Tama Hochbaum
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Tama Hochbaum (born 1953) is an artist and photographer living in
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 ...
.


Life

Hochbaum was born in New York City, and received her BA from
Brandeis University , mottoeng = "Truth even unto its innermost parts" , established = , type = Private research university , accreditation = NECHE , president = Ronald D. Liebowitz , pro ...
in Fine Arts. Upon graduation, she was awarded a Thomas J. Watson Foundation Fellowship to study printmaking at
Atelier 17 Atelier 17 was an art school and studio that was influential in the teaching and promotion of printmaking in the 20th century. Originally located in Paris, the studio relocated to New York during the years surrounding World War II. It moved back ...
in Paris. She later received a MFA in painting from
Queens College Queens College (QC) is a public college in the Queens borough of New York City. It is part of the City University of New York system. Its 80-acre campus is primarily located in Flushing, Queens. It has a student body representing more than 170 ...
in NYC in 1981. She worked as a painter in
Newton, Massachusetts Newton is a city in Middlesex County, Massachusetts, United States. It is approximately west of downtown Boston. Newton resembles a patchwork of thirteen villages, without a city center. According to the 2020 U.S. Census, the population of Ne ...
for 20 years. In 1991, during a four-month stay in Italy, an old interest in photography that had begun during her time in Paris re-emerged. In 1996, she and her family moved to North Carolina, where she currently lives.


Process

Hochbaum has been interested in making work about the passage of time. Her recent work is a portfolio of self-portraits titled "Anti-Selfies". In her artist statement about this work she states: The self-portrait is, by its very nature, linked to the artist’s identity. She insists on her relevance, her existence even, through her representation of the self. In “Anti-Selfies” I present myself to the viewer with my signifiers – my red glasses and pink lipstick. To create the first layer in these works, the fundamental self-portrait, I capture my face in a grid of nine parts, three rows of three. The second, superimposed layer, also gridded, has anywhere from 9 to 841 parts. These images are screen shots from what has become my camera of choice, my iPhone. Most of these digital composite images live in two dimensions. Instead of a deep, perspectival space, these images flatten out and parade across the surface of the picture plane as mosaics. This compositional device generates a tension in the play between fragmentation and cohesion, between seeing the portrait as a whole and separating the layers, hence seeing the many discrete images, “reading” them individually, in sequence, like text. Jason Farago, in his New York Times essay on Albrecht Dürer’s 1500 self-portrait, implies that the artist presents “the self as a subjective individual, the author of one’s own life story.” This resonates deeply with what I am creating in this series. My gridded constructions are, in essence, anti-selfies. While the ‘sitter’ in those ubiquitous images that appear everywhere on social media is prominent, center-stage, my visage is obscured, sometimes practically consumed by what surrounds or lays on top of it. In contrast to the quick, casual, spontaneous selfie, my self-portraits are deliberate, formal, fabricated, staged composites combining, blending, and superimposing a variety of images: flowers, beloved objects, Zelensky, exhibitions I have seen, my home, my ancestors, my progeny and my self. These self-portraits are consciously self-centered; they are considered, vibrant, multi-layered creations that state, “I am here, and this is my story”. Hochbaum's previous body of work consisted of composite photo collages, in black and white and color. In these pieces, she begins with a grid of between 25 and 50 photos set up in columns and rows and works digitally to blend the individual panels to make a whole, a single picture plane. She always leaves a hint of fog at the border between the modules, never making a seamless image, to remind the viewer that this is no window one is looking through, this is the act of seeing itself, over time. Previous to this portfolio, Hochbaum created shaped images, made up of individual panels printed into aluminum. She has used three distinct shapes - the symmetrical cross, the lintel or doorway and the Bi square, the empty square, or the squaring off of the Bi disc shape. She has also produced a series on the Silver Screen. In this series, Hochbaum takes screenshots of classic movies broadcast on TV, warping images of famous Hollywood starlets (Audrey Hepburn, Greta Garbo and Lillian Gish among them) before printing the image on aluminum panels. She has published a book with Daylight Books of the same name, SILVER SCREEN. Along with these series, she has created a number of slide shows to music; each contain hundreds of her images. Two of these pieces were commissioned by the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. One, ''Graffito'', a collaboration with her husband the composer Allen Anderson, was screened in Memorial Hall in February 2011 as part of the North Carolina Digital Arts Festival. Another, ''return:radius'', was screened at the FedEx Global Education Center as part of the Water of Life Festival in the Spring of 2013. She was represented by George Lawson Gallery in San Francisco and Los Angeles for 9 years. Her work is in the collections of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston and the Benton Museum in Storrs, Connecticut. Her work is also in the corporate collections of Credit Suisse and Truist Bank.


Collections

Hochbaum's work is held in the following public collections: *
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston The Museum of Fine Arts (often abbreviated as MFA Boston or MFA) is an art museum in Boston, Massachusetts. It is the 20th-largest art museum in the world, measured by public gallery area. It contains 8,161 paintings and more than 450,000 works ...
* William Benton Museum of Art at the University of Connecticut in Storrs, CT *Credit Suisse


References


External links

* {{DEFAULTSORT:Hochbaum, Tama 1953 births Living people Artists from New York City Artists from North Carolina Atelier 17 alumni Photographers from North Carolina Artists from Newton, Massachusetts 20th-century American photographers 21st-century American photographers 20th-century American women photographers 21st-century American women photographers