31 December 2009

TruthBeauty: Pictorialism and the Photograph as Art, 1845-1945

McNay Art Museum
TruthBeauty: Pictorialism and the Photograph as Art, 1845-1945
February 3 - May 9, 2010

Drawn from the rich collections of the George Eastman House, TruthBeauty shows the rise of Pictorialism in the late 19th century from a desire to elevate photography to an art form equal to drawing and painting, and extends Pictorialism's historical period by including its influential precursors, its persistent practitioners, and its seminal effect on photographic modernism. Photographers such as Alvin Langdon Coburn, F. Holland Day, Heinrich Kühn, Edward Steichen, and Alfred Stieglitz are included in this exhibition.

Please visit www.mcnayart.org for more information

TruthBeauty is a smaller version of the exhibition of the same name produced by Vancouver Art Gallery. Both versions were curated by George Eastman House International Museum of Photography and Film. As of November 4, 2009, funding at the McNay is generously provided by the William and Salome Scanlan Foundation and the G. A. C. Halff Foundation.

IMAGE: Eva Watson-Schütze, Woman with Lily, 1905; platinum print; courtesy George Eastman House


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30 December 2009

David Scheinbaum: Cambodia Exhibition


“Photography is a means of communication. As a photographer I aspire for my images to express my feelings and thoughts about my subjects. An added benefit is when the work can help effect change in the world. With this exhibition I hope to achieve that goal.”

-David Scheinbaum


People familiar with David Scheinbaum typically associate his name with his photographic work, his dedication to teaching, and his publications. What many people are not aware of is that David spent much of his childhood in and out of a children’s hospital in Brooklyn, New York.

 In 2007, in Santa Fe, during an afternoon visit with the respected artist and friend Kenro Izu and his wife, photographer Yumiko Izu, David was introduced to a first hand account of the Angkor Hospital for Children that Kenro had started in 1999 after a trip he had made to Cambodia. Kenro was able to raise both awareness and money for the hospital with the help of the international photographic community. Each year The Friends Without A Border hold a photographic auction that can be viewed on their website at fwab@fwab.org.

While discussing each other’s work Kenro suggested that David make a trip to Siem Reap and include the temples of Cambodia in his current work on stone and it’s uses throughout the world, as well as visit the hospital.

While visiting the hospital David was taken back to his experiences as a child. When invited to exhibit his photographs made during that trip he was pleased to have the opportunity to help the Angkor Hospital for Children. In his own words he states:
 

“I know how my life was not only changed, but my very being is a result of the care that I received as a child. The work that is happening on a daily basis at the Angkor Hospital for Children is unparalleled in Cambodia. The lives that are affected number in the thousands. I couldn’t ask for a greater reward from my artistic endeavors then to help raise funds for this cause.”

-David Scheinbaum


About the Hospital:

The Angkor Hospital for Children, sponsored by Friends Without A Border, is a leading pediatric hospital providing free healthcare to children in Cambodia. On average, 350 children and their families arrive at the hospital each day. Since opening in 1999, AHC has provided nearly three quarters of a million child treatments, and has been recognized by the Ministry of Health as an official teaching hospital, having trained hundreds of healthcare and NGO workers throughout Cambodia and beyond. Friends Without A Border supports AHC as a not-for-profit corporation under section 501(c)(3) of the U.S. Internal Revenue Code.

A portion of all print sales will benefit the Angkor Hospital for Children.

Gelatin silver prints edition of 36 $1,600
Archival pigment inkjet prints, edition of 10 $750

www.angkorhospital.org

View the photographs at www.photographydealers.com





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Verve Gallery of Photography Presents A Group Exhibition by Three Gallery Artists


 

Opening Reception: Friday, January 22, 2010, 5-7pm
Exhibit is on view through Friday, March 13, 2010
 
Gallery Talk with Michael Crouser
Saturday, January 23, 2009, 2-3pm
 


Verve Gallery of Photography is pleased to present a three-person exhibition of documentary photography with Verve gallery artists Stanko Abadžic, Julio Bittencourt and Michael Crouser. The public reception is held on Friday, January 22, 2010 from 5-7pm. The exhibition is on view through Friday, March 13, 2010. There will be a Gallery Talk with Michael Crouser at Verve Gallery on Saturday, January 23, 2010 from 2-3pm.

STANKO ABADŽIC

Stanko Abadžic will be exhibiting black and white gelatin silver prints from his imagery that has a street photographer’s aesthetic, including a wide range of genre and themes in the artist’s signature style.

