Exhibit by Artist Robin Resch Installed in Downtown Princeton
PORTRAITS ON VIEW: “Taking Pause” by Robin Resch is installed at Dohm Alley.
The Arts Council of Princeton (ACP) announces that “Taking Pause,” a public art photography installation created by ACP Artist-in-Residence Robin Resch, is now on view in Princeton’s Dohm Alley.
Taking Pause is a documentary, collaborative portrait project that asks people to reflect on what in their lives feels most essential. With what do we identify and connect most deeply? What truly matters to us and why?
Photographic triptychs each display a participant, what they shared as irreplaceable, and their story behind this choice. Resch describes the documentary series as a collaboration meant to invite reflection and healing amid challenges like COVID-19, racial injustice, and social reckoning. The portrait sets will be on display in Dohm Alley, next to Starbucks, through October 2021, as a public art display, free and open to the public.
“At a time when our country feels so torn and disconnected, this project aims to reconnect and place trust with those we don’t know,” said Resch. “Crucial to this project is its collaborative nature that aspires to connect with people, share stories, and spend time together. In short, to take pause, to reflect.”
Work on this series began in early 2018 with a core group of participants from varying backgrounds. Between November 2018 and March 2019, Resch began to expand the project’s community and network exponentially by working with people across the United States, driving solo 10,553 miles from East to West along a southerly route that naturally evolved and was largely determined by the location of the contributors. Resch’s goal for this Princeton manifestation of her Taking Pause project is to capture as broad a spectrum of the local community as possible.
“Our lives are so diverse and we’ve all been impacted in similar and yet differing ways,” said Resch. “To some degree, it has been equalizing. In other ways it’s been polarizing. How has it impacted us? Have our values changed? Would we answer the question ‘what is irreplaceable to you?’ differently today than a year ago?”
Her hope is to sow seeds for a conversation that may help heal in such a challenging time and that as a collaborative project, “Taking Pause” may help rebuild trust by addressing our fears and fostering communication and reflection.
Resch is a Princeton-based photographer who lived in Italy, France, and the Netherlands until 1998. She left Europe to pursue her Master’s in Architecture at Princeton University, which she combined with advanced photographic studies with Emmet Gowin and Andrew Moore. Her architectural training informs her documentary photographic work as she is particularly interested in making images that are about and their personal environments as well as the impact on our collective environments. Her landscape photography, which is more abstract, seeks to explore our human experience of the natural environment.
Resch’s work has been exhibited at Princeton University’s Lucas Gallery, the Pringle Gallery in Philadelphia, Design Within Reach, Princeton Project Space, the Arts Council of Princeton, and the Nassau Club. Her photographs have been published in the New York Times, the Witte de With Cahiers, the Rotterdams Dagblad, Italian GQ, and Princeton Magazine. She has maintained an active portrait studio since 2003. In 2012, she was honored to be the exclusive campaign photographer for the Princeton fundraising event with First Lady Michelle Obama.