Larry Garmezy is one quirky photographer. A retired geologist he’s spent his life as a photographer inspired by nature’s beauty and his unique digital photographic techniques are quite stunning. But what does a photographer do when his muse is taken away? Plunges into uncharted waters. And, in this case his own backyard.
Garmezy normally travels to the springs of the Northern Rocky Mountains for inspiration but during COVID that wasn’t possible. So, while stuck at home, he turned to a source of water a little bit closer - his 50-year-old pool. The patterns formed by the circulation jets function as a stand-in for the natural water surface distortion and ripples he usually photographs.
Garmezy’s show, "Stuck," is a unique, often playful, chronicle of a disrupted life, a deserted downtown, and how stuck we, as individuals, remain as our society ripples and shifts.
Following the opening reception, the exhibit will be on display until March 31.
Larry Garmezy is one quirky photographer. A retired geologist he’s spent his life as a photographer inspired by nature’s beauty and his unique digital photographic techniques are quite stunning. But what does a photographer do when his muse is taken away? Plunges into uncharted waters. And, in this case his own backyard.
Garmezy normally travels to the springs of the Northern Rocky Mountains for inspiration but during COVID that wasn’t possible. So, while stuck at home, he turned to a source of water a little bit closer - his 50-year-old pool. The patterns formed by the circulation jets function as a stand-in for the natural water surface distortion and ripples he usually photographs.
Garmezy’s show, "Stuck," is a unique, often playful, chronicle of a disrupted life, a deserted downtown, and how stuck we, as individuals, remain as our society ripples and shifts.
Following the opening reception, the exhibit will be on display until March 31.
Larry Garmezy is one quirky photographer. A retired geologist he’s spent his life as a photographer inspired by nature’s beauty and his unique digital photographic techniques are quite stunning. But what does a photographer do when his muse is taken away? Plunges into uncharted waters. And, in this case his own backyard.
Garmezy normally travels to the springs of the Northern Rocky Mountains for inspiration but during COVID that wasn’t possible. So, while stuck at home, he turned to a source of water a little bit closer - his 50-year-old pool. The patterns formed by the circulation jets function as a stand-in for the natural water surface distortion and ripples he usually photographs.
Garmezy’s show, "Stuck," is a unique, often playful, chronicle of a disrupted life, a deserted downtown, and how stuck we, as individuals, remain as our society ripples and shifts.
Following the opening reception, the exhibit will be on display until March 31.