Showing posts with label Photo Competition. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Photo Competition. Show all posts

9.16.2020

Enter PORTALS: Windows, Mirrors, and Doors at PhotoPlace Gallery

The Daily News ©  Sean Perry
 
 
©  Kerry Mansfield
 
Event Horizon © Sean Perry
 
San Andreas Fault © Ellen Jantzen⁠
 
CALL TO ENTER
Juror: Elizabeth Avedon⁠
 
A 'portal' can be an architectural feature (gate, window, doorway, mirror, tunnel) that frames or isolates or adds dimension to an image. In a fictional sense, a portal can become a magical doorway through time and space. Alone or in combination, they hold unlimited creative possibilities for photographers. For this exhibit, we're looking for images that use these devices in intriguing ways. ⁠
 
Deadline to Enter: October 5, 2020⁠
PhotoPlace Exhibition: Nov 26 – Dec 26, 2020⁠ 
PhotoPlace Gallery
Middlebury, VT

12.14.2019

ALL-ABOUT-PHOTO AWARDS: Call To Enter

The Car Boys © Rebecca Moseman, Merit Mention 2019

CALL TO ENTER: All-About-Photo Awards 5th edition invites photographers from around the world to submit their best work for consideration. Cash prizes! Terrific jurors! Deadline to enter: January 31, 2020

Winners will receive $10,000 in cash awards, extensive press coverage and global recognition. The grand prize is $5,000, the 2nd prize is $2,000, the 3rd prize is $1,500, the 4th prize is $1,000 and the 5th prize is $500!

All winners will have their work published/showcased on the websites Lenscratch, Daylighted's digital traveling exhibition worldwide, All About Photo Winners Gallery and featured in the printed issue of AAP Magazine "Special Edition All About Photo Awards 2020". In addition, a selection of entrants of particular merit will be invited to display their portfolio on the website www.all-about-photo.com.

For More Information and to Enter:


 © Christian Vizl, 2nd Place Winner 2019


 All About Photo Awards is open to all individuals age 18 and older; 
professional and amateur photographers alike.

12.04.2019

BLACK+WHITE Call For Entry : Curated by Elizabeth Avedon

First Light © Sean Perry

Mahavodi Temple, Bodhgaya, India © Nicholas Vreeland

Black and white photography still holds a place in my heart; it holds an incomparable mystique and mood. Actually film star Ginger Rogers said something like that, but I am of the same opinion. Canadian photojournalist Ted Grant said, “When you photograph people in color, you photograph their clothes. But when you photograph people in black and white, you photograph their souls!” I’m not sure that is an actual fact, but I like his point of view. – Elizabeth Avedon

I’m looking for entries on all subject matter, real or illusive, unpredictable or expected, complicated or plain, in black + white.

"Black + White” Photographs Call for Entry
Curated by Elizabeth Avedon
Entry Deadline: January 6, 2020

Notifications: January 20, 2020
Framed images due at Gallery: March 1, 2020

Exhibition hangs March 1 - May 15, 2020
South x Southeast Photography Gallery
Molena, Georgia

questions: nancy@sxsemagazine.com

8.17.2019

LEICA WOMEN FOTO PROJECT AWARD 2019 Her Legacy Interview with Elizabeth Avedon

 "fossil of light + time" Cover photo: Sean Perry
Detroit Center for Contemporary Photography

 Avedon: 1947–1977 
Farrar, Straus + Giroux, 1978

"Borne Back" Tintypes by Victoria Will
Peanut Press Books, 2019

"Vintage Contemporary Artists" Interview Series
Elizabeth Avedon Editions/ Random House, 1978

"I want photographers to be courageous and strive to create consistent work. Their personal stories, passions, and vision will ensure the work is seen as uniquely their own." 

Leica Women Project  Her Legacy: Elizabeth Avedon
Independent curator, photo book and exhibition designer, Elizabeth Avedon, shares her perspective as an industry leader in the world of photography.

1. What drives your commitment to the art of photography?


Having worked with many of photography’s past icons, I am now interested in the work of emerging photographers who will someday shape the future of photography. I continue to be drawn to the magic of photography, and I love the surprise of how each new generation of photographers bring their own uniqueness to elevate us to a new and unseen realm.

