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William Karl Valentine

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Lost and Found - The Green Bus Art Space - Santa Monica

August 25, 2025

When I went up to see Alex Turner last weekend, I wasn’t sure where Marshall Gallery was in Bergamont Station, and I wandered into The Green Bus Artspace to ask for directions. It was absolutely appropriate since their current exhibition is Lost and Found. I noticed what was on the walls as I was getting directions and I promised to come back after Alex’s talk, which I did.

I really like Vernacular photography; those types of photographs can be wonderful documents of the past and I respect the power of images to help preserving our memories. With vernacular photographs we often don’t have any more information about the photograph than the image itself, so the viewer has to interpret the photograph for themselves. Most of these photographs can always tell us something about the period and the place but that might be it. People photograph to document their world and preserve things that are important to them, in a photobooth the strip of images might only matter to the people behind the curtain.

When I see vernacular images, I often think back to a lecture Bill Jay gave at Arizona State University when I was there and it highlighted how the value of an image is determined by the viewer. I have mentioned the lesson several times before on this blog and it always has value to revisit it. The last time I shared it was a year ago when my daughter’s best friend died unexpectedly shortly after arriving in Paris to watch her sister-in-law compete in the Olympics. With that mention I wrote about how photographs of her friend were a way for us to hold on to her memory. It is an obvious connection. When I see vernacular photographs the prints are outlasting the memory of the people in the images. These prints were most likely unwanted and were discarded, maybe they were lost in either case the prints could be very much like the people in the photographs.

This exhibition might seem lighthearted and fun at first, I chuckled at some images, but I think there are lots of layers here. I think they absolutely crushed it, if you are near Santa Monica, it is absolutely worth the stop. The presentation and curation of the images is perfect, it absolutely fits their space, and the creative way the images were enlarged and displayed is outstanding. Without the scale and display techniques this exhibition would not have been as good.

Bill Jay Lesson from previous posts:

I know I have told this story more than once, but it’s worth repeating and still is one of the greatest things Bill Jay taught us while I was at Arizona State University. We were in class one day, in Matthews Hall, when Bill put two slides up the screen next to one another (yes back then you looked at prints or slides in class and there were real blackboards). One image was Ansel Adams’s Moonrise Over Hernandez, New Mexico which had just set the record for the most expensive print ever sold (I think it sold for around $40K). In the other projector Bill put up a good snapshot quality photo of a child in an inflatable wading pool. I can’t recall but it may have even been a photograph of one of his daughters, doesn’t matter. So, with both images side by side he asked the class which photograph was more valuable. Lots of my classmates spoke up with reason why it was Adams’s photograph; because of composition, because of the author, and many noted how important the sale was for the medium in general because of the price it sold for. After everyone willing to take the bait had their say, then Bill gave us more information. He said what if this print is the only photograph that this mother has which documents her child at that time in their lives. Maybe all the family albums had been lost in a fire, maybe she had even lost the child, and that simple snapshot was the only visual reminder she had of her child. He then asked us which print would the mother say is more valuable? Would she even consider selling the simple photograph of the child for any price? That simple example was almost forty years ago, and it is still so vivid to me. The viewer sets the value based on their own experiences and tastes.

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Location

Bergamot Station Arts Center
2525 Michigan Ave, E2
Santa Monica, CA 90404

Hours

Tuesday and Wednesday, 10:30am — 2:30pm

Saturday, 10am — 6pm

And by appointment.

In Photography, Photography Collector, Photography Exhibitions, Galleries Tags Vernacular Photography, Documentary Photography, Photography, Bill Jay, Alex Turner, Bergamot Station Arts Center
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Alex Turner and me at Marshall Gallery.

Alex Turner - Marshall Gallery - Santa Monica

August 23, 2025

On August 16th I was able to get up to the Marshall Gallery at Bergamont Station, in Santa Monica, to hear Alex Turner talk about his current exhibition Blind Forest which closes today. Heidi Volpe (Director of Photography, Patagonia) hosted the discussion whoch also included Kaya & Blank, video artists who also have a video installation up at Marshall. This is Alex’s second solo exhibition at Marshall, having previously exhibited his Blind River portfolio there in 2023.

Alex Turner (born 1984 in Chicago) is currently a Los Angeles based photographer who received his MFA from the University of Arizona in 2020. I met him in January of 2020 at the Center for Creative Photography’s Legacy of LIGHT Symposium and have followed his career since then.

With Blind Forest, Alex used a hunting scope with a built in infrared camera to capture thermal images of the forest around him. Most every photograph in this was a montage of 150 small image files stitched together digitally to create one larger image file. Those image files are sent to his printer who uses a special digital enlarger that projects a negative image of the file on to Silver Gelatin paper that is then processed in a traditional manner. When he explained the process I had to admit to him that I had never heard of it before. Alex explained how he had been dissatisfied with his early prints on digital paper so he found this other alternative. The prints are beautiful, his decision was correct. With a Google search I found several different companies who provide this service including this one that stood out to me. The Blind Forest images are impressive, and I especially like how the thermal imaging captured artifacts in the trees that Alex could not see with his naked eye; like the carvings in a tree which had apparently healed but the scarred area gave off different heat signatures.

