Perdido

Michael P. Berman

August 28 - October 2, 2021

A selection of works from the exhibition is included. Contact us for a full pricelist.

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Photographer and Guggenheim Fellow Michael P. Berman presents his first solo exhibition with Galleri Urbane since 2014.

The show borrows its name from and follows the release of the artist’s most recent published book Perdido: Sierra San Luis (Museum of New Mexico Press, 2019). In his book, Berman traverses by foot the San Luis mountain range that cuts through the boot heel of New Mexico and south into the Mexican states of Chihuahua and Sonora. This journey, in addition to subsequent trips along the Texas-Mexico border, is captured through photographs in the exhibition. As does his book, this body of work captures the borderland’s beautiful and rugged landscape and provides a poetic opportunity to recognize its ecological significance.


Sierra Del Carmen, Rio Grande, 2021
$0.00

Carbon pigment print on hahnemuhle paper (Framed)

33.25 x 47.50 in. / Framed: 36.50 x 50.50 in.

Edition 3/5

Hayes Ridge, Sunset, 2021
$0.00

Carbon pigment print on hahnemuhle paper (Framed)

33.25 x 47.5 in. / Framed: 36.5 x 50.5 in.

Edition 2/7


 

In his foreward to Berman’s book, climate activist Tim DeChristopher presses that the individualist spirit which pits mankind against everything and everyone else has tragically disconnected humans from nature’s web of interdependence. 

The suburbs, cities and borders we erect protect our illusion of control, while the untamed mountains, swift rivers and vast desserts beyond them remind us of our fragile mortality. Answering DeChristopher’s call for a return to the wilderness, Berman rejects the safety of built civilization in favor of the barren borderlands. Traveling for days and weeks at a time on land occupied by ranchers, wildlife and narcos, Berman captures instances that gift us reminders of our small and delicate nature. Some of his images do this through capturing the oft-futile attempts by humans to dictate nature’s course, while others offer panoramic vistas that unlock a sublime reading of the natural world. Through Berman’s lens, our vulnerability becomes something to treasure and serves as a catalyst for understanding our collective responsibility of protecting the land.

 

Saguaro Duo #1, 2021
$0.00

Carbon pigment print on aluminum

18 x 12 in.

Unique work

Saguaro Duo #7, 2021
$0.00

Carbon pigment print on aluminum

18 x 12 in.

Unique work

 

Watch:

View a video tour of the exhibition


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The first day my mind is like a jumping bean
on a hot pan
What I am going to do...what I am going to see.
What I...What I.
In a few days I settle down
into a routine
get up hours before sunrise
walk...
and photograph until dark.
In a week I am lonely.
I wish I had someone to talk with.
In two weeks
I talk with myself
In three weeks
I see things
differently.
— Michael P. Berman

Nugent, Big Bend National Park, 2020
$0.00

Carbon pigment print on Hahnemühle paper (framed)

20 x 24 in. / Framed: 22.75 x 27 in.

Edition 1/12

Ococtillo, 2020
$0.00

Carbon pigment print on Hahnemühle paper (framed)

20 x 24 in. / Framed: 22.75 x 27 in.

Edition 1/12


Exhibition Install Images:


 

Berman’s mastery of the photographic medium is on display through the range of formats found in the exhibition. An adept eye for the craft of printing is found in framed photographs on Hahnemühle rag paper, like Hayes Ridge, Sunset (2021) which captures the sun peering through an atmospheric gradient of dense snow storm clouds. The coveted plate composite works make a return: a single image is fragmented and mounted across multiple hand-cut and painted aluminum plates. Panoramic views are made all the more monumental, like an image of a colossal cloud formation above the Chisos mountains range in Cloud, Big Bend (2021). On view for the first time are a series of single plates with composite images of saguaros found in treks across the Sonoran Desert, condensing the towering cacti into intimate images. Lastly, Berman’s newly developed Sierra San Luis Grids, printed on delicate, Japanese Kozo paper, offer a matrix of dissected images that interrupt one’s reading of each scene. These require viewers to slow down and spend time with the visual information they are being presented, not unlike what is required of Berman when out on the land.

 

Cloud Big Bend, 2021
$0.00

Carbon pigment print on aluminum plates

Price upon request

61 x 114 in.

 

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Saguaro Duo #3, 2021
$0.00

Carbon pigment print on aluminum

18 x 12 in.

Unique work

Saguaro Duo #12, 2021
$0.00

Carbon pigment print on aluminum

18 x 12 in.

Unique work


Setting out hours before the sun rises and photographing until dark, Berman captures his images like only one who truly spends time on the ground can. In doing so, he brings an awareness of the complexity of biological worlds like the border, heightening one’s perception of the land.


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Michael P. Berman (b. 1956, NYC) wanders the terrain of the American West and Mexico Norteño, and more recently, the extensive grasslands of Mongolia. He was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship in 2008 to photograph the remnant grasslands of the Chihuahuan Desert. His photographs are included in the collections of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Amon Carter Museum and the Museum of New Mexico. In 2013, he received the Governor’s Award for Excellence in the Arts in New Mexico and has also been a recipient of Painting Fellowships from the Arizona Commission on the Arts and the Wurlitzer Foundation. His installations, photographs, and paintings have been reviewed in Art in America, and exhibited throughout the country. He has received grant support for his photographic and environmental work from the McCune and Lannan Foundation. Berman’s work has been published in several books including Gila: Radical VisionsThe Enduring Silence and the first and third books of a border trilogy with writer Charles Bowden, Inferno and Trinity; and Perdido: Sierra San Luis.