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21st Annual Appalachian Mountain Photography Competition

Feb 2 - Jun 1

Jax Gaglianese-Woody, Not a Sea Anemone

Exhibition Statement

Roots. Ground. Water. Seed.

Appalachia. A region. An idea. An imaginative and geopolitical landscape with real land(s) and real people(s)–those living, those who have passed on, and those to come. These mountains, valleys and streams, hollers and cities, dirt roads and railroad tracks texture our lives and craft our many histories. They build a felt sense of place. 

My story (a snippet): I grew up not in the mountains, but always going to them–a ritual homecoming as we gathered each month with my Daddy’s family in the Swannanoa Valley. As Daddy and all but one of his siblings have transitioned to the ancestral realm, I often lay my eyes on these hills and valleys (IRL and in my dreamworld) to center myself and to return home to them…to me.

The stories reflected in these photographs reveal the specificity of you/me/him/her/they as well as the common and collective (the we/us). Whether embodied by grandma’s hands, animals grazing, raindrops resting on leaves, banjos fixin’ to be played, painted church windows, rebel flags or carrots pulled fresh from earth, they call us to question. To dream. To remember. To muse.  Who’s at the center of these lands? Who’s at the center of this story? What is the story, here? What is this place? And what if there’s not one story–there isn’t y’all–but a multiplicity of narratives that bob and weave, overlap, criss-cross and diverge?

“Roots, Ground, Water, Seeds” is an effort to amplify visual artists whose photography considers our many and intertwining ancestral roots; our connection and relationship to the land, the ground we walk on, the lives these lands have supported and the way Appalachian earth demands and yearns for our conscious care. Here, you dip into the waterways and communities that sustain and repair us and witness the seeds that birth new life/futures, rejuvenate our soil and spirits, and spark necessary political change. Here in this place, you/we/I bear witness to a personal and collective archive. Come in. Listen. See.

  • E. Gale Greenlee

 

AND THE WINNERS ARE…

Best Single Image

Cinda Holsomback-Ebner, “Slugs in Love

Best Series

Federica Georgia, “Ann’s Root Cellar is her Lifeblood.”

Best in Show

Mark Mahoney, “Appalachian Farm-Gray, Tennessee

People’s Choice

Katie Richard, “Oil and Water

Juror: E. Gale Greenlee, Ph.D.

Gale Greenlee, Ph.D. (she/her/hers) is a writer-educator, an independent children’s literature and Black Girlhood Studies scholar, and a recent teacher-scholar in residence at the bell hooks center at Berea College. Born in Greensboro, NC, she is the granddaughter of farmers from rural South Carolina and a descendent of five generations of Affrilachians who called Western North Carolina home. Broadly interested in pop culture, Black Appalachian literature, memory work and Black feminist legacy keeping, Gale is a longtime arts advocate whose childhood dream was to travel across the U.S. in an RV selling her art. Her public humanities work focuses on curating literary and cultural programs for community spaces, and she is committed to creating ethical collaborations and weaving art in her world. From teaching courses such as “Women of Color: Art, Justice and Joy” at The Ohio State University, organizing artist talks, co-curating a permanent installation at the bell hooks center, to writing about Black craft as a Center for Craft Archival Research Fellow, Gale works to amplify the artistic traditions of historically marginalized communities.

Exhibition Finalists

Christopher Burton

Heather Cormons

Jax Gaglianese-Woody

Frederica Georgia

Carrie Hanrahan

Caleb Hayes

Tucker Hibbitts

Ben Hill

Cary Hitchcock

Cinda Holsombach-Ebner

Lauren Kern

Michael Snyder

Evan Bates

 

Ann Kunz

Mark Mahoney

Tyler McRae

Sophie Mead

David O’Daniel

Robert Parker

Becky Price

Katie Richard

Kelsey Riso

Robert Seevers

Mitzi Simmons

Matt Ballain

Ken Barrett

 

 

About AMPC

Following last year’s 20th Anniversary Celebration for the Appalachian Mountain Photography Competition (AMPC), the Turchin Center for the Visual Arts is pleased to host this year’s 21st Appalachian Mountain Photography Competition exhibition. 

Inspired by the Banff Centre’s Mountain Photo Competition(https://www.banffcentre.ca/mountain-photo-essay-competition), this year’s AMPC features three series finalists alongside 23 single-image finalists. Highlighting the AMPC’s vision to support the expansion of Appalachian narratives, artists submitted work aligned with this year’s theme of “Roots, Ground, Water, Seeds” chosen by juror Dr. E. Gale Greenlee. 

Please visit the gallery in person to cast your vote for the People’s Choice Award! 

 BANFF Weekend – March 21-23, 2024

AMPC Panel Discussion, Portfolio Walkthrough, & Awards Reception – March 23, 2024

 

2023-2024 CALENDAR

Online Submission System Opens September 22, 2023
Deadline for Entries November 18, 2023 @ 5 PM EST
Notifications Emailed December 8, 2023
Artwork Delivery Dates January 17-20, 2024
Exhibition Dates February 2 – June 1, 2024
BANFF Weekend March 21-23, 2024
AMPC Portfolio Reviews, Panel Discussion, & Awards Reception March 23, 2024

THANK YOU TO OUR SPONSORS!

Connections Document

About the Turchin Center for the Visual Arts

The Turchin Center for the Visual Arts, named for university benefactors Robert and Lillian Turchin, fulfills Appalachian State University’s long-held mission of providing a home for world-class visual arts programming. The largest facility of its kind in the region, the center presents exhibition, education, and collection programs that support the university’s role as a key educational, cultural, and service resource. The center presents multi-dimensional exhibits and programs and is a dynamic presence in the community, creating opportunities for people of all ages and backgrounds to experience the power and excitement of the visual arts. Its six galleries host changing exhibitions featuring local, regional, national, and international artists. 

The Turchin Center is located at 423 West King Street in Boone. Hours are 10 a.m. – 6 p.m., Tues. – Thurs. and Saturday, and noon – 8 p.m., on Friday. The Center is closed Sunday and Monday and observes all university holidays. Admission is always free, although donations are gratefully accepted. For general inquiries, to be added to the mailing or e-news list, to obtain donor program details or to schedule a tour, call 828-262-3017, e-mail turchincenter@appstate.edu or visit tcva.org. Follow the Turchin on Facebook and Instagram @TurchinCenter.

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