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SANDRA GOTTLIEB - BIOGRAPHY
Sandra
Gottlieb has created a striking series of photographs of the skies and
waters of the Atlantic Ocean. With a keen eye for the fleeting phenomena
of clouds and light, she has created beautiful large-scale images that
range from the abstract, to the painterly, to the highly dramatic. Her
poetic work conveys the sense of impermanence in both nature and in human
existence.
Sandra Gottlieb was born in Brooklyn, NY, and from an early age was devoted
to the study of ballet and the arts. She studied Fine Arts at Brooklyn
College, and later photography at the International Center of Photography
in New York City and interior design at the New York School of Interior
Design. Continuing her dance training as well, she performed professionally
with a number of ballet and modern dance companies in the city. She has
noted that dance gave her both a feeling for movement, and an awareness
of change from moment to moment, both of which have contributed to her
photographic vision.
In the 1970s and 1980s, Gottlieb’s artistic impulse brought her to acting,
and she appeared in Off-Broadway plays in New York, and on daytime television.
She recognizes in her theater work the importance of “yourself in the moment”,
in touch with one’s inner being. Gottlieb sees this quality of being present
to what is happening right now, as an important preparation for taking
pictures of nature that may change in an instant.
In 1991, Gottlieb received a camera for her birthday, and found herself
taking pictures that were immediately satisfying. In 1996, she began studying
at the International Center Of Photography with the photographer and master
printer Jerry Vezzuso, who strongly encouraged her in her work. Gottlieb
began taking the first pictures of the Rockaway Beach Series, which would
later be expanded into Seascapes 1996 thru 2006. She took these photographs
from the third floor of her house overlooking the ocean in Rockaway Beach,
Queens, NY. These first pictures were exhibited as a solo show at New Century
Artists Gallery in New York in 1998.
With her work in photography, Gottlieb has discovered an affinity with
a range of American abstract painters. She found in Rothko a strong sense
of structure wedded to color. In Milton Avery she recognized his very personal
interpretation of reality, focused on the edge of the sea. Morris Louis
was a model for his veils of diaphanous color. While she was creating Seascapes
1996 Thru 2006, Gottlieb also produced other series including Floral Impressions,
close-up soft focus views of flowers, Nocturne, details of the breaking
surf at twilight, and Sea Grass, whose curving lines suggest abstract painterly
gestures. Gottlieb has continued her conceptual view of flowers with City
Tulips, 2008 and her seascapes series with Winter and Summer, 2009.
Solo Museum shows include The Alden B. Dow Museum of Science and Art, Midland,Michigan
and The Fernbank Museum, Atlanta, Georgia. Gottlieb has shown her
work in solo exhibitions both in New York City and Palm Beach, Florida,
and numerous group exhibitions throughout the United States and Greece. |