Showing posts with label L'Oeil de la Photographie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label L'Oeil de la Photographie. Show all posts

1.08.2014

JAMES ESTRIN: Elizabeth Avedon Interview

Trance dancing at a Trinidadian Hindu temple devoted to the goddess Kali in Queens. 2005 © James Estrin/The New York Times

Sheikh Reda Shata, an imam, blesses a newborn child at a Hospital in Brooklyn. 2005 © James Estrin/The New York Times

A ceremony for the dead at a Cambodian Buddhist temple in the Bronx. 2005 © James Estrin/The New York Times

“Silence and Dust, 9/11 Memorial, 2002.” Rescue workers formed a circle on ground zero for a minute of silence in observance of the anniversary of the World Trade Center attacks. A strong wind blew dust around the circle. © James Estrin/The New York Times

James Estrin Talks To Elizabeth Avedon

In James Estrin’s exhibition "Observance: Photographs of Spiritual Experience" opening today, sensitivity and technical skill combine to create impactful moments in the world he observes. When thousands of people gathered to commemorate the first anniversary of 9/11, he was assigned one of the least accessible vantage points, yet his extraordinary photograph, “Silence and Dust, 9/11 Memorial, 2002”, was the most powerful (and chilling) image made of the event.

Estrin, a senior staff photographer for the New York Times and founder and co-editor of Lens, the Times's photography blog; is also a writer for the Times and produces audio and video for nytimes.com. He was part of the team that won a Pulitzer Prize in 2001 for the series “How Race is Lived in America.” Internationally, he has covered the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, photographed the devastation in Haiti following the earthquake, and in 2004, was the first journalist to document an assisted suicide in Oregon.

I had the opportunity to talk with James before the opening of his exhibition:

Elizabeth Avedon: How old were you when you first became interested in photography?
 

James Estrin: I was 16, and I knew pretty quickly that I wanted to be a photographer.

EA: What direction would you have gone in if you had not become a photojournalist?
 
James Estrin: Good question. It’s not that I had many skills when I was 22.  I think I would have become a teacher.

EA: You've been a New York Times photographer for over two decades. How did you get to this point in time?

James Estrin: I've been with the New York Times for 26 years; I was a freelancer for the first four years. I'm now a senior staff photographer, and for the last four and a half years I've been the co-editor of the Lens Blog. At first David Dunlap and Josh Haner were co editors and for the last 2 years David Gonzalez has been the Lens co-editor. And there’s our producer Matt McCann who is indispensable.

I went to Hampshire College and the International Center of Photography in the Advanced Studies program. But I thought I should give myself a chance to do something else. I studied some photography at college with Jerry Liebling but mostly I studied anthropology and history.

I'm a big proponent of studying as many things as you can. I think you shouldn’t only study photography or journalism.  That is like majoring in wood shop.

Much of photography is a craft, and what separates one photographer from another besides a visual style is what you have to say. To have something to say, you have to have ideas and thoughts. I think every photographer should know art history; every photographer should have a good grounding in literature, philosophy, anthropology and history.

When I left ICP I took a job in Jackson, Mississippi at the Clarion-Ledger, which was a very good paper at that time.  After two years I went to Washington, D.C. to freelance and then to New York where I was a stringer or temporary staff for every paper in NY- Newsday, the Post, the Daily News and finally for the Times for four years. I got hired at the Times January 13th, 1992.

EA: What have been your most challenging assignments?
 
James Estrin: Among them have been covering the attacks on the World Trade Center and the incursions in Ramallah by Israel in 2002. The story that I did on the making of an American Imam in Brooklyn in 2006 was also quite challenging. And it took me years to arrange to photograph an assisted suicide in Oregon in 2004.

EA: What effect did the experience of the assisted suicide have on you or your work?

James Estrin: It was very difficult to gain people’s trust, get access to people considering employing the suicide law there and attend an actual suicide. It reaffirmed my belief that if you are honest and open with people – and patient-that you can photograph anything.

It had more of a personal effect then a professional one. It was a very profound experience. It makes me constantly evaluate where I find meaning in life. I did a multi media piece on this. It was 2004 and I didn’t really know what I was doing but the power of the story comes through anyway.

Link:http://www.nytimes.com/packages/khtml/2004/05/31/science/20040601_RIGHT_FEATURE.html

EA: At what point did you begin to incorporate writing with your stories?

James Estrin: I think it was 2003. I always came up with story ideas but had to get a writer to suggest them to word editors to get them done. Of course the Times has many excellent reporters so that usually worked out well. But even when it did, I wasn’t the primary storyteller. I was illustrating someone else’s words. And on occasion their take on the story was somewhat different than mine.

After one experience that didn’t work out so well I decided that I should try it. And I did. For the next few years I wrote a couple of stories a year, and then we started Lens and I dove into the deep end.

EA: Let's talk about your exhibition "Observance: Photographs of Spiritual Experience." What was the original force behind creating this work?
 

James Estrin: I have always been interested in spiritual experience - both photographically and personally. From an early age I thought there was more to life than immediately met the eye.

That’s the challenge for me in these photos. Religious ritual is visually lush and made for photographers. Actual spiritual experience is internal and essentially not visible.

EA: Your photograph "Silence and Dust, 9/11 Memorial, 2002" is a transcendent image for me. How did it occur? 

James Estrin: This was a ceremony at Ground Zero one year after 9/11. I was on the 8th floor terrace across the street about as far as could be from what I thought was a good position. I wanted to be down on the ground near the ceremony but I was assigned to the roof. I couldn’t move. I had several very long lenses with me.

At one point something happened in the corner of the site, someone about to walk down the ramp, perhaps the president or the mayor. And photographers started looking that way.

