1.23.2010

JEFF BRIDGES CRAZY HEART: Stephen Bruton Tribute

Photograph (c) Jeff Bridges /All Rights Reserved

Photograph (c) Jeff Bridges /All Rights Reserved

Bruton Tribute Video

Stephen Bruton, with music collaborator and fellow Texan, T-Bone Burnett, created the original 'classics' for the film Crazy Heart.

JEFF BRIDGES won the Best Actor SAG Award and the Best Actor Golden Globe Award for his amazing performance in Crazy Heart...and he received lengthy standing ovations both nights! This week you can view Bridges must-see photographs he took while making Crazy Heart here. More about Crazy Heart's soundtrack and video's here. More about Jeff Bridges Wide-lux Camera here.

1.21.2010

HAITI RELIEF PRINT SALES: Photographers Donate 100% to Doctors Without Borders

Dog Statues, Takao, Japan 2009 Edition of 10: $50
Photograph (c) Emily Shur /All Rights Reserved

Illumination 2010 Edition of 10: $50
Photograph (c) Tom Chambers
/All Rights Reserved

Full Moon 2010 Edition of 10: $50
Photograph (c) Bill Finger
/All Rights Reserved

Wedding Clothes 2009 Edition of 10: $50
Photograph (c) Aline Smithson
/All Rights Reserved

life support

Wall Space Gallery and it's Artists support 100% of the sales of these prints to Doctors Without Borders. Tom Chambers, Aline Smithson, Lydia Panas, Randall J. Corcoran, Priya Kambli, Ron Reeder, Bill Finger, Kristen Fecker Peroni, Charles Grogg, and Mitch Dobrowner. Prints in an Edition of 10: $50.
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Emerging Photographers Support The People Of Haiti:


Haiti Relief Benefit Print Sale: Emerging Photographers Support The People Of Haiti. Each 8 x 10" photograph is part of an edition of 10. Each photograph is $50. 100% of the proceeds will be donated to Doctors Without Borders.

Doctors Without Borders / Medecins Sans Frontieres in Haiti. Patients in desperate need of assistance wait to receive medical treatment outside of an MSF office in Haiti. Photograph Haiti 2010 (c) Julie Remy

DOCTORS WITHOUT BORDERS, known in Haiti as Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), is an international medical humanitarian organization created by doctors and journalists in France in 1971. In 1999, MSF received the Nobel Peace Prize. As of today, thousands of patients have been treated so far at several Doctors Without Borders locations in Haiti.

1.19.2010

LARRY FINK: Be Seen

Be Seen
Photograph (c) Larry Fink
/All Rights Reserved

Be Seen
Photograph (c) Larry Fink /All Rights Reserved

Mingle
Photograph (c) Larry Fink
/All Rights Reserved

Mingle
Photograph (c) Larry Fink /All Rights Reserved

BOOKS
LARRY FINK WEBSITE
And BLOG

1.17.2010

FRANCESCO CLEMENTE: Vintage Interview

Click Image to Enlarge
An Interview With Francesco Clemente. Front Cover Photograph (c) Richard Avedon /All Rights Reserved. "She and She" Back Cover Painting (c) Francesco Clemente /All Rights Reserved.

Sky and Water, Watercolour on paper
Painting by Francesco Clemente /All Rights Reserved

The following quotes by artist Francesco Clemente were excerpted from An Interview With Francesco Clemente by Rainer Crone and Georgia Marsh, published under the imprint "Elizabeth Avedon Editions | Vintage Contemporary Artists | Random House:" (Here)
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"...about the publication of your book of poems, Castelli di Sabbia. (Naples: L’Arte Tipografica, 1964) "I had been reciting it to my mother since I was five or six, and it was published against my better judgment. It was enormously embarrassing, and it made me into a painter, actually, because I decided that to be a poet was too embarrassing; it was too revealing, and I wanted something more obscure to deal with. I thought of painting that way. That was when I was eleven or twelve years old."

