3.02.2023

THE PHOTOGRAPHY SHOW presented by AIPAD: Scheinbaum & Russek Ltd.

 
Wynn Bullock (1902 - 1975) 
Child in Forest, 1954 
Vintage gelatin silver print
Image: 7 7/16 x 9 7/16; Mount: 15 x 15 1/16"

 
 
Paul Caponigro (b. 1932)
Redding Stream, Redding, Connecticut, 1968 
Gelatin silver print
Image: 16 x 20"; Mount: 23 1/2 x 29"
 
Scheinbaum & Russek Ltd. will be exhibiting a significant selection of vintage and modern prints by Manuel Álvarez Bravo, Wynn Bullock, Paul Caponigro, Henri Cartier-Bresson, Walter Chappell, Eliot Porter, Alfred Stieglitz, Minor White, and others.
 
THE PHOTOGRAPHY SHOW presented by AIPAD 
March 31st - April 2nd, 2023
 
Scheinbaum & Russek Ltd.
Select Contemporary and Vintage Photography 
BOOTH 233
Center415
415 5th Avenue
(between 37th and 38th streets)
New York, NY 10016
 
To learn more about the fair and the programs, please visit https://www.aipad.com/show.

 Thursday, March 30 | 12:00 pm - 8:00 pm (VIP Opening Preview)
Friday, March 31 | 12:00 pm - 7:00 pm
Saturday, April 1 | 12:00 pm - 7:00 pm
Sunday, April 2 | 12:00 pm - 5:00 pm

Scheinbaum & Russek Ltd. | 369 Montezuma Avenue 
Box 345Santa Fe, NM 87501
 

AMY ARBUS: SVA i3 Photo Lecture Presentation posted on YouTube

Ed Harris / Wrecks, 2006 © Amy Arbus
 
Amy Arbus i3 Presentation posted on YouTube 
 
Don’t miss watching this terrific i3 Presentation with Portrait & Fine-Art Photographer AMY ARBUS now posted on YouTube.

The School of Visual Arts MPS Digital Photography Department presents this talk with Photographer Amy Arbus. Arbus has published five books, including the award winning On the Street 1980 – 1990, The Inconvenience of Being Born and The Fourth Wall. Her most recent photography series, “After Images,” is an homage to modernism’s iconic avant-garde paintings....Her photographs have appeared in over 100 periodicals around the world, including New York Magazine, People, Aperture and The New York Times Magazine.

Photo credit: Ed Harris / Wrecks, 2006 © Amy Arbus

The i3: Images, Ideas, Inspiration lecture series has returned to in-person events. The series continues to feature leading photographers, artists, editors, gallerists and industry experts. This fall, book designer, curator and faculty member Elizabeth Avedon was the Guest Curator.

YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5EzIQIY-y5A


IGNACIO AYESTARAN: SVA i3 Photo Lecture Series March 7, 2023

Credit: Ignacio Ayestaran

Credit: Ignacio Ayestaran

Credit: Ignacio Ayestaran
Ignacio Ayestaran : 3D Artist & Lifestyle Photographer

"I'll be giving a brief intro into Ai and prompt writing at SVA. I'll be discussing what I've learned along the way and talking about my work so far; it's inspiration, artists, designers and photographers that I use in my prompts. This will be my very 1st public speaking engagement and I'm super nervous. Please feel free to join.” – Ignacio Ayestaran

Don’t miss 3D Emmy Award winning photographer and AI enthusiast, Ignacio Ayestaran, Tuesday March 7th for our fifth i3 Lecture of the Spring 2023 season Guest curated by Elizabeth Avedon at the School of Visual Arts.

Ignacio Avestaran received his master's degree from New York University's Tisch School of the Arts in 1994. He's been involved in the commercial industry as a 3D artist for the last 20 ears and has received many accolades, including an Emmy award for his work on the Discovery Channel.

He was a contributing artist for Getty Images for over 10 ears and his images formed part of the exclusive Getty Imades Prestide Collection. The list of companies that have used his photographs included Apple, BBC Worldwide, Conde Nast Digital, Lonely Planet Publications, The New York Times Magazine, Peter Luger Steak House, Smithsonian Magazine, Viacom and Volkswagen Do Brasil.
i3- Ideas, Images, Inspiration, lecture series features leading photographers and artists, hardware and software developers and industry experts. Presented by the MPS Digital Photographv Department. This fifth i3 Lecture of our Spring 2023 season was Guest Curated by Elizabeth Avedon.
This is a live event:
Tuesday, March 7, 2023, 7-8:30PM
School of Visual Art
136 West 21 Street
New York, NY 10011
Room 418-F Lecture Hall.

