Showing posts with label Gallery Exhibition. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gallery Exhibition. Show all posts

3.10.2011

LOUISE WHELAN: Australians All

Burundi refugee's find a new home in Newcastle NSW
Photograph (c) Louise Whelan /All Rights Reserved


The Tibetan community of Australia visited by HH the Dalai Lama, Sydney
Photograph (c) Louise Whelan /All Rights Reserved


A proud southern Sudanese refugee at his home in Newcastle NSW
Photograph (c) Louise Whelan /All Rights Reserved


Chef with BBQ Duck Moon Festival Cabramatta NSW
Photograph (c) Louise Whelan /All Rights Reserved


Northern Sudanese twins Punchbowl NSW
Photograph (c) Louise Whelan /All Rights Reserved


Icelander sits proudly in her St Mary's Home NSW
Photograph (c) Louise Whelan /All Rights Reserved

Documentary photographer, Louise Whelan, has been on a two-year journey to capture ‘slice of life’ images from all the ethnic communities in NSW. Working with the State Library of NSW and photographer John Immig, this project has enormous cultural and historical significance for all Australian’s as the photographers document approximately one hundred and fifty different ethnic groups.

Over 50 photographs by Louise Whelan will be exhibited as part of Sydney's Living In Harmony Festival, March 18 - March 26. Pine Street Gallery, 64 Pine Street, Chippendale, NSW, Australia.

3.04.2011

KRISTOFER DAN-BERGMAN: Space | Yearbook



from 'Yearbook' series
Photograph (c) Kristofer Dan-Bergman

from 'Yearbook' series
Photograph (c) Kristofer Dan-Bergman


Kristofer Dan-Bergman is a Swedish born photographer who lives and works in New York. His projects include documentary, fine arts, editorial and commercial work. Photography has allowed Kristofer to meet and photograph people he would most likely never have encountered otherwise. Former President and First Lady, Bill and Hillary Clinton, Lauren Bacall, Muhammad Ali, Joan Baez and Noble Peace Prize Award Winner, Desmond Tutu, have all sat on the other side of Kristofer’s lens.

I met Kristofer at the recent ASMPNY Fine Art Portfolio Review.
Check out his 'SPACE' vimeo above and view his 'YEARBOOK' series. Watch for an exhibition in Sweden's Smalands Museum 9/15/11 thru 1/15/12.

WYATT GALLERY: Tent Life Haiti


Photograph (c) Wyatt Gallery /All Rights Reserved

Photograph (c) Wyatt Gallery /All Rights Reserved

Tent Life: Haiti. Published by Umbrage Editions

Wyatt Gallery (a person not a place) grew up in Philadelphia. He's received numerous awards such as the Fulbright Fellowship, the PDN 30, and 25 Under 25 Up-and-Coming American Photographers by Duke University. His photographs have been exhibited throughout the U.S.A. and are in major private and public collections, including the Museum of Fine Arts Houston, the George Eastman House, and American Express. In 2011, Wyatt published Tent Life: Haiti with Umbrage Editions. 100% of the royalties from the sale of this book go to Haitian Relief.

Tent Life: Haiti

Photographs + Book by Wyatt Gallery
Through March 31st
Umbrage Gallery, Dumbo

2.25.2011

RAGHU RAI: Magnum Photographer NYC Exhibit

Book Cover: Artist Studio, Kolkata, 2004
RAGHU RAI'S INDIA: Reflections In Black & White
(Penguin Studio 2007)

Flower Market, Kolkata, 2004
Photograph (c) Raghu Rai /All Rights Reserved


Traffic at Chawri Bazar, Delhi, 1964
Photograph (c) Raghu Rai /All Rights Reserved


Ganpati Celebration, Mumbai, 2001
Photograph (c) Raghu Rai /All Rights Reserved


Preparing for Durga Puja, Kolkata, 1999
Photograph (c) Raghu Rai /All Rights Reserved


