Leonard Nimoy is an artist’s artist and a photographer’s photographer. His obsession with the camera and the power of the photographic image, initially an infatuation with black and white imagery, began in his teens. An extended study with UCLA’s legendary Robert Heineken only heightened his determination to use photography as a means to create works of art.
Guided by a visceral appreciation of classical and modern art forms, Nimoy’s eye is in pursuit of a re-animated expression of the sublime. His early nude studies are fleshy expressions of shadow unfolding through form. The Egg Series explores, in an essentially abstract format, the possibility of matter and motion being communicated via shape or line. The Borghese Series, executed while in Rome on a fellowship from the American Academy, began with a fixation on sculpture, specifically “Paulina” by Canova. How to translate the sensual impact of marble and a somewhat steamy back-story into a photograph? His current work, the White project, shot in color and printed digitally in a large-scale format, is an exquisitely literal investigation of the photograph’s ability to imitate and then re-invent the evanescence of marble sculpture. Stone made flesh made image made alive; perhaps that articulates Nimoy’s ongoing quest for expressions of the entirely human in the aesthetically sublime.