Shane Balkowitsch is a self-taught large format photographer. As one of the fewer than 1,000 wet-plate collodion artists practicing around the world, Balkowitsch carries on the tradition of the Victorian photographic method, dating back to the 19th century. Based in Bismarck, North Dakota, Balkowitsch established the first natural light wet-plate studio constructed in the entire country in over 100 years, the Nostalgic Glass Wet-plate Studio. His works are held in prestigious institutions, including the State Historical Society of North Dakota, Smithsonian and Library of Congress. North Dakotan Shane Balkowitsch's first personal camera was not an Instamatic Kodak or a point-and-shoot Nikon, but rather a large format wet-plate camera. As a self-taught "image-maker" and one of the fewer than 1,000 wet-plate collodion artists practicing around the world, Balkowitsch has fully devoted himself to mastering the obsolete photographic technology since 2012. Approaching the historically embedded technique from a contemporary perspective, Balkowitsch's process transforms the limitations of the medium its labor and time-sensitive nature into opportunities for creative explorations. He lives in Bismarck, North Dakota.
Description
"Shane's purpose is not to photograph Native Americans as if the 19th and 20th centuries had never happened-the mission of the great Edward S. Curtis (1868-1952)-but to record individuals as they wish to be seen, to give Native Americans the opportunity to explore their self- image, perhaps at times a fantasy image, in a safe space where who they are and how they see themselves are certain to be respected and admired."--Clay Straus Jenkinson, Director, The Dakota Institute