Maine’s Mid-Century Moment: Kosti Ruohomaa’s Beloved Maine at the Penobscot Marine Museum

The University of Maine at Augusta (UMA) in partnership with the Penobscot Marine Museum, will present Kosti Ruohomaa’s Beloved Maine with speakers Deanna Bonner-Ganter, author of Kosti Ruohomaa: The Photographer Poet, and Kevin Johnson, Penobscot Marine Museum Photo Archivist, who will delve into the life and work of this iconic Maine photographer.

Event Details:

Image for Maine's Mid-Century Moment with Penobscot Marine Museum Kosti Ruohomaa’s Beloved MaineKosti Ruohomaa’s Beloved Maine

May 20, 2021, 6 p.m. via Zoom. This event is open to the public, however an RSVP is required.

FMI:  Please visit: https://penobscotmarinemuseum.org/events-list/

Ruohomaa’s lens captured the villagers taking a “gander” in the general store, the tough farmers, woodsmen, river drivers, and fishermen who worked with their hands close to land and sea. Kosti Ruohomaa’s Beloved Maine selects images of Ruohomaa’s poetic sensitivity not only of the people and rugged geography, but his visions of Maine’s winter, winter nights, and the rugged coastal landscape.

Ruohomaa was a storyteller with his camera. He captured the spirit and culture of Maine through its people and landscape like few other photographers have ever done. Ruohomaa’s photographs were featured in various publications including Life MagazineLookNational GeographicLadies Home Journal, and Down East. In 2018, a large collection of Ruohomaa’s work was given to Penobscot Marine Museum by his agency, Black Star of New York. This collection is a remarkable resource. While his published work is fairly well known, it represents less than 10% of the photographs he made; the rest of his photographs had never been seen by the general public.

This event is part of University of Maine at Augusta’s series exploring the artists, writers, and innovators who shaped and chronicled Maine’s mid-century cultural evolution. Maine’s Mid-Century Moment has been made possible in part by a major grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities.