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Depths of winter: 'Frozen in Time' brings images of joy, despair to Monroe Gallery

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"Ice Skating Waiter, St. Moritz, 1932," Alfred Eisenstaedt/Life Picture Collection.
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Courtesy of Tony Vaccaro
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“The newly created ‘Japanese Police Force’ moves out of camp for winter training, Hokkaido, Japan, 1951,” Carl Mydans/Life Picture Collection.
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"Wrought Iron Design in Snow, New York City, 1945," Ida Wyman.
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"Standing Rock, 2016," Ryan Vizzions.
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“Ancestral Strength, Teton National Park, Wyoming, Cayuse, Umatilla, Newe Sogobia and Tséstho’e, 2023,” Eugene Tapahe.
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'FROZEN IN TIME'

‘FROZEN

IN TIME’

WHEN: Friday, Nov. 29, through Jan. 19, 2025

WHERE: Monroe Gallery, 112 Don Gaspar Ave., Santa Fe

MORE INFO: monroegallery.com, 505-992-0800

Winter brings both beauty and brutality.

Open at Santa Fe’s Monroe Gallery of Photography, “Frozen in Time” brings images of both joy and despair by some of the most renowned American photojournalists. The photographs cover the 2016 protests during the Standing Rock pipeline construction, a skating waiter at St. Moritz, Switzerland, in the early 1900s, and images of the grim winter conditions during World War II.

Several of the photojournalists worked for Life magazine.

Depths of winter: 'Frozen in Time' brings images of both joy, despair to Monroe Gallery

20241124-life-monroe
"Standing Rock, 2016," Ryan Vizzions.
20241124-life-monroe
“Ancestral Strength, Teton National Park, Wyoming, Cayuse, Umatilla, Newe Sogobia and Tséstho’e, 2023,” Eugene Tapahe.
20241124-life-monroe
Courtesy of Tony Vaccaro
20241124-life-monroe
“The newly created ‘Japanese Police Force’ moves out of camp for winter training, Hokkaido, Japan, 1951,” Carl Mydans/Life Picture Collection.
20241124-life-monroe
"Wrought Iron Design in Snow, New York City, 1945," Ida Wyman.
20241124-life-monroe
"Ice Skating Waiter, St. Moritz, 1932," Alfred Eisenstaedt/Life Picture Collection.

“It always makes for a beautiful, serene, contemplative experience,” said Michelle Monroe, gallery co-owner, of the frosty season. “We know it’s cold, we know it’s quiet, we know there is a veil of light.”

Alfred Eisenstaedt’s “Ice Skating Waiter” encapsulates the grace of skating while balancing a tray of glasses and liquor.

“He had a very rudimentary camera with glass plates,” Monroe said. “He said the whole thing was a technical challenge.”

The photographer focused on the chair until the waiter swanned by.

Tony Vaccaro’s photograph of soldiers partially buried in snow during the 88-day Battle of Hürtgen Forest captures the longest fight on German ground of World War II. An estimated 24,000 were killed, wounded or captured.

“There was no one more uncomfortable than the other,” Monroe said. “You couldn’t even find any comfort being together. (Vaccaro) said there was a lot of dark humor.”

In 2023, Navajo photographer Eugene Tapahe took “Ancestral Strength” in Wyoming’s Grand Teton National Park.

Tapahe was studying at Utah’s Brigham Young University when the pandemic hit. He decided to take four Native jingle dancers (two of whom were his daughters) across the country.

“The jingle dress has always been used for healing,” Monroe said. “Since the schools were closed, perhaps he could heal the country. They went all over performing. It had a tremendous effect on people.”

Those stops included Mount Rushmore, Yosemite and New York’s Central Park.

Ryan Vizzions photographed the protests over the Standing Rock pipeline in 2017, including a portrait of a medicine man.

“He was a spiritual counselor and guide for everything there to keep people in focus,” Monroe said.

Life magazine photographer Ida Wyman created a graceful shot of a wrought iron railing in the New York snow in 1945.

“(For) a lot of the older photographers, in order to be put on the front page, it was to get out there and get a shot of this latest snowstorm,” Monroe said. “She was part of the Photo League (cooperative.) They were shut down by the Red Scare movement for being subversive.”

The photographs also include images of the 1939 Russo-Finnish War, harsh winter conditions in the northern Soviet Union taken during its collapse in the 1990s and several ice skating scenes, including Truman Capote at New York’s famed Rockefeller Plaza in 1959, as well as tranquil snow scenes of the American West.

Monroe Gallery specializes in photojournalism, showcasing works by 31 photographers. It was the recipient of the 2010 Alfred Eisenstaedt Award for Excellence in Photojournalism.

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