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Finding fine art at the Laundromat
"One day while I was on a walk down the street in New York's Greenwich Village, I noticed some washing machines in a Laundromat window spinning with their contents, and it struck me that the patterns were captivating and that they could make interesting photographs. For my first set of photos, I used towels and sheets. These produced some wonderful photos," she said. But that was just the beginning. Intrigued, she expanded on her creative vision and began to use items other than clothing.
"I have a passion for my garden and the beauty of flowers, which I deem to be God's paintings. So it was only natural I combined my love of flowers with my interest in the effects the laundry machines could produce," she said. McCarthy lives and works in New York City and Shrewsbury. Her conceptual and painterly photographs have been exhibited and published internationally. "Through the Porthole," an exhibit of her digital photographs, will open Friday at the Monmouth Beach Cultural Center on Ocean Avenue, where it will run through Aug. 2. Photographs by her husband, well-known photographer Tom McCarthy, are also on exhibit. "I approached the cultural center three years ago with my portfolio. I thought it would be a great place for a summer exhibition," McCarthy said.
She has worked as a commercial photographer producing shoots for national advertisements with her husband, whose credits include work for Life magazine and The Saturday Evening Post as well as Eastman Kodak, Eastern Airlines and other corporations. "I photograph ideas that I conceive. I actually loved the idea of placing objects in washers and letting the movement of the water and soapsuds interact with the objects and letting motion and chance come together to produce one-of-akind moments that I can capture," she said. Photography has been her full-time work for more than 20 years, both fine art and commercial. "My photographs are digital these days. I do very little manipulation besides cropping and some color adjustments. My control is in the objects I place in the machines and the cycles chosen. I carefully choose my colors and forms and the amount of detergent used," she said. McCarthy's photographs are both sensitive and evocative, sensual and delicate.
McCarthy calls her work "photographic painting." She says that the photos are studies of order in chaos, beauty in randomness, and surprise in the unexpected. "If my photographs were a symphony, the score would be written by John Cage and the conductor would be Georgia O'Keefe." McCarthy studied photography at The New School in New York and has taught photography for the Miami-Dade school systems. Before moving back Northeast to her roots, she had been a photographer for the Coconut Grove Playhouse in Miami and on staff for Miami magazine. She has had a number of solo shows in Florida, where she lived for a number of years. They include the Boca Raton Museum, the Miami Children's Museum, and the Art Space Gallery.
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