Penny Wolin

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Penny Wolin Los Angeles

Penny Wolin (born June 5, 1953), also known as Penny Diane Wolin and Penny Wolin-Semple, is an American portrait photographer and a visual anthropologist. She has exhibited solo at the Smithsonian Institution and is the recipient of two grants from the National Endowment for the Humanities and one grant from the National Endowment for the Arts. Her work is held in the permanent collections of such institutions as Harvard University, the Layton Art Collection at the Milwaukee Art Museum, the Santa Barbara Museum of Art, the New York Public Library and the Smithsonian American Art Museum. Known for her documentary and conceptual photographs, she has completed commissions for major corporations, national magazines and private collectors, including the Walt Disney Company, LIFE Magazine and the Brant Foundation. For over 30 years, she has used photographic portraiture with oral interviews to research Jewish civilization in America.

Wolin is the youngest of five children born into a Conservadox Jewish family in Cheyenne, Wyoming. Her father, Morris Aaron Wolin (ne Wolinsky) immigrated there as a child, directly from the Russian town of Grodno, later to become a businessman. Her mother, Helen Sobol Wolin, came from Denver, Colorado, and was an artist. At age 10, Penny began using a Kodak Brownie Hawkeye. At age 16, her brother Michael Wolin gave her a high quality rangefinder camera and the necessary darkroom equipment to begin a career.

Wolin attended the University of Wyoming and then was graduated from Art Center College of Design in Pasadena, California, majoring in photography and film. She then attended a masters' program in the department of cultural anthropology at the University of California, Los Angeles, under the mentorship of Cultural Anthropologist Johannes Wilbert.[1] Then, she was awarded a directing fellowship to the American Film Institute, Center for Advanced Film and Television Studies.

Documentary Projects

Guest Register

In 1975 at 21 years of age, while studying at ArtCenter College of Design, Penny Wolin moved into a Single Room Occupancy hotel, the St. Francis in Hollywood, California, and photographed and interviewed selected residents of the rooms. She created 34 black and white photographs with excerpted texts for Guest Register. The hotel, on the corner of Hollywood Boulevard and Western Avenue, sheltered a range of people from all ages and walks of life, staying from one night to thirty years. This work brought Wolin to the attention of graphic designers such as Lloyd Ziff, Art Director at New West Magazine; Bob Cato at A&M Records; and Marvin Israel; a graphic designer working in New York. After seeing Wolin's photography, Ziff commissioned Wolin to photograph Ansel Adams and George Burns; Cato commissioned Wolin to photograph the rock group The Band; Israel began designing a book maquette for publication by the Aperture Foundation and the Los Angeles County Museum of Art invited her to participate in a group exhibition.

Descendants of Light: American Photographers of Jewish Ancestry

In 2005, Wolin began researching Descendants of Light: American Photographers of Jewish Ancestry.[2] Since the 1850s, these photographers have contributed to journalistic, fashion, portrait, advertising and fine art photography. By photographing and interviewing each photographer, (or interviewing the living descendants of those who have died) re-photographing heirloom images of their ancestors and showcasing an iconic image that is of their own creation, Wolin is able to visually and verbally document a multi-generational story of the intersection between American Jewish culture, modern America and the history and practice of photography. Jewish-American photographers interviewed and photographed by Wolin include Lillian Bassman, Jo Ann Callis, Lauren Greenfield, Elinor Carucci, Lois Greenfield, Bruce Davidson, Annie Leibovitz, Herman Leonard, Helen Levitt, Jay Maisel, Joel Meyerowitz, Arnold Newman, Robert Frank and Joel-Peter Witkin. Posthumous interviews include the families of Philippe Halsman, Herb Ritts, Nickolas Muray, Arthur Rothstein, Roman Vishniac and Garry Winogrand.

The Jews of Wyoming: Fringe of the Diaspora

In 1982 Wolin met the late Shirley Burden, the major donor to the photography department of The Museum of Modern Art. With his encouragement and financial assistance as well as that of two National Endowment for the Humanities grants, as administered through the Wyoming Council for the Humanities, Wolin completed a visual and verbal study of 140 years and five generations of Jewish culture in Wyoming. The Jews of Wyoming: Fringe of The Diaspora[3][4][5][6] was sponsored by what is now known as the Skirball Cultural Center in Los Angeles, California, and exhibited solo at the Smithsonian Institution, National Museum of American History, National Museum of American Jewish History, Judah L. Magnes Museum and Ucross Foundation. A book of the same title is published by Crazy Woman Creek Press.