Burial of an unknown child the morning after the catastrophic Union Carbide gas leak that killed thousands on the early morning of December 3, 1984. Raghu Rai cried as he took this picture. Photograph (c) Raghu Rai /All Rights Reserved

Skulls discarded after research at the Hamidia Hospital, Bhopal after the great Bhopal Gas Tragedy. Photograph (c) Raghu Rai /All Rights Reserved

Raghu Rai next to his well-known photograph, "Mother Teresa at her refuge of the Missionaries of Charity in Calcutta during prayer."The Guardian, 2010

Photographs by Raghu Rai (Penguin Studio 2010)

I believe that the photographer's job is to cut a frame-sized slice out of the world around him so cleanly that if he were to put it back again, life and the world would continue to move without a stumble–Raghu Rai

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Raghu Rai has been in the forefront of photography in India for over 40 years. As a member of Magnum, he established an international reputation as a photographer with his special photo-essays on the Bhopal Gas tragedy. His work has regularly appeared in Paris Match, National Geographic, The New York Times and Newsweek. Twenty-five of his photographs are held in the permanent collection of the Bibliotheque Nationale de France, and in 1997 the National Gallery of Modern Art in Delhi gave Rai the first retrospective exhibition dedicated to the work of a contemporary Indian photographer. His impressive body of work is now being featured in a retrospective at the Aicon Gallery, 35 Great Jones Street, in New York City.

Raghu Rai | A Retrospective Exhibition
February 18 - March 20, 2011

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I like being among my own people. I merge with them. I don't carry camera bags, I don't wear stylish clothes. I have one camera with a zoom lens so I am not alarming people; no one is saying, 'Here comes a photographer!'

The Guardian Interview: It was a donkey that made Raghu Rai want to become a photographer. He trained as a civil engineer in the early 1960s, but did the job for a year in Delhi and hated it. His elder brother was already earning a living taking pictures and suggested Rai accompany a friend on a shoot to take photographs of children in a local village. When he got there, Rai's interest was sparked not by the children but by a donkey foal in a nearby field.

"I tried to get closer, but when I was about 10 feet away, the donkey started running and the children started laughing," he says now, more than 40 years later. Rai chased the donkey for the best part of three hours in order to amuse his audience. "I was enjoying myself. After a while, the donkey got tired and stood there so I got closer and took the shot. It was evening and the landscape was fading in soft light." His brother entered the resulting picture into a weekly competition run by The Times in London. It was published. "The [prize] money I got was enough to live on for a month," says Rai. "I thought, 'This is not a bad idea, man!'"

That was 1965. The following year, he joined the Statesman newspaper in West Bengal as its chief photographer. He never went back to civil engineering. "My father worked for the irrigation department," says Rai. "People would ask how many sons he had and he would say, 'I have four. Two have gone photographers', like he was saying, 'Two have gone mad.'" Over a career spanning four decades, his son has become one of the foremost chroniclers of the changing face of India. His images are famed for capturing both his country's brutality and its beauty, often within a single frame.

Rai, who was born in a small Pakistani village and came to India during Partition, has been witness to some of the most significant events in his country's recent history. He was one of the first photographers on the scene after the 1984 Bhopal industrial disaster and has produced acclaimed documentary series on Mother Teresa, the Dalai Lama and the late Indian prime minister Indira Gandhi. Championed in the west by Henri Cartier-Bresson, Rai joined Magnum Photos in 1977 and went on to judge the World Press Photo Awards from 1990 to 1997...read the full Interview by Elizabeth Day in The Guardian , UK

1.20.2011

HAI BO: Pace/MacGill Gallery

Shadow–2, 2009
Photograph (c) Hai Bo /All Rights Reserved


Shadow–3, 2009
Photograph (c) Hai Bo /All Rights Reserved

Untitled series–6, 2009
Photograph (c) Hai Bo /All Rights Reserved

TODAY! Jan 20th: 4:45pm
Gallery Walk-Through with Hai Bo
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Pace/MacGill Gallery
Jan 20 – Feb 26, 2011

The passage of time and its inevitable conclusion lay at the heart of Hai Bo’s art. The photographs in this new body of work form a simple, yet eloquent and highly personal meditation on man’s fleeting time on earth. The vast landscapes and quotidian portraits wax nostalgic about simpler times and capture the lingering traces of humanity that have been left behind.

