Sandi Haber Fifield

Cross Currents

July 22 – September 3, 2022

Collaged photograph by Sandi Haber Fifield

Sandi Haber Fifield

LS17_195, 2017

Unique Archival Pigment Prints; Graphite; Wax Pastel; Vellum; T-pins

16 1/2h x 16 1/2w in
41.91h x 41.91w cm

Unique

SHF_016

Collaged photograph by Sandi Haber Fifield

LS17_184, 2017 
Unique Archival Pigment Prints; Graphite; Wax Pastel; Vellum; T-pins
16.5 x 20.5 inches

Collaged photograph by Sandi Haber Fifield

LS17_167, 2017
Unique Archival Pigment Prints; Graphite; Wax Pastel; Vellum; T-pins
13 x 23 inches

Collaged photograph by Sandi Haber Fifield

GD19_309, 2019
Unique archival collaged pigment prints; graphite; vellum
29 x 22 inches

Collaged photograph by Sandi Haber Fifield

GD19_279, 2019
Unique Archival Collaged Pigment Prints; Graphite; Vellum
18 x 15 inches

Collaged photograph by Sandi Haber Fifield

LF16_146, 2016
Unique archival pigment prints, graphite, wax pastel, vellum, t-pins
21 x 31 inches

Collaged photograph by Sandi Haber Fifield

BE20_35, 2020
Unique Archival Pigment Prints, Collaged
30.5 x 23 inches

Collaged photograph by Sandi Haber Fifield

GD19_305a
Unique Archival Collaged Pigment Prints; Graphite; Vellum
32 x 22 inches

Collaged photograph by Sandi Haber Fifield

BE21_401, 2021
Unique Archival Pigment Prints, Collaged
31.25 x 23.5 inches

Collaged photograph by Sandi Haber Fifield

BE20_355, 2020
Unique archival pigment prints, collaged
30.5 x 23 inches

Collaged photograph by Sandi Haber Fifield

GD19_280
Unique Archival Collaged Pigment Prints; Graphite; Vellum
18 x 25 inches

Collaged photograph by Sandi Haber Fifield

GD19_289, 2019
Unique Archival Collaged Pigment Prints; Graphite; Vellum
33 x 22 inches

Collaged photograph by Sandi Haber Fifield

GD19_314, 2019
Unique Archival Collaged Pigment Prints; Graphite; Vellum
29 x 22 inches

Press Release

Tracey Morgan Gallery is pleased to present Cross Currents, our first solo exhibition with New York based artist Sandi Haber Fifield, on view concurrent with Laura Letinsky: Preparing for Flowers. An opening reception for both artists is scheduled for Friday, July 22 from 6-8PM.

This exhibition brings together three distinct bodies of work, As Birdsongs Emerge, The Certainty of Nothing, and Lineations. Utilizing the medium of photography as a point of investigation, Haber Fifield’s work challenges ideas of perception as she recontextualizes photographs of the natural and built environment by way of hand interventions and layering. The work revels in deep, evocative colors, geometric shapes, and lyrical lines as Haber Fifield unearths the mysteries of the sites she photographs while adding to them her own sense of wonder.

In As Birdsongs Emerge, image fragments are frequently thrown into conflict, with no single material or conceptual element outweighing the other. The series seeks not to resolve but question the strata of seeing—finding comfort in the unseen rather than the apparent. The Certainty of Nothing utilizes photographs taken by the artist at the ruins of Angkor Thom and Angkor Wat, two sites built in the 12th century in present day Cambodia, exploring the frailty of civilization and drawing from Hindu legend. The title acknowledges both the inevitability of nature to reclaim itself, and the persistence of these sites of ancient civilization to exist in our modern world. The series Lineations combines straight and altered photography, transparent layers of vellum, and hand-drawn elements of carefully variegated line weight. In these images the haptic and visual elements combine into a compositional whole that encourages conceptual investigation.

Sandi Haber Fifield (b. Youngstown, Ohio) received her MFA from Rochester Institute of Technology. Her work has been widely exhibited in galleries and museums throughout the United States including: The Art Institute of Chicago, IL; The De Cordova Museum, Lincoln, MA; The Museum of Modern Art, New York, NY; The National Museum of Women in the Arts, Washington, DC; The Oakland Museum, CA; The Philadelphia Museum, PA; The Southeast Museum of Photography, Daytona Beach, FL; and The St. Louis Museum, MO. Her work is included in numerous major public collections, including The Art Institute of Chicago, IL; The Brooklyn Museum, NY; The High Museum, Atlanta, GA; The George Eastman Museum, Rochester, NY; Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Los Angeles, CA; The Museum of Contemporary Photography, Chicago, IL; The Museum of Modern Art, New York, NY, among others. She lives and works in Shelter Island, New York.