Abadžic’s use of shadow, line and form coupled with his juxtapositions create irony, humor and satire. The images are familiar, yet distinct, capturing an Eastern European timeless sensibility, as though they could have been made today or in the early 20th century. They remind the viewer of the old world, where people were friendly, modest, and had humor about their misgivings; playfulness was abundant yet people worked hard and the world was uncertain.

Abadžic’s work is characterized by strong contrasts of light and dark and an interest in patterns and geometric forms created by long shadows, brick or cobblestone streets, intricate ironwork designs, fences, and other grid-like elements-shot mostly in Prague and other Eastern European cities. He seeks out children playing, people on bicycles or lingering at street cafes, and has an eye for irony. There is a strong sense of nostalgia and transience running through his work, due no doubt to his experiences as a displaced person.

Stanko Abadžic was born in 1952 in Vukovar, Croatia. At the age of 15 he began to teach himself photography. After marrying, he worked as a reporter and photojournalist to support his family. When the Croatian War of Independence broke out in 1991, Abadžic left everything and fled with his family to Germany for what he hoped would be a brief stay. After four difficult years, during which he took few photographs, they were denied German citizenship and forced to leave. After moving to Prague, Abadžic experienced a rebirth and began exploring the city with a medium-format camera. At this point in 1995, he began to develop his visual eye in earnest.

Abadžic was able to return with his family to Croatia in 2002, settling in the capital of Zagreb. He continues to visit Prague to take photographs and also shoots on the Adriatic Sea. Abadžic has had solo exhibitions at the Museum of Modern Art Dubrovnik, Museum of Modern Art Rijeka, Mimara Museum in Zagreb, and various galleries in Japan, Argentina Prague, Berlin, and other Eastern European cities. He is represented in the United States by John Cleary (Houston, TX), Verve Gallery (Santa Fe, NM) and Contemporary Works (Pennsylvania).


JULIO BITTENCOURT

Julio Bittencourt will be exhibiting his award winning color photographs from the book and print series, In A Window of Prestes Maia 911 Building.

This series centers around what is thought to have been the biggest squat in the world: 911 Prestes Maia, a 22-story tower block in central São Paulo, the largest city in Brazil. In 2006 the abandoned building was home to an estimated 1630 people including 468 families with 315 children - a mini city within a very big one. In 2002 the ‘Movement for the Homeless’ had moved hundreds of homeless families into the empty building, who in turn made the place habitable, even going so far as providing a library, cinema and workshops. Then suddenly, in March of 2006, the inhabitants learned they were going to be evicted within a month. Julio Bittencourt photographed the diverse occupants at their windows, from which they communicated with one other, recording the happiness and dignity in coexistence with decay and neglect.

Bittencourt’s photographs are a powerful record of this diverse community. He grew up in São Paulo where he became accustomed to people communicating across windows as family and friends lived on top of and next to each other. As such, windows were always a significant part of BIttencourt’s life and this is what drew him to create this project.

"To be able to photograph a window I also had to be positioned in one [across from the subjects in other’s homes]. I think that by choosing windows, and only them, I created a ‘rigorous game’ that I proposed to myself – to look at windows, from windows… My intention was to show a symbolic and a physical ‘barrier’, the decay of the materials, the dignity of the people who survive behind them and the decay of a system that doesn’t integrate its inhabitants into society but moves away from them making these ‘barriers’ each time bigger."

The building was finally evicted in 2007 and many residents were relocated to public housing developments in the east side of the city, Some returned home - usually northeast of Brazil and other South American countries, while others have joined other, much smaller squats, mainly downtown. The artist has been following this theme for more than a year, in his new series called Citizen X.

Julio Bittencourt was born in Brazil, grew up in São Paulo and spent his adolescence in New York. In 2000 he began his career at the photo department of Valor Economico, the major financial publication in Brazil where he worked as a staff photographer and as assistant-editor for four years. Since 2006 Julio has been working as a freelance photographer for magazines, newspapers, advertising and corporate clients in Brazil, Europe, Canada, Japan and the United States, in addition to his personal projects. Julio's work has been exhibited in galleries and museums worldwide and published in magazines such as Geo, National Geographic, Stern, Le Monde, The Guardian, Esquire, Leica World Magazine, among others. In 2008 he published his first book, In a window of Prestes Maia 911 Building, which was awarded the Leica Oskar Barnack Award. Julio currently lives in São Paulo.


MICHAEL CROUSER

Michael Crouser will be exhibiting black and white gelatin silver prints from his soon-to-be published book, The West.