I'm looking the other way and this wind blows and brings up this dust - and its quite remarkable, it feels like the place is alive.

Exhibition
Observance: Photographs of Spiritual Experience by James Estrin
From January 7 to March 3, 2014
92nd Street Y
1395 Lexington Avenue, New York, NY 

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11.13.2013

L'Oeil de la Photographie | Meet The Eye of Photography's Editorial Team

 
 (click image to enlarge)
*(1) Jean-Jacques Naudet (Directeur de la Rédaction), (2) Ericka Weidmann (Rédacteur en Chef), (3) Xavier Derache (Responsable des Rubriques), (4) Juliette Deschodt (Responsable Editorial), (5) Sylvie Rebbot (Secrétaire de Rédaction anglais), (6) Gilles Decamps (Correspondant USA), (7) Rudth Mael Galite (Responsable technique), (8) Greg Hermann (Traducteur anglais), (9) Michael Verger (Traducteur français), (10) Damien Robert (Référencement web), (11) Bernard Perrine (Journaliste France), (12) Michel Puech  (Journaliste France), (13) Laurence Cornet (Correspondante USA), (14) Jonas Cuénin (Correspondant USA), (15) Fanny Lambert (Journaliste France), (16) Michel Philippot (Revue de Presse Européenne) , (17) Antoines Soubrier (Journaliste France), (18) Miss Rosen, (19) Molly Benn / Our Age is 13 (Vidéos), (20) Séverine Morel (Rubrique Tendances), (21) Pauline Auzou (Journaliste France), (22) Céline Chevallier (Correspondante Amérique du Sud), Eva Gravayat (Correspondante Allemagne), (24) Sybile Girault (Correspondante Inde), (25) Marine Cabos (Correspondante Chine), (26) Alison Stieven-Taylor (Correspondante Australies), (27) Yan Morvan (Photographe), (28) Eliseo Barbàra (Correspondant Asie), (29) Miriam Rosen (Journaliste France), (30) Patricia Nagy (Revue de Presse Mode), (31) Virginie Drujon-Kippelen(Correspondante USA), (32) Elizabeth Avedon (Correspondante USA), (33) Christian Caujolle (Correspondant international), (34) Christophe Lunn (Correspondant international), (35) Olivier Pineda (Directeur Artistique).


Dear Readers, Seventy-five days after leaving Le Journal de la Photographie, we’re back with L'Oeil de la Photographie | The Eye of Photography. The seventy-five days were turbulent and full of passion, and we owe our return to ten sponsors who will support us as we develop a more sustainable business model. We will introduce them in the near future. We would like to thank them all. Our return also owes itself to our team: of the 36 regular and occasional contributors to Le Journal, 34 are with us today as The Eye. And above all, we are here today because of you. The hundreds of messages we received in the past weeks reinforced our determination to return as soon as possible. And here we are. Please let us know what you think our new home. It’s also yours.

Thank you all,  
Jean-Jacques Naudet, France

L'Oeil de la Photographie is available in English and French

2.11.2011

HIROSHI WATANABE: Love Point

Mariko 2
Photograph (c) Hiroshi Watanabe /All Rights Reserved





Japanese Edition "Love Point" (Tosei, 2010)



 La Lettre de la Photographie 2.11.2011
(Sorry, this link no longer exists)

"I took the photograph of a bar, Love Point, a few years earlier in Japan. I liked the sign and its design. I used it on the cover in order to confuse the readers. When the show opened in Japan, a newspaper article appeared saying that the show is about a real place in Japan where men play with real women and dolls. For me, the work is a kind of mind game. I hope I was able to intrigue."– Hiroshi Watanabe

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Japanese-born, California based photographer, Hiroshi Watanabe, has become an important force in photography over the past several years, with a growing list of monographs, artist's books, exhibitions and awards to his credit. He's known for his beautiful theatrical portraits of traditional Noh Masks of the Naito Clan and Kabuki Players (Hiroshi Watanabe, La Lettre de la Photographie, Jan 17, 2011)


La Lettre de la Photographie 1.17.2011
(Sorry, this link no longer exists) 

....though here he has taken a slightly different turn, photographing artificial Japanese Sex Dolls as models, along with almost identical live models. The portraits are titled out of fictional characters in an accompanying short story by novelist Richard Curtis Hauschild and all reside in a fictional place, Love Point.

"The dolls are very expensive sex dolls (about $5,000). They are human size with real joint movements, soft skin, and weigh just like a woman. As in US and Europe, there are people in Japan who live and sleep with these dolls in lieu of wife or girlfriend. US dolls are more realistic in a way, but Japanese dolls are cuter and adorable (my opinion)."

"After I photographed the dolls, I photographed real human models dressed similarly. I wanted to puzzle and confuse what is real and what is not. Of course, one can tell the difference once he/she knows there are both. I could have made them more same and thus indistinguishable if I manipulated the images digitally, buytI kept them as they are on the film. I wanted to raise a question about perfectly (and easily) manipulated digital images that we see now everywhere."

Love Point” was a collaboration of many. Hiroo Okawa of 4woods created the dolls which gave Watanabe's photographs their mysterious charm, along with the work of make-up artist, Kyoko Owada, stylist Hiromi Chiba, and models, Mariko Masu and Hiroko Sato. Richard Curtis Hauschild, “Bulldog”, wrote a strikingly original short story with the inspiration he received after looking at Hiroshi Watanabe's photographs. Kunihiro Takahashi of Toseisha belief in the work prompted an “I will publish it” response on the spot when shown the photographs, with book design by Satsuki Ishikawa. And more recently, Chris Pichler of Nazraeli Press, published the U.S. version, One Picture Book #66: Love Point (Nazraeli Press, 2011). – Elizabeth Avedon, La Lettre de la Photographie

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