Author Archive

The Next Generation

November 29, 2009

Check out Judith H. Dobrzynski’s latest post on The Daily Beast,  Magnum: The Next Generation. Three of the photographers are featured below. I’ve included an excerpt below.

Mark Power

The legendary photography collective Magnum returns to its Parisian roots with a new gallery and an exhibition celebrating its photographers of tomorrow.

Magnum Photos, the celebrated photojournalism cooperative founded in 1947 by Robert Capa, Henri Cartier-Bresson, David “Chim” Seymour and George Rodger, returned to its Parisian Left Bank roots last week: It opened a new gallery steps off the Boulevard Saint-Germain-des-Pres, just around the corner from Café de Flore and Brasserie Lipp.

Alessandra Sanguinetti

The first exhibit showcases works by photographers who joined the exclusive collective after 2000, along with some vintage works. And while Magnum photographers have always produced photos with a social comment, the newer pieces are rawer, more powerful, in the same way that much journalism these days has grown more opinionated.

Trent Parke

Edward Weston Model and Muse Dies

November 26, 2009

Charis Wilson, model, muse, and wife of photographer Edward Weston, died on November 20 at the age of 95. Wilson, who met Weston was she was 19 and he was in his late 40s, began posing for him. “After eight months we are closer together than ever,” Weston wrote in his diary in 1934. “Perhaps C. will be remembered as the great love of my life. Already I have reached certain heights reached with no other love.” The couple married several years later and remained together until their divorce in 1946. Many of Weston’s most memorable photographs—including a nude with her head bowed and her limbs entwined—are of Wilson. Much of her later years were spent writing and lecturing about Weston—her memoir, Through Another Lens, was published in 1999, and in 2007 she appeared in a documentary, Eloquent Nude.

The Daily Beast

Also check out this article on A Photo Editor: Interview with Edward Westons Wife and Muse, Charis Wilson

Dire Financial Condition

August 2, 2009

For as long as I’ve lived and worked in NYC, there have been rumors suggesting the financial difficulties of Annie Leibovitz. As a young assistant, I had first hand experience with this. In the late 1980s I worked for her as a freelance photo assistant on a shoot for Vanity Fair Magazine. The job went without a hitch and was eventually published. It was a wonderful experience to work for such a legend. Collecting my fee was a different story. After 45 days with no check in hand, I called her studio asking when I would receive payment. They gave me the number of her accounting firm. When I contacted them they indicated that they had not yet been paid. After a couple of months of getting nowhere, I call the magazine directly. They explained that Ms. Leibovitz receives a monthly check from Conde Nast and that they had paid her for the job I worked on months ago. I eventually received my check,which amounted a few hundred dollars. I’m not surprised to see the latest article in The New York Times which I have included below.

I have also attached links to The Daily Beast and Gawker, who offer their own perspective on the situation.
It is unfortunate that such a major talent,who earned great fortune as well as acclaim could become a victim of her own financial mismanagement.

- ghi contributor

What’s Wrong With This Picture?

source: NYTimes, David Carr

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Annie Leibovitz's portrait of the Queen. Photograph: Annie Leibovitz/ Contact/nbpictures

Annie Leibovitz has a reputation as one of the most talented people working behind a camera, but she is apparently less adept at handling money than images — with New York real estate serving as her Waterloo.

“An art finance company that lent the photographer Annie Leibovitz $24 million against every photo she has ever taken – and against the value of her homes in Manhattan and Rhinebeck, N.Y. — filed a breach of contract lawsuit against her in State Supreme Court on Wednesday.”
Charging that Ms. Leibovitz engaged in “boldly deceptive conduct,” Art Capital Group wants the court to order the photographer to allow real estate agents to enter her townhouses to make an appraisal on the property with an eye toward liquidating the properties to meet her obligations.

The suit contends that in October, she signed an agreement granting Art Capital the right to sell all her photos, her town houses in Greenwich Village, and her summer home in Rhinebeck if she did not meet her payments.

But beyond the implication that Ms. Leibovitz, who has had seven-figure contracts with Conde Nast Publications for many years, spends like a sailor on shore leave, the story by Allen Salkin mentions that she bought three adjoining townhouses in the West Village and then began lengthy renovations. An editor who has worked with Ms. Leibovitz for many years, but asked not to be identified speaking on her private finances, said what looks like a spendthrift artist could be a much more common story.

“I’m pretty sure that her business agent told her when she was making all the money she was making that New York real estate would be a good place to put it,” the person said. “But then she got involved in all of these horrendous renovations, which is a story many of us have lived through in New York and now that photo budgets are being cut back everywhere, I’m sure she doesn’t have nearly as much money coming in.”

So, apart from the part about the three townhouses, the $24 million and the lucrative contracts, Ms. Leibovitz is just like the rest of us.

Additional links: Gawker, Daily Beast

Art & Commerce

July 26, 2009
Student art Gallery
Elizabeth Eiten / Rhode Island School of Design

contributor: Indigo Jones

A site that provides a forum for emerging student artists to showcase their work, and has a philanthropic twist? Count us in!!

We love the Student Art Gallery, launched last June by two Arizona entrepreneurs, Jeff Skoglind, and Danny Wojtenowski.

Their mission is simple: to bring art to the forefront and support it’s evolution, while giving exposure to student artists and providing a means to sell their work.  Did we mention that a contribution from each sale is gifted back to the artist’s school?

Currently, the site features a highly curated selection of 150 pieces, but the founders hope to represent 1500 works by the fall.
It’s a great way to support the future careers of up and coming artists, find affordable artwork, and help fund the arts programs while you shop. What’s not to love?

Check it out!

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Freefall

July 19, 2009

“In the current economic, environmental, and political climate, change seems the only constant we can hold onto. And with change comes movement. From shifting markets and politics to 24/7 Facebook feeds and global travel, flux defines our times. Even the production of a print magazine is a shifting series of negotiations, creative processes, and re-interpretations. In issue 09  Design Mind tries to capture this notion of movement in as many ways as possible, whether through the eyes of a ballet choreographer, a parent nurturing a hyperactive child, or a designer trying to manage the flow of ideas”.  Source: Design Mind

Below is a continuation of this notion of motion in Denis Darzacq project La Chute (The Fall)

Here is an excerpt from the Guardian / Angelique Chrisafis

Down and out in Paris

The French riots of 2005 inspired the photographer Denis Darzacq to head for the housing estates on the outskirts of the capital. But he wasn’t after gritty shots of urban deprivation, he tells Angelique Chrisafis. He wanted something more – to capture an entire generation in freefall and with no one to catch them.
The surrealist René Magritte would have happily declared: “This is not a dancer. This is a young French person falling from the sky.” The French photographer Denis Darzacq is just as content to mess with people’s minds. His bizarre series La Chute (The Fall), on show in Paris, has gripped the French art world. People have clamoured to know what on earth is happening in these pictures – taken with a manual camera and not Photoshopped – in which impassive 20-year-olds seem about to hit the ground at high speed. Why are all the shutters closed behind them? Will anyone care if they splatter on the pavement? Will anyone even notice them tumbling to certain oblivion?

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When The Fall won this year’s World Press Photo prize in the “arts and entertainment” category, the organisers rang Darzacq to ask the name of the dance company he had photographed. But it wasn’t a dance company. It was a carefully crafted response of Darzacq and a group of young French people to the alienation of youths on suburban housing estates after the riots that shook France in 2005. “I hate this visual idea of Paris as a baguette or Catherine Deneuve carrying a bunch of flowers,” Darzacq says. “That’s why we lost the Olympics. I’d like us to be able to speak of modernity without blushing.”