"Paintings are simple things. They are important not so much for what is in them as for what is not there. When we talk of the Renaissance we talk of something fragile; the surprise is that at a certain point, after a thousand years of Christianity, Renaissance artists looked at their bodies again, and looked at their faces, and looked at the world as a sensual place. This feeling of surprise happens again in Tiepolo's skies, and even down to de Chirico's earliest painting. If we talk of Piero della Francesca, what comes to mind is the light. There are two lineages of light in painting. One is a secular light: from Caravaggio to de Kooning. The light is outside; it comes down on things, and makes them what they are. But if we talk of Piero, or talk of Roman paintings, or of the Pompeian paintings, we talk of a light that comes from within and that has nothing to do with the history of man. It is a light that is before the history of man. Giotto is unique because you don't know exactly which way the light goes: his is already a completely secular point of view, but still the light is treated as an inner flow. There is really no one else like him; that degree of mystery is nowhere else. We have to talk in terms of light, because if we talk in terms of formalities, what can we get out of it?"

"It could be a step forward to realize that the rational picture of the world is also an imagination; it has the same reality as a myth. It is the product of the mind; it is not more substantial than the mind. When we talk about mythology we are talking about questions of history, of rational thought and rationalized memory of our past. History is the most tragic product of the rational mind–a picture from which there is no way to escape. The picture of the world that history gives us is the picture of a dead person who looks over his own life. It is as if we are all dead, and we are looking at the world in a glass case. How can we get away from this? I have no answer for it."

FRACTION MAGAZINE: All About The Face

Photograph (c) David Maisel /All Rights Reserved

1.15.2010

CAIO FERNANDES: My World

Untitled, acrylic on canvas
Painting (c) Caio Fernandes /All Rights Reserved

Bianca Conducting Souls, 2009 series
Copyright (c) Caio Fernandes
/All Rights Reserved


Untitled, acrylic on canvas
Painting (c) Caio Fernandes /All Rights Reserved

Untitled, acrylic on canvas
Painting (c) Caio Fernandes
/All Rights Reserved


Bianca Conducting Souls, 2009 series
Copyright (c) (c) Caio Fernandes /All Rights Reserved

Bianca Conducting Souls, 2009 series
Copyright (c) Caio Fernandes /All Rights Reserved

When I was 13, the year I fell in love with photography, I also discovered North American realism in painting, literature and photography. Here in São Paulo, we are sons and grandsons of Europeans that came here after the wars. The European sensibility and aesthetics are still very strong among us. I was taught all the "isms" of the 20th Century that came from the old continent, along with the most popular work from the USA, such as Abstract Expressionism, Pop Art...but after "In The American West", I saw that art could be very mature, even sober, without losing the power of expression. Today it sounds obvious, but at the time it really blew my mind.

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CAIO FERNANDES, born in São Paulo, Brazil in 1975, studied Psychology, Art and Photography at both the University of São Paulo and at Brazil's most prestigious school for Art and Architecture, the Fundação Armando Alvares Penteado (FAAP). Studying under artists Evandro Carlos Jardim, Claudo Mubarack and Elisa Bracher, he worked as studio assistant to Ms. Bracher for a short period preparing exhibits for Germany and Rio de Janiero.

Fernandes' work is sometimes described as Realist, "though the sheer intensity of his work sets him apart from most contemporary Realist painters. With a highly individualistic style of painting, Caio reveals the raw physical characteristics and inner tensions of his subjects. A strong interest in Kardecist Spiritism, which proposes an intricate set of perspectives of the "self", is apparent in his self-portraits. Though Caio affirms that a self-portrait can only be considered as a visual reflection of himself, "There is no conceptual speech behind it," he believes strongly that the only important thing is the painting itself."

