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Immortalize your baby with an original Adam Fuss baby photogram! Fuss's color photograms of babies floating in water are among his best-known works and can be found in the collections of major museums throughout the world. Each image is entirely unique, made directly with the baby, the parent, and the artist. Each work manifests an extraordinary process: in the dark studio, the parent gently sets the baby into a pool of warm, shallow water. Under the baby is a piece of unexposed photo paper, and Fuss exposes this paper through a quick flash of light. He seeks out that exact moment during which the child's movements express a full sense of his or her character in the water.
Adam Fuss began his career in photography in Australia in 1980, when he worked as a photographic apprentice at the Ogilvy and Mather Agency. In 1982 Fuss moved to New York City where he worked as a commercial photographer documenting art exhibitions. Fuss chose to deviate from traditional photographic images, and in 1984 began developing a series of works made from a pinhole camera.
This technique enabled Fuss to create a greater sense of freedom and movement for the subjects captured within the boundaries of the picture plane, which were primarily marble sculptures. Fuss first exhibited these photographs in 1985 at Massimo Audiello’s gallery. Fuss's exploration in the photogram process has resulted in the rich tapestry of over 15 years of work involving a wide variety of subjects such as water, snakes in water, infants in water, rabbit entrails, plants, sunflowers, stained glass fragments, cow livers, birds, smoke, mushroom spores, and simply light itself. However, throughout the wide range of materials with which Fuss has worked, there has been a faithful commitment to our organic world and to simultaneously "generating pictures himself.” In 2000, Fuss won the Sixteenth Annual ICP Infinity Award for Art.