2022 Works Framed/Mounted
Assortment of Work Ready to Hang!
These works are in storage at my studio, framed/mounted and ready for your walls!
Ears Across America
Done as a little bit of fun while road-tripping across America the Summer of 2021 - "Ears Across America" was a way to let my friends and family know I was okay and share what I was seeing on my travels.
They got such a great response that I'm offering them as 6"x6" images on 8.5" x 11" paper - edition for each image is 100.
No Adults Allowed
No Adults Allowed 2001-2004
Tamara Rafkin
Artist Statement 2026
This series began over twenty-five years ago as a visual exploration of New York City’s playgrounds — spaces that are hidden within the labyrinth of concrete, glass, and crowded streets. Tucked into parks and along the edges of neighborhoods, these playgrounds were designed as places of refuge and freedom for children growing up in the intensity of the city. At the same time, they also reflect the fears of the culture around them: fenced in, gated, and marked with signs warning adults to stay out unless accompanied by a child. Even then, they felt like spaces shaped as much by anxiety and protection, as by play.
Shortly after I began photographing this series, New York City 9/11 happened, which permanently shifted both the atmosphere of the city and my understanding of the work itself. The playgrounds became visual metaphors of vulnerability, loss, and the fragile nature of innocence. What had started as an investigation into the culture’s obsession with protecting children became something more psychological and emotionally layered.
These photographs move between beauty and unease, often occupying a liminal space between a child’s perspective and an adult’s awareness. Many of the images are framed from a low or wandering point of view, while the titles carry darker double meanings that speak directly to adult fears and experiences. That tension became central to the work — the overlap between imagination and danger, memory and reality.
Although these images were created in one of the US’s busiest cities, they are marked by stillness and solitude. Looking retrospectively, I see them as reflections of the emotional isolation and disconnection during that particular moment in the city’s history. Twenty-five years later, the series has also become an archive of a New York space not usually focused on and a meditation on how these public spaces meant for childhood can quietly hold the larger fears, hopes, and anxieties of the culture surrounding them.
Organic Abstracts 2020/21
During our pandemic year I started revising a subject matter that I was investigating in 2010, images all taken in nature on my walks - focusing on the abstraction of small natural elements by composition and color.
All images are limited edition archival ink photographs on bamboo paper that has the feel of hot press water color paper - these images in person function more like painting or drawings than a representational photograph. They are 19" x 13" paper and edition for each image is 5.