Thursday, October 24, 2013

BEACON JOURNAL 10.24.13

                     Doomed Tree, Churchill Street, Beacon, New York  © Ronnie Farley

Sunday, September 29, 2013

BEACON JOURNAL 09.29.13

                   Toshi's tree, University Settlement Camp, Beacon, New York  © Ronnie Farley                           

Friday, August 16, 2013

CITY DIARY 08.14.13

Shaft of light, East 4th Street, New York City © Ronnie Farley
                               

Sunday, June 9, 2013

06.09.13




Ronnie Farley's New York Water Towers exhibit at Hudson Beach Glass Gallery, 162 Main Street, Beacon, New York until July 28. The show consists of photographs, paintings and a partially constructed  water tank from Isseks Brothers in Manhattan with sounds of the city emitting from within.

Friday, June 7, 2013

06.07.13


New York Water Towers

June 7, 2013
Solo art exhibition by Ronnie Farley at Hudson Beach Glass Gallery
By Sommer Hixson for the Phillipstown Paper
Their silhouettes along the skyline are as iconic as the Statue of Liberty or the Empire State Building and, to certain aesthetes, no less romantic. Ronnie Farley, a photographer living in Beacon, has had an ongoing love affair with New York City’s water towers since she first moved there in 1982, and has chronicled them ever since.
Beginning Saturday, June 8, the culmination of Farley’s work will be on display in a solo exhibition at Hudson Beach Glass Gallery. The show includes several of her oversized digital black-and-white and color photographs alongside smaller, gelatin silver prints and a grid of 55 small paintings. A soundscape of the city from recordings Farley made inside a tank in Brooklyn will emanate from an actual wooden tank that has been partially reconstructed and installed in the second-floor gallery.
colorsilhouetteWater towers in New York City first came into use in the 1890s in response to new regulations by the Department of Health for the installation of “modern” plumbing. As urban housing proliferated (elevators were invented around the same time), tanks on the rooftops introduced a solution for getting water to people at higher levels, using gravity to provide water pressure. Today, almost every building in the city that uses water and has more than six floors has a water tower.
Abraham Isseks, a barrel maker originally from Bialystok, invented the modern-day water tank in the 1890s and started a business in New York City with his older brother, David. After Abraham died in a factory accident in 1896, his wife took over the business and David left to start his own company. About 70 years later, the Isseks reunited. Today, Isseks Brothers, Rosenwach Group (started by the Isseks’ foreman, Harris Rosenwach) and American Pipe & Tank carry on the tradition.
Farley considers water tanks a universal symbol of the utility of one of our greatest natural resources. “Artistically I think they’re beautiful, but what really piqued my interest in water was the photography work that I had been doing across the country, with Native Americans and ranchers,” she said. “Water is a huge issue for them. Traditionally, for native communities, it is a sacred element. Coming back to New York from these trips I would connect the dots, realizing just how fragile urban existence really is. In a city teeming with human life and activity, these tanks are the umbilical cord to our survival.”
Texts from her interviews with Native American women about water will be projected on the exterior of the tank in the gallery.
“For most of us, there’s no consciousness that water is the very essence of our life,” she continued. “Our consumption of technology parallels our consumption of water. The faster our technology increases, the faster we’re destroying the earth. I’m trying to make that connection in a very broad way with my work.”
A water tower in New York’s Chelsea neighborhood made headlines in May when artists ran an illegal nightclub, the Night Heron, inside a tank on top of a vacant building.
“What a brilliant idea!” Farley said. “Most New Yorkers have a warm and fuzzy feeling toward them, especially once they understand their function.” But it’s also a dangerous prospect; “tank men,” those who are responsible for building, tearing down and repairing the tanks, are often exposed to extreme weather and flying debris from nearby construction. “They are the city’s unsung heroes. Without them, there would be no city,” she said.
WTcoverRonnie Farley’s photographs have been published in Rolling StoneUSA Today,The Village VoiceNew York Daily News,Sierra Magazine, Native Peoples and The Sunday Times of London. Her work has been exhibited throughout the U.S. and is in the permanent collections of the Museum of the City of New York, The Museum of the American Indian in New York City, the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum in Cleveland, The Nicolaysen Museum in Casper, Wyo., the National Cowgirl Museum and Hall of Fame in Fort Worth Texas and the Kultur Bodensee, in Salem, Germany.
There are two books of Farley’s photographs, Women of the Native Struggle: Portraits & Testimony of Native American Women (Crown) and Cowgirls: Contemporary Portraits of the American West, (Crown; reprinted by Thunder’s Mouth Press) and she is working on a third, New York Water Towers. She writes a blog at newyorkwatertowers.wordpress.com.
Hudson Beach Glass, 162 Main St. in Beacon, will hold an opening reception Saturday, June 8, from 6 to 9 p.m. The exhibition will be on view through Sunday, July 28. For more information, visit hudsonbeachglass.com or contact the gallery at 845-440-0068.
Photos by Ronnie Farley