Hai Bo, born in 1962 in Changchun, the capital of Jilin Province in northeastern China, received a BA in 1984 from the Fine Art Institute of Jilin, China and a MA in 1989 from the Print Department of the Central Institute of Fine Arts, Beijing, China. "He has been returning to his hometown for decades to photograph the familiar places of his youth. As China's cities grow exponentially, the artist looks poignantly at another aspect of large-scale urbanization: the increasingly desolate and aging villages of rural China. The photographs convey a sense of nostalgia for the beauty and vastness of the Chinese landscape."

Hai Bo's photographs have been the subject of numerous solo exhibitions, including the China Art Archives and Warehouse, Beijing (2002), Beijing Commune, Beijing (2007, 2008), and the Smithsonian’s Arthur M. Sackler Gallery, Washington, DC (2010).
+ + +

Other Contemporary Chinese Artists:
Jang Jinsong
Yong Li Ming
Heungman
Wang Xing
Don Hong-Oai

1.15.2011

PHOTOGRAPHY AND IMAGING: Exhibition

Waiting for Train
Photograph © Susan May Tell/ All rights reserved

Man and Arm
Photograph © Susan May Tell/ All rights reserved

Gallorus Oratory, Ireland from PORTALS Series
Photograph © Margaret McCarthy/ All rights reserved

Ross Abbey, Ireland from PORTALS Series
Photograph © Margaret McCarthy/ All rights reserved

Wisdom is a butterfly and not a bird of prey– Yeats
Photograph © Clayton Price/ All rights reserved

PHOTOGRAPHY AND IMAGING
MEMBERS EXHIBITION AT THE NATIONAL ARTS CLUB, NYC
15 Gramercy Park South

Jan 5-28

1.10.2011

DORNITH DOHERTY: Svalbard Seed Vault

Dornith Doherty and her view camera, Svalbard


Door, Svalbard Global Seed Vault, 2010
Photograph © Dornith Doherty/ All rights reserved


Boxes Outside, Svalbard Global Seed Vault, 2010
Photograph © Dornith Doherty/ All rights reserved


Interior, Svalbard Global Seed Vault, 2010
Photograph © Dornith Doherty/ All rights reserved


Nordic Genetic Resource Center Seed Vials
Photograph © Dornith Doherty/ All rights reserved
Bag of Seeds, Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center, 2009
Photograph © Dornith Doherty/ All rights reserved


Cryogenic Racks, National Center for Genetic Preservation, 2009
Photograph © Dornith Doherty/ All rights reserved


Seed Head 1, 2010 from the series Archiving Eden
Photograph © Dornith Doherty/ All rights reserved
Whip It, 2009 from the series Archiving Eden

Arctic Svalbard
Photograph © Dornith Doherty/ All rights reserved

Photographer Dornith Doherty traveled close to the North Pole to photograph the Svalbard Global Seed Vault (also known as the Doomsday Vault, the Svalbard Global Seed Vault is the most diverse assembly of the world's food crops). "Seed banks conserve clones or seeds at a certain point of perfection and then “stop time” to try and prevent the botanical materials from changing further," photographer Dornith Doherty explained to me last year when viewing her series Archiving Eden. "Since perfect stasis is not possible, I have used the lenticular process to create powerful images that show the tension between stillness and change. This technology allows for the appearance or disappearance of parts of the image as well as refractive color changes." I spoke with Dornith recently about her expedition to photograph the world's largest seed bank in the remote Arctic Svalbard archipelago.