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Darzacq was born in Paris’s 6th arrondissement, where he had every chance of bumping into Deneuve, but for decades he has lived and worked on the grittier streets of Paris, taking Renaissance-style portraits of people on poor housing estates and touring the characterless pedestrian shopping streets of small-town France.

In 2006, Darzacq dreamt up The Fall. It was partly the horror-struck idea of people falling from the twin towers on September 11, but it was mostly a depiction of an entire generation in France in free fall, ignored by society, their energy untapped and unused. He felt today’s France was the sort of place where someone could tumble from the sky without a net and no one walking down the street would bat an eyelid.

But Darzacq needed young people to play the role of these leaden, expressionless beings dropping from the clouds, and they had to be fit – able to hit the concrete over and over again without smashing themselves up. He went to watch hip-hop and break-dancing shows in Paris, and filmed them. He froze some fuzzy frames in which the dancers appeared to be falling from the sky and went back to them, saying, “I want you to do that.” They said no way, that they couldn’t. “But it’s you,” he said, pointing at the frames. They were intrigued.
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The dancers set about inventing some moves. Darzacq then surveyed the 19th arrondissement for locations, seeking out the most banal modern architecture repeated like an Identikit across Europe, giving the sense that this could be anywhere. But why do all the shutters and blinds seem to be closed – had he asked everyone to lock up shop?

“Find me any ground-floor flat in Paris where the shutters or windows are open,” Darzacq replies. “People are afraid of each other, everyone is a victim of crime – that’s a constant reality in Paris. I didn’t ask anyone to close their blinds. It’s the sad reality of how people live. Who would even see a kid fall?”

He took each dancer on to the street for sessions of up to two hours. He didn’t want recognisable moves, or recognisable clothes. They went to market stalls to buy mundane outfits. He took only one shot per movement.

François Gautret, 27, who runs a hip-hop collective in northern Paris, was one of Darzacq’s subjects. “I wanted to capture the sense of the split second before hitting the ground,” he says. “It was cold, the concrete was very hard, in one picture you can even see my sleeves pulled down over my knuckles so I didn’t wreck my hands when I landed. I totally got his idea of a society in which youth is ignored, feared and left to crash. Even now, during the elections, everyone’s still using Nicolas Sarkozy’s line that every young person on an estate is racaille [rabble], that all anyone does is burn cars.”

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Bintou Dembele, 31, a hip-hop dancer from one of Paris’s southern suburbs, says, “We had to work very fast, the moves had to be very efficient, people were walking down the street, there was no time for hesitation. I was very conscious of him watching me. There was this second each time when we just clicked.”

Dembele started dancing in the street at the age of 10, part of the second generation of self-taught break-dancers and street dancers in France who have struggled but made it to the mainstream. Sitting in a dance studio on Paris’s Left Bank, as young girls arrived with their mothers for her hip-hop class, Dembele says she found the finished photographs a “shocking beautiful” comment on French suburban youth. “I come from there, I know all about the energy of the place that’s going untapped.”

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Another subject was Thierry Rivière, 25, an illustrator from the French Indian Ocean island of La Réunion, who found out about the project by word of mouth at his capoeira group. He describes his moves as levitation, captured on the way down. “Denis was very specific. He wanted no grimacing, he wanted us to be expressionless. The idea of the forgotten urban generation is something I have never experienced, though. In La Réunion, you are poor, but it is a more simple life.”

Darzacq is proud that his work remains open to interpretation. “I like the fact that you can read into these photos whatever you want. Will we let them hit the ground? Will anyone rush out to scoop them up?” ·
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Legally Blind Photographer, Part Two

July 12, 2009

Below is a continuation of a series that I posted a couple of weeks ago “Legally Blind Photographers”. Check out this article by Matt Kettman.

The Art and Heart of Blind Photographers

Blind photography: the very concept sounds like an oxymoron. But an intriguing and often striking exhibition of photographs in Riverside, California, argues that it emanates from the core of contemporary art. The show “Sight Unseen,” at the California Museum of Photography until Aug. 29, features everything from underwater scenes off Catalina Island, transvestites in New Orleans and Braille-enhanced black-and-whites as well as portraits, nudes, landscapes, travel shots, abstracts, collages, and everything else you might expect from a “sighted” photographer. Except the subtext and context is blindness: the photographers are legally blind, some born without sight or with limited vision, and others who have lost their vision over time. And that is why, argues the man who organized the show, they are at the very heart of art.

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Seeing with Photography Collective, Box Portrait, Jacques. A group of blind artists based in New York, this portrait was made by the group using an updated form of a pinhole camera. The technique is simple: a pinhole camera in a dark room projects an image of an illuminated subject onto braille-punched paper and a digital camera is used to capture the result.

“The whole trajectory of modern art for the last 100 years has been toward the concept of mental construction, and blind photography comes from that place,” says the show’s “sighted” curator Douglas McCulloh, himself a photographer. “They’re creating that image in their head first — really elaborate, fully realized visions — and then bringing some version of that vision into the world for the rest of us to see.” A sample of the photographs posted by TIME.com received a huge amount of attention. (See pictures by blind photographers here.)

How do the blind take their photographs? Some rely on assistants to set up and then describe the shots, and others just point and shoot in the right place. “Just like any good artists,” says McCulloh, “they have their unique ways of operating.”

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Steve Erra and the Seeing with Photography Collective, Braille Portrait as Antique. Erra comments: "(We) talk all the time about how most people don't really see. They don't pay attention visually to things...I only see parts of things at a time, very small areas at one time. These pictures that we're taking now concentrate on one area at a time. A sharpness, a blurriness...your eyes are always going from one to the other, which is how I view the world, too."

One participating photographer is Pete Eckert, an artist with multiple degrees in design and sculpture who only turned to photography after losing his vision in the mid-1980s. He opens the shutter on his camera and then uses flashlights, lasers, lighters, and candles to paint his scene on film. He explains: “The human brain is wired for optical input, for visualization. The optic nerve bundle is huge. Even with no input, or maybe especially with no input, the brain keeps creating images. I’m a very visual person, I just can’t see.” “Sighted photographers always talk about the difficulty of what they call ‘seeing,’” Eckert adds. “I tell them ‘If you can’t see, it’s because your vision is getting in the way.’”

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Kurt Weston, Visor Vision Of the works in Sight Unseen, the show's curator Douglas McCulloh writes, "For these artists, photography is the process of creating physical manifestations of images that already exist as pure idea, whether complex previsualizations that lead to eventual photos, or images imagined and triggered by non-retinal criteria. As such, the show poses an surprising central idea: that blind photographers possess the clearest vision on the planet." The exhibit will be on view at the University of California, Riverside/California Museum of Photography until August 29. To learn more, visit the exhibit website. The photographs are reproduced with the permission of the artists. All rights, copyright, and reproduction rights remain with the artists.

Kurt Weston’s dark and depressing images — many of which are stylized self-portraits — are also a star of the show. A former fashion photographer in Chicago, Weston lost his vision due to AIDS in 1996, and focuses his lens, and sometimes simply his scanner, on images of decay and disability. “I not only want to look at these things, photograph these things, but put an exclamation point on them,” he explains. “I’m saying, ‘You need to look at this disabled body, this aging body. And maybe you need to reconsider your ideas about what is normal or abnormal. You need to look, and I’m going to make you look.’”

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Victorine Floyd Fludd, Radiant Abyss. Of her work, Fludd says, "A good picture comes not from outside, but from within. It's a love. Just like when you love someone and you show the love. You're going to go all out to get that picture how you want it to be."

