November 2012
Facing South
by Jerry Siegel
University of Alabama Press
Hardcover, $29.95
For more than 15 years, Jerry Siegel has been photographing Southern artists. Following in the footsteps of his namesake uncle, Jerry Siegel who was one of the earliest collectors and promoters of Southern artists–the younger Siegel continually traces regional Southern artistic talent back to its creators, whom he captures in portraits as emotionally affecting as they are visually striking.
Facing South: Portraits of Southern Artists reproduces, in both black-and-white and color, 100 of these portraits of the artists that Siegel has worked with: potters, sculptors, and photographers. Facing South also includes two essays, one on the nature of photographic portraiture by Julian Cox, and one on the regional countenance reflected in Siegel’s portraits by Dennis Harper. Brief biographies of the 100 subjects are also included.
Facing South is a co-publication of The University of Alabama Press and the Jule Collins Smith Museum of Fine Art at Auburn University.
Jerry Siegel, a native of Selma, graduated from the Art Institute of Atlanta. After 29 years as a much sought-after commercial photographer in Atlanta, Siegel relocated to Birmingham, where he continues to shoot for commercial clients while also pursuing fine arts photography. Jerry captures the unique cultural landscape of the South, focusing on the Black Belt region as well as his ongoing series of portraits of Southern artists.
His work has been shown in solo exhibitions at the Ogden Museum of Southern Art in New Orleans, the Museum of Contemporary Art of Georgia in Atlanta, the Wiregrass Museum of Art in Dothan, and the Montgomery Museum of Fine Art. A commissioned body of work for the Columbus Museum in Columbus, Georgia, was featured in the 2009 solo exhibition Now and Then, Snapshots of the South.
Julian Cox is chief curator of the de Young Museum, San Francisco, and has formerly served as curator of photography at the High Museum of Art in Atlanta.
Dennis Harper is the curator of the Jule Collins Smith Museum of Fine Art at Auburn University.
Marilyn Laufer, Ph.D., is director of the Jule Collins Smith Museum of Fine Art at Auburn University and coauthor of Myths and Metaphors: The Art of Leo Twiggs.
Jerry Atnip
Jerry Atnip has a 38-year career as a commercial and fine art photographer. His images have been published in 40 countries, and since 2003, he’s held over 75 exhibitions and been presented with over 90 awards. He is also a teacher, workshop director, curator, juror, frequent lecturer and serves on the boards of several Arts &
Photography organizations, including Atlanta Celebrates Photography festival and Slow Exposures Photofestival. His work has been collected by museums, corporate and private collectors and he is an Exhibiting Member of The National Arts Club in New York.