Jackalopes, Cowboys and Coalmines: A Photographic Survey of Wyoming

In 1978, Wolin was awarded a National Endowment for the Arts major survey grant to complete Jackalopes, Cowboys and Coalmines: A Photographic Survey of Wyoming.[7] Because of Wyoming's mineral and oil-rich natural resources, the state's history had been one of a boom or bust economy and culture. A national energy crisis made for a huge energy boom in Wolin's native state. This energy boom brought a final "Americanization" to the rural towns that sparsely dotted the least populated state in the union. Shopping malls and fast food outlets arrived; local downtown businesses closed, and the existing ranch economy was in turmoil. A worker's wage to tend cattle was no match for the higher wages being paid to work in an open-pit coal mine or a drilling rig. Traveling during each season throughout Wyoming, Wolin photographed and interviewed the native and newly arriving residents, ranging from cowboys to oilfield roughnecks to elected officials. The resulting work became a traveling exhibition that toured Wyoming as sponsored by then Governor Ed Herschler. The photographs and text are now held in the permanent collection of the Wyoming State Museum and the Smithsonian Institution, American Art Museum.

Selected exhibitions

Year Location Title Solo/Group
2025 Leica Gallery, New York, New York GUEST REGISTER Solo
2018 Museum of Sonoma County, Santa Rosa, California Aftermath: The Tubbs Fire Group
2017 Calabi Gallery: Santa Rosa, California Aftermath: The Tubbs Fire Group
2012 Calabi Gallery: Santa Rosa, California Descendants of Light: American Photographers of Jewish Ancestry Solo
2011 New York Public Library, New York, New York Recollection: Thirty Years of Photography Group
2000 The Osher Marin Gallery: San Rafael, California The Jews of Wyoming: Fringe of the Diaspora Solo
1995 Eiteljorg Museum, Indianapolis, Indianapolis Jackalopes, Cowboys and Coalmines: Energy Development and the Culture of the Cowboy Group
1994 National Museum of American Jewish History, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania The Jews of Wyoming: Fringe of the Diaspora Solo
1992 Smithsonian Institution, National Museum of American History, Washington, DC The Jews of Wyoming: Fringe of the Diaspora Solo
1992 Judah L. Magnes Museum, Berkeley, CA, The Jews of Wyoming: Fringe of the Diaspora Solo
1990 Skirball Cultural Center, Los Angeles, California The Jews of Wyoming: Fringe of the Diaspora Solo
1990 Wyoming State Museum, Cheyenne, Wyoming The Jews of Wyoming: Fringe of the Diaspora Solo
1984 Ucross Foundation, Ucross, Wyoming Jackalopes, Cowboys and Coalmines: Energy Development and the Culture of the Cowboy Solo
1980 Wyoming State Museum, Cheyenne, Wyoming Jackalopes, Cowboys and Coalmines: Energy Development and the Culture of the Cowboy Solo
1980 The Nicolaysen Art Museum: Casper, Wyoming Jackalopes, Cowboys and Coalmines: Energy Development and the Culture of the Cowboy Solo

Selected Assignments

Teaching Positions

Year Position Institution Course
2020–Present Adjunct Professor ArtCenter College of Design; Pasadena, California MFA Program; Visual Literacy Through the Lens
2019–Present Adjunct Professor ArtCenter College of Design; Pasadena, California Photography for Graphic Designers
2019–2022 Artist in Residence Meaningful Works Consultancy; Los Angeles, California Lens Based Visual Literacy; Analysis of Word, Image and Light
2000 Program Director Sonoma Valley Film Festival; Sonoma, California Art, Passion and Politics
1999 Program Director Sonoma Valley Film Festival; Sonoma, California Films by or about Women
1998 Instructor Academy of Art University; San Francisco, California Documentary Portraiture
1996 Instructor Art Center College of Design; Pasadena, California History of Photography
1995 Instructor Sonoma State University; Cotati, California Film Production
1990 Instructor Art Center College of Design; Pasadena, California Documentary Portraiture
1986 Instructor Art Center College of Design; Pasadena, California Portraiture
1985 Instructor California Institute of the Arts; Valencia, California Photography for Graphic Designers
1982 Instructor University of Idaho; Moscow, Idaho Documentary Photography
1970 Instructor 4-H; Cheyenne,Wyoming Kids and Cameras

Selected Reviews

References

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