2. What are some of the challenges you’ve encountered in the world of photography?

I was fortunate to begin my career working and socializing with some of the most successful photographers and art directors of their time - although being very young I wasn’t aware of how lucky I was. The challenge came 15 years later when I became over saturated with photography and turned my attentions towards contemporary painters creating a set of interview books for Random House with contemporary artists including Robert Rauschenberg and Louise Bourgeois. Not finding the ‘art world’ to be more enlightening than photography, I then worked with some well-known photographers in advertising and fashion, on print magazines and the early world of online photo magazines.

Feeling I’d explored all New York had to offer, I moved to New Mexico briefly where I was Gallery Director at Photo-eye. While living in Santa Fe, I attended several very inspiring talks by photo dealers, David Scheinbaum and Janet Russek, at their gallery Scheinbaum & Russek. Early in their careers, Janet had assisted Eliot Porter and David worked with and printed for the preeminent photography scholar, Beaumont Newhall, as well as Ansel Adams. One night a month they invited photographers and collectors into their gallery, sharing antidotes from their past experiences and passing around extraordinary vintage prints by some of histories most iconic image makers.

I returned to New York re-inspired and with a renewed outlook and appreciation for the new up-and-coming generation of photographers, which has only grown exponentially each year since.

3. Of all the projects you have worked on, which one left an indelible impression on your current point of view?

It started with Richard Avedon’s fashion retrospective book and exhibition, “Avedon: 1949–1979”, I designed for the Metropolitan Museum of Art in 1979. What I learned crafting that eight year project, gave me the tools to work with throughout my career. The project began in the years before computers and digital files, taking a team of darkroom printers many years round-the-clock to print contact sheets of all of Avedon’s fashion shoots from over 40 years. The contact sheets were in chronological order in endless cartons and took several years to edit with RA, then creating an extensive book dummy. I redesigned the space at the Met, the Dallas Museum of Fine Arts and several other museums across the country and Japan for the accompanying exhibition. I was able to tap into the lessons learned from that experience when designing Avedon's “In The American West” exhibition to fit the Amon Carter Museum’s unique architectural design, as well as refitting the show for the Corcoran Gallery of Art, the High Museum in Atlanta, the Art Institute of Chicago, the Phoenix Art Musem and others.

4. Who are some of the photographers (deceased or living) that inspire your perspective and approach to photography?

I was fortunate to have had Tod Papageorge as my first photography instructor, as he was such a traditionalist and a Leica lover. Papageorge later held the position of Director of Graduate Study in Photography at Yale for over 3o years, and received two Guggenheim Fellowships and two NEA Visual Artists Fellowships. In his world there were only a few true photographers worth studying – Henri Cartier-Bresson, Brassai, Atget, Koudelka, Walker Evans, Robert Frank, and his best friend, Garry Winogrand.

I was also influenced by the work of Dorothea Lange, Bernice Abbott, Helen Levitt and now Vivian Maier. Inspiring to me for different reasons and in different ways are Sally Mann, Mona Kuhn, Carrie Mae Weems, Maggie Steber, Ruddy Roye, Julie Blackmon and many more contemporary photographers too numerous to name.

5. Based on your experiences in the world of art & culture, what advice would you give the next generation of photographers?

It might sound like a cliché, but anyone can copy something currently popular. I want photographers to be courageous and strive to create consistent work unlike anyone else’s. Their personal stories, passions, and vision will ensure the work is seen as uniquely their own.

6. Are there topics you have not yet seen covered, that you feel are important to explore?

What I most want to explore are the photographs that are unique, the ones you can't quite explain that call to be looked at again and again.

7. In your opinion, how does photography impact culture, and vice versa?


As one of my mentor’s Jean Jacques Naudet, L’Oeil de la Photographie Editorial Director, said to me in an interview, “Photography has never been as fashionable as now. Photography has replaced the verb in communication. In fact, Photography IS the communication now.”

I believe photography has always informed us how to see the physicality of our experience. In turn, that familiarity allows us to deepen our awareness and connect back with new understanding. Photographs are the cultural road markers forward.