Perhaps the most experienced blind photographers come from New York City’s Seeing With Photography Collective, which has been shooting blind since 1988 under the direction of Mark Andres. The Riverside exhibition features some collaborative group work, but also pieces by individual members. One of those is Sonia Soberats, who explains, “When I tell people I do photography, they don’t believe me. When a person achieves something that others think you can’t because you are blind, you feel it much more.” Another individually recognized collective artist is Steven Erra, who says, “I only see parts of things at a time, very small areas at one time. These pictures that we’re taking now concentrate on one area at a time. A sharpness, a blurriness, a sharpness, a blurriness, your eyes are always going from one to the other, which is how I view the world, too.”

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Victorine Floyd Fludd, Children of the Damned. A member of the New York's Seeing with Photography Collective, Fludd was born in Antigua and presently resides in Brooklyn. She lost her vision at the age of 26.

McCulloh has been pursuing these blind photographers for more than a decade, and began pitching the idea of this show four years ago. But the time became right this year, he says because “I’m convinced of its importance. The main trigger is that I’ve seen a real groundswell of interest around the world in a whole lot of different places, including Tel Aviv, Czechoslovakia, Mexico City, London, Los Angeles…. I felt like the movement was really there.” Thanks to crowds and critical acclaim, the exhibit seems likely to show again in Mexico City after leaving Riverside.

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Pete Eckert, Electroman. One of Eckert's techniques involves using a composite body view camera mounted on a tripod. Focusing with notches carved into a focus rail, he throws his studio into total darkness, opens the shutter, and roams the space "painting" his image with light, using flashlights, candles, lasers and other devices.

What do gallery-goers say? “I was very impressed by it. The technique and experience and technical ability that was within the group was amazingly diverse,” says John Hesketh, a printmaker in Anaheim. “You never have a sense of feeling sorry for these people because they’ve worked very hard to be where they’re at.”

Next door to the museum is the Sweeney Art Gallery, where curator Tyler Stallings has seen a steady stream of visitors. “It’s definitely a show that’s brought in a lot of people who may have never been here, even though they live in the area,” says Stallings. He notes that while the show certainly has a curiosity element, the work is not presented in a “superficial” way. He explains that shows that target a “self-defined” community, such as a certain ethnicity, “can oftentimes make it a marginalized exhibition. What’s nice about this show is that Doug made an amazing effort to make it international and to really get quality artwork.”

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Pete Eckert, Charlie by the Portal. "I'm a very visual person" says photographer Pete Eckert, "I just can't see." Based in Sacramento, California, Eckert began to pursue photography only after going completely blind in 1980. To him, blindness gives him an advantage. "Sighted photographers always talk about the difficulty of what they call 'seeing.' I tell them 'If you can't see, it's because your vision is getting in the way."

Beyond the praise, however, the exhibition also marks another milestone for disabled people everywhere. That point was explained most poignantly in early May during a panel discussion on the show. At the very end of the talk, one attendee summed it up: “This exhibition is landmark and revolutionary for many reasons…. Because the work is dignified by being at a museum, it’s not a question just of the history of photography, but the history of the civil rights movement. I think that by being an artist with a disability, you are continuing the work of those people who fought for basic civil rights to gain access and to have a voice. In that way, it’s so wonderful that your photographs say it all.”

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Gerardo Nigenda, Entre lo invisible y lo tangible, llegando a la homeostasis emocional. Born in Oaxaca, Mexico, the 42-year-old Nigenda calls his images "Fotos cruzados," or "intersecting photographs." As he shoots, he stays aware of sounds, memories, and other sensations. Then he uses a Braille writer to punch texts expressing those the things he felt directly into the photo. The work invokes an elegant double blindness: Nigenda needs a sighted person to describe the photo, but the sighted rely on him to read the Braille. The title of this work translates roughly to: "Between the invisible and the tangible, reaching an emotional homeostasis."

And such tenacity at getting their work recognized is certainly something that McCulloh the curator can appreciate. “These people combine two traits,” he says. “They’re all intensely visual. They just can’t see — and that expresses itself in a whole variety of ways. The other one is they’re furiously independent and determined. This is a group that does not say ‘quit’ in any way.” Or as Weston says, “I guess it’s God’s little joke, having someone who is legally blind do so well in the visual arts.”

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Kurt Weston, Mask. A gay man who lost his sight to AIDS in 1996, Weston's work explores the stigma of disease and decay. His daily battle to stay alive is transformed into an unflinching look at his (and our) mortality: "These photographs are about the realization of loss," he says. "About losing your facade. They say, 'This is your new reality. This is your strange new flesh. Let's take a look."

Legally Blind Photographer

June 29, 2009

Many years ago I met a wonderful photographer who was legally blind. She was determined to keep shooting. She contacted Konica, one of the first camera manufacturer to come out with an auto focus camera. As a result of here new system she was able to continue to shoot and exhibit her work.

Once again I’m inspired by the work of of another photographer who happens to be blind, Kurt Weston

Behind the Scenes: Altered Visions

Kurt Weston, 51,was once part of what he calls “the illusion machine.” As a glamour photographer, he would jet to Europe with hair stylists and makeup artists to transform models and create the appearance of beauty.

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The Vision Machine

Now he says he is interested only in authenticity. Mr. Weston’s subjects are the elderly and the frail, with special attention to issues surrounding blindness. Surface appearances do not interest him so much.

What changed his work was an HIV/AIDS-related condition — cytomegalovirus retinitis — that destroyed his sight in one eye and left the other with minimal peripheral vision. In 1995, Mr. Weston was close to death, but new antiviral drugs saved his life.

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Do You See the Big E

Today, he is a legally blind photographer.

“I was grateful to be alive, but I assumed I couldn’t do photography,” he recalled in a recent telephone interview from Huntington Beach, Calif., where he lives. “But I learned mobility skills, adaptive computer skills and how to use low-vision devices like monoculars, video magnifiers and thick clear-view glasses to help me see.”

Mr. Weston was shocked when he realized he could photograph again. “I still don’t see very much of anything,” he said, “but I see enough to get by.”

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Peering Through the Darkness

His first major projects were about his own blindness. He started with self-portraits that illustrated the psychological, emotional and physical weight of vision loss. There is nothing glamorous about these images. He lay atop a scanner and dripped foaming glass cleaner onto the surface to create visual disturbance. Some images include the vision assistance devices on which he relies.

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Reel Vision

“I try to replicate my vision,” Mr. Weston said. “When i move my eye, I see spiderlike tendrils. There’s nothing in focus or sharp.”

In his next series, Silent Age, he photographed elderly people, using a medium format camera. With a scanner, he combined these images with photographs he took of peeling paint on the walls of Chicago subway stations. Together, they suggest the deterioration that often comes with advanced age. Other images involved subjects, often in their 80s and 90s, laying on the scanner.

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Silent Heart

Mr. Weston feels he is unlikely to reach a great age himself because of HIV and the drugs he takes. “The body is like a machine that breaks down,” he said. “It deteriorates over time.”

While the concept of a blind photographer may seem counterintuitive, Mr. Weston is not alone. Many legally blind people photograph and exhibit their work, as Time noted in“The Art and Heart of “Blind Photographers.” There are over 150 members of the group“Blind Photographer” started by Tim O’Brien. The Web site BlindPhotographers.org developed out of the Flickr community.

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Floaters

When Mr. Weston teaches photography at the Huntington Beach Art Center, he doesn’t tell his students that he is legally blind. He waits until they figure it out. He says that after their original shock, the students realize he has much to teach them.

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Wiser Than Dreams

He helps them develop their vision, just as he has expanded his own.

“I was part of the illusion machine, but now I’m dealing with mortality and the reality of being human,” Mr. Weston said. “I just want it to be intensely real.”

