Syracuse University

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SU's Bob Gates mounts photography exhibit at Le Moyne College, Jan. 26-Feb. 20

January 16, 2009


Rob Enslin
rmenslin@syr.edu



Bob Gates, associate professor of English in Syracuse University's College of Arts and
Sciences, is mounting a photography exhibit at Le Moyne College titled "Encounters
With(in) Images." The show, which is free and open to the public, runs Jan. 26-Feb. 20 in the
Wilson Art Gallery of Le Moyne's Noreen Reale Falcone Library (1419 Salt Springs Road,
Syracuse).


"Encounters With(in) Images" captures interactions between Gates and his subjects, as well
as among his various subjects. Gates says that he was drawn to the idea because of the
impact of today's media-saturated environment on human encounters and interactions. "It's
a continuous source of mystery and speculation," he says of this interplay. "I am
particularly interested in enticing the viewer to contemplate encounters between my subjects
and the images that flood our culture and carry layers of meaning, of which the subjects,
themselves, sometimes remain blissfully unaware."


The gallery is open during library hours: Monday-Thursday, 8:30 a.m.-midnight; Friday,
8:30 a.m.-8 p.m.; Saturday, 9 a.m.-8 p.m.; and Sunday, noon-midnight. For more
information, call (315) 445-4323.


An opening reception with Gates will be held in the gallery Friday, Jan. 30, from 4-6 p.m. It
is free and open to the public.


Gates studied photography at the University of Iowa while completing his Ph.D. in English.
After joining SU's English department faculty in 1967, he began pursuing photography on
the side. His work has gone on to win regional and national contests; appear in group,
individual and juried exhibitions; and been published in magazines worldwide, including
PhotoLife (Canada), MaVista (United Kingdom), National Geographic Traveler, The Photo
Review, Photographic, Shutterbug, Outdoor Photographer, The Best of Photography
Annual, f-stop and Popular Photography.


"Photography encourages us to contemplate our own encounters with otherness, the way we
look at and are looked at when the camera is present, or the way the camera makes those
unaware of our looking. It reveals subjects in new and unexpected ways," he says.


The English department is part of SU's College of Arts and Sciences. More information is
available at http://thecollege.syr.edu/.