Due to limited seating
Register for this Free Event HERE:
 
show vax cards at the door
 

10.17.2022

NYC4PA: 10th Anniversary Exhibition

Frida © Dina Goldstein 

An Offer © Leslie Jean-Bart

Savannah © Bootsie Holler

Contemplation © Sandra Chen Weinstein

Phone Cord © Jo Ann Chaus

Rough Play © Allison Plaus

I was honored to jury the New York Center for Photographic Art's '10th Anniversary Exhibition - Your Best Shot 2022’. The Grand Prize Winner:  “An Offer” © Leslie Jean-Bart. View all the Photographs in the exhibition:  HERE

Exhibition : October 18-29, 2022. Opening Reception, October 20th 6-8pm. 
 
660 Tenth Avenue
New York, NY.
 
Opening Reception: New York Center for Photographic Art's '10th Anniversary Exhibition' Thurs. October 20, 2023. 6-8pm. Jadite Galleries, 660 Tenth Avenue, NYC 10036 www.nyc4pa.com/street-photography-2020

8.26.2022

APA NY’s 1st Annual Juried Exhibition : Call For Entries

Photograph © Travis Keyes
 
Juried by Elizabeth Avedon  
 
Deadline for Submissions : September 7, 2022


American Photographic Artists (APA NY) invites all APA Members regardless of chapter -  and those photographers who would like to be members - to participate in its very first juried, open photography competition and exhibition at the renowned Soho Photo Gallery, New York.
 
• This one-week, open-gallery event, to be held December 6-11, 2022, will give each artist a chance to promote their work. And to assist, we will be inviting art buyers and editors from all around the New York area.

APA members' selected work will be featured on the gallery walls at this special event. A promotion effort has been created for this event that includes: a feature on the APA website, social media, advertising, a catalog, and gala opening night.

All types of photography are eligible for entry, regardless of subject matter or photographic technique. And you may enter individual images or a series. • Deadline for submissions: September 7, 2022.
 
There will be awards for First, Second, and Third Place, in both the single image and series images categories. Those prizes will be $1000 for First Place, $500 for Second Place, and $250 for Third Place in each category. APA will also be handing out several Honorable Mentions awards.

If you are not yet a member of APA, if you join now at any Level, your annual membership fee will include a 1 FREE entry into the single image competition. With your new membership you will be joining our community of photographers and the education, inclusion and inspiration that comes with it.
 
Important Dates:
• Deadline for submissions: September 7, 2022
• Notification: September 30, 2022
• Accepted Work Due At the Gallery: December 5, 2022
• Exhibition: December 6 - 11, 2022
• Soho Gallery Opening Reception: December 6, 2022
 
Questions? 
Contact Deborah Gilbert at Director@apany.com
 
 
P.S. NOTE FROM ME: Please don't enter images selected by me for awards within the past 2 years.Thanks so much for understanding – EA

7.27.2022

METRO / New York / London / Paris : An Interview with Herb Robinson by Elizabeth Avedon with Lesley Jean-Bart

METRO / New York / London / Paris, Schiffer Publishing

 
Paris, © Herb Robinson. 
METRO / New York / London / Paris

New York City, © Herb Robinson.
METRO / New York / London / Paris
  
“Photography for me is improvisational, it is creating something new in the moment, creativity that is disciplined, emerging in real time. A great photograph breathes, it is alive, has body, emotion, and it is timeless” – Herb Robinson

Music, Jazz in particular, has been an important influence on legendary photographer Herb Robinson’s working style. I wanted to get to know Robinson better as an artist before embarking on this journey through his new monograph,  METRO / New York / London / Paris, published by Schiffer. However, I quickly found out he does not like talking about himself and will go to any lengths to avoid doing so. Fortunately Herb’s long time friend, photographer Leslie Jean-Bart, stepped in to help by dictating his answers to my inquiries with great success. In his own words….

+  +  +
                                                        
It started early, when I was 9 years old. I was looking at and listening to the great Duke Ellington band. I was absorbing the music though I was not aware of it then. I was a good friend with the Hodges family who lived across the street from my parents at 555 Edgecombe Avenue. The building was famous for the great musicians and other prominent African-Americans living there, including Thurgood Marshall, musician and composer Count Basie, boxer Joe Louis, singer and actor Paul Robeson, among others.

My friends and I had access to seeing Mr. Hodges perform, hearing him practice in his home. I had the privilege to hear the purest, richest, beautiful alto saxophone sound that was Johnny Hodges of the Duke Ellington Band. The experience was like having the opportunity of seeing Michelangelo at work. I absorbed his sound and his tone while hearing him practice and perform. This was the period that was to form my photographic vision.

