In 2013, the Renaissance Society presented the first museum solo exhibition by Chicago-based artist John Neff. The exhibition included a new body of photographs made from digital cameras Neff built by outfitting desktop scanners with bellows and lenses taken from antique cameras. Made without shutters or viewfinders, the cameras captured images using a slow-moving linear scanning array, rather than a full-field sensor. Over the course of 18 months, Neff used the scanner cameras to photograph his immediate environment, his long-exposure photographic process resulting in mysterious and tonally rich images that have the look and feel of earlier moments in the medium’s history.
18" x 24", double-sided
unfolded, shipped rolled
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