This Kodak sponsored project features imagery of the disappearing world of cattle ranchers in Colorado, all shot on Kodak Tri-X film. The imagery is made in Crouser’s style of warm-toned prints with soft blacks that allow for a sense of serenity even in the sometimes stark subject matter.

Like the artist’s previous work on the world of the bullfights in Spain, Mexico and South America, these Western pictures examine and document a rough, dangerous, age-old and disappearing world. The artist is drawn to the timeless elements in this work–horseback riding; branding with hot branding irons; cowboys wearing chaps and cowboy hats and chewing tobacco.  The artist was intrigued with the soft-spoken, kind cowboys and cowgirls that he’s met along this exploration. The Colorado landscape was a new subject for the Crouser, usually photographing in the warmer climates for his bullfighting series.

“The West is a series that had its beginnings as long ago as 1997, with some test shots I did on a ranch in Telluride, Colorado. Almost ten years later, as I found myself in a period of general and photographic malaise following the death of my mother, I was invited to come back to Colorado, to a friend's ranch near Gypsum to photograph that year's calving. I wasn't hopeful of gathering much, as my heart really wasn't in it. To my surprise, I found myself captivated by the work of the ranchers I met, and made some pictures during the week that got me excited about holding a camera again. My friendship has grown with these wonderful people, and as they have introduced me to neighboring ranchers, so has the series.”
-Michael Crouser

Michael Crouser was born in Minneapolis, Minnesota in 1962, and graduated from Saint John's University (Collegeville, MN) in 1985. His first monograph, Los Toros, was published by Twin Palms Publishers in the fall of 2007, and was given 1st Prize in the category of Fine Art Book in the International Photography Awards. Both Los Toros and his second book, Dog Run, were recognized in Communication Arts, PhotoDistrict News and the Lucies/IPAs as being among the top ten photography books of their respective publishing years.  Three prints from the Los Toros series can be found in the permanent collection of the Minneapolis Institute of Arts. Crouser is represented by galleries in Santa Fe, Houston, New York, and Spain.  His third book, with a working title of The West, featuring black and white imagery of the disappearing world of cattle ranchers in Colorado, will be published in the Spring of 2011. Michael Crouser splits his time between Brooklyn and Minneapolis.


CONTACT INFORMATION FOR VERVE GALLERY OF PHOTOGRAPHY
Jennifer Schlesinger, Gallery Director, Verve Gallery of Photography
Email: director@vervefinearts.com
Phone: 505.982.5009  Fax: 505.982.9111
Web: http://www.vervegalleryofphotography.com/


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Charis Wilson, model and writer, died on November 20th, aged 95

Charis Wilson

Dec 10th 2009
From The Economist print edition


THE first time she modelled for Edward Weston, in March 1934, Charis Wilson knew she didn’t look good. At 20 she was “a piece of jailbait”, a mere child, especially with the stumpy plaits into which she sometimes twisted her hair. She was a drifter, moving in a miasma of angry despair in and out of speakeasies and other people’s beds because her father had refused to let her go to college, even though she’d won a full scholarship to Sarah Lawrence, and even though he would certainly have let her brother go. There was nothing to do but work in her mother’s dress shop, sleep around in San Francisco, get pregnant, have an abortion. She had taken a solemn vow of chastity since then, like one of her made-up childhood rituals of lying in freezing cold water, but to someone with her natural generosity it was a heartless, bitter thing. She looked pale, her chin jutting out in defiance and her whole face needing something—like warts on her nose, her mother told her—to make it remotely interesting. READ MORE

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29 December 2009

2010 Spring Workshop Schedule for The Center for Alternative Photography


Cyanotype Image by Instructor Robert Schaefer


Feb 28 and March 7
Shooting Large Format Film Cameras with Anthony Hamboussi

March 13

Cyanotype Printing with Robert Schaefer

March 20

Introduction to Bromoil Printing with Joy Goldkind

April 24

Antique Lens Discussion with Geoffrey Berliner &  Eric Taubman

May 2

Introduction to Bromoil Printing with Joy Goldkind

May 22 & 23

Advanced Wet Plate Collodion with Nate Gibbons
                                                  
June 5 &  6
Introduction to Salted Paper Printing with Brenton Hamilton

June 12 & 13
Introduction to Wetplate Collodion Printing onto Metal & Glass with Keliy Anderson-Staley

July 10 & 11
Platinum & Palladium Printing with Carl Weese



Dates TBA:

Making & Shooting Calotype Paper Negatives with Alan Green
Shooting Antique Film Cameras with Andrew French

Introduction to Albumen Printing with Daniel Levin
Introduction to Carbon Printing with Lisa Elmaleh
How to Collect Antique Photographic Images with Thomas Harris
Digital Negative Printing with Keliy Anderson-Staley




Image by Bromoil Instructor Joy Goldkind


The Center for Alternative Photography
36 East 30th Street
New York, NY 10016
917-288-0343
keliy@capworkshops.org
www.capworkshops.org



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World Photography Awards - Cannes 2010

The global, annual awards programme for both professional and amateur photographers.