My peers were also Jazz musicians. My friends Johnny Hodges Jr. and Michael Lambert, were both Jazz drummers. I would go to their homes and sit until they finished practicing before we could go out and play. We were steeped in hearing and collecting Jazz records, like other kids collected baseball cards.

Though I was not a musician, I had access, understood, and connected to the soul of Jazz musicians. Circling back to Duke Ellington, he had a profound effect on me, though I did not realized it until I opened my first commercial studio. Ellington was the ultimate composer where each of the instruments is used to serve his purpose. In my studio I had up to 18 different light sources at my disposal to be used as needed to achieve the goal at hand. That approach came directly from Ellington’s style of orchestration. For example, as to whether he used the sweet sound of a Johnny Hodges or the rougher sound of a Paul 
Gonsalves (tenor saxophonist) or mixed the two. Ellington’s influence extends as well to my street work, where it can be found in my use of and mix of textures, tones, and highlights that are used to serve my purpose, as an extension of my voice.

My favorite pianist, Bill Evans, and his use of negative space is something that I voluntarily, and more often involuntarily, channel when I am shooting. There is a lot of use of negative space in my compositions and Bill Evans is the main source.
 
+  +  +
 
Roy DeCarava, the Director of Kamoinge in the early days of the collective, was steeped in all the Arts. From him I get the seriousness, dedication, and respect for the Arts— the timeless of Old Masters. Not just composition, but all of it.

There was not any one photographer who influenced me. The influence on my work is more from painters, more specifically Peter Paul Rubens, Caravaggio, and El Greco. The Rubens and Caravaggio influences can be found throughout METRO in the energy and movement within the frame. El Greco’s is in the way I use line in METRO. In my portraits, I go beyond the surface of what I am seeing. I know a bit about painting, but as a photographer, not as a painter.

The abstract painter Joe Overstreet (he passed away in 2019) was a wealth of information. Not only because of Joe’s own work, but also because he was able to mingle with the key artists who influenced the history of modern painting in the United States. He rubbed shoulders with Willem de Kooning, Norman Lewis and all the other modern masters during their prime, so he has a wealth of information.  I have really the privilege again, the honor to really learn from one of the living masters of painting.

As an artist, I have been inspired throughout my career by Pablo Picasso, and the person that I view as his creative equal, Miles Davis. Each of their careers was marked by their relentless drive to innovate and continually reinvent themselves, requiring a level of confidence and creativity at the highest level. Picasso and Miles knew no boundaries, defied convention, and were fearless in embracing new ideas, and then just as quickly shifting in new directions. They were undeterred by expectations that their work stay the same, possessed only by their art and rising above at an unfathomable level of creative genius. Both Picasso and Miles were masters of self-promotion, never faltering from their belief in themselves and the worth of their work; they were decades ahead of the ‘branding’ surge in advertising. Prolific beyond what appears possible in a lifetime, each piece of art was left for the world to continue to try to grasp and more fully understand in future generations.

Inspired by the lives of Picasso and Miles, I strive to move boldly in my ever-changing photography, taking risks and rejecting the need for a safety net.  I am intensely focused on freely creating art from the inside out, often startling myself by what emerges.  I am deeply fortunate to continually learn from these masters, whose genius illuminates my path.
 
+  +  +
 
It’s been a treat for me to listen to Leslie Jean-Bart discuss interviewing Herb Robinson with my questions. Going off on a tangent is really second nature to Herb’s character, and every story he tells is a small facet in his own life that results in the images he creates. Leslie described one afternoon as an example; “If Herb is talking about Art Blakey, he cannot just talk about Blakey. He has to refer to Philly Joe Jones style of playing as compared to Blakey vs. how Tony Williams was really a Rock drummer who happens to play Jazz, to Jack DeJohnette. From the drummers he will float to Jackie McLean style of saxophone playing vs. another particular Jazz saxophone player. From there possibly shift to Miles Davis's style of trumpet playing, leading to Bill Evans style of piano playing, and then shift back to Art Blakey and the other major Jazz drum players. In his eagerness to clearly present and explain the finer nuances of certain aspects of Jazz, one can often find yourself in sensory overload. I have to often then "kindly-abruptly" stop him and redirect him where I need to go. Although his eagerness is honest, I came to realize that these long detailed explanations tends to often happen when he is desperately trying to avoid talking directly about himself.”

“A question directly addressed to him can easily start a discourse on Roy DeCarava's life. No, Herb, I want to talk about you. "Well, well, Leslie", he would say, "I have to set it up first, that's the way I am". He will then start with some cryptic half answers that one has to attempt to decode while he is sliding into Jazz or so other person's life story.”