EA: What is the background for your series Archiving Eden?

DD: In the process of photographing at the National Center for Genetic Resource Preservation (NCGRP), in Fort Collins, Colorado, I noticed they were using a tabletop x-ray machine to test the viability of accessioned seeds. I was fascinated by the images I saw and this led to my using the x-ray equipment to make images of seeds and tissue samples from their seed and clone collections. Later, I was able to work at the Millennium Seed Bank in England in much the same way. The collaboration with the scientists has been fruitful, and the scientist at the NCGRP grows samples for me to photograph. Upon return to my studio in Texas, I make the collages that are part of "Archiving Eden".

EA: The images in Archiving Eden have a sacred quality to them.

DD: The photographs pose questions about life and time on a micro and macro scale for me. I am struck by the visual connections – some look like astronomical bodies or microscopic cells. When I work with x-rays, you are literally gazing into the plantlets and seeds- things you cannot see with an unaided eye. Tiny (many are the size of a grain of sand or smaller) seeds that generate life remain simultaneously delicate and powerful. The scale of time that is ingrained in the process of seed banking, which seeks to make these sparks last for two hundred years or more, makes the life cycle very much on my mind while I work. I also contemplate the elusive goal of stopping time in relation to living materials, which at some moment, we would all like to do.

EA: What inspired you to travel to the remote archipelago near the North Pole to photograph the Svalbard Global Seed Vault?

DD: Archiving Eden and Vault were inspired by an article I read about the Vault in the New Yorker Magazine two years before I went to photograph there. When I encountered John Seabrook’s article (Annals of Agriculture, Sowing for the Apocalypse) I was inspired by the dichotomous hopeful/pessimistic nature of the project; on one hand volunteers and governments from around the world were collaborating to create a global botanical back-up system, and on the other hand the gravity of climate change and political instability created the need for an inaccessible ark.

I immediately wanted to photograph it.

It was not until two years later; after I had initiated Archiving Eden and had traveled and photographed at other large and comprehensive seed banks, that I received an invitation to photograph the Vault from Cary Fowler, the Director of the Svalbard Global Seed Vault. You can't imagine the thrill it was to open that e-mail.

EA: How difficult was it to travel there?

DD: The Vault is only open a few days a year when new seeds are placed in the vault. It took two days to fly there, and although the airport has one scheduled flight each day, it’s the type of place where a small metal staircase is rolled across the tarmac to the airplane door. I arrived on the same plane as the Director Cary Fowler and Ola Westengen, the operation manager for the Vault. Time was short, so I changed into warm clothes in the airport washroom, and we drove directly to the Vault to begin work.

When you travel outside populated areas on Svalbard, polar bears can be a problem, and many people carry guns. As I traveled to photograph the landscape, helpful people I meet would explain how to tell if there might be a polar bear nearby, since they are completely camouflaged. One of the best ways to detect a polar bear, I was told, is that if you are near a place that is frequented by seals, and there are no seals, that means there is a polar bear watching you. I never saw any seals; only reindeer, so apparently I was in constant danger of polar bear attack.

EA: How did you feel when you first faced the actual door of the Vault before going in and on entering the tunnel leading to the storage area?

DD: It was a very memorable moment. I was filled with awe. Standing in front of the vault in the bitter cold was the culmination of two years of work and planning, and surprisingly, the experience of traveling to someplace remote with cumbersome equipment to take photographs of a significant place brought to mind the photographic practice of some of my favorite photographers, for example; Timothy O’Sullivan or E.O. Goldbeck.

The Vault itself looks elegantly minimal; you see the rough rock walls of the mountain fitted with concrete floors and metal doors. I was surprised to see that Ola and Cary unloaded the shipment themselves and rolled the boxes down the long tunnel to a space outside of the vault in a simple wagon.

