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Brigitte Carnochan - Imagining Then: A Family Story, 1941-47
May 12, 2012 through June 23, 2012
CPA Gallery Sponsor: Betty and Jim Kasson
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Why Remember?.© Brigitte Carnochan. All rights reserved.
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Immer Der Gleich. © Brigitte Carnochan. All rights reserved.
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Love of His Life. © Brigitte Carnochan. All rights reserved.
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Born in a Dangerous Time. © Brigitte Carnochan. All rights reserved.
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The Day I Brought You Home. © Brigitte Carnochan. All rights reserved.
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Explain Some Other Time. © Brigitte Carnochan. All rights reserved.
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Casualties of War. © Brigitte Carnochan. All rights reserved.
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War's Long Shadow. © Brigitte Carnochan. All rights reserved.
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Three Years, Mostly in the West. © Brigitte Carnochan. All rights reserved.
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Pensée. © Brigitte Carnochan. All rights reserved.
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He Asked What I'd Been Told. © Brigitte Carnochan. All rights reserved.
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All Is Going Well. © Brigitte Carnochan. All rights reserved.
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No Shelter. © Brigitte Carnochan. All rights reserved.
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Drive to the Rhine. © Brigitte Carnochan. All rights reserved.
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Beyond the Last Thought. © Brigitte Carnochan. All rights reserved.
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The Scar Remains. © Brigitte Carnochan. All rights reserved.
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How We First Met. © Brigitte Carnochan. All rights reserved.
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What We Keep. © Brigitte Carnochan. All rights reserved.
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Moved, Address Unknown. © Brigitte Carnochan. All rights reserved.
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My Life Before. © Brigitte Carnochan. All rights reserved.
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Wishful Thinking. © Brigitte Carnochan. All rights reserved.
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Didn't Know the Language-Sorgerecht. © Brigitte Carnochan. All rights reserved.
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Keep Them in Your Heart. © Brigitte Carnochan. All rights reserved.
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Official Rations. © Brigitte Carnochan. All rights reserved.
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Knight. © Brigitte Carnochan. All rights reserved.
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Please Try to Understand. © Brigitte Carnochan. All rights reserved.
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Knowing What She'd Seen. © Brigitte Carnochan. All rights reserved.
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To Hate the Enemy. © Brigitte Carnochan. All rights reserved.
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Ashes for Dreams. © Brigitte Carnochan. All rights reserved.
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Everything Altered. © Brigitte Carnochan. All rights reserved.
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Remembered Steps. © Brigitte Carnochan. All rights reserved.
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Warbride's Daughter. © Brigitte Carnochan. All rights reserved.
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Like a Dream. © Brigitte Carnochan. All rights reserved.
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Between One Life and Another. © Brigitte Carnochan. All rights reserved.
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Meet You At Pier. © Brigitte Carnochan. All rights reserved.
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The New World. © Brigitte Carnochan. All rights reserved.
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Time Like a River. © Brigitte Carnochan. All rights reserved.
Brigitte Carnochan's CPA lecture is now available with the accompanying images from her exhibition.
Watch the video.
Old photographs tease out fragments of memory—a laugh, a sigh, a conversation the camera interrupts and then suspends across time. Looking at photographs and documents that came to me after my parents died, I’m struck not
only by how much I’ve forgotten but also how easily and quickly the past rushes back when called.
Sometimes forgetting is simply being afraid to remember. I was born in Worms, Germany in 1941 and reunited in 1976 with my German father, who had disappeared from my life when I was eighteen months old. I knew he had been a German soldier and that he and my mother had divorced after the war so she could marry my American stepfather, a man I quickly grew to love as my father. But I knew very little about my German father. My other never spoke of him, and I was afraid—given the possibilities—to ask.
Like a New Year’s gift, in January 1976, his letter arrived and took me completely by surprise. I had no memory of him whatsoever—no image in my head to put with the bold blue script on the paper. Over the following months we exchanged many letters, and that summer my nine–year–old daughter and I visited him and his family in Connecticut, where he had immigrated in 1952.
It is oddly unsettling to find you have played a role in people’s lives who were strangers to you. And odder still to sort through the stories suffused with emotion trying to find the real story. The truth, of course, is that all the stories are real—my father’s story, my mother’s story, my stepfather’s story. They are authentic and subjective simultaneously; tell the truth but “tell it slant.”
Trying now to reclaim my early life by imagining the years from 1941–1947 heals a wound I hadn’t consciously known I carried. The story remains elusive, however, even though I have a remarkable number of photos and documents from those years, saved by both of my parents. But however fragile, it is quite real.
In these images, I have drawn a map of my life by taking the random but tangible artifacts my parents left behind and reordering them within a larger historical context. I have tried to find and shape my story from those fragments that survived and relate it to other lives, those of people I have never met.
Any life story includes love and loss, hope and fear, success and failure. Some focus on what is lost, others on what is found, and some will not believe that anything was lost (or found) at all.
- Brigitte Carnochan, 2012
Brigitte Carnochan’s photographs have been the subject of one-person shows and awards world wide. Two books of her images were published in 2006: Bella Figura—Painted Photographs by Brigitte Carnochan by Modernbook Editions and The Shining Path, a limited edition monograph with eleven original gelatin silver photographs, by 21st Publications. A book of her new series, Floating World, based on Japanese poems written by women between the 7th and 20th centuries will be published in 2012. A Hasselblad Master Photographer in 2003, she has been featured on the cover in Lenswork, Color and Silvershotz magazines and with interviews in the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, AfterCapture, Black & White UK, Camera Arts, Hasselblad, Fotoritim, Zoom, among others. She regularly teaches through Stanford’s Continuing Studies program. For more information, visit: brigittecarnochan.com
This exhibition has been sponsored by Betty and Jim Kasson.
Brigitte Carnochan - Imagining Then: A Family Story, 1941-47
This soft-cover, perfect bound catalog has been signed by the artist and includes all 37 images from the exhibition, Carnochan's artist statement, an essay by Brooks Jensen, and afterthoughts by David Bayles.
Book: $30.00*
*Plus shipping
Digital book: $5.00
Order from MagCloud
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