Order Caio's Book: THE PICTORIAL CONSEQUENCE

1.14.2010

GINA KELLY: Behind The Curtain

Denali Behind The Curtain 2
Photograph (c) Gina Kelly
/All Rights Reserved

Box of Horses
Photograph (c) Gina Kelly
/All Rights Reserved


Sisters
Photograph (c) Gina Kelly
/All Rights Reserved


The Kind of Thing That Brightens My Day
Photograph (c) Gina Kelly
/All Rights Reserved


GEENUT BLOGSPOT
GINA KELLY WEBSITE

1.11.2010

DAVID MAISEL: Library Of Dust

Photograph (c) David Maisel /All Rights Reserved

Photograph (c) David Maisel /All Rights Reserved

Photograph (c) David Maisel /All Rights Reserved

. . . these canisters hold the cremated remains of patients from an American psychiatric hospital. Oddly reminiscent of bullet casings, the canisters are literal gravesites. Reacting with their ash inhabitants, the canisters are now blooming with secondary minerals, articulating new metallic landscapes.” — Geoff Manaugh, Contemporary

1.10.2010

1.09.2010

ROBERT VOIT: Cell Phone Trees

Photograph (c) Robert Voit /All Rights Reserved

Photograph (c) Robert Voit /All Rights Reserved

Photograph (c) Robert Voit /All Rights Reserved

ROBERT VOITS NEW TREES is "a work-in-progress since 2003, of mobile phone masts in the guise of artificial trees erected in real space in the U.S., Great Britain, South Africa, Korea, Italy and Portugal pays superficial tribute to a diffuse creative will driven by a basic desire for conciliation. To visually compensate for the dangers of electro-smog, mobile phone masts are given plastic “magic hoods” which simulate nature so that they then appear in the landscape as idealized forms of vegetation. The broad range of camouflage outfits includes deciduous trees and conifers, pines, palms and huge cacti. A lucrative manufacturing industry specializing in these artificial trees has emerged with considerable future potential; currently it is gaining a foothold on the European continent." – Christoph Schaden

JAN 13 - MAR 6

2010 CENTER PHOTO AWARDS: Play This Ad


Photograph © Carolyn Drake | Design © Savage Studios

1.08.2010

ALEXANDRA HUDDLESTON: Timbuktu

Daily Life in Black and White: Timbuktu, Mali
Photograph (c) Alexandra Huddleston /All Rights Reserved

Divine Knowledge: Timbuktu, Mali
Photograph (c) Alexandra Huddleston /All Rights Reserved

Divine Knowledge: Timbuktu, Mali
Photograph (c) Alexandra Huddleston /All Rights Reserved

Daily Life in Black and White: Timbuktu, Mali
Photograph (c) Alexandra Huddleston /All Rights Reserved

Daily Life in Black and White: Timbuktu, Mali
Photograph (c) Alexandra Huddleston /All Rights Reserved

ALEXANDRA HUDDLESTON, an International Documentary Photographer, spent a year photographing in Timbuktu on a Fulbright Scholarship. She states she wants "to open doors between cultures and individuals through photography and, in so doing, to enable them to decide how and if they want to change their worlds."

ALEXANDRA HUDDLESTON WEBSITE

1.07.2010

JOHN EDER: Football Fever

Photograph (c) John Eder /All Rights Reserved

Photograph (c) John Eder /All Rights Reserved

Photograph (c) John Eder /All Rights Reserved

Eder's signature free-falling images
Photograph (c) John Eder
/All Rights Reserved

I met JOHN EDER several years ago when he shot two covers for us for David Lauren's classic Gen X Swing Magazine ("The Magazine for People in Their 20's, the Age Group that Swings the Vote"). One of the covers was an Eder signature image of a young business man free-falling, and the other was of Matthew Fox, a cool guy long before "Lost".

The Football Crowd (above) was commissioned by Getty Images back in the day when they still commissioned photographs. "We had 65 extras in a stadium in Glendora going through all the motions. It was totally artificial, not a real game. I really enjoy directing large crowds. I kind of amazed myself by memorizing the names of all the cast so I could direct them. At the time, I was moaning about how I wasn't making much dough on this mammoth gig - 65 extras, a stadium, six assistants, tons of equipment, etc. etc., and my editor said oh you are gonna make money! Sales were UNBELIEVABLE for the stadium shots."
JOHN EDER WEBSITE