Congress Heights on the Rise

View Original

🌟BE A WORK OF ART | On June 10 + 11 Have your portrait taken (for free) as part of 'Anacostia Portraits'

The next public tintype sessions are happening on June 10th and 11th, at Honfleur gallery in Anacostia!
Each portrait will follow a 30-minutes per sitter format.

REGISTER HERE

Walk-ins are welcome! This event is FREE for the participants. We invite Anacostia residents and people who are otherwise connected to the community to participate. During our next sessions, we would like to offer priority to Anacostia residents, and waiting list spots to people with roots in the region.
(If you do not have any connections to the region, perhaps you may be interested in a private sitting.)

Questions? Email anacostiaportraits@gmail.com

Anacostia Portraits is a participatory arts project using a historic photographic process to create a visual archive celebrating the people who make up the Anacostia region of the District of Columbia. In this revival of the 19th century tintype, individuals with a connection to the community were invited to portrait sessions with photographer Elena Volkova at the Anacostia Arts Center. Each sitting produces two portraits, one for the participant and one for a final installation.

Volkova sees Anacostia Portraits as a way for people to shape their own representations, and to encourage a dialogue between past and present. The tintype, or wet plate collodion, process makes exposures on metal plates coated with wet silver nitrate. Like a Polaroid, each exposure produces a single image. However, a single tintype takes about 15 minutes to create. Volkova uses the forced slowness to collaborate with participants, learning enough about each person to reveal their internal stories in a final portrait.

Subjects come with a diverse range of connections to Anacostia: life-long residents, people who grew up and moved away, and newcomers making art or building businesses in the region. Their lives touch on different parts of the varied and changing landscape of Anacostia, which began as a Native American settlement, grew into a center for DC’s African-American community, and now grapples with the push and pull of gentrification.

Honfleur Gallery will host a final installation of portraits produced through Volkova's project from May 6 through June 18, 2022. Nearly 100 original photographic plates will be on display, along with digital enlargements.

Anacostia Portraits is supported by a grant from Corcoran Women’s Committee and ARCH Development Corporation.