Accepting Entries until January 4th, 2010.


As one of the largest photographic events existing today, The Sony World Photography Awards (SWPA), reach far beyond an awards programme for the still image. The SWPA is a convergence of festival events, focused photographic agendas, exhibitions, awards schemes, student programmes and an industry-led gala evening ceremony which marks the pinnacle of the week-long event in April 2009.


The Sony World Photography Awards Gala and central exhibitions that support the awards’ nominees and honourees, occurs once a year in the prestigious Palais des Festivals in Cannes, France. The evening welcomes some of the most influential names in the photography industry, from press and media to gallerists, publishers, agents, critics, aficionados and the renowned artists themselves.


From fine art to applied photography in fashion, advertising and sport to humanistic and documentary photography of people, social, cultural and current affairs to the environmental image of landscape, wildlife and ecology, there are few subjects or genres left undiscovered. The celebration of the still image - its roots, conception, adaptation and continuous evolution - is a constant parallel, unifying all categories of the Sony World Photography Awards.


This impressive union of distinct photographic genres has spurred many of the industry’s elite to actively support the SWPA. A very select group of these heavyweights have been invited to form the World Photographic Academy. To date, close to 100 members from the photographic community belong to this academy, from leading international agencies, guilds, galleries, publishing houses, foundations, press and of course renowned photographers themselves, such as Elliott Erwitt, Tom Stoddart, Susan Meiselas, Stuart Franklin, Mary-Ellen Mark and many more.


Beyond the week-long celebration in Cannes, the Sony World Photography Awards continuously create ways in order to support and further promote its existing industry network, the newly discovered photographers and those studying the craft. These many year-long initiatives include the Student Programme, The Sony World Photography Awards Global Tour and the Online World Photography Awards Magazine, Galleries and Store.


http://www.worldphotographyawards.org/default.aspx

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28 December 2009

Showcase: Channeling Caponigro





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Showcase: A Thirsting Planet




Though James Whitlow Delano has devoted years of his life to photographing the global water crisis, he was not paying much attention to the recent conference on climate change.

It’s not that he didn’t care about what the world’s leaders did in Copenhagen. But he couldn’t follow the negotiations over the earth’s future because he was cut off — virtually incommunicado — working in the Gobi Desert in Inner Mongolia. Lens reached him at an Internet cafe in a small settlement as a sandstorm approached.

Continue Reading and view the slideshow here


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26 December 2009

The Year in Pictures 2009 - Photo Essays - TIME Magazine




Kate Westaway
Kate Westaway

Upside Down
Photographer Kate Westaway went underwater to take this image of a humpback whale calf off the coast of Turks and Caicos. "I was really terrified at first, she says. "I was in snorkel gear, and this humpback calf was brushing me with his pectoral fin. He would slap the water with his tail and then go to his mother, who was sleeping nearby, then return to us. I came eye to eye with him a few times. Maybe he was fascinated by his reflection in my 
 fish-eye lens." The photograph is printed upside down. Westaway says she wanted to show the world from the whale's perspective.



Steven Day / AP
Steven Day / AP

Miraculous
Passengers wait on the wings of US Airways Flight 1549, an Airbus 320 that was safely ditched in the Hudson River after a flock of birds knocked out both its engines. This photograph was taken by artist Steven Day. He recalls, "I have a freelance job on 47th street, on the 8th floor. I was working on my computer when someone passed by me and said, 'what is that?' So I instinctually grabbed my camera —I'm working on a series that involves recording the world around me — and went to the window and started shooting. My initial reaction was 'this must be an exercise.' It didn't occur to me that it was a plane until I zoomed in, because they were just moving down the river like a boat. I mean, you just don't see people standing on the wings of an airplane in the middle of the Hudson River. Alive...The river was moving so fast it was only a matter of seconds before the plane floated past us. The photo here is one of the first frames I took, there's actually a water taxi approaching that ended up being cropped out. Very quickly there were 4 or 5 ferries responding, and passengers were being taken on board. It was strangely calming. This was an incredible situation, and everyone was there and they knew what their job was and what their limitations were and they were just waiting to be rescued."