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Peering Through the Darkness

By James Estrin / New York Times

Essay: Slow Photography in an Instantaneous Age

June 21, 2009

Digital photography, we’ve come a long way in a short amount of time.  Where will it take our profession? How will it affect how we approach photography. Well, this post isn’t about digital photography. It’s about shooting beautiful black and white film. Check out New York Times photographer Fred Conrad’s latest post to “LENS”

Fast is fine, but slow can be much better.

Fred R. Conrad

Lens / New York Times / Blog

Digital photography and the ascent of the Web have quickened our jobs. Instead of one deadline a day, we now have continual deadlines, bringing exponentially increasing speed to what we do at The Times.

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One advantage of using larger formats is that the process is slower. It takes time to set up the camera. It takes time to visualize what you want.

When doing portraits, it enables the photographer to talk and listen to subjects, to observe their behavior. A camera can trap a photographer sometimes. You can look so intently through a viewfinder that you are unaware of the picture in front of you. When I use an 8-by-10 camera for portraits, I will compose the picture and step back. Using a long cable release, I will look at the subject and wait for the moment. It’s very liberating.

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The same technique worked for me when I photographed architecture for the “Geometries” series. But there was another liberating aspect, too. With exposures that may take as long as an hour, you really don’t know what the end result will be. There is a little bit of faith involved, and a lot of imagination. That, and the fact that you have to wait to develop the film, just adds to the excitement.

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When the Lens project started, I hadn’t shot large format black-and-white film for quite a while. In fact, there is no dark room in the new Times headquarters. Lucky for me, Chuck Kelton and his Kelton Labs are still around. Then I needed to settle on a film and developer. I ended up with Fuji Neopan and Efke 25, made in Croatia. For a developer, I chose Rodinal. It’s been around since the 1890s. It was made by Agfa, which no longer exists, but I found a store in Hollywood, Freestyle Photographic Supplies, that carried both the film and developer.

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One memorable experience during this project was photographing the one remaining Loew’s Wonder Theater that still shows movies. Loew’s built five Wonder Theaters in the New York metropolitan area in the late 1920s. Two of these movie palaces are now churches. One no longer has its Wonder organ or a movie screen; instead, it hosts music events and boxing matches. One has remained vacant and decaying since 1984. And then there is the Jersey Loew’s in Journal Square. The theater is being restored. It has an original Wonder organ that plays. They even show movies.

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I shot the theater from the balcony, while the movie “Blade Runner” was playing. I had no idea how long to leave the shutter open. Since the movie was two hours long, I decided to make two exposures — an hour each. It was during those two exposures that I realized how different and special it was to be shooting on film. When you shoot digital, the images are quick and you spend more time looking at the back of your camera than you do seeing.

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I hope that film and large-format cameras stick around for a while. I love the results and I cherish the process. More importantly, when I have the time and opportunity to shoot big film, I feel a connection with photographers who came before me. That may be the most important reason.

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Forgotten by Capitalism

June 18, 2009

Check out the latest issue of Design Mind. It features the photos of  photographer Rob Hornstra and a fascinating article on the Russian elite.

Picture 2In the book 101 Billionaires, Norwegian photographer Rob Hornstra reveals the raw reality lurking behind the facade of the Russian power elite.

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Photography by Rob Hornstra, from his 101 Billionaires book. Courtesy of the artist. © Rob Hornstra / www.borotov.nl

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From 2000 to 2008, after more than a decade of recession and confusion following the collapse of the Soviet government, Russian capitalism skyrocketed thanks in large part to the country’s vast supplies of oil and natural gas. This boom led the Moscow-based business newspaper Finans to publish an overview of the country’s most powerful citizens, and the paper’s editors declared that Russia was home to 101 billionaires.

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But for each one of them, there are millions of others who weren’t connected, lucky, or tough enough to cash in. These citizens — factory workers, cab drivers, veterans, and more — are the subjects of photographer Rob Hornstra’s ironically titled book, 101 Billionaires. They include people like Andrey (pictured at right), a severely drug-addicted young man with HIV and tuberculosis. He receives no assistance from state health organizations and is resigned to his fate (and perhaps liberated by it). “I am sure I will die soon,” he says. “But I am not afraid. Nothing will scare me anymore.”

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In early 2009, the day the first edition of 101 Billionaires sold out, Finans announced that the number of billionaires in Russia had dropped to 49.

To learn more about Rob Hornstra and his work visit www.borotov.nl.

Rob Hornstra lives and works in The Netherlands.

Sebastiao Salgado, “Genesis”

June 14, 2009

“Africa”  latest body of work currently on exhibit at the Peter Fetterman Gallery in Santa Monica, California also includes photographs of Sebastio Salgado’s current project  “Genesis”. “Genesis” should be completed in 2012 and plans are being made to display this ecological photo essay in Central Park, New York City.

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Sebastião Salgado at the Peter Fetterman Gallery in Santa Monica, Calif.

SEBASTIÃO SALGADO sounds as if he’s slightly allergic to Los Angeles. It’s not just that this celebrated Brazilian photojournalist has been sniffling since he arrived in the city, explaining: “I was born in a tropical ecosystem. I’m not used to these plants.” It’s also that he peppers his description of the city with words like strange and crazy, noting that he was mesmerized by the sight of the endless stream of automobile traffic as his plane made its descent.

An iceberg in Antartica, photographed in 2005.
An iceberg in Antartica, photographed in 2005.

The urban sprawl of Los Angeles is, in any case, a far cry from the remote, sparsely populated jungle and desert locations where he has been traveling for his epic, ecological work in progress “Genesis.” Famous for putting a human face on economic and political oppression in developing countries, Mr. Salgado is photographing the most pristine vestiges of nature he can find: pockets of the planet unspoiled by modern development. He has visited the seminomadic Zo’e tribe in the heart of the Brazilian rain forest and weathered desolate stretches of the Sahara. Next up: two months in the Brooks mountain range of Alaska on the trail of caribous and Dall sheep.

The Sand Sea in Namibia, 2005.
The Sand Sea in Namibia, 2005.

But this brand of environmentalism is costly enough to send him back to major cities for support. That’s what brought him here for a three-day whirlwind of talks, meetings and parties. One night he gave a slide show featuring new work from “Genesis” to a sold-out crowd at the Hammer Museum. The next evening he was a guest of honor at a fund-raiser at the Peter Fetterman gallery in Santa Monica, where some of his new work appears in his show “Africa,” through Sept. 30. After that it was off to San Francisco for a benefit dinner given by Marsha Williams before returning to Paris, which he considers home along with Vitória, Brazil.

Fishermen in Mato Grosso, Brazil, a 2005
Fishermen in Mato Grosso, Brazil, a 2005

It might sound like a punishing schedule, but the 65-year-old photographer says he doesn’t mind and doesn’t lose focus on work even when flocked by art collectors and celebrity backers. Sitting down at the Peter Fetterman gallery, with his image of zebras in Namibia hanging overhead, Mr. Salgado compared his time away from nature to the potentially disruptive moment when he has to change the film in his camera, when he likes to close his eyes and sing so as not to lose concentration.

“I came here for special things, but my head is there, my body is there,” he said with an intent expression and a gentle Portuguese accent. “I might be sleeping in a hotel room in Los Angeles, but in my mind I am always editing pictures.”

A cattle camp in southern Sudan in 2006.
A cattle camp in southern Sudan in 2006.

For “Genesis,” an eight-year project now more than half completed, he is piecing together a visual story about the effects of modern development on the environment. Yet rather than document the effects of, say, pollution or global warming directly, he is photographing natural subjects that he believes have somehow “escaped or recovered from” such changes: landscapes, seascapes, animals and indigenous tribes that represent an earlier, purer — “pristine” is a favorite word — state of nature.

