3.11.2011

JACQUES HENRI LARTIGUE: Diary of A Century

Au Sentier de la Vertu, 1912
Photograph (c) Jacques Henri Lartigue

Avenue du Bois de Boulogne, Paris, 1911
Photograph (c) Jacques Henri Lartigue

Car Trip, Papa at 80 kilometers an hour, 1913
Photograph (c) Jacques Henri Lartigue


The ZYX 24 takes off, Rouzat, 1910
Photograph (c) Jacques Henri Lartigue


Simone Roussel on the Beach at Villerville, 1906
Photograph (c) Jacques Henri Lartigue


Zissou, Rouzat,1911
Photograph (c) Jacques Henri Lartigue


Lartigue Retrospective Exhibition at CaixaForum, Madrid
March 4 to June 19th, 2011


A Floating World: Photographs by Jacques Henri Lartigue (1894-1986), features 182 modern prints of Lartigue’s photographs, including 18 modern recreations of his stereoscopic pictures with their original three-dimensional effect-taken with a stereoscopic camera, a device very much in fashion at the time, in the attempt to capture reality in all its dimensions. Also, the show includes an insight into the different techniques that Lartigue used to create and organize his works. The section includes 23 vintage prints, produced between 1905 and 1926, as well as 3 cameras that belonged to Lartigue, some stereoscopic glasses, 8 autochrome prints (coloured photographs), four albums of original photographs and 6 volumes of the diaries and agendas that he kept throughout his life.

Lartigue's first book, Diary Of A Century, was made in collaboration with Richard Avedon and designed by Bea Feiter, 1970

Jacques-Henri Lartigue took his first photographs at the age of six in 1900. He was considered a child prodigy and produced incredible images of his family and friends by the time he was twelve. In the dozen or so years before World War I, whether it was racing cars, flying machines, people jumping, glider planes, ladies of fashion strolling in the park, or people at the seashore and at the races, the young Lartigue was fascinated by movement. Lartigue was rediscovered in the 1970s with the publication of Diary of a Century, edited by Richard Avedon.

3.10.2011

LOUISE WHELAN: Australians All

Burundi refugee's find a new home in Newcastle NSW
Photograph (c) Louise Whelan /All Rights Reserved


The Tibetan community of Australia visited by HH the Dalai Lama, Sydney
Photograph (c) Louise Whelan /All Rights Reserved


A proud southern Sudanese refugee at his home in Newcastle NSW
Photograph (c) Louise Whelan /All Rights Reserved


Chef with BBQ Duck Moon Festival Cabramatta NSW
Photograph (c) Louise Whelan /All Rights Reserved


Northern Sudanese twins Punchbowl NSW
Photograph (c) Louise Whelan /All Rights Reserved


Icelander sits proudly in her St Mary's Home NSW
Photograph (c) Louise Whelan /All Rights Reserved

Documentary photographer, Louise Whelan, has been on a two-year journey to capture ‘slice of life’ images from all the ethnic communities in NSW. Working with the State Library of NSW and photographer John Immig, this project has enormous cultural and historical significance for all Australian’s as the photographers document approximately one hundred and fifty different ethnic groups.

Over 50 photographs by Louise Whelan will be exhibited as part of Sydney's Living In Harmony Festival, March 18 - March 26. Pine Street Gallery, 64 Pine Street, Chippendale, NSW, Australia.

3.04.2011

KRISTOFER DAN-BERGMAN: Space | Yearbook



from 'Yearbook' series
Photograph (c) Kristofer Dan-Bergman

from 'Yearbook' series
Photograph (c) Kristofer Dan-Bergman


Kristofer Dan-Bergman is a Swedish born photographer who lives and works in New York. His projects include documentary, fine arts, editorial and commercial work. Photography has allowed Kristofer to meet and photograph people he would most likely never have encountered otherwise. Former President and First Lady, Bill and Hillary Clinton, Lauren Bacall, Muhammad Ali, Joan Baez and Noble Peace Prize Award Winner, Desmond Tutu, have all sat on the other side of Kristofer’s lens.

I met Kristofer at the recent ASMPNY Fine Art Portfolio Review.
Check out his 'SPACE' vimeo above and view his 'YEARBOOK' series. Watch for an exhibition in Sweden's Smalands Museum 9/15/11 thru 1/15/12.

WYATT GALLERY: Tent Life Haiti


Photograph (c) Wyatt Gallery /All Rights Reserved

Photograph (c) Wyatt Gallery /All Rights Reserved

Tent Life: Haiti. Published by Umbrage Editions

Wyatt Gallery (a person not a place) grew up in Philadelphia. He's received numerous awards such as the Fulbright Fellowship, the PDN 30, and 25 Under 25 Up-and-Coming American Photographers by Duke University. His photographs have been exhibited throughout the U.S.A. and are in major private and public collections, including the Museum of Fine Arts Houston, the George Eastman House, and American Express. In 2011, Wyatt published Tent Life: Haiti with Umbrage Editions. 100% of the royalties from the sale of this book go to Haitian Relief.

Tent Life: Haiti

Photographs + Book by Wyatt Gallery
Through March 31st
Umbrage Gallery, Dumbo

3.03.2011

ARNOLD NEWMAN: 93rd BirthDay

Henri Cartier-Bresson, New York, NY , 1947
Photograph (c) Arnold Newman /All Rights Reserved

Yasuo Kuniyoshi, New York, NY, 1941
Photograph (c) Arnold Newman /All Rights Reserved

Stieglitz & O'Keeffe, New York, NY, 1944
Photograph (c) Arnold Newman /All Rights Reserved

Igor Stravinsky, New York, NY, 1946
Photograph (c) Arnold Newman /All Rights Reserved

"Photography, as we all know, is not real at all. It is an illusion of reality with which we create our own private world."

