Albanese, Gerard
Using varied rhetorical strategies, such as juxtaposing forms to create visual puns, Albanese offers poetic and pointed reflections on a life lived on the streets. In the image (Veiled) Figure with White Shoes, for instance, he creates a visual relationship between a slumped human figure and its surrounding environment. The person's huddled shape resembles the rounded piece of metal in the left half of the image, and his or her body would blend into the urban setting if it were not for a pair of bright white shoes, which are a similar shade to the metal protrusion.
Gerard Albanese has exhibited at the William Traver Gallery in Seattle, WA, and Blue Sky/the Oregon Center for the Photographic Arts, in Portland, OR. His work is included in the exhibition catalog Seattle Now by the Art Gallery of Greater Victoria, BC, Canada (1984), and his work was published in Art in America (September 1988). He is the recipient of a Washington State Arts Commission Fellowship Award (1991). In the early 1990s Albanese left the Pacific Northwest and returned to New York.
British, b. 1815 India, d. 1879 Sri Lanka