View More: http://www.time.com/time/photogallery/0,29307,1946595,00.html



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24 December 2009

Bob Willoughby dies at 82; still photographer shot on movie sets








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Nine Photojournalists. One Ambitious Climate Change Project.

Originally posted as Nine Photojournalists. One Ambitious Climate Change Project. on December 2, 2009 at 7:39am on www.pdnonline.com:

NOOR photo agency was formed to pool talent and resources behind projects about pressing social issues. Nine of its member photographers just completed a group project on climate change to  influence debate at the UN summit in Copenhagen.
Read the Interview by David Walker

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22 December 2009

Workshop with Josephine Sacabo

In this extended week-end workshop, I will be showing you how to make polymer photogravures from either your film negatives or digital files. Polymer gravures are a new method of making gravures without using strong chemicals - in fact they are exposed in sunlight or a UV light and processed in water. The results are as beautiful as copper gravures.

We will be working in my New Orleans studios where I print all of my gravures and you will be making two 8x10 plates and as many prints as time allows. We will also spend some time shooting. We will provide a setting and models in my studio, both male and female. I will then teach you how to make your digital positives on transparent film and we will produce them together.

At this point you will learn how to make your plates and we will print your images together on my large American Standard printing press. This is the process that I use for my work and I am happy to share this exciting experience with interested photographers.


Who should attend: This workshop is open to all photographers in any format.
No prior experience with digital printing or photogravure is necessary.

Level: All levels.

What to bring: Digital SLR with various lenses and a tripod.
Participants who wish to make photogravures of their existing work may also bring their negatives or digital files.
Two models will be available on the first day of the workshop and the studio has a large collection of props.

Dates: May 14-16, 2010. 10am-5pm each day.

Class limit: 8 students.


Biography: Josephine Sacabo lives and works mostly in New Orleans, where she has been strongly influenced by the unique ambience of the city. She is a native of Laredo, Texas, and was educated at Bard College, New York. Prior to coming to New Orleans, she lived and worked extensively in France and England.
Her earlier work was in the photo-journalisitic tradition, influenced by Robert Frank, Josef Koudelka, and Henri Cartier-Bresson. She now works in a very subjective, introspective style. She uses poetry as the genesis of her work and lists poets as her most important influences, among them Rilke, Baudelaire, Pedro Salinas, Vincente Huiobro, and Juan Rulfo.

More Information: 
http://www.neworleansworkshops.com/artists/josephine/photogravure.html

Upcoming Lectures by Susan kae Grant

ASMP Dallas February panel at The Women's Museum Dallas Fair Park:

Featured Speakers:
JEAN ANN BYBEE, commercial
SUSAN KAE GRANT, fine art
CHERYL DIAZ MEYER, photojournalism
ALISON V SMITH, editorial

When: Thursday February 4 (6pm social, 7pm presentation).
Where: The Women's Museum 3800 Parry Avenue Dallas, TX 75226
214.915.0860

_________________________________________________

Visiting Artist Lecture: Susan kae Grant
University of Oregon, Eugene
Thu, Feb 11 2010
7 p.m. –8 p.m.
Room 115 Lawrence Hall
Department of Art
Contact Beth Roy, (541) 346-3609

21 December 2009

2009 Southwest Books of the Year

Five Museum of New Mexico Press (MNMP) titles, including Telling New Mexico and Through the Lens, were selected as 2009 Southwest Books of the Year by a distinguished panel, including western writers and librarians.  The annual competition, in its 33rd year, is organized by the Arizona Historical Society/Pima County Library.  Of the 12 "Top Picks", 4 were MNMP publications (the only publisher with as many top picks!) and another MNMP title was picked as a "Notable" book.  All the titles represent great collaborative efforts between museums, authors and MNMP.  I give special recognition to my staff, especially Mary and David for their hard work and talent, and their dedication to producing books of high quality and scholarship.

Here are some excerpts from panelist comments:

"Top Picks":

Through the Lens: Creating Santa Fe, Edited by Mary Anne Redding and Krista Elrich (W. David Laird):  This collection of images, beautifully reproduced, captures the essence of the oldest capital city in the U.S….Fine visual browse with excellent text.”  (Bill Broyles) “[Catches] the magic of the town’s sense of place, identity, and history.  The combination of fine art, historical photography, and documentary work makes for more than just a magnificent volume—it gives a full and inviting sense of North America’s oldest capital.”

