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  • December10th

    An ongoing and ever-evolving project, Vanishing Point aims to examine how time and space impact upon a single focal point within a larger landscape while using our vanishing urban spaces as subject matter. The viewer’s perspective is challenged through the use of multiple photo layers and viewpoints within the same scene. The resulting images give these once-forgotten and vanishing spaces a new dimension and movement, bringing them to life once again. A photographic metamorphosis, this process has evolved over many years and continues to transform with each location, adapting with the subject matter.

    Photos from the Vanishing Point series were exhibited as part of the Urban Timelines exhibit with the HangMan7 collective in 2009 at the Hang Man Gallery, and as part of the Gladstone Hotel’s EXPOSED: Deceptions, Discoveries, Discussions & Debate exhibit during the 2009 CONTACT Photography Festival.

    You can see additional photos in the Gallery section.

  • December5th

    Set inside an ancient drugstore in the main square of Lviv, Ukraine, is a museum devoted to the apothecary arts. Established in 1735 by Wilhelm Natorp, a military pharmacist, the drugstore remains in operation in the front room, while the museum takes up 16 rooms on 3 floors in the rest of the building on the corner of Drukarska and Stavropihiyska, and has over 3000 rare articles on exhibit.

    “Pid Chornym Orlom” (“Under a black eagle”) gets its name from the signage above the doorway. In the 1700s, each pharmacy had a symbol which was hung up before the entrance. The pharmacies were then referred to by these symbols – “Under a black eagle”, “Under a Gold deer”, “Under Sacred Spirit” etc. Since the pharmaceutical industry did not exist at this time, each pharmacy prepared extracts, elixirs, ointments and cosmetics. Today, “Pid Chornym Orlom” still prepares and sells their signature “Iron Wine” used to treat anemia.

    Additional photos can be viewed in the Gallery section under “Experimental”.