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Robert Buelteman
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Antherium by Robert Buelteman (Base Price Varies with Size)
Code: RBA
Price: Varies - Contact MAPS or Artist for more info
In order to purchase this print you must contact either MAPS or the Artist directly.
Chromogenic development prints of “Antherium”
are available in each of three sizes: 11x9”,
edition of 10, matted, unframed; 25x20”, edition
of 10, mounted to aluminum, unframed;
and 50x40”, edition of five, mounted to gator
board, unframed. All prints are made by the
photographer and are signed and numbered
in pigment en verso. Robert’s collection can
be viewed at: www.buelteman.com. Interested
purchasers should contact Robert Buelteman
directly at info@buelteman.com or 650-
728-1010. Proceeds from sales will be split
between the artist and MAPS.
Robert Buelteman is committed to the
transcendent qualities of life as reflected in
his photographs, which portray the universe
as designed and life as purposeful. His print
work is a powerful extraction of beauty and
substance revealing unrecognized dimensions
in the commonplace. He has published 13
photographic portfolios in his thirty-five years
in photography, and four of these, “A Vision of
Life” (1988), “The Unseen Peninsula” (1994),
“Eighteen Days in June” (2000), and “Signs
of Life” (2009) were published as books. In
1999, Buelteman left photographic tradition
behind in creating “Through the Green Fuse”,
a portfolio of extraordinary photograms made
without cameras, lenses, or computers. As a
result of the success of this new work, Robert
served as the artist-in-residence at the Santa
Fe Institute in New Mexico from 2003-2006.
His work can be found in public and private
collections worldwide, including the Yale University
Art Museum, Santa Barbara Museum
of Art, Bank of America, Xerox, and Nikon.
Robert writes, “The creative process
begins with my selection of a subject, after
which I bring the living subject into the
studio, where I sculpt it with surgical tools to
manage its form and opacity. I then move into
the darkroom to manipulate the subject on my
imaging easel. The easel is surrounded by a
safety fence of wooden 2x4s to avoid electrocution
is composed of a piece of aluminum
sheet metal floated in a solution of liquid silicone,
and is sandwiched between two sealed
pieces of 1/8” thick Plexiglas. I then go into
total darkness to build the exposure matrix
on top of my easel. First, the 8x10 inch color
transparency film is laid flat on the easel with
the light-sensitive surface face up. Then the
sculpted subject is placed on the film, sometimes
with and sometimes without layers of
diffusion material, which are laid on top when
used. The subject is then wired to a grounding
source with cable and clamp. The actual process
of imaging begins with the introduction
of high frequency, high voltage electricity into
the exposure matrix to create the ultraviolet
aura of ionized gas that surrounds the subject.
Then a variety of light sources including
xenon-strobe, tungsten, and fiber-optic light
are used to illuminate the subject by hand so
the light is scattered through the diffusion
screens, through the subject, and onto the film
where the exposure energy is recorded.”
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