art museum in Akron, Ohio, United States.
The museum first opened on February 1, 1922, as the Akron Art Institute. It was located in two borrowed rooms in the basement of the public library. The Institute offered clas ...
/
Florida State University Museum of Fine Art /
Fred Jones Jr. Museum of Art
The Fred Jones Jr. Museum of Art is an art museum on the University of Oklahoma campus in Norman, Oklahoma.
Overview
The University of Oklahoma’s Fred Jones Jr. Museum of Art holds over 20,000 objects in its permanent collection. The museum c ...
/
Agnes Scott College
Agnes Scott College is a private women's liberal arts college in Decatur, Georgia. The college enrolls approximately 1,000 undergraduate and graduate students. The college is affiliated with the Presbyterian Church and is considered one of the ...
/
Light Work, Syracuse University /
Lamar Dodd Art Center /
New Mexico State University /
Photographic Archives,
University of Louisville
The University of Louisville (UofL) is a public research university in Louisville, Kentucky. It is part of the Kentucky state university system. When founded in 1798, it was the first city-owned public university in the United States and one of ...
/
Duke University
Duke University is a private research university in Durham, North Carolina. Founded by Methodists and Quakers in the present-day city of Trinity in 1838, the school moved to Durham in 1892. In 1924, tobacco and electric power industrialist James ...
Archives /
El Paso Public Library
The El Paso Public Libraries is the municipal public library system of El Paso, Texas. The library serves the needs the public in El Paso, Texas, Chaparral, New Mexico and Ciudad Juarez, Mexico. It consists of 14 branches and one Bookmobile serv ...
/
State of Georgia, Atlanta /
City of Atlanta,
Hartsfield International Airport /
Columbus Museum of Art / International
Polaroid Collection
The Polaroid Collection was a collection of fine-art photographs assembled by the Polaroid Corporation. The collection was initiated in the 1940s by Ansel Adams and Edwin Land. Following the company's 2008 bankruptcy, the collection was broken up f ...
/
Cassilhaus Collection
/
Westlicht Collection. Also: Collection of
Allan Gurganus
Allan may refer to:
People
* Allan (name), a given name and surname, including list of people and characters with this name
* Allan (footballer, born 1984) (Allan Barreto da Silva), Brazilian football striker
* Allan (footballer, born 1989) ( ...
/
Collection of Sir
Elton John
Sir Elton Hercules John (born Reginald Kenneth Dwight; 25 March 1947) is a British singer, pianist and composer. Commonly nicknamed the "Rocket Man" after his 1972 hit single of the same name, John has led a commercially successful career a ...
/
Collection of
Cy Twombly
Edwin Parker "Cy" Twombly Jr. (; April 25, 1928July 5, 2011) was an American Painting, painter, Sculpture, sculptor and photographer. He belonged to the generation of Robert Rauschenberg and Jasper Johns.
Twombly is said to have influenced you ...
/
Collection of
E. O. Wilson /
Collection of
Annie Dillard
Annie Dillard (born April 30, 1945) is an American author, best known for her narrative prose in both fiction and non-fiction. She has published works of poetry, essays, prose, and literary criticism, as well as two novels and one memoir. Her 19 ...
and Bob Richardson /
Collection of
Branford Marsalis
Branford Marsalis (born August 26, 1960) is an American saxophonist
The saxophone (often referred to colloquially as the sax) is a type of single-reed woodwind instrument with a conical body, usually made of brass. As with all single-reed inst ...
References
* Antone, Evan Haywood, Editor (Author) and Hunter, Frank (photographer), ''Portals at the Pass: El Paso Area Architecture to 1930.'' El Paso, 1984
* Soike, Lowell J. ''Without Right Angles: The Round Barns of Iowa.'' 2nd ed., 104pp, Penfield Press, 1990; 1st ed., Iowa State Historical Department, Office of Historic Preservation, 1983
* ''New Georgia Encyclopedia'' (newgeorgiaencyclopedia.org)
* ''Popular Photography.'' “Trunk Show,” November 9, 2010
* Stephenson, Sam, ed. ''Bull City Summer: A Season at the Ball Park,'' 216pp, Daylight Press, 2014.
Trunk Show: FRANK HUNTER , Popular PhotographyLandslide: Every Tree Tells a Story - Gallery , Garden DesignBull City Summer - The Morning News* Heine, Achim; Reuter, Rebekka; and Willingmann, Ulrike, eds. ''From Polaroid to Impossible: Masterpieces of Instant Photography—The Westlicht Collection.'' 192 pp, Hatje Cantz, 2011
* Hirsch, Robert. ''Photographic Possibilities: The Expressive Use of Equipment, Ideas, Materials, and Process.'' 3rd edition, Focal Press, first published 2009, pp. 72, 99.
Southerly gaze , Creative LoafingOfficial websiteThomas Deans Fine Art
{{DEFAULTSORT:Hunter, Frank
1947 births
Living people
Landscape photographers
University of Colorado Boulder alumni
Ohio University alumni
Duke University faculty
American photographers