Traditions Highway

Traditions Highway

1512 Bolton St Baltimore, MD 21217, USA Saturday, February 12, 2022–Friday, April 8, 2022

This exhibition consists of 16 photographs made between 2015-2021, a group of collected vernacular landscape paintings, and a text piece created by Rozovsky in 2021 while driving on Route 15, a Georgia state road known as Traditions Highway.

untitled (traditions highway) by irina rozovsky

Irina Rozovsky

Untitled (Traditions Highway), 2018

Price on Request

untitled (traditions highway) by irina rozovsky

Irina Rozovsky

Untitled (Traditions Highway), 2018

Price on Request

untitled (traditions highway) by irina rozovsky

Irina Rozovsky

Untitled (Traditions Highway), 2018

Price on Request

CPM is pleased to announce an exhibition of new works by Irina Rozovsky entitled Traditions Highway. This is the artist’s first solo show with the gallery.

This exhibition consists of 16 photographs made between 2015-2021, a group of collected vernacular landscape paintings, and a text piece created by Rozovsky in 2021 while driving on Route 15, a Georgia state road known as Traditions Highway. Traditions Highway, stretches from north to south the entire length of Georgia, passing through Sparta and Athens, named after ancient Greek cities that gave birth to the concept of Democracy 2,500 years ago. 

To transplant these names onto the comparatively recent project of American Democracy, and the complex histories of the American South, inevitably draws a line between the origin of our political system and its current local iterations. 

The works in this exhibition are a first person window into our evolving experience of the American promise, and an arena in which the ideal can coexist with everyday individual realities.Rozovsky’s photographs express how layers of past and present coalesce upon people, places, and objects—a discarded heart-shaped horse carriage abandoned in the woods, a hazy junkyard and the reflection in a rear view mirror, or a young girl standing next to a flooded forest, equalize moments of the mundane and the sublime. 

The photographs, printed at various sizes, also depict a tension between the natural and built environment, where the forms inherent to one mode begin to encroach upon the other.  These images will be interspersed with a group of vernacular paintings collected by Rozovsky, depicting romantic rural vistas and picturesque landscapes. Traditions Highway passes through old, forgotten towns. Rozovsky, who lives in Athens, Georgia, drove along this road, annotating any and all signage visible from the road—local political and commercial slogans, church marquees, traffic signs, and the chatter heard on local radio stations. These notes were then compiled as an automatic poem, printed in large scale, and wheatpasted onto the central wall of the gallery—an excerpt reads:do not pass / pass with care / the key to heaven was hung on a nail / promises made promises kept

Bio:Irina Rozovsky (born Russia,1981) makes photographs of people and places, transforming external landscapes into interior states. She has published three monographs: In Plain Air (MACK 2021), Island in my Mind (Verlag Kettler 2015), and One to Nothing (Kehrer Verglag 2011). Her work is in the collections of the Museum of Modern Art, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, High Museum of Art, Philadelphia Museum of Art, and others. Irina lives in Athens, Georgia where she and her husband Mark Steinmetz run the photography space The Humid. She currently teaches in Hartford University’s MFA photography program