Telling New Mexico: A New History, edited by Marta Weigle with Frances Levine and Louise Stiver (Patricia Etter):  “What a great way to get a history lesson!  Sit down, open this book anywhere and enjoy....this is for the general reader, the scholar, and should probably should be in every New Mexico classroom.” (Bill Broyles) “Each of the essays in this book is excellent and many are superb….Other states should do so well.”

New Mexico Colcha Club:Spanish Colonial Embroidery & the Women Who Saved It, by Nancy Benson (Patricia Etter):  “…the author carefully weaves in the history of New Spain along with the art of weaving and evolution of the colcha revival.   All is presented in color in a beautifully designed volume that should be prized by weavers.”

To Walk in Beauty: A Navajo Family's Journey Home, by Stacia Spragg-Braude, Afterword by N. Scott Momaday (Bill Broyles) “This profoundly moving book is about a Navajo family, the Begays….Their story is told in compelling, personal photographs by Stacia Spragg-Braude and in the family’s owns words….read this book.  In an afternoon you’ll gain the insight of a lifetime.” (W. David Laird) “Heartfelt…”


"Notable" selection:
El Rancho de Las Golondrinas by Carmella Padilla, Photographs by Jack Parsons (Bill Broyles) “With a mellow and accurate voice, Carmella Padilla narrates this rich history, enormous passion, and compelling preservation of architecture, lifeways, and community cooperation. Jack Parsons’ photos, taken over a period of 35 years, perfectly complement the text and enliven our sense of being there.” (Patricia Etter) “History at its best.”

18 December 2009

Nevada Wier - The Great Unpacking and The Big Camera Cleaning … it must be done

I consider myself a Professional Packer, since I seem to do it all the time. Packing and unpacking. In previous blog posts I have discussed what gear I take on international trips and how I pack all my photographic equipment (and I have my equipment list on my website). Now I’m home after two months of travel and I have to unpack it all (while thinking of two upcoming trips). I hate unpacking, really hate it...

Read More:
http://nevadawier.wordpress.com/

Review LA - posted by Mary Virginia Swanson on Facebook

Few spaces remain for Review LA, across the street from Photo LA; lottery begins soon!

This afternoon I spoke with Laura Wzorek Pressley at CENTER, and learned that there are a few spaces available for those photographers wishing to have their work reviewed by industry professionals at Review LA January 14-16 at the Doubletree Guest Suites in Santa Monica, California.

And as an added benefit for participants, the art fair “Photo LA” is returning to its former location the Santa Monica Civic Auditorium, occurring across the street from Review LA on the same weekend. This way, photographers can participate in a portfolio review event AND attend an art fair on the same trip. And this convenience also makes it easy for those attending and exhibiting at the fair to consider attending the open portfolio walk on Friday evening January 15th which will showcase the work of Review LA participants (held in the Doubletree’s ballroom). Economy in every way!

CENTER, which also organizes Review Santa Fe (an annual juried portfolio review event),offers participants the opportunity to rank the reviewers in order of preference during an on-line lottery. When this period of time concludes, you will know exactly which reviewers you will be meeting with.

From Laura: “The lottery opens this Monday, December 21st, and closes on Tuesday, December 29th. (Note – the lottery and the reviews are not based on a first-come, first-serve basis. It makes no difference if participants enter their reviewer preferences on Monday, or a minute before the lottery closes on the 29th). On Wednesday, December 30th we run the data as submitted, and the resulting schedules will be available for the participants in order to prepare for their reviews. If any spaces are available after that date, the photographers must choose the review spaces that remain.”


To view a list of the professional scheduled to review portfolios, click here.

01 December 2009

photoMiami 2009 Exhibiting Artists




photo MIAMI 2009, December 1 - 6, 2009
3401 North Miami Avenue and NW 34th Street, Miami, Florida
Click Here for Directions.

VERVE Gallery can be visited at Booth 101.

Now in its fourth year, photo MIAMI, the acclaimed contemporary international fair of photo-based art, video, and new media, returns in a new, 30,000 square foot venue at NW 34th Street and North Miami Avenue in Miami's Wynwood Arts District. Coinciding with Art Basel Miami Beach, the fair opens on December 1 with a Gala VIP Invitational Reception.

The fair's new location is strategically positioned in Miami's midtown arts corridor. photo MIAMI is on the main thoroughfare for all of the major satellite fairs in Miami, as well as the Rubell Family Collection and the new warehouse for the Rosa and Carlos de la Cruz Collection, which will open that week.