The tunnel was dark and had thin ribbons of ice flowing towards the base. As you can see from the photograph, the Vault door is covered with ice crystals and has a closed-circuit TV monitor mounted outside. I was captivated by looking at a mediated image of the vault as I photographed it. The door is not on axis with the tunnel, and Cary explained there is a small curved wall in line with the tunnel engineered to disperse a blast radius in case of terrorist attack. Originally, no outsider was allowed into the actual vault, so the TV monitor was installed so that a visitor could see inside without entering the vault. When I entered, the roar of the compressors, the extreme cold, and the systematic organization were in striking contrast to the organic nature of the seeds.

The vault is kept at a very specific low temperature and humidity to ensure the longevity and viability of the collection. However, since the vault is below the permafrost line, if electricity fails, the archive should be okay.

A background note-Since much of my work has to do with landscape, my equipment is optimized for the extreme heat you encounter in the American Southwest. I had to research and purchase almost everything, from boots and gloves to batteries. At the suggestion of several fellow-photographers, I brought a digital slr camera as a back up to my view camera. Surprisingly, because of the twelve hour days working at below freezing temperatures, the digital slr would freeze after 8 hours but my point and shoot and view camera never failed. Since we live in the digital post-film era, I liked how the failure of the digital slr camera and the success of the 19th century technology of the view camera mirrored the operations philosophy of the vault- trying to keep things simple and fail-safe.

EA: The Director, Cary Fowler, has said "This is a Library of Life". Is there a sense of The History of the World' while inside the world's food archive?

DD: Yes, you feel the importance of the place, although it seems more cultural than historical. Some countries do not have an infrastructure that can support their efforts very effectively. The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation supports the cost of shipping their collections, and it was very moving to see humble paper boxes of seeds that were sent from poor nations, compared to the relatively high-tech shipments of industrialized, wealthy nations.

2015 UPDATE! 

Dornith Doherty: Exchange
Dallas, Texas
February 21 - May 9, 2015 

+  +  +
VAULT: Photographs by Dornith Doherty
Exhibition to February 8, 2011
The Institute for the Advancement of the Arts, Denton, Texas

Gallery Talk With Dornith Doherty
Jan 19, 2011 7pm

1.04.2011

KLOMPCHING: Splash II

Bundle (2010)
Photograph (c) Cara Barer

International District, Seattle (2003)
Photograph (c) Doug Keyes

Beyond The View No. 5 (2009)
Photograph (c) Helen Sear

Attentional Landscapes No. 11 (2007-2008)
Photograph (c) Odette England

SPLASH II Group Exhibition
Opening Jan 6 - Feb 26


Sarah Lynch, Doug Keyes, Phillip Toledano, Helen Sear, Odette England, Cornelia Hediger, Cara Barer. Also showing Lisa M. Robinson's Snowbound.

111 Front Street, Suite 206 | DUMBO Brooklyn

12.29.2010

CRAIG SEMETKO: Unposed

Photograph (c) Craig Semetko /All Rights Reserved

Photograph (c) Craig Semetko /All Rights Reserved

Published by teNeues
purchase


Photograph (c) Craig Semetko /All Rights Reserved

"...he is the essential photographer. That is, the one who sees what others could not have seen."–Magnum Photographer Elliott Erwitt

CRAIG SEMETKO: UNPOSED
Jan 14 – Feb 26 2011
Leica Gallery • 670 Broadway/ NYC


"None of the pictures were staged...This requires a great deal of wandering around aimlessly with an empty head–a skill many teachers told me I had a gift for–only now I carry a camera to record all the strange and beautiful things in front of me. I look for the ironies and oddities that cross cultural boundaries and are common to the human condition. I strive to show authentic moments of joy, melancholy, irony—the full spectrum of human experience. To borrow a phrase from Henri Cartier-Bresson, Photography is nothing-it’s life that interests me."– Craig Semetko