06.08.13



Clockwise: New York Water Towers project engineer Zenote Sompantle secures braces for the water tank installation of Ronnie Farley's show at Hudson Beach Glass gallery in Beacon, New York; Zenote begins hanging the show; Ronnie puts final touches on paintings for Urban Water Altar / H2O piece.

Monday, April 15, 2013

BEACON JOURNAL 04.15.13



Dinner with photographer Patricia Lay-Dorsey, the most inspiring and spirited person I have had the honor of meeting and knowing. Her work Falling Into Place: A Self Portrait is currently on exhibit at Fovea in Beacon, New York, until July 7th. To see her work: http://www.patricialaydorsey.com

Monday, April 8, 2013

Tuesday, March 26, 2013

CITY DIARY 3.26.13

 New York Water Towers show is currently at The Joint at 471 Myrtle, in Brooklyn until the end of April. This work is part of an upcoming book which chronicles 25 years of  New York's  beautiful wooden tanks. © Ronnie Farley

Sunday, March 24, 2013

CITY DIARY 3.24.13



                    Sunset on water tower, New York City, 2007 © Ronnie Farley

It was "World Water Day" two days ago and a large symposium was held at the United Nations to commemorate this day--and address the daunting issues that face the world regarding water.  Was there a spot of news about any of this in our mainstream media? There was a billboard at Times Square that had an animation about water that would flash a few of times an hour (according to a New York Times blog called "Green"). The Times also had a "Picture of the Day"--a girl from India with water dripping from a spigot. That was it. I guess at least there was some kind of nod towards the issue. But folks, this is our life's blood, the Earth's blood! Shouldn't there be more concern over this in our mainstream media?

The arm of the global energy interests reaches far into our mainstream media outlets—whether they are owners, investors, board members, or major advertisers.
Almost half, that is HALF of the water consumed in this country is used for 'thermoelectric power generation.' Simply put, that is the production of electricity through steam driven turbine generators—burning fossil fuels like coal, natural gas, or petroleum to create steam, which propels the turbines that create electricity. Then, the machinery used to produce the electricity needs to be cooled down—hence using more water, then that water gets too hot and needs to be stored to cool off, before being drained into a lake, a river, the ocean, or some kind of holding pool or drainage system (Nukes is not the alternative because they use even more copius amounts of water—especially to cool the rods, and nukes also create waste from spent uranium, which also needs to be cooled, often by immersion in water).
In addition to the use of water in the creation of electricity, there is an enormous amount of water used in the extraction, processing and transport of these natural resources to the power plants, usually contaminating the local water source with toxic by-products of the mining operation. Oftentimes the communities with power plants in their back yard are Indian reservations or low-income areas, who suffer high cancer rates as a result of the toxins in the water they drink
Water is our most precious resource and yet we have created machines that are sucking our life blood out of the Earth, and in turn, killing us. All for the profit of a few, under the guise of "making life easier." We've created a social, economic, and political system completely dependent upon electricity and at the same time, we are writing ourselves onto the endangered species list. As we dive headlong into our technological future, it is my hope that the generations to come will address this madness and embrace a way of thinking that works with the laws of Nature rather than against her, and create technologies that advance us forward towards life-sustaining ways. The responsibility of technology is  'Kapieren und Kopiernen'—first understand Nature, then copy it. If we continue to think we will harness and bend Nature to our will, we are further coercing her destructive powers to save herself from our hubris.



Tuesday, February 19, 2013

Wednesday, February 6, 2013

02.04.13


Cara Lee Sperry hangs  my New York Water Towers show at Superfine, at 126 Front Street between Adams & Jay Street in the DUMBO neighborhood of Brooklyn. The opening is Thursday Feb. 7th from 6-9pm during the DUMBO Art Walk. This show includes 21 color and black & white photographs and 25 small oil paintings.  The New York Water Tower book and exhibit project is sponsored in part by a generous grant from the Ford Foundation.