8. What is one piece of advice you would offer to applicants of the Leica Women Foto Project award?


Pay attention to each individual image you submit. So often in competitions, I will see work by exceptional photographers I’ve met at a Portfolio Review whose work is terrific; however, the work they submitted to the competition is mediocre, or the images don’t work with each other. Remember, each image is new to the juror and should support and propel your project forward. 

Get a closer look on Elizabeth Avedon's perspective on photography: 

Continue the journey with Elizabeth on social media:

In The American West: Richard Avedon
Harry N. Abrams, 1985

 Portraits: Richard Avedon
Farrar Straus + Giroux, 1976


 LEICA WOMEN FOTO PROJECT | AWARD 2019
Call For Entries is Open to August 29, 2019

The first LEICA WOMEN FOTO PROJECT AWARD, dedicated to the female perspective and its impact on visual storytelling. In support of diversity in photography, Leica CameraUSA is seeking 3 photographers to receive $10,000 + 1 year loan of a Leica Q2 to support a personal project expressed through the female perspective.

Applicants will be reviewed on the basis of quality of photography, dedication to the medium of photography, sophistication of project, with narratives that broaden perspectives, ideas and conversations on today’s social and political climate.

 MORE INFO: https://bit.ly/LeicaWomen

Applications will be judged by a renowned panel of industry voices including:

Karin Kaufmann: Art Director & Chief Representative, Leica Galleries International
Maggie Steber: VII Agency photographer and Guggenheim fellow
Laura Roumanos: Executive producer and co-founder, United Photo Industries
Elizabeth Avedon: Independent curator, photo book and exhibition designer
Deborah Willis: University professor and Chair of the Department of Photography & Imaging at the Tisch School of the Arts at New York University and author of Envisioning Emancipation: Black Americans and the End of Slavery 

Candidates for the award are requested to submit a series of 10 images from a personal or long-term project, made on any digital or film camera of any make, model or brand, with at least 4 images created between 2018-19. Alongside the images, applicants are required to submit a 500 word proposal describing their personal project and its relevance in today’s social climate, including detail of how the funds will be allocated.

NO PURCHASE NECESSARY. Void where prohibited and outside US.  Must be legal US resident 21+ at entry, and must not be affiliated with competitor of Sponsor. Entry must adhere to Submission Guidelines. Winner may not partner with competitor of Sponsor for 1 year.  

Official Rules http://bit.ly/LeicaWomenFotoProjectRules
MORE INFO: https://bit.ly/LeicaWomen

8.28.2018

LENSCULTURE EMERGING TALENT AWARD 2018 + THE BEST OF LENSCULTURE Vol. 1 + 2

 The Best of LensCulture, Vol. 2 (Schilt Publishing, 2018) 
Cover Image: Coco Amardeil

 The Best of LensCulture, Vol. 1 (Schilt Publishing, 2017) 
Cover Image: Annelie Vandendael

In "The Best of Lensculture, Vol. 2" there are 162 award-winning contemporary photographers from 38 countries on five continents, making remarkable work right now in diverse cultures around the world. It’s fresh, inspiring, insightful and thought-provoking. 

This book celebrates excellence in the visual language of photography in all genres: documentary, fine art, photojournalism, portrait, street photography, abstract, landscape, architecture, nature, alternative process, experimental, poetic, personal, and more. 

If you are serious about the current state of photography around the globe, you’ll discover a rich variety of photographers and their imagery presented in these pages.

This book is an all-new follow-up on the great success of "The Best of LensCulture, Vol. 1" which is still available.
 
Vol. 1: Purchase Here + Vol. 2:  Purchase Here


FINAL WEEK TO ENTER!

All 50 photographers selected will receive an online Photography Master Class with Joel Meyerowitz or Steve McCurry; as well as included in NY’s KLOMPCHING Gallery exhibition; worldwide exposure to LensCulture's 3+ million audience; and inclusion in "The Best of LensCulture, Vol. 3" Photo Book! 

  

A great opportunity to show your work to an International Jury of Editors from the The British Journal of Photography and WIRED, Gallery Professionals, Photo Festival Organizers; and every entrant receives personalized written feedback on their work by a Photo Industry Professional. 