I loved some of Alex’s Bling River photographs when I discovered his work, but I also remember wondering where he would be able to go from there, he has definitely answered that question. I love our medium of photography and how inclusive it can be to so many different lens-based artists. I encourage you to also follow Alex Turner’s career. I have linked several outstanding articles below the gallery of images in this post.


Marshall Gallery is located in Bergamont Station at 2525 Michigan Avenure, #A6, Santa Monica, California and is open from 12pm to 7pm Tuesday - Saturday. It is a great space and Bergamont Station is my favorite gallery community in Southern California, I can always find an interesting exhibition there.

Alex Turner’s Exhibition Statement:

BLIND FOREST My work navigates the intersections of ecology, technology, and human experience, and Blind Forest embodies this approach through an extended study of trees as both ecological keystones and mirrors of human intent. Set across the diverse landscapes of California, the project uses thermal imaging—a tool of surveillance, fire detection, and tree health assessment—to reveal what lies beyond the visible: the conservation, transmission, and dispersion of heat through living systems. Created in collaboration with ecologists, natural historians, and cultural anthropologists, Blind Forest reflects a cross-disciplinary inquiry into how natural systems absorb, reflect, and archive cultural and natural histories. Using a thermal hunting scope mounted on a panoramic tripod head, I construct largescale images from hundreds of exposures, mapping thermodynamic activity in precise detail. In doing so, I treat heat not just as data, but as narrative—a record of vitality, decay, stress, and transition. Trees are long-living witnesses to environmental and human histories, and they carry evidence of shifting climates, displaced communities, and evolving systems of power in their bark, roots, and canopies,. From junipers and pinyon pines valued by Indigenous communities, to redwoods logged for empire and citrus groves that once symbolized prosperity, the species featured in Blind Forest trace overlapping tensions—extraction and preservation, survival and erasure, change and continuity. Blind Forest questions what it means to see—and what is made visible or concealed through the tools we use to understand the world. Thermal imaging extends human perception but also implicates us in systems of control. By turning this apparatus toward the forest, I aim to collapse the distance between scientific observation and poetic witnessing, rendering the unseen visible and inviting viewers to reconsider their relationship to place, memory, and environmental urgency. Ultimately, Blind Forest asks how we document and understand the slow, often invisible forces that shape our surroundings. It positions trees not as passive scenery, but as active participants—living archives that conserve, transmit, and disperse meaning across generations. In a moment of ecological precarity, Blind Forest prompts reflection on the fragile systems we inherit, inhabit, and either sustain or destroy.

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Additional information about Alex Turner :

Musee Magazine 2025 article on Blind Forest - This is an outstanding interview!

Lenscratch 2025 article on Blind Forest

Lenscratch 2020 article on Blind River

 
In Artist, Photographer, Photography, Photography Exhibitions Tags Heidi Volpe, Pantagonia, Douglas Marshall, Marshall Gallery, Alex Turner, Bergamot Station Arts Center, Kaya & Bank, Thermodynamics, Lenscratch
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Arizona State University MFA candidate Julia C. Martin and William Karl Valentine at the LIGHT symposium

Julia C. Martin & Alex Turner - Two MFA Candidates you should get to know

February 9, 2020

One of the best experiences I had with attending the Legacies of Light Symposium was getting to know two MFA candidates who I am confident will have impactful photography carriers.

I’ll start with Julia C Martin who is studying at Arizona State University. We had a couple long talks during the weekend and I was very impressed. She already has solid insight in to world of fine art photography and I could definitely see her doing big things in a curatorial role one day. She has positioned herself perfectly for something like that already having worked for the Santa Fe Photographic Workshops and Aperture. She has also interned with Mary Virginia Swanson and has a good relationship with her. But Julia is also a photographer and makes some pretty powerful images. Julia’s work right now deals with the themes of death, mortality, and femininity. She primarily photographs using film and oftentimes prints her images using alternative processes to captured the feelings she is dealing with. She could impact the photography world in a number of different ways. I learned a lot from talking with her, Julia’s insight has value and she communicates her ideas so well.

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View fullsize Mark Klett with Alex Turner

I only had a chance to speak briefly with Alex Turner but I think that was mostly because so many other people were trying to speak with him. Alex is studying at the University of Arizona and was just awarded one of the 2020 Society for Photographic Education’s Student Awards for Innovations in Imaging. He will also be presenting his Blind River project at SPE Houston this spring. From what I have seen of his work he is a strong image maker who is starting to make an impact.

In Photography, Museums Tags @alex_turner_art, Alex Turner, Julia C. Martin, William Karl Valentine, The Center for Creative Photography, The Legacies of Light, #light2020, #qualitiesoflight, Arizona, The University of Arizona, Arizona State University, Mark Klett, Mary Virginia Swanson, SPE Houston, Society for Photographic Education, Aperture, Santa Fe Workshops
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