Apparitions & Manifestations

Dan Schlapbach

January 17 - February 12, 2023

Opening Reception
Thursday, January 26 | 5PM - 7PM

The Seeping, 2023
Relievo Ambrotype (wet-plate collodion glass image, archival ink jet print)


Apparitions & Manifestations

We do not see things as they are, we see them as we are.” Anaïs Nin

"The most beautiful experience we can have is the mysterious. It is the fundamental emotion that stands at the cradle of true art and true science. Whoever does not know it and can no longer wonder, no longer marvel, is as good as dead, and his eyes are dimmed.” The World As I See It, Albert Einstein

Fundamentally, of course, we communicate through established cultural and social norms and practices. You, as an English speaker, can read these words. I can communicate my thoughts to you through these abstract shapes we call letters. But everyone reading these words does so from within their own mind, influenced by multiple factors – family background, education, a history of experiences and our interpretations of them, assumptions and expectations. The word “beautiful,” for example, can mean different things depending on what brought you to this point in your life. What happens however, when the word “beautiful” is followed by the word “ending?” While the two words can have clear meanings individually, what happens when these words are combined? The conclusion of a story? A meal? A trip? A life?  Is the expression happy or sad? The words influence each other, they add nuance and context to the other, and our life history and personality can further alter their meaning.

As sentient beings, we experience the world through our senses. Each of us can each feel the comforting touch of a loved one, taste the complex flavors of a cup of tea, smell the damp ground after a rain, feel the warmth of the full sun, see the magnificent display of stars in a clear night sky. But how do we make meaning of those senses? Do we all interpret those same sensations in the same way? Even more challenging, how do we communicate our personal experience, our interpretation, of those sensations to others?

The Last Ride, 2023
Relievo Ambrotype

Photographs, compared to words, would seem to eliminate some of this room for interpretation. An object must exist to be photographed. A photograph of a flower looks like a flower. The photograph signifies its referent. What is there to interpret? What happens however, when a photograph of a flower no longer looks like a flower. How do you interpret what you see in the photograph when the referent is loosened, distorted, or disconnected? How do you construct meaning out of this abstraction of ordinary reality, what you expect to see?

Casting, 2023
Relievo Ambrotype

In part, we construct meaning from context.  If we see a photograph of a bubble in a stream of water, it fits within our expectations. Our thinking generally stops because there is nothing to interpret. The puzzle has been solved. But what happens when we see that same bubble in the eye socket of a skull? The referent is broken, and the context no longer makes sense. We are challenged to think about both the bubble and the skull in new ways, shuffling our interpretation of both objects and potentially bringing new meaning to each one. Similarly, consider what happens in your imagination when photographs are paired, either side-by-side or within the same frame. How does the appearance of an image within a context of multiple photographs inform your interpretation? What happens in between the photographs?  Do you assume the photographs are establishing a narrative, telling you a story, or do they have some other relationship to each other – structural, thematic, historical, mystical or otherwise?

Digital Image Diptych, 2022

Mundamala, 2023, Relievo Ambrotype

This mystery of consciousness, the mind’s individual interpretation of senses, especially visual, is at the core of this work. How much of what we think we see is “actually there,” and how much does our consciousness influence what we see as “actually there,” based on our expectations and experience? There is a balance between facts and interpretation, upon which we rely to live together and to make sense of the world. What happens, however, when the balance is disrupted?

Imagine these photographs not as actualities, as facts, but as images open to interpretation. My goal is not to tell you what or how to think, but to ask you to consider why you think the way you do.

About the Artist


Dan Schlapbach received his MFA from Indiana University. He is an Professor of Fine Arts/Photography and at Loyola University MD. His work has been exhibited locally, regionally, and nationally. Mr. Schlapbach’s research interests include the intersection of the history of photography, alternative photographic processes such as stereo photography and wet-plate collodion, and digital imaging. He received an Individual Artist Award from the Maryland State Arts Council in 2008 and 2011. In December 2021 he received the “Juror’s Choice” award in the exhibit “Small Wonders” at the Maryland Federation of Art Circle Gallery in Annapolis MD.

