NEW ORLEANS, LA.- Before During After, a collection of extraordinary images illustrating the impact of Hurricanes Katrina and Rita on the vision and work of 12 Louisiana photographers, opened at the
Louisiana State Museums Presbytere on Jackson Square.
Scheduled to run through August 31, the show compliments the Museums new $7.5 million permanent exhibition Living with Hurricanes: Katrina and Beyond, also at the Presbytere.
Louisianas recovery from the 2005 storms has been marked by a spirit of creativity and resilience, said Tony Lewis, Louisiana State Museum Curator of Visual Arts. The artists represented in Before During After saw what happened here, captured it vividly, and were forever changed by the experience.
Lewis served as co-curator with Diane Barber of DiverseWorks in Houston, where Before During After premiered last September.
Selected for the Presbytere show are 38 large-format photographic prints in both color and black and white paired with personal artists statements documenting changes in subject matter, media and technique before and after the storms.
Participating photographers include Eric Julian, Elizabeth Kleinveld, Rowan Metzner, David Rae Morris, Thomas Neff, Samuel Portera, Frank Relle, Jennifer Shaw, Mark Sindler, Zack Smith, Jonathan Traviesa, and Lori Waselchuk.
The exhibition is accompanied by a 124-page book of the same title (University of New Orleans Press, $24.95) featuring essays and commentary.
The Presbytere is open daily (except Mondays and major holidays) from 10 AM to 4:30 PM. Admission is $6 for adults, children under 12 free.