Evolve of Devolve Exhibition

Event Image
A holographic-looking image with vibrant colors.

"Evolve or Devolve" — a solo exhibition featuring Assistant Professor Jim Porto's career-spanning experimental and evolving photographic processes — is on view Jan. 12-Feb. 6 in University Gallery. A reception is scheduled for 4:30-7 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 15.

From the artist

The art path is a trail of the evolution of one’s consciousness in relation to a medium and to changes in that medium. This exhibit contrasts earlier and current work to map those simultaneous evolutions.

I found photography at 11 and devoted my life to it, captivated by its alchemical process. At once I was bored with straight photography and wanted to make images that didn’t resemble reality. This led to numerous film experimentations in the camera and the darkroom.

"Frames" (1988-92) was the first coherent body of artwork that came out of that obsession. The portraits were shot on 4x5 transparency in an in-camera composite (made before the advent of Photoshop and our digital tools). The multi-exposure process was invented to produce a more direct method of compositing than the laborious darkroom practice that I was then employing. The photographs were then printed on Cibachrome and merged with the Frames.

I was fortunate to have forged a livelihood solely with the camera. I would make images for commercial and editorial clients for nearly four decades, transforming the external world into conceptual images that were marketable and engaging. During that period, I pursued every creative impulse with photography that I could conceive. Even before I stopped seeking photographic subjects, I began to turn my attention inwards, to my consciousness. I earned an MFA in Computer Art in 2020 to learn how to make images that were not possible with a camera, that might offer a more digitally mediated glimpse of my inner world.

"Strange Visitors" (2021-now) is camera-less art. These are digital fractal images driven by a sense of self being led by the possibilities of mathematical formulas. I am currently entranced by purely digital art and how some of its forms can suggest and map transcendent patterns. The fractal begins as a pre-historic organic form, mathematical in its essence. It has become, based on the very same underlying mathematics, a medium of personal metaphysical exploration. This connection, available through imaging, expresses its power. Printing on aluminum then adds another material and light-registering dimension to the play of patterns.

"Evolve or Devolve" is the spirit by which a freelance artist lives. The work that comes through that artist expresses one or the other with each iteration. Frames and Strange Visitors offer diverse views into my image-mediated psyche during the timeframes of their creation, on the screen and then as materialized, printed and approached in space for viewing.

- James Porto, October 2025


Contact
CAD Galleries
This event may be photographed/videoed by RIT. By attending, you grant Rochester Institute of Technology (“RIT”) permission to use photographs and/or audio-visual recordings in which you appear, now and in the future, for illustration, promotion, art, editorial, advertising, and trade, or any other purpose.
Event Snapshot
When and Where
January 15, 2026
4:30 pm - 7:00 pm
Room/Location: Booth Hall, second floor
Who

Open to the Public

Interpreter Requested?

No

Topics
faculty
galleries