During his FWM residency, Abelardo Morell created two new photographic series shot throughout Philadelphia. The first, titled Pictures in Three Museums, juxtaposed and transformed artworks within the extensive collections of the Philadelphia Museum of Art, the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, and the Barnes Foundation. Morell finds museums inspiring in “the way gallery spaces can seem to ‘play with’ the content of the pictures hanging in them. In several of these works I combined and altered art and rooms…to make a kind of art mash-up, creating new and impossible museum installations, art, and architecture.”
For Two Views of Philadelphia, Morell produced a limited-edition camera obscura print for FWM. His technique of turning a room into a pinhole camera resulted in a final image that overlays the city skyline within a Loews Philadelphia hotel room. Morell is well known for his distinctive use of camera obscura and has also modified the process considerably over time. As Morell explained, “I began to use color film and positioned a lens over the hole in the window plastic in order to add to the overall sharpness and brightness of the incoming image. Now, I often use a prism to make the projection come in right side up. I have also been able to shorten my exposures considerably thanks to digital technology, which in turn makes it possible to capture more momentary light. I love the increased sense of reality that the outdoors has in these new works. The marriage of the outside and the inside is now made up of more equal partners.”