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11.08.2019

THE 14th JULIA MARGARET CAMERON AWARD FOR WOMEN PHOTOGRAPHERS : Winners Announced

PEOPLE / SERIES WINNER: MEG BIRNBAUM

  PORTRAIT / SERIES WINNER: LORETTA AYEROFF

  NUDE + FIGURE / SERIES WINNER: MONA KUHN

 N.A. VAGUE 
N. A. VAGUE. Recipient of the Julia Margaret Cameron Award in the Non-Professional Section for her Series #read#me#ad, and Winner in Fine Art Photography

 CULTURE + DAILY LIFE / SINGLE WINNER: YUKARI CHIKURA

 NUDE + FIGURE / SINGLE WINNER: SARAH SCHOR
 
 SELF PORTRAIT / SERIES WINNER: AGNIESZKA SOSNOWSKA


This 14th Edition of The Julia Margaret Cameron Award has been juried by Elizabeth Avedon, Rebecca Robertson, and Analy Werbin. A total of 805 photographers from 67 countries have submitted 6,240 photographs for consideration of the pre-selection team of the Worldwide Photography Gala Awards, and the final selection of the jurors. In this occasion, the Worldwide Photography Gala Awards has waived or discounted entry fees of around 30% of the total amount of submitters. . . . An exhibition of many of these works will be in Barcelona at the FotoNostrum Gallery, March 2020


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

3.31.2019

CHRISTIE'S PHOTOGRAPHY AUCTION : Previews March 31 – April 2, 2019

Patti Smith, 1978
Photograph by Robert Mapplethorpe

from a Portfolio of Twelve Photogravures
by Roy DeCarava, 1956

 Lungile Cleo Dladla, 2011
Photograph by Zanele Muholi
 
 Siqourney Weaver, 1983
Photograph by Helmut Newton

Reflecting, 2006
Photograph by Mona Kuhn

Time Out and Before the Storm from Domestic Vacations, 2005
Photographs by Julie Blackmon

DPRK 001, Li Min Gyong, 
Pyongyang Schoolchildren's Palace, North Korea, 2006
Photograph by Hiroshi Watanabe

Identity #1, 2014
Photograph by Ruud Van Empel

My School of Visual Arts Photography students in front of 
Photographs from a Private Collection

Darius Himes, International Head of Photographs at Christie’s 
working with clients at the Auction Preview, March 29, 2019

Photographer Rania Matar with Darius Himes
Christie’s International Head of Photographs

Shells 6S, 1927
Photograph by Edward Weston

Kiki Silhouette, Positive, 1922-1938
Rayograph by Man Ray

If you love photography, do not miss Christie’s Photography Auction Preview! It is absolutely magical … over 300 photographs span the history of photography from salt prints to the most contemporary images and glorious prints from 3 Collections!




20 Rockefeller Center (49th St), NY, NY

On View:
30 Mar, 10am - 5pm
31 Mar, 1pm - 5pm
1 Apr, 10am - 5pm

Auction: Tuesday, April 2, 2019

12.16.2018

BEST PHOTOGRAPHY BOOKS OF 2018 : ROUND-UP PART II

YURI KOZYREV AND KADIR van LOHUIZEN
Arctic: New Frontier

 Point Hope, Alaska, USA, May 2018
Yuri Kozyrev and Kadir van Lohuizen —NOOR for Fondation Carmignac

Boys at the Nakhimov Naval School in Murmansk, Russia, in September.  
Photograph © Yuri Kozyrev—NOOR for Fondation Carmignac


Arctic: New Frontier
Photographs by Yuri Kozyrev and Kadir van Lohuizen :
Co-laureate’s for the 9th edition of the Prix Carmignac Photojournalism Award

One of the most important books to come out this year! Co-laureate’s Yuri Kozyrev and Kadir van Lohuizen traveled almost 10,000 miles collectively across the Arctic to investigate the irreversible changes that are taking place in the region. With a text by Jean Jouzel, chair of The 9th edition Prix Carmignac jury, climatologist, winner of the 2012 Vetlesen Award and co-winner of the 2007 Nobel Peace Award as Director of the IPCC, this book is such a success that the distributor is almost out of the first edition after one month. 

 A Must-Read about this important work here. An exhibition of this work will be showing at Saatchi Gallery, London in May  2019. Purchase on Amazon here and at the Albertine Bookshop,  972 Fifth Ave. New York, NY.

(caption top : Polar bear skin being prepared for clothing, Point Hope, Alaska, May 2018  © Kadir van Lohuizen — NOOR for Fondation Carmignac

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SAUL LEITER In My Room (Steidl, 2018)

In My Room
Photographs by Saul Leiter. Text by Robert Benton.
Steidl, Germany, 2018

"Recent discoveries from Saul Leiter’s vast archive, In My Room provides an in-depth study of the nude, through intimate photographs of the women Leiter knew. Showing deeply personal interior spaces, often illuminated by the lush natural light of the artist’s studio in New York City’s East Village, these black-and-white images reveal a unique type of collaboration between Leiter and his subjects."

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MONA KUHN 
She Disappeared into Complete Silence
Steidl

 Photographs © Mona Kuhn

MONA KUHN  
She Disappeared into Complete Silence
Steidl, Germany, 2018
Text by Salvador Nadales, curator of Painting and Drawing, Museo Reina Sofia

She Disappeared into Complete Silence was photographed in a glass house, on the edge of Joshua Tree National Park,  where the golden light enters unobstructed. Conceptually speaking, this glass house with mirrored ceilings was an extension of my own camera and optics.

I was drawn to the desert because of its magical light and raw mystic landscape. The house itself is a minimal structure held mostly together by glass, built by architect Robert Stone. These translucent surfaces offered a great setting for reflections and at times worked as a prism for the light.

Together with a long time friend Jacintha, we experimented with reflections, shadows, illusions, and created images that push the boundaries of representation. I wanted to escape the body and photograph the human presence coming in and out of evidence, at times over exposed, at times hidden in shadows, like a desert mirage, a solitary figure who could have been the very first or last. 

 – Mona Kuhn

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BARBARA BOSWORTH The Heavens


BARBARA BOSWORTH The Heavens
Text by Margot Kelley, Joanne Lukitsh, and Owen Gingerich
Radius Books, Santa Fe, 2018 



Barbara Bosworth focus’s on the Sun, the Moon and the Sky in The Heavens. "Made over the past several years with an 8x10 camera, the star images are hour-long exposures with the camera mounted on a clock drive so that the stars are rendered as dots instead of streaks. The sun and moon images are made with a telescope attached to Bosworth's camera. The book also includes facsimile editions of three artist's books that Bosworth has made as a nod to Galileo's 17th-century publications in which he first observed the skies through a telescope."

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ANDY RICHTER  Serpent in the Wilderness
Kehrer Verlag

 Photographs © Andy Richter
“Travel light, live Light, spread the Light, be the Light.”– Yogi Bhajan

ANDY RICHTER  Serpent in the Wilderness
Kehrer Verlag, Germany, 2018

"Serpent in the Wilderness is a visual exploration of yoga that emerged from photographer Andy Richter’s personal practice and experience. After studying yoga for years, he decided to use his medium – photography – to search for the essence of the teachings. For more than half a decade, he traveled to places that are historically relevant to yoga’s past and others that embody its living present, documenting a variety of yoga traditions with many of the world’s great saints and yogis. The book reveals hidden layers and rarely seen dimensions of a profoundly spiritual path and way of life, from ashrams and caves throughout India to living rooms across America." Purchase here


I've found it difficult to be impartial when it comes to Andy Richter’s collection of exceptional photographs of yogi’s, yogini’s, sadhu’s’s, students and monk’s. Shot mostly in India, along with New Mexico, California and Beijing – and beautifully photographed, beautifully designed, and beautifully printed –  this book awakens the heart and inspires the mind. Sat Nam. – EA

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PARIS VISONE  For Real 
 Peanut Press

 Photographs © Paris Visone


PARIS VISONE  For Real
Foreword by Cig Harvey 
Peanut Press, 2018

"The publication of For Real marks the first time that Paris Visone's photographs that bridge the gap between commercial photography and fine art. 61 images with a foreword by photographer Cig Harvey, For Real presents intimate portraits of famous musicians and Visone’s own family, blurring the lines between private life, fame, and public persona. In her photographs, Visone portrays her family and friends as rock stars while presenting renowned rock musicians with the intimacy of friends and family."

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 Untitled IV © Victoria J. Dean
Winner, LensCulture Emerging Talent Awards 2017


VICTORIA J DEAN
The Illusion of Purpose

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ANDERS OVERGAARD 
Nothing Left Behind 
Burning Man Festival

 Photographs © Anders Overgaard at Burning Man Festival

ANDERS OVERGAARD  
Nothing Left Behind
A limited edition, Burning Man Festival

"Danish photographer and director, Anders Overgaard, gives a rare insight into the famed Burning Man Festival that takes place in Nevada’s Black Rock Desert with his latest book, Nothing Left Behind. Through his inspiring and daring images, Overgaard's limited edition photo book of the annual festival unites pictures and words in a poetic narrative about the bond that occurs between people, music, art and fashion. Stories and quotes are included from P.Diddy, Frederik Bockhahn, D.J Pierce, Maor Cohen and Overgaard, himself." Take $20. off with code AOXMAS here

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LISA McCARTY
Transcendental Concord
Texts by Rebecca Norris Webb and Kirsten Rian
Radius Books, Santa Fe, 2018

I chose Lisa McCarty's book Transcendental Concord several months ago to include, however photographer Lauren Henkin wrote a beautiful statement about it recently on Photo-Eye Bookstore's 2018 Best Books list:  

"Transcendental Concord is a beautiful meditation on Transcendentalism, photography and visual poetry. The book design, printing, scale, and material selection are handled with such care by Radius Books, that the viewer is left to fully engage and succumb to McCarty’s imagery and the accompanying text of Rebecca Norris Webb and Kirsten Rian. It’s a rare combination that feels unrushed — like the research and work that led to the creation of the book took years to slowly simmer"
– Lauren Henkin, Photo-Eye Best Books 2018

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Somnyama Ngonyama,  
Hail the Dark Lioness
Aperture, New York, 2018

Photographs by Zanele Muholi. Interview and essay by Renée Mussai. Contributions by Andiswa Dlamini, Carla Williams, Cheryl Clarke, Christie van Zyl, Deborah Willis, Fariba Derakhshani, Hlonipha Mokoena, Jackie Mondi, M. Neelika Jayawardane, Mapula Lehong, Milisuthando Bongela, Napo Masheane, Sindiwe Magona, Sophie Hackett, and Unoma Azuah. Purchase here

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HYE-RYOUNG MIN
Re-membrance of the Remembrance

Limited Edition. Datz Press, 2018

Re-membrance of the Remembrance, is a visual reconstruction of memories of the photographer Hye-Ryoung Min's 70 journal entries that she has written steadily since her childhood, already in the collections of the Museum of Fine Arts Houston (MFAH), the Griffin Museum of Photography, Stanford University Libraries and the National Library of Korea.

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DAVE JORDANO  A Detroit Nocturne

In a continuation of Dave Jordano's critically-acclaimed Detroit: Unbroken Down (powerHouse Books, 2015), which documented the lives of residents, Detroit Nocturne is an artist's book not of people this time, but instead the places within which they live and work: structures, dwellings, and storefronts. Made at night, these photographs speak to the quiet resolve of Detroit's neighborhoods and its stewards: independent shop proprietors and home owners who have survived the long and difficult path of living in a  post-industrial city stripped of economic prosperity and opportunity.

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Lawrence Schwartzwald  : The Art of Reading 
Steidl, Germany, 2018

The Art of Reading presents New York photographer Lawrence Schwartzwald's candid images of readers. Partly inspired by André Kertész's On Reading (1971), Schwartzwald's subjects are mostly average New Yorkers, sunbathers, a bus driver, shoeshine men, subway passengers, denizens of bookshops and cafes. Notably Amy Winehouse at Manhattan's now-closed all-night diner Florent graces the cover.

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Dawoud Bey: Seeing Deeply
University of Texas Press, 2018

Recipient of a 2017 MacArthur Foundation “genius grant,” Dawoud Bey has created a body of photography in Seeing Deeply that masterfully portrays the contemporary American experience on its own terms and in all of its diversity.

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RUSSELL JOSLIN  Series of Dreams



Russell Joslin : Series of Dreams
Skeleton Key Press

Series of Dreams” is a beautifully printed volume features 157 striking and memorable works by artists from around the world. Now 25% off in the month of December. To order.


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STEVEN BOLLMAN  Almost True



STEVEN BOLLMAN : Almost True
Afterword by Alfredo Triff.
F8 Books, 2018

Almost True, draws from over three decades of work from many different projects. 81 black and white photos in nine groups,
diverse images that tell their own story but, through the magic of sequencing, offer new stories. The images were taken in Cuba during Fidel Castro's time, at religious processions in Sicily, and during the elections in Haiti in 1987, plus street photos from  Mississippi, New York, Oakland, Portland, Santa Fe, Seattle, Italy, Portugal, and Spain.

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There were more photography books this year than ever before! 

Here's Part I :

BEST PHOTOGRAPHY BOOKS OF 2018 : 

ROUND-UP PART I

If it's in RED it's a link.
Many descriptions are from the publishers promo's.

Follow Jonathan Blaustein’s Photography Book Reviews all year   
aphotoeditor.com

Happy Holidays!