Clarifying his “Tony Williams was really a Rock drummer who happens to play Jazz,” exactly what Herb meant was that Tony Williams came along at a time when his generation was exploring the new phase of music at the time, and that was Rock. So Williams’s influence was more Rock. Williams and those of his generation were at the time in the process of leaving behind the platform set by the older Jazz generation, a platform that was more metronome and rhythmic, for the Rock platform that was harder. The same generational evolution took place with Charlie Parker and Dizzy Gillespie who played in the same band and were the inventors of Bebop 3. They both came out of playing in the Big Band, which was mellow and went into Bebop that was harder and more like Rock. The only one who did not fit into that evolutionary pattern was Miles Davis. He was a one man visionary. He did not stay into one idiom as most of his contemporaries did. Miles moved through different periods - Cool, Fusion, and so on.

                                                                                                 

To complete this look behind the images in METRO / New York / London / Paris, I asked Herb what drew him into the New York subways, the Paris Metro, and the London Underground (Tube). His reply was basically that the three cities covered in METRO played, and continue to play, a huge part in Jazz history.

Also, ideas like globalism, immigrants, immigration, and migration that were running on my mind, were all present and contained within a subway car. The subway car became an equalizer, a self contained common ground for all people regardless of their background or place of origin. It became portraits in the train.

I feel completely free to take the viewer on a journey with the camera as an instrument while using the Jazz idiom of improvisation.  The story called me and took me on a journey where it flowed.

METRO / New York / London / Paris
Photographs by Herb Robinson.
Curated and Edited by Eve Sandler. 
Schiffer Publishing, 2022

Herb Robinson is an original member of Kamoinge Workshop, the pioneering photographic collective of New York-based African-American photographers, founded in 1963 at the height of the American Civil Rights Movement. The name literally means, “A group of people working together” in Kikuyu. Robinson’s work was also part of the traveling exhibition Soul of a Nation: Art in the Age of Black Power, originating at the Tate Modern. He is represented by the Bruce Silverstein Gallery, NY.

Eve Sandler is an interdisciplinary artist, designer, writer, and activist whose work commemorates Black culture, memory, and transformation.

Leslie Jean-Bart, has walked the shoreline of Coney Island for the last 12 years, looking for the magic of light, water, and reflection, in his photographic series Reality & Imagination.

Elizabeth Avedon has been a long-time contributor to The Eye of Photography.
 
Many thanks to Jean-Jacques Naudet and Gilles Decamps for posting this interview in L'Oeil de la Photographie / The Eye of Photography, July 26, 2022.

6.12.2022

NANCY A. SCHERL: DINING ALONE In the Company of Solitude


By The Shore, Homer Restaurant, NY, NY 1994 © Nancy A. Scherl

Private Tent, Julius’, New York, NY 2020 © Nancy A. Scherl

A Burger and Fries, Union Square Coffee Shop, 
New York, NY 1994 © Nancy A. Scherl

A Rose and Wine, Bondini’s, New York, NY 1989 © Nancy A. Scherl
 
Dining Alone: In the Company of Solitude draws attention to the disillusion of the stigma of eating alone…The work spans 35 years, ending in 2020, providing a new context for isolation brought on by the global health crisis. The images unfold in a Cinéma Vérité style so the camera is used to unveil truths in a documentary approach. The 65 plates are a window into trends of fashion and dining establishments over the three decades, reminding us that eating alone still involves being seen.”
– Laura Wzorek Pressley, CENTER, Santa Fe
 

Dining Alone: In the Company of Solitude (Daylight Books)
 
In the late 1980’s, Nancy Scherl began her Dining Alone: In the Company of Solitude series to explore the experience of solitude. As a teenager, she was influenced by Edward Hopper’s work, and then as a young woman, she lived alone in New York’s West Village for many years. There, in West Village restaurants and cafes, she found it comforting to dine alone but in the presence of others. An astute observer of people and with a photographer’s sensibility, Nancy realized how much she was also a subject in her own observations, bringing for her the reality of and questions about the experience of solitude into more vivid focus.

What do her images say about loneliness, social behaviour and our evolving attitudes in public spaces?  Read more in The Guardian, here
 
Photographs by Nancy A. Scherl
Foreword by Laura Pressley
Book Design by Bonnie Briant
Daylight Books, 2022
 

 
100 signed books and special edition prints are available to ORDER here.

CHARITABLE DONATION
Nancy Scherl will donate 50% of all the proceeds for the signed books/prints to CaringMatters and Jasa,