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Nancy J. Ori is respected internationally as a freelance industrial photographer
and video producer. She
also enjoys teaching photography classes and workshops each year
throughout the United States. Affiliated for many years with the Ansel Adams Workshop in
California, Ori is also on the faculty of the New Jersey Center for
Visual Arts in Summit, Peters Valley Craftsmen in Layton, Somerset
Art Association in Bedminster and the Watchung Adult School. In 1990, she established The Heritage Photography Workshop,
which she holds each spring in Cape May. And in 1995, she co-founded the New Jersey Photography Forum.
Photographing
in the West Coast tradition of her long-time mentors, Ansel Adams
and Morley Baer, Nancy expresses her own interpretation of the
landscape and architecture. Her
photographs reveal a love of light, shadow and form. They are powerful documentations of the land, expressing its
vulnerability and endurance. “As
I look at my work, I am aware of the major role that Nature plays in
the way I see and make photographs. Nature has a way of peeling away the old to reveal something
new to us. This same
process has become a way of seeing, thinking and documenting for me. I do not want my photographs to show decomposition but
instead vulnerability, not the ravages of time but endurance.”
“Since 1970, I have traveled throughout the world
working on various photographic and video projects which has given
me the opportunity to explore many popular and cherished places with
my cameras. Landscape
and architecture has become a source of inspiration and discovery. In 1978 and 1980, I was fortunate to have the opportunity to
work with Ansel Adams in California and then teach at the Ansel
Adams Workshop on a number of occasions. Through this association, I was exposed to Ansel’s
philosophy on preservation and documentation of the landscape and
learned a special respect and love of the land.”
The work presented here at Seton Hall University by
Nancy Ori was made possible in part by a HEART GRANT (History,
Education and Arts, Reaching Thousands) from the Union County Board
of Chosen Freeholders in 1998.Funding has also been provided by Professional Planning &
Engineering Corporation and the Friends of the Walsh Library
Gallery.
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