Exhibition
National Geographic:
Past and Future Present

Portrait, Taormina, Sicily, ca. 1890 - Baron Wilhelm von Gloeden/National Geographic Image Collection/Steven Kasher Gallery

A Cascade of Weathered Ice Spills From the 14 Square Mile Glacier, Karagom Glacier, Caucasus Mountains, Russia, 1890 - Vittorio Sella/National Geographic Image Collection/Steven Kasher Gallery

From Early Colorado Railroads, 1870-1880 - William Henry Jackson/National Geographic Image Collection/Steven Kasher Gallery

Aboard the Terra Nova on the British Antartic Expedition 1910-1913, ca. 1911 - Herbert Ponting/National Geographic Image Collection/Steven Kasher Gallery

Robert Falcon Scott and Crew Reach the South Pole A Month After His Rival Amundsen, Antarctica, January 18, 1912 - Herbert Ponting/National Geographic Image Collection/Steven Kasher Gallery

Stonehenge, England, 1911 - Gilbert H. Grosvenor/National Geographic Image Collection/Steven Kasher Gallery

Tribute to Dead Piegan Blackfoot, Montana, 1912 - Roland Reed/National Geographic Image Collection/Steven Kasher Gallery

The Minneapolis Milling District, The Largest U.S. Flour Producer, 1915 - Washburn-Crosby Company/National Geographic Image Collection/Steven Kasher Gallery

Buamba, Mobuku River, Uganda, 1915 - Vittorio Sella/National Geographic Image Collection/Steven Kasher Gallery

Mud-covered Boys After A Swim, Worcestershire, England, ca. 1921 - A.W. Cutler/National Geographic Image Collection/Steven Kasher Gallery

A Tourist Truck in The Forest, Mount Rainer National Park, Washington, ca. 1922 - Asahal Curtis/National Geographic Image Collection/Steven Kasher Gallery

Limestone Cliffs, Perce, Gaspe Peninsula, Quebec, 1934 - B. Anthony Stewart/National Geographic Image Collection/Steven Kasher Gallery

Colossal Olmec Head, La Venta, Mexico, 1940 - Richard Hewitt Stewart/National Geographic Image Collection/Steven Kasher Gallery

The Drive-In on Route 1, Alexandria, Virginia, 1941 - J. Baylor Roberts/National Geographic Image Collection/Steven Kasher Gallery

Eiffel Tower, Paris, 1946 - Maynard Owen Williams/National Geographic Image Collection/Steven Kasher Gallery

Jacques Yves Cousteau Films A Jet-propelled Submersible, Caribbean Sea, 1959 - Jacques Ertaud/National Geographic Image Collection/Steven Kasher Gallery
Portrait, Taormina, Sicily, ca. 1890 - Baron Wilhelm von Gloeden/National Geographic Image Collection/Steven Kasher Gallery
Steven Kasher Gallery presents the exhibition National Geographic: The Past and Future Present. It is the gallery’s fifth show of works from the National Geographic archives, but our first that presents vintage illustrations side by side with vintage photographs. The one hundred works presented span the entire 20th century. Photographers will include Herbert Ponting, Baron von Gloeden, Maynard Owen Williams, and Hiram Bingham. Illustrators will include Thornton Oakley, Louis Agassi Fuertes, and Tom Lovell. The exhibition will show works that represent National Geographic’s rich history in the fields of geography, archaeology, exploration, science, wildlife and world cultures.
Themes explored include Past Civilizations, the Age of the Dinosaur, Space Travel, Native American Cultures, American Industry, the Sea, Flora and Fauna. National Geographic: The Past and Future Present juxtaposes photographic images taken from life, botanical studies drawn from live specimens, and depictions of the past and the future, imagined but unseen. These juxtapositions will highlight changing visions of natural and human history as they have evolved over the twelve decades of the Society’s image making.
"This exhibition represents the continuation of a four-year partnership with the Steven Kasher Gallery to put our commissioned work in the public eye. The inclusion of illustrations in this exhibition demonstrates the overall range of our archive, which spans vintage and contemporary photography, as well as drawings, paintings and other illustrations from the late 1800s to the present day.” Maura Mulvihill, Senior Vice President for National Geographic Society and Director of the National Geographic Image Collection.
The National Geographic Society is one of the world’s largest nonprofit scientific and educational organizations. Founded in 1888 to “increase and diffuse geographic knowledge,” the Society’s mission is to inspire people to care about the planet. It reaches more than 400 million people worldwide each month through its official journal, National Geographic, and other magazines; National Geographic Channel; television documentaries; music; radio; films; books; DVDs; maps; exhibitions; live events; school publishing programs; interactive media; and merchandise. National Geographic has funded more than 10,000 scientific research, conservation and exploration projects and supports an education program promoting geographic literacy.
National Geographic: The Past and Future Present
On view January 10th through February 16th, 2013.
Steven Kasher Gallery
521 W. 23rd St.,
New York, NY 10011
USA
T : +1 212 966 3978
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