In this way “Genesis” is a grand, romantic back-to-nature project, combining elements of both the literary pastoral and the sublime. Mr. Salgado also describes it as a return to childhood, as he was raised on a farm in the Rio Doce Valley of southeastern Brazil — then about 60 percent rain forest — that suffered from terrible erosion and deforestation. Years later, in 1998, he and his wife, Lélia, founded the Instituto Terra on 1,500 acres of this land to undertake an ambitious reforestation project. His wife, who also designs his books and exhibitions, is the institute’s president; he is vice president and the institute’s most famous spokesman. Or, as Ian Parker wrote in The New Yorker, Mr. Salgado is more than a photojournalist, “much the way Bono is something more than a pop star.”

Herdsmen driving their cattle into a camp in southern Sudan in 2006.
Herdsmen driving their cattle into a camp in southern Sudan in 2006.

In short, while the Instituto Terra is the locally rooted arm of his environmental activism, “Genesis” is its globally minded, photo-driven counterpart. Since undertaking the series in 2004, he has visited some 20 different sites across 5 continents.

He began with a shoot in the Galápagos Islands that paid homage to Darwin’s studies there. (Mr. Salgado says his title, “Genesis,” is not meant to be religious.) “Darwin spent 37 to 40 days there,” he said. “I got to spend about three months there, which was fabulous.” He was thrilled to see for himself evidence of natural selection in species like the cormorant, a bird that lost its ability to fly after a history of foraging for food underwater, not by air.

The Gisovo Tea Plantation in Rwanda in 1991.
The Gisovo Tea Plantation in Rwanda in 1991.

Last fall he spent two months in Ethiopia, hiking some 500 miles (with 18 pack donkeys and their owners) from Lalibela into Simien National Park to shoot the mountains, indigenous tribes and rare species like a very hairy baboon known as the Gelada. “I was traveling in this area in the same way people did 3,000 to 5,000 years ago,” he said.

Well, almost the same way. He did carry a satellite phone, which made him the point person for receiving news of the United States election in November. “When we found out that Obama won, everyone driving these donkeys, everyone was jumping up and down,” he said. He called Mr. Obama’s election “a victory for the planet.”

He is cautiously optimistic about his own environmental work. “I’m 100 percent sure that alone my photographs would not do anything. But as part of a larger movement, I hope to make a difference,” he said. “It isn’t true that the planet is lost. We must work hard to preserve it.”

Boys fleeing from Southern Sudan to avoid being forced to fight in the civil war, and heading for the refugee camps of Northern Kenya in 1993.
Boys fleeing from Southern Sudan to avoid being forced to fight in the civil war, and heading for the refugee camps of Northern Kenya in 1993.

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By JORI FINKEL

Women in Photography

May 30, 2009

I would like to introduce you to a new web site that I stumble upon, Women in Photography. Although established in 2008 it appears to be well established and worth visiting. Here is an excerpt from their last group show.

Women in Photography launched in June of 2008 as an outlet for women photographers to exhibit work outside of the traditional commercial art world. Showcasing emerging photographers in addition to mid-career and established artists, it is designed as a resource for photographers, editors, curators, gallery owners, and the general public to discover and enjoy the work of women artists. As an internet-based project, the site reaches a global audience. Exhibitions are co-curated by Amy Elkins and Cara Philips.

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A GROUP SHOWCASE

“If there were a little more silence, if we all kept quiet… maybe we could understand something”
-Federico Fellini

The photographer often retreats inward from the external world – to digest, to dissect and to make it their own. The noise of the world must be taken in and internalized before they can turn their gaze out again. In that stillness all the small parts of a riddle begin to be solved. Without that the artist would most certainly be lost.

If There Were a Little More Silence, wipnyc’s first group showcase, explores the artists innate desire to break away and embark on one’s own investigation of environment, family, society and self. Featured artists include Michele Abeles, Rebecca Horne, Melissa Kaseman , Catherine Larré, Stacy Renee Morrison, Sonja Thomsen, Anna Venezia, Jessica Watson and Sarah Wilmer.

Picture 19Jessica Watson was born in 1973 in Massachusetts. She received her BA in studio art from Wellesley College and her MFA in photography from Bard College. Her work has been exhibited in New York galleries, including Art in General, Larissa Goldston Gallery, Massimo Audiello Gallery and Sean Kelly Gallery. She was a resident at the Lower Manhattan Cultural Council’s Workspace Program in 2005. She lives and works in Brooklyn, NY. www.jessicamanningwatson.com

Picture 20Rebecca Horne received a BFA from the San Francisco Art Institute in 1992 in California, and her MFA from Mason Gross School of the Arts at Rutgers University in 1997. After graduating she alternated between teaching photography at Rutgers University and working at photo agencies Redux and Sipa Press and photo editing at Newsweek and other magazines. She is currently the Photo Editor for Discover magazine.

Rebecca Horne has exhibited her photography in Europe and the US and is represented in NYC by Roebling Hall gallery. www.galleryartist.com/rebeccahorne

Picture 23Born and raised in Missouri, Sarah Wilmer lives and works in New York, with her cat, Tubs. www.sarahwilmer.com

Picture 25Michele Abeles has lived and worked in Brooklyn, NY since 1999. She makes work in the city, in her apartment, in other people’s homes, on the road, in the desert, on the beach, in the forest, and will drive many miles to find what she doesn’t know she’s looking for.

Since 2004 she has exhibited in NYC, Los Angeles, Seattle, Indianapolis and abroad. In 2005 she was selected to show work in Art & Commerce’s Festival of Emerging Photographers. She is a recent graduate from the MFA program at Yale University where she was awarded the 2007 Richard Benson Excellence in Photography prize. She teaches at Parsons the New School for Design and currently is preparing to participate in the 2008 High Desert Test Sites. www.micheleabelesphotography.com

Picture 22Catherine Larré was born in Nancy. She studied at ENSAAMA in Paris and then
at the Royal College of Art in London. Her work has been exhibited throughout Europe, most recently at the Centre Photographique, d¹Ile-de-France. She lives and works in Paris. www.catherinelarre.com

A look at the World

May 17, 2009

The New york Times ran a wonderful piece on must see places. Beautifully photographed by Raymond Meier.

I think my favorite place might be Louis Kahn’s Capital Complex, Dhaka, Bangladesh.

Check out a few of my top choices.

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Culture vultures always have at least one must-see-before-I-die destination on their list: Michelangelo’s Sistine Chapel; Chandigarh, the Le Corbusier planned city in India; Robert Smithson’s ‘‘Spiral Jetty’’ in Utah. These are places that can change the way we see and the way we think, places worth getting on a plane for, particularly now, when travelers are seeking out edifying experiences more than ever. With this in mind, T asked an eclectic group of experts to share their personal meccas. Some choices were iconic, like Walter De Maria’s earthwork ‘‘Lightning Field,’’ in Quemado, N.M., while others, like the ceiba tree in the Little Havana section of Miami on which the artist Ana Mendieta carved her silhouette, are hardly on the Grand Tour. ‘‘Seeing art is always about a personal pilgrimage,’’ says Amy Cappellazzo of Christie’s, who chose Mendieta’s piece. (Brancusi’s ‘‘Endless Column’’ in Targu-Jiu, Romania, was a runner-up.) ‘‘It is a commitment to open-mindedness and belief in the state of wonder.

