Robert Tat Gallery presents a group exhibition featuring collectors’ favorite photographs by five of the Gallery’s artists: Alyson Belcher - from her Pinhole Self Portrait series; William Heick - selections from the recently deceased photographer's large body of work; Rebecca Martinez - from her Wounded series and earlier work; Gerald Ratto - from his Children of the Fillmore series and other early 1950s San Francisco; Margaretta Mitchell - from the female nudes series.

Alyson Belcher is a San Francisco artists and teacher. She describes her pinhole self-portraits as "an exploration of the nature of each movement and where it originates internally". The long exposures required in pinhole photography allow the subject time to fully experience each moment and explore the space through slow movement, and enables something to arise that might never be revealed by modern photographic technology. Pinhole cameras have no lens to interfere with the light as it travels from the subject to the film, thus creating a direct process of image-making.

William Heick was a San Francisco Bay Area photographer who studied with Minor White and Ansel Adams at the California School of Fine Arts (now the San Francisco Art Institute). He has been associated with many of the great California photographers of the 20th century, including Edward Weston and Dorothea Lange and Imogen Cunningham, lifelong friends both of whom he regards as primary influences on his photographic work. Sadly, he passed away last year at the age of 96.

In a published "Art Scene" review Monterey art critic Rick Deregon wrote: "The special qualities of W.R. Heicks's images come from the simple relationship between the photographer and subject. With no agenda other than to capture the decisive inspirational moment and to illustrate the human parade Mr. Heick's work transcends straight journalism and aspires to an art of nobility and compassion."

Rebecca Martinez as a background in painting and graphic design, which is evident in much of her work. Although she photographs many subjects, the majority of her oeuvre explores and examines artificial worlds and the entities that represent us.

Rebecca writes of her Wounded series, which features damaged, antique mannequins: “Everything in the physical world, both animate and inanimate, is challenged and effected by time. The quest for perfection is a continual battle against the forces of aging and injury, and maintenance of beauty requires increasing artifice. These generic beauty icons are empty vessels, and achieve individuality and their own unique character only after they become marked by usage and decay. This damage is a reminder of our own mortality. Just as the humans they represent, these inanimate objects do not escape the ravages of time. Damage of these facsimiles of ourselves is a memento of the transitory nature of perceived physical perfection and a reflection of the human experience.”

Margaretta Mitchell is a nationally-known artist and professional photographer, author, and educator based in the San Francisco Bay Area. Of her work she writes: “The role of art is to awaken the senses, to find an inner truth by connecting with others across the centuries and with the natural world. As artists we become part of the continuum of those who seek to express the simple joy of being alive. By observation of, say, a flower, or a naked body, or the head of a small child, we make a connection that teaches us about the meaning of life, of love, of the highest part of our psyches. Most people see only the outer form, but the meditation on that form through a discipline such as photography reveals messages from another realm. My work is essentially a meditation on that connection.”

Gerald Ratto studied with Minor White and Ansel Adams at the California School of Fine Arts (now the San Francisco Art Institute), where visiting teachers included Ansel Adams, Imogen Cunningham and Edward Weston. Even before he received his degree, Ratto exhibited alongside his teachers in a juried San Francisco Museum of Art show, “Perceptions.”

Ratto comments on his Children of the Fillmore series, made in the early 1950s: “The people were wonderful. People didn't have attitudes then. [They] believed me when I said my only motive was to take pictures. That's why the pictures are so good. People were just themselves, and we were having a good time together.”

When Black & White Magazine honored Ratto’s Children of the Fillmore portfolio with a Spotlight Award and article in 2008, they observed: “With a career of more than five decades as a commercial and fine art photographer, Gerald Ratto could rightly be called one of the true legends of the San Francisco Bay-Area photography scene.”

Robert Tat Gallery
49 Geary Street, Suite 410
San Francisco (CA) 94108 United States
Tel. +1 (415) 7811122
info@roberttat.com
www.roberttat.com

Opening hours
Tuesday - Saturday
From 11:00am to 5:30pm