VERVE Gallery will focus on exhibiting women in contemporary photography, representing emerging and established female artists working in all mediums. We intend to expand the recognition of these female artists and add new, lesser-known, as well as desirable artists to the international photographic community of Photo Miami. Works by Susan Burnstine, Brigitte Carnochan, Susan kae Grant, Jane Martin, Beth Moon, Elizabeth Opalenik, Janet Russek, Josephine Sacabo, Jennifer Schlesinger, Maggie Taylor and Nevada Wier will be on view.

Please visit the photoMIAMI website for more information: http://www.photomiami-2009.com


SUSAN BURNSTINE

Susan Burnstine is an award winning fine art and commercial photographer based in Los Angeles. Susan is represented in galleries across the country, widely published throughout the world and has also written for several photography magazines, including a monthly column for Black & White Photography (UK). Nominated for the 2009 Santa Fe Prize for Photography and winner of numerous awards including B&W Magazine?s 2008 Portfolio Spotlight Award.




BRIGITTE CARNOCHAN

Carnochan’s painted gelatin silver photographs have been exhibited at galleries and museums nationally and internationally. A book of her images, Bella Figura: Painted Photographs by Brigitte Carnochan, containing 73 color plates of her work, was published by Modernbook Editions in July 2006. A limited edition monograph with 11 gelatin silver photographs, The Shining Path, was also published in 2006 by 21st Publications. Carnochan was named a Hasselblad Master Photographer for 2003 and her work has recently been featured on covers of Camera Arts and Silvershotz and in Polaroid, Black and White, Studija, and Hasselblad Forum magazines. Three catalogs of her previous work have been published. She teaches photography classes regularly through the Stanford University Continuing Studies program and serves on the advisory council of the Santa Fe Center for Photography.



SUSAN KAE GRANT

Susan Kae Grant received a B.S. in 1976 and a MFA in Photography and Book Arts in 1979 from the University of Wisconsin-Madison. She is a Professor and Head of the Photography & Bookmaking Program at Texas Woman's University and teaches workshops annually at the International Center for Photography in New York City. She was the recipient of the "Crystal Apple Teaching Award" from the Society of Photographic Education in 2003 & 2005 and "The Excellence in Photographic Teaching Award" from the Santa Fe Center for Photography. Grant's photography is in permanent collections of various national museums including the George Eastman House; the Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography; the J. Paul Getty Museum; the Victoria and Albert Museum; and the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston.



JANE MARTIN

Jane Martin was born in Brooklyn and grew up in Huntington, New York. Before graduating Summa Cum Laude from the State University of New York, College at Oneonta with a B. A. in Studio Art, she was chosen to participate in a study-abroad program in Tours, France under the direction of Erik Koch, former student of and assistant to abstract expressionist Hans Hofmann. Immersion in this intensive master-student environment and life in another culture with proximity to European art collections became a watershed in her life. She remained in France for six years, living in the south of France, Lyon, Strasbourg as well as Copenhagen, while painting and traveling to European museums.



BETH MOON

Although Beth was a fine art major, she is a self-taught photographer with interests in alternative printing processes. The majority of her work today employs the Mike Ware platinum printing method that she learned while living in England. Beth has exhibited widely in England, France and throughout the U.S. with solo shows in London, San Francisco and Chicago. She has won several awards including the Golden Light Award from the Maine Photographic Workshops and she been published widely in major photographic magazines.






ELIZABETH OPALENIK

Elizabeth Opalenik’s innovative images using figurative and flower themes have been shown in over sixty international exhibitions, and profiled in most major photographic publications. A sought after teacher/lecturer, she privately leads figure and alternative process workshops in California, Provence, Tuscany, Mexico, Argentina and on barges in Burgundy; she also conducts classes for The Maine Photographic Workshops, Santa Fe Photographic Workshops, The British Guild of Portrait Photographers, the Center for Photography at Woodstock, National Geographic and others. Her work has been profiled in most major photographic publications and most recently she was featured in Zoom Magazine's 30-year anniversary issue.



JANET RUSSEK

Alongside her artistic work, Janet Russek is also a private fine art photography dealer in Santa Fe. She and her husband, David Scheinbaum, founded Scheinbaum and Russek, Ltd., in 1980. The company maintains an inventory of contemporary and vintage photographic works, and it exclusively represents the estates of Eliot Porter and of Beaumont and Nancy Newhall.

The couple has collaborated on two books, Ghost Ranch: Land of Light (Balcony Press, 1997), and Images in the Heavens, Patterns on the Earth: The I Ching (Museum of New Mexico Press, 2005), which won the American Association of Museums award for design in 2005. Russek was a founding member of the New Mexico Council on Photography, and she has served on the boards of the Marion Center for Photographic Arts and the Association of International Photography Art Dealers. Her work is part of the permanent collections of several museums, including the New Mexico Museum (Santa Fe), the Bibliotecque Nationale (Paris), and the High Museum of Art (Atlanta).