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’’LOUIS KAHN’S CAPITAL COMPLEX
DHAKA, BANGLADESH

‘‘Kahn’s skill at ennobling experience through simple materials grandly used can be sensed at his library in New Hampshire and the ruins of his Trenton Bath House. But it is in the marshy capital of Bangladesh that one of America’s greatest architectural talents can be experienced in all its force.’’
— Barry Bergdoll, chief curator of architecture and design, MoMA

Picture 10STIFTUNG INSEL HOMBROICH
NEAR DÜSSELDORF, GERMANY inselhombroich.de

‘‘It’s a sort of utopian project meets private collection. The extensive grounds are practically left to the wild in a sort of eco-conscious way. In contrast to that, pavilions, like little follies, have been commissioned by artists and architects alike. They house an amazing mixture of works, from ultra-contemporary to modern to traditional. The whole thing is strangely lowbrow, no-nonsense, like a very contemporary, quiet renaissance.’’ — Sarina Basta, curator and writer

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KANAZAWA

This town, on the west coast of Japan’s main island, has recently emerged as a place of pilgrimage for both ancient and modern Japanese art and craft. 21st Century Museum of Contemporary Art It’s known for its eclectic rotating exhibits, and the striking building is a destination in itself (kanazawa21.jp). Yasue Gold Leaf Museum Kanazawa produces most of Japan’s gold leaf. See excellent examples at this small, thoughtfully curated collection (011-81-76-233-1502). Kenrokuen Garden The site is named for the six attributes (kenroku) considered vital for a perfect garden: space, seclusion, artifice, antiquity, water and scenic views. Myoryuji One of Japan’s most intriguing temples, it abounds with secret passages, hidden rooms and traps designed to protect feudal lords. (011-81-76-241-0888.) AKIKO ROBINSON

GLASS MENAGERIE PATRICK BLANC’S ‘‘GREEN BRIDGE’’ IN THE COURTYARD OF THE 21ST CENTURY MUSEUM OF CONTEMPORARY ART IN KANAZAWA, JAPAN.

Picture 13JAMES TURRELL SITES

Four places to experience the artist’s meditations on light and space. Louise Blouin Foundation, London After dark, the 78 windows here emit a transcendental light show (ltbfoundation.org). Pomona College, Claremont, Calif. His alma mater houses an example of his ‘‘skyspace’’ works (pomona.edu/museum). Villa Panza, Varese, Italy Turrell’s piece communes with installations by Dan Flavin and Robert Irwin (fondoambiente.it). James Turrell Museum, Estancia y Bodega Colomé, Argentina The first museum dedicated specifically to the artist (left) is at the Hess Family Winery (estanciacolome.com).

The Art of Life in the Age of Digital Reproduction

February 4, 2009

Tim Leberecht

Design Mind

While not a member of the Net Generation (the 88 million Millennials for whom social networking is a birthright) myself, I have many friends and co-workers who qualify, and I am constantly baffled by their ease and eagerness to narrow- and broadcast their lives through digital media and with post-privacy transparency. The audience size doesn’t matter, it can be narrow or broad, but cast it must be, even if it is often mundane. And yet, it is one of the ironies of such “ego-casting” that the status updates, which become critical life signs, the activity metrics of one’s public life, do not begin with “I” but mostly appear in third person on Facebook and Twitter and the likes.

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This is because all these outlets treat the amateur publisher as a dramatic person per se: “Anthony is happy.” – “Tim is working on an economic stimulus plan.” – “Sarah loves Tea Leaf Green.” When the Net Geners aggregate their social media publishing output into one FriendFeed, the effect becomes fully obvious: here we have the constant flux, the permanent Now as manifest and yet as fragmented as it can be. “It ain’t why, why, why, it just is,” Van Morrison sang, and another famous Irish artist, James Joyce, based on the concluding free-flow monologue of his Ulysses, would likely agree with the inevitability of “the river of life” as a never-ending “stream of consciousness” that affirms nothing but the fact that one is alive: “Yes.”

Self-portrait

February 3, 2009

THE WORD ACCORDING TO WIKIPEDIA…

A SELF-PORTRAIT IS A REPRESENTATION OF AN ARTIST, DRAWN, PAINTED, OR SCULPTED BY THE ARTIST. ALTHOUGH SELF-PORTRAITS HAVE BEEN MADE BY ARTISTS SINCE THE EARLIEST TIMES, IT IS NOT UNTIL THE EARLY RENAISSANCE IN THE MID 1400S THAT ARTISTS CAN BE FREQUENTLY IDENTIFIED DEPICTING THEMSELVES AS EITHER THE MAIN SUBJECT, OR AS IMPORTANT CHARACTERS IN THEIR WORK. WITH BETTER AND CHEAPER MIRRORS, AND THE ADVENT OF THE PANEL PORTRAIT, MANY PAINTERS, SCULPTORS AND PRINTMAKERS TRIED SOME FORM OF SELF-PORTRAITURE.

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Angelina McCormick, Self-portrait, photograph (2006)

THE PORTRAIT OF A MAN BY JAN VAN EYCK OF 1433 IS THE EARLIEST KNOWN PANEL SELF-PORTRAIT. HE PAINTED A SEPARATE PORTRAIT OF HIS WIFE, AND HE BELONGED TO THE SOCIAL GROUP THAT HAD BEGUN TO COMMISSION PORTRAITS, ALREADY MORE COMMON AMONG WEALTHY NETHERLANDERS THAN SOUTH OF THE ALPS. THE GENRE IS VENERABLE, BUT NOT UNTIL THE RENAISSANCE, WITH INCREASED WEALTH AND INTEREST IN THE INDIVIDUAL AS A SUBJECT, DID IT BECOME TRULY POPULAR.

Alexander Calder The Paris Years 1926-1933

January 30, 2009

Whitney Museum of American Art

On view October 16, 2008 – February 15, 2009

“For decades [Calder's] Circus, lent by the artist in 1970 to the Whitney Museum of American Art, has set flight to the imaginations of visiting children and adults. Now the museum is celebrating its genesis in “Alexander Calder: The Paris Years, 1926-1933,” an exhibition that brings the young Calder and the giddy ferment of his artistic circle to life.”
The New York Times,

Josephine Baker IV

Josephine Baker IV

When Alexander “Sandy” Calder (1898–1976), arrived in Paris in 1926, he aspired to be a painter; when he left in 1933, he had evolved into the artist we know today: an international figure and defining force in twentieth-century sculpture. In these seven years Calder’s fluid, animating drawn line transformed from two dimensions to three, from ink and paint to wire, and his radical innovations included openform wire caricature portraits, a bestiary of wire animals, his beloved and critically important miniature Circus (1926–31), abstract and figurative sculptures, and his paradigm-shifting “mobiles.”

Calder in his Paris studio, 14 Rue de la Colonie, fall 1931

Calder in his Paris studio, 14 Rue de la Colonie, fall 1931

The Whitney has the largest body of work by Alexander Calder in any museum and is proud to be the exclusive American venue for this landmark exhibition, co-organized with the Centre Pompidou.

Calder with Myxomatose, Paris

Calder with Myxomatose, Paris

Calder with his Cirque Calder, 1926-30

Calder with his Cirque Calder, 1926-30

Dancing for the King

January 27, 2009

design mind

By Marc Fenigstein

In an earlier post I mentioned The Design Mind conference that happened in San Francisco this month. Here is an excerpt from this event.

Alonzo King's Lines Ballet

Alonzo King's Lines Ballet

Tonight’s Design Mind event in San Francisco generated a flood of thoughts on several topics. The thread that struck me most profoundly was the question of preserving artistic vision especially within the context of group collaboration.

picture-172Alonzo King (Lines Ballet Company) shared how dance, ballet specifically, had become rigid. It had become rote, as it became less about personal expression or experience and more about professional entertainment. It had become “dancing for the king” not dancing for oneself, and some thing was lost.