8.04.2018

PHOTOPLACE GALLERY: Elizabeth Avedon Juried Exhibition

 © Richard Greene
Reader

 © Zackery Handler
they are of threaded glass

© Felipe Garza
Hide and Seek

Opening Reception: August 4th, 4–7pm

PHOTOPLACE GALLERY
August 1 – September 1, 2018
3 Park Street
Middlebury, VT 05753

7.02.2015

SOHO PHOTO GALLERY: 2015 Juried National Photography Competition Award Winners

First Place
“Entering the Metropolitan Opera (2014)”
Photograph © Paul Kessel

Second Place
“Net” from "Letting My Guard Down" series
Photograph © Yorgos Efthymiadis

3rd Place
“Finding and Losing My Father #3"
Photograph © Mark Rousell

+  +  +

Four Honorable Mentions


“Daughter of a Slave, Timbuktu, Mali”
Photograph © Robert Moran 


“The More That Is Taken Away, Act 1, Year Two, November”
Photograph © Ben Altman

“Watching You” 
Photograph © Sheri Lynn Behr

“Untitled” from the series “You Who Never Arrived"
Photograph © Jennifer McClure

The Soho Photo Gallery
 2015 Juried National Photography Competition
Opening Reception: July 7, 2015, 6–8 pm

Soho Photo Gallery initiated its first juried National Photo Competition in 1995 and it has been an annual event ever since. Each year, the Gallery receives hundreds of entries from photographers all over the United States. I was honored to be this year's juror.

I want to thank everyone who entered the 2015 National Competition for the Soho Photo Gallery. It was a difficult task to edit many great images out, but there were only 40 spaces and over 2000 images. At first glance, I never wavered from my choice of Paul Kessel's somber beauty "Entering The Metropolitan Opera" as the First Place winner. It stayed with me like the atmosphere of a 70's era Winogrand scene. For 2nd Place, I chose Yorgos Efthymiadis’s "Net" from his "Letting My Guard Down" body of work for it's serene, solitary empty space and color. 3rd Place, I was deeply drawn into the unusual landscape by artist Mark Roussel from his series "Finding and Losing My Father." All Honorable Mentions; Ben Altman, Sheri Lynn Behr, Jennifer McClure, and Robert Moran, along with all the photographs accepted into the exhibition, represent my interest and love for fine art photography as well as portraiture, landscape, street and travel work.
July 7–25, 2015
15 White Street, NY, NY

Special thanks to this year’s sponsor, Archival Methods, for their generous support. View all 40 images here. Soho Photo Gallery was founded in 1971 by a group of New York Times photographers who wanted to create a venue for photography as fine art. They are a 501 (c)(3) non-profit arts organization operated by their member photographers.

8.01.2014

NEW YORK PHOTO FESTIVAL: PhotoWorld 2014 Exhibition Invitation

Photograph © Martine Fougeron, Tête-à-Tête
NYPH, 2011

"New York Photo Festival presents PhotoWorld 2014, a wide-ranging exhibition invitational selecting the best new documentary, fine art, and motion and drone photography being produced today, determined by top photo and image professionals from The New Yorker, CNN, Fortune, National Geographic, International Center for Photography, Esquire, Foto Visura, LensCulture and L'Oeil de la Photographie."

"Finalists chosen will exhibit their work in an installation at POWERHOUSE Arena opening September 26 during the DUMBO Arts Festival. Grand prize winners also receive a one-hour consultation with one of the esteemed jurors. PhotoWorld 2014 is an unparalleled opportunity to jump start your career in Photography."

Jurors: Elizabeth Avedon, L'Oeil de la Photographie; Jim Casper, LensCulture; Neil Harris, Fortune; Elizabeth Griffin, Esquire; Whitney Johnson, The New Yorker; Elizabeth Krist, National Geographic; Adriana Letorney, FotoVisura; Graham Letorney, FotoVisura; Aline Smithson, Lenscratch.

Follow NYPH News for Juror Features here.

Extended Deadline: September 16th, 2014

Complete your uploads by 
Tuesday September 16, at midnight (pst).
Extended Deadline: September 16th, 2014

Complete your uploads by 
Tuesday September 16, at midnight (pst).
Dumbo - Brooklyn NY