JOSEPHINE SACABO

Sacabo, an internationally acclaimed photographer, has had four books of her own work published including "Une Femme Habitée" in Paris in 1991 by Editions Marval; award winning "Pedro Paramo" in 2002 by the University of Texas Press; "Cante Jondo" in 2002 by 21st Publishing; and “Duino Elegie” in 2005 also by 21st Publishing. Sacabo has had solo shows in Paris, London, Madrid, Toulouse, Buenos Aires, Mexico City, New York, Chicago, Los Angeles and other major U.S. cities. Her work has also been widely published in magazines in the United States and Europe, including Camera Arts, B&W Magazine, Rangefinder Magazine, ZOOM and others. Her work is in the collections of the Whitney Museum of American Art - N.Y.; The Museum of Modern Art - N.Y.; The Art Institute of Chicago; Houston Museum of Fine Arts; The Smithsonian - Washington D.C.; The Library of Congress; The New Orleans Museum of Art; The Wittliff Collection – Austin; The Bibliothèque Nationale – Paris; and La Maison de la Photo – Paris; among others.Joséphine Sacabo has taught highly acclaimed workshops at the Center for Photography at Woodstock, the Rencontres Internationales de la Photographie in Arles - France and at the Santa Fe Workshops.



JENNIFER SCHLESINGER

Jennifer Schlesinger graduated from the College of Santa Fe in 1998 with a B.A. in Photography and Journalism. She was an adjunct professor in the Photography Department at the College of Santa Fe and has taught for many other organizations. She has exhibited widely at regional as well as national venues including the Santa Fe Art Institute, Portland Northwest College of Art, Chelsea Art Museum and the Bridge Art Fair in Chicago. Her work has been published online and in print and is represented in public collections including the Huntington Botanical Art Collections (CA) and The New Mexico Museum of Art. She has received several honors in recognition of her work including a Golden Light Award in Landscape Photography (Maine Photographic Workshop 2005); a nominated finalist for the Willard Van Dyke Grant (NMCP 2005) and the Santa Fe Prize for Photography (Center 2007); and a nominee for the Eliot Porter Fellowship (NMCP 2007). In 2007 she was awarded the CCA Photography Auction Award (Santa Fe 2007). Schlesinger has also held positions in various non-profit arts organizations such as being the Assistant Director of Santa Fe Art Institute (2002-2005). Her work is represented by Wallspace Gallery (Seattle, WA) and Verve Gallery of Photography (Santa Fe). Schlesinger is co-founder of the NM Photography Collective, www.flash-flood.org.



MAGGIE TAYLOR

Maggie Taylor was born in Cleveland, Ohio, and was awarded her BA degree in Philosophy from Yale University. Her MFA degree in Photography came from the University of Florida. After more than ten years as a still-life photographer, in 1996 she began to use the computer to create her images. Her work is featured in Adobe Photoshop Master Class: Maggie Taylor’s Landscape of Dreams, published by Adobe Press in 2005; and Solutions Beginning with A, Modernbook Editions, Palo Alto, 2007. Taylor’s images have been exhibited in one-person exhibitions throughout the U.S. and abroad. Her work is in the permanent collections of The Art Museum, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ; The Center for Creative Photography, Tucson, AZ; The Harn Museum of Art, Gainesville, FL; The Houston Museum of Fine Art, TX; The High Art Museum, Atlanta, GA; and The Fogg Art Museum, Harvard University, MA, among others. Taylor lives in Gainesville, Florida.



NEVADA WIER

Nevada Wier was an editorial assignment photographer for magazine such as National Geographic, Smithsonian and many others. In addition to her editorial assignments, Nevada Wier has also been the photographer for various book publications including “The Land of Nine Dragons - Vietnam Today“ (Abbeville Press), winner of the Lowell Thomas Best Travel Book of 1992. She was also the author and photographer of “Adventure Travel Photography” (Amphoto) and a participating photographer in “A Day in the Life of Thailand” (Collins), Planet Vegas (Collins) and “Mother Earth” (Sierra Clubs Books). Ms. Wier has also participated in several television programs involving her travels on assignment with National Geographic including “Through the Lens,” as well as “Canon Photo Safaris” (Outdoor Life Network), and she has been a regular guest on The Travel Channel. She was a speaker for the 2000 nation-wide tour “LIVE...from National Geographic”, and she has participated in numerous other seminars and professional panels.