Fashion Forward

January 24, 2009
Published: January 22, 2009
There are days when it seems as if you’ve been subscribing to all the wrong fashion magazines. A little bit of your world crumbles, or maybe a lot.
Weird Beauty, by Tim Walker, 2008 Vogue Italia

Weird Beauty, by Tim Walker, 2008 Vogue Italia

A visit to the International Center of Photography may cause such a day. The center is inaugurating a year of fashion photography exhibitions called “2009 Year of Fashion” with four synergistic exhibitions. They culminate in an engrossing survey of pictures from Edward Steichen’s years at Condé Nast (1923-37), when that pioneer photographer more or less invented fashion photography and celebrity portraiture.
mc queen 0803, 2008, by Guenter Parth

mc queen 0803, 2008, by Guenter Parth

But the leadoff of the foursome — and the whole year — is a blast from the present: a snapping, crackling survey of fashion photography from the last two years. With a few exceptions (usually from W magazine) the most impressive spreads are from magazines that are European, obscure or both. At least none of them have ever graced my mailbox.
Blue Mask, Paris, 2007, by Paolo Roversi

Blue Mask, Paris, 2007, by Paolo Roversi

“Weird Beauty” provides an instant update on fashion photography as a fast-moving collective expression. It is as esoteric as abstract art, and as startling as a sleek, hissing serpent in the drab garden of everyday reality. The alpha and the omega of the collaboration are the clothing designer and the photographer; in between lies the crucial participation of magazine editors and graphic designers, hair and make-up artists, sets (or setting), models and especially stylists. (The stylists’ names are featured prominently on the exhibition labels, just below the photographers’.)
Pink Eye, 2008 Richard Burbridge's

Pink Eye, 2008 Richard Burbridge

The ceiling-to-floor, push-pull installation alternates between art and commerce in all ways. Tear sheets mounted on board dominate, but selected images repeat as large framed prints for further delectation. There are regular appearances from the field’s leading lights, especially Steven Klein, but also Solve Sundsbo, Miles Aldridge and the team Mert Alas and Marcus Piggott, along with one-time visits from some artists, including Cindy Sherman (doing her own styling), Collier Schorr and Sara VanDerBeek; the versatile Terence Koh does a turn as a stylist. Also here are photographers who move easily between art gallery and fashion magazine, like Juergen Teller and Philip-Lorca diCorcia.
Ruffled Neck, New York City, 2007 Michael Thompson

Ruffled Neck, New York City, 2007 Michael Thompson

In these images, mouths are smeared with lipstick; hats are displayed on skull-like busts of burned plastic foam. The narratives veer from frothy fantasy to surprisingly hard-bitten Americana, as in the unstyled backyard images by Lise Sarfati, who began her career as a photojournalist. And the sexual innuendos and stereotypes never stop: Betty Boop, baby doll, man-eater, slut, saint, S&M toy. Nor do the shifting shades of gender. In several spreads women’s garments — and undergarments — are modeled by beautiful young men.
Black and white Op Art stripes and dots, Sundsbo

Black and white Op Art stripes and dots, Sundsbo

Clothes for the average woman or man have little place here. Fashion photography is, as others have noted, a cousin of performance art. The choreography is delicate, and the risk of flameout considerable, as even this show attests. The intent is to mesmerize and intimidate with as much fabulousness as can be wedged onto a small tract of glossy paper. This entails exploiting the latest cultural trends with parasitical finesse.
A year of fashion photography exhibitions can sound like overkill, but the center is varying its menu. These shows will be followed by a retrospective of Richard Avedon in May. And next fall the museum’s triennial will tackle the relationship between fashion photography and contemporary art.

Edward Steichen: In High Fashion

January 23, 2009

1923-1937

An exhibit at ICP

January 16- May 3, 2009

An exhibition of 175 works by Edward Steichen drawn largely from the Condé Nast archives, this is the first presentation to give serious consideration to the full range of Steichen’s fashion images. Organized by the Musée de l’Elysée, Lausanne, and the Foundation for the Exhibition of Photography, Minneapolis, in conjunction with the International Center of Photography, the exhibition will open at ICP after an extensive tour in Europe.

Model Marion Morehouse and unidentified model wearing dresses by Vionnet, 1930

Model Marion Morehouse and unidentified model wearing dresses by Vionnet, 1930

Steichen’s approach to fashion photography was formative and over the course of his career he changed public perceptions of the American woman. An architect of American Modernism and a Pictorialist, Steichen exhibited his fashion images alongside his art photographs. Steichen’s crisp, detailed, high-key style revolutionized fashion photography, and his influence is felt in the field to this day—Richard Avedon, Robert Mapplethorpe, and Bruce Weber are among his stylistic successors.

Model Marion Morehouse in a bouffant dress and actress Helen Lyons in a long sleeve dress by Kargère; masks by the illustrator W.T. Benda, 1926

Model Marion Morehouse in a bouffant dress and actress Helen Lyons in a long sleeve dress by Kargère; masks by the illustrator W.T. Benda, 1926

Edward Steichen: In High Fashion features the finest examples of his fashion and celebrity portraiture made for Vogue and Vanity Fair. Much of the exhibition is drawn from the Steichen Archive at Condé Nast, which contains more than two thousand original vintage prints.

Evening shoes by Vida Moore, 1927

Evening shoes by Vida Moore, 1927

A select group of prints from the George Eastman House, International Museum of Photography and Film in Rochester will be shown only at ICP. Some of the images in the exhibition are well-known, iconic images in various histories of photography. Never before, however, have more than a modest selection of these prints been exhibited or published.

Actor Gary Cooper, 1930

Actor Gary Cooper, 1930

The exhibition will be accompanied by a book devoted to images from Steichen’s Condé Nast years. The book’s authors are William A. Ewing, Carol Squiers, and Nathalie Herschdorfer, co-curators of the exhibition along with Todd Brandow, and Tobia Bezzola. The exhibition is traveling to ICP after presentations in Paris, Zurich, Madrid, and Reggio Emilia, Italy.

Self-Portrait with Photographic Paraphernalia, New York, 1929

Self-Portrait with Photographic Paraphernalia, New York, 1929

Obama’s White House Photographer

January 18, 2009

picture-14Witness private and political moments along Barack Obama’s path to the presidency, as seen by official White House photographer Pete Souza

picture-62ATHENS, OH (January 4, 2009) – Photojournalist and NPPA member Pete Souza has accepted the position of official White House photographer for President-elect Barack Obama, he told News Photographer magazine tonight.

Souza received the offer for the position from Robert Gibbs, the new president’s longtime spokesman who is also Obama’s incoming White House press secretary.

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It won’t be Souza’s first time in the Oval Office. He was also a White House photographer during President Ronald Reagan’s second term.

Souza, 54, said he accepted the offer today after talking with Gibbs and reaching an agreement that the primary function of the White House photography office will be to document Obama’s presidency for the sake of history.

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Gibbs is a close advisor to Obama, a member of the new president’s transition team, and made the offer to Souza this weekend on behalf of the President-elect.

“Pete is great person and a wonderful photographer,” Gibbs told the Chicago Tribune’s John McCormick. “The White House is lucky to have him back again.”

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Souza has been teaching photojournalism at Ohio University’s School of Visual Communication and the Spring semester starts today, so the photojournalist’s incoming students will learn this morning that their professor has started their classes by taking what he says is “an extended leave of absence.” Souza says he’ll leave Athens on Monday for Washington, where his family stayed while he’s been teaching in Ohio.

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Obama and Souza met for the first time in January 2005, on Obama’s first day in the U.S. Senate when he was sworn in as a Democrat from Illinois. Souza worked for the Chicago Tribune at the time, and documented Obama’s first year in the Senate, and his trips to seven countries including Kenya, South Africa, and Russia, in photographs that were later compiled into the July 2008 book “The Rise of Barack Obama,” which made it onto The New York Times bestseller list and was available to the public shortly before last summer’s Democratic National Convention in Denver, CO.

