
May 11
, 
10:00 am
 – 
5:00 pm

Darkroom Basics: Shooting, Processing & Printing

Ruth Kaplan

This hands-on workshop is intended for photographers interested in working with a 35mm manual camera, processing their own film and enlarging their negatives. Instructor, Ruth Kaplan will give introductions on camera basics; shooting, processing B&W film, making contact prints and 8"x10" enlargements in the darkroom! 
 

Film, chemistry and paper will be provided for this workshop.  Please bring your own 35mm camera if available. Upon registration, please indicate whether you will need to borrow a camera.

Ruth Kaplan is a documentary-based photographer whose work explores a variety of themes such as the social behaviour of bathers in communal hot springs, participants in rituals of spirituality and most recently, refugee shelters in Canadian/U.S.A. border cities including Detroit, Buffalo and Fort Erie. Her first monograph, Bathers, has recently been published by Damiani.  

Kaplan has exhibited internationally and is represented by the Stephen Bulger Gallery. Her editorial work can be found in major Canadian and international publications, she has received numerous grants and awards and is currently photography professor at OCAD University and Ryerson University.

www.ruthkaplanphoto.com

www.bulgergallery.com

$

 Non-Members

$

 Members

$

 

Register


Related Programs

Related Programs

Related Programs

No items found.
No items found.
401 Richmond St. W, Suite 120, Toronto, ON, M5V3A8
info@gallery44.org
416.979.3941
Closed during lockdown. Online office hours Tue – Fri, 11:00 – 5:00 PM.
Follow Us
twitterfacebookinstagram

Gallery 44 acknowledges that it is situated on stolen land. On the ancestral and traditional territories of the Mississaugas of the Credit First Nation, the Haudenosaunee, the Anishinaabe and the Huron-Wendat, who are the original owners and custodians of this land that they continue to inhabit today.

Acknowledging the land on which we work and create is an important first step towards truth and reconciliation, however, much more needs to be done by settlers, by our government, and by us as arts practitioners to educate ourselves and others, and to endeavor to end ongoing colonial violence.

During this global pandemic, it is important to acknowledge that Indigenous communities in Canada continue to live under increasingly inequitable conditions.

DonatePolicy and GuidelinesOpportunitiesStatement of SolidaritySalon 44Subscribe to our NewsletterContact
Search
AboutExhibitions & Public ProgramsYouth ProgramsMembershipLearningSupport
donate