Exhibition Statement

This exhibition is the result of a year-long sabbatical taken during the 2021-2022 academic year. The goal of my sabbatical was to explore the notions of consciousness, particularly our tangled perceptions of reality in the duration of time between our sleeping and waking minds. I then planned to produce a series of relievo ambrotypes derived from those studies. Each relievo ambrotype layers two photographs to create a single image. The top ambrotype photograph is created on glass using the wet-plate collodion process, while the bottom print is made from a digital image. The relievo ambrotype procedure is a very involved process that necessitates several stages and is quite time consuming. It requires several days to complete a single image. The camera in this exhibition is the one I used to make the glass plate ambrotypes.

To create a foundation from which to build my photographic work, I turned to a collection of related books and articles. My research was broad and deep, and included works by philosophers, psychologists, cosmologists, poets, historians, and of course, photographers. My investigation also included books I was researching for the new Spirit Photography course I am offering in the spring of 2023. While doing my preliminary exploration my ideas, interests, and approach evolved. I am still very much interested in consciousness, but it has shifted toward the ways in which we each individually construct our own consciousness and how we use that personal understanding to comprehend the universe and our place in it.

Spirit Photography was a 19th century photographic practice that developed parallel with the rise of “Spiritualism.” Spiritualism is a metaphysical school of thought that espouses the belief that consciousness transitions to another place after death, and that it is possible to commune with those who had transitioned, or died. As spiritualism grew, psychics or trance mediums conducted seances during which the living believed they could communicate with the dead. Spirit Photography was a natural outgrowth of Spiritualism in which bereaved individuals sat for portraits that would result in photographs of themselves with a ghostly visage of their dearly departed hovering nearby. The most common sitters were those who had recently lost family or friends in the U. S. Civil War. Among them was Mary Todd Lincoln who, after Abraham Lincoln was assassinated, sat for a portrait in which a ghostly aura of her husband hovered over her shoulders. Spirit photography remained popular until the early 20th century when the practice was widely debunked as fraudulent trickery.

Although the Spiritualism-driven, commercial practice of Spirit Photography ceased to be popular, the notion of photographing spirit was taken up by numerous photographers and is still practiced today. The concept of spirit however, has evolved from deceitful attempts to communicate with the dead, to more subtle and nuanced explorations that may not necessarily claim to photograph spirit, as much as intone spirit as a muse, or embed photographs with spirit. Some photographers see their practice as an act of Zen meditation, developing deep metaphysical relationships with the subject of their photographs.

One such photographer was Minor White. In his book, Mirrors, Messages and Manifestations, White discusses his methodology in sequencing photographs. What interested him was not how each individual photograph is interpreted by viewers, but what happens in the viewers’ mind as their attention moves from one photograph to another. What happens in the blank space in between the photographs? Is there a spirit that courses back and forth between the sequenced images? This notion of a personal or individual “spirit” transmuting between images is endlessly fascinating and has profoundly affected my practice.

After four years as chair of the Fine Arts (now the Visual & Performing Arts) department my artistic practice atrophied. At the beginning of my sabbatical, I struggled to simply see photographically. In my initial forays into my studio, I found that I was taking pictures, not making photographs. Because the relievo ambrotype process is so complicated, I turned to the immediacy of digital photography to streamline my artistic practice and simply to look more. I could make hundreds of digital photographs in a single day. It took weeks to nurture and rekindle my belief in my own photographic intuition, to trust myself to make aesthetically risky decisions, to allow myself to fail and yet believe in the long view of my practice. My collection of digital photographs was so significant that I have included several of them without pairing them with ambrotypes. They are however grouped to enable a conversation between the images.

After reawakening my photographic visions, I returned to making relievo ambrotypes. My approach to the relievo photograph, which merges two distinct photographs into a single image, is the perfect opportunity to explore this idea of how viewers can incant their own spirit that moves between two disparate images. Rather than completing a body of work during my sabbatical, I have opened a new chapter in my practice.