Official portrait

Official portrait

By Donald R. Winslow

Marina Berio, Untold Stories

January 17, 2009

Marina a great talent, and a dear friend. Check out one of her projects “Untold Stories”

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statement_unu17_lgbioblurbu7_lgMarina Berio

Eminent Domain

January 16, 2009

Contemporary Photography and the City

Last summer, public outcry forced New York City officials to reconsider regulations that might have required even the most casual of tourist-photographers to obtain a permit and $1 million in liability insurance to photograph or film in the streets of the city. A majority of the objectors felt that the proposed regulations threatened First Amendment rights to photograph in public places and amounted to a kind of privatization of public space. Similarly, people have questioned the current private/public arrangements that characterize much of modern urban redevelopment, from the proposed Columbia University expansion to Hudson Yards in Manhattan, and from Willets Point in Queens to the Atlantic Yards and Coney Island in Brooklyn.

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Contention particularly surrounds the legal power of eminent domain, or the taking of private property for public use: at the core of the debate is the definition of “public use” and concern that the word “public” has become a euphemism to disguise what are essentially private investments.

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As the proposed regulations on photographing in New York City illustrate, photography is often subject to such private/public complications. Indeed, issues of privacy and image rights have troubled photography throughout its history; with the shift to digital media and the increasing regulation of public space (both literal and virtual), these issues are becoming even more complex. A photograph, after all, is a transaction between the private and the public that is negotiated through the taking of an image—a kind of eminent domain of the visual realm. By its very nature, then, photography poses questions that resonate with current debates about the reorganized urban landscape and the consequent shifting of public and private space, whether through gentrification, globalization, or the suburbanization of the city.

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Eminent Domain, based on a New York Public Library exhibition of the same title (on view May 2–August 29, 2008, at the Humanities and Social Sciences Library, Fifth Avenue and 42nd Street), presents selections from the work of five New York–based artists who have recently created large photographic projects that take on the theme of the modern city. While none of the artists’ works specifically addresses the law of eminent domain, all of the projects deal in different ways, and to varying degrees, with the changing nature of space in New York City today.

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Stephen C. Pinson
The Robert B. Menschel Curator of Photography
The Miriam and Ira D. Wallach Division of Art, Prints and Photographs

Photographer Zoe Leonard

“My own neighborhood is filled with the signs of a local economy being replaced by a global one: small businesses being replaced by large corporations, multinationals taking over. The deeper I look, the more I realize that in looking into these shop windows, I am also looking out at the rest of the world. I think this is a unique moment to document, and an important one to archive. I know the world will never look quite this way again, and I feel that I want to look closely, to hold it near.”

- Zoe Leonard

Featured Photographer, Kate Isherwood

January 15, 2009

Recent Work by Kate Isherwood

I grew up in an old house within a small hamlet reached by way of a winding Devon lane. Many would find it too solitary a location, but my childhood-self inhabited a world of day-dreams and although I was often afflicted by a sense of boredom synonymous with never-ending Sunday afternoons, I recognized early-on the depth of my attachment to this place…’

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Kate Isherwood was born in 1966 and grew up in South Devon. Although she originally trained as an Illustrator, her abiding passion for photography was re-invigorated after seeing the work made by James Ravilious in North Devon.

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Kate’s photographic practice explores deeply personal narratives often combining image and text. In Voices in the Dark Water she revisits the dream-like quality of childhood memories; and the significance of her formative rural experience led to Shadows of the Past in which she visually explored the nature of her abiding attachment to a particular landscape. Kate also instigates photographic projects concerned with examining the experience of contemporary rural life, as can be seen in her work Pictures of Rural Childhood.

774685cbbb7eede60a1769d230dcb71cKate Isherwood graduated from the University of Plymouth in 2008 with a first class BA (hons) in Photography, where she was also awarded the Greg O’Shea Memorial Prize given to one student in recognition of their outstanding photographic practice throughout the degree. She has recently embarked on a two year, part-time MRes at Plymouth, where she will be researching the work of landscape photographers in Britain during the 19th Century, with particular emphasis on notions of Place and Identity.

Getting Lost To Find New Opportunity :: 迷失中发现新机会

January 14, 2009

What does it mean… take time, wander, explore, experience something new?picture-13picture-3

There is something to be said for wandering. Having no place to be, no end in sight, no final destination. Taking in the city you live with fresh eyes. Catching a glimpse of the old anew, spotting the minute, details that you had never noticed before on your daily walk to work.

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Often wandering is frowned upon. I, by no means recommend a wandering mind in a meeting, or wandering into a dark alley at night, but the serenity and contemplative nature of being able to just let free of all your inhibitions and just go. It becomes about a journey of discovery, often enlightenment.

In A Field Guide To Getting Lost, author Rebecca Solnit explains “Losing things is about the familiar falling away, getting lost is about the unfamiliar appearing” she goes on to compare the city to “resemble a conscious mind, a network that can calculate, administrate, manufacture.”  On a recent bout I found that in every tucked away corner of the city there was a true to life innovation. Small, incremental changes and adaptations of existing products to better suit the needs of its user.

image2Posted by DONG XI – January 11, 2009

Design Mind In Person: The Motion Issue

January 13, 2009

If you’re in San Francisco at the end of this month, you should check out Design Mind .

Thursday, January 22nd, 7-8:30pm

frog design

660 Third Street

San Francisco

pre register

picture-111In the current economic, environmental, and political climate, change seems the only constant we can hold onto. And with change comes movement. From shifting markets and politics to 24/7 Facebook feeds and global travel, flux defines our times. Even the production of a print magazine is a shifting series of negotiations, creative processes, and re-interpretations. The latest issue of design mind tries to capture this notion of movement in as many ways as possible, whether through the eyes of a ballet choreographer, a parent nurturing a hyperactive child, or a designer trying to manage the flow of ideas.

Please join us for an inside look at design mind via discussions with our contributors.

Speakers:

ALONZO KING
LINES Ballet Artistic Director and Choreographer

RACHEL HOWARD
San Francisco Chronicle dance columnist

DOREEN LORENZO
President, frog design

ERIC BAILEY
Design Analyst, frog design

DENISE GERSHBEIN
Associate Creative Director, frog design

DAVID HOFFER
Associate Creative Director, frog design

NICK DE LA MARE
Associate Creative Director, frog design

Moderator:

SAM MARTIN
Editor-in-Chief, design mind

Doors open at 6:30. Wine and light refreshments will be served.

Paul Graham, a shimmer of possibility

January 11, 2009

Exhibitions2009 Exhibitions

February 4–May 18, 2009

Paul Graham, Self Portrait

Paul Graham, Self Portrait

In August of 2004 Paul Graham (British, b. 1956), who had moved from London to New York in 2002, set out on the first of many trips around the United States to see and photograph the country for himself.

Paul Graham

Paul Graham

This exhibition has been selected from the resulting series of photographic works, which Graham published in twelve volumes as a shimmer of possibility (steidlMACK, 2007). Each simple but structurally inventive series includes varying numbers of pictures, from one to more than ten, and provides a vivid glimpse into unheralded moments in the lives of individuals Graham encountered on his travels.

Paul Graham

Paul Graham

A series showing a woman eating a take-out meal or a man waiting at a bus stop transcends its nominal subjects and describes aspects of life that, while ordinary, are imbued by the photographer with affection and curiosity. a shimmer of possibility is a call for attention to the brief, indefinite intervals of life.

Paul Graham

Paul Graham

As Graham has said, “Perhaps instead of standing at the river’s edge scooping out water, it’s better to be in the current itself, to watch how the river comes up to you, flows smoothly around your presence, and reforms on the other side like you were never there.”

Paul Graham

Paul Graham

MOMA, NYC

Organized by Susan Kismaric, Curator, Department of Photography.


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