"The subject must be thought of in terms of the 20th century, of houses he lives in and places he works, in terms of the kind of light the windows in these places let through and by which we see him every day."

"There are no rules and regulations for perfect composition. If there were we would be able to put all the information into a computer and would come out with a masterpiece. We know that's impossible. You have to compose by the seat of your pants."

"Visual ideas combined with technology combined with personal interpretation equals photography. Each must hold it's own; if it doesn't, the thing collapses."
– Arnold Newman


Photographer Arnold Newman, one of the best portrait photographers of the 20th century, would have been 93 today. "He helped me find my way with photography when I was young and trying to figure things out. One of the things he taught me was that I should pursue what I know best, much like an author"...read more on Photographer Larry McNeil's Photoblog

2.25.2011

RAGHU RAI: Magnum Photographer NYC Exhibit

Book Cover: Artist Studio, Kolkata, 2004
RAGHU RAI'S INDIA: Reflections In Black & White
(Penguin Studio 2007)

Flower Market, Kolkata, 2004
Photograph (c) Raghu Rai /All Rights Reserved


Traffic at Chawri Bazar, Delhi, 1964
Photograph (c) Raghu Rai /All Rights Reserved


Ganpati Celebration, Mumbai, 2001
Photograph (c) Raghu Rai /All Rights Reserved


Preparing for Durga Puja, Kolkata, 1999
Photograph (c) Raghu Rai /All Rights Reserved


Burial of an unknown child the morning after the catastrophic Union Carbide gas leak that killed thousands on the early morning of December 3, 1984. Raghu Rai cried as he took this picture. Photograph (c) Raghu Rai /All Rights Reserved

Skulls discarded after research at the Hamidia Hospital, Bhopal after the great Bhopal Gas Tragedy. Photograph (c) Raghu Rai /All Rights Reserved

Raghu Rai next to his well-known photograph, "Mother Teresa at her refuge of the Missionaries of Charity in Calcutta during prayer."The Guardian, 2010

Photographs by Raghu Rai (Penguin Studio 2010)

I believe that the photographer's job is to cut a frame-sized slice out of the world around him so cleanly that if he were to put it back again, life and the world would continue to move without a stumble–Raghu Rai

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Raghu Rai has been in the forefront of photography in India for over 40 years. As a member of Magnum, he established an international reputation as a photographer with his special photo-essays on the Bhopal Gas tragedy. His work has regularly appeared in Paris Match, National Geographic, The New York Times and Newsweek. Twenty-five of his photographs are held in the permanent collection of the Bibliotheque Nationale de France, and in 1997 the National Gallery of Modern Art in Delhi gave Rai the first retrospective exhibition dedicated to the work of a contemporary Indian photographer. His impressive body of work is now being featured in a retrospective at the Aicon Gallery, 35 Great Jones Street, in New York City.

Raghu Rai | A Retrospective Exhibition
February 18 - March 20, 2011

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I like being among my own people. I merge with them. I don't carry camera bags, I don't wear stylish clothes. I have one camera with a zoom lens so I am not alarming people; no one is saying, 'Here comes a photographer!'

The Guardian Interview: It was a donkey that made Raghu Rai want to become a photographer. He trained as a civil engineer in the early 1960s, but did the job for a year in Delhi and hated it. His elder brother was already earning a living taking pictures and suggested Rai accompany a friend on a shoot to take photographs of children in a local village. When he got there, Rai's interest was sparked not by the children but by a donkey foal in a nearby field.

"I tried to get closer, but when I was about 10 feet away, the donkey started running and the children started laughing," he says now, more than 40 years later. Rai chased the donkey for the best part of three hours in order to amuse his audience. "I was enjoying myself. After a while, the donkey got tired and stood there so I got closer and took the shot. It was evening and the landscape was fading in soft light." His brother entered the resulting picture into a weekly competition run by The Times in London. It was published. "The [prize] money I got was enough to live on for a month," says Rai. "I thought, 'This is not a bad idea, man!'"

That was 1965. The following year, he joined the Statesman newspaper in West Bengal as its chief photographer. He never went back to civil engineering. "My father worked for the irrigation department," says Rai. "People would ask how many sons he had and he would say, 'I have four. Two have gone photographers', like he was saying, 'Two have gone mad.'" Over a career spanning four decades, his son has become one of the foremost chroniclers of the changing face of India. His images are famed for capturing both his country's brutality and its beauty, often within a single frame.

Rai, who was born in a small Pakistani village and came to India during Partition, has been witness to some of the most significant events in his country's recent history. He was one of the first photographers on the scene after the 1984 Bhopal industrial disaster and has produced acclaimed documentary series on Mother Teresa, the Dalai Lama and the late Indian prime minister Indira Gandhi. Championed in the west by Henri Cartier-Bresson, Rai joined Magnum Photos in 1977 and went on to judge the World Press Photo Awards from 1990 to 1997...read the full Interview by Elizabeth Day in The Guardian , UK

2.23.2011

RACHEL PAPO: Lecture at The Center For Photography at Woodstock Feb 27th

Hava on Margosa Tree, Elroi, Israel 2011
Photograph (c) Rachel Papo /All Rights Reserved

RACHEL PAPO will be giving a lecture about her work at The Center for Photography at Woodstock, Sunday, February 27, 11 am. This lecture is part of a new series, Near Here, featuring photographic artists living in the Woodstock area.

You can also view images from Rachel Papo's Exhibition, Serial No. 3817131, posted here 10.13.2009, at the Redline Art Space, Denver, Colorado, March 1-April 26; the Yangon Photo Festival, Yangon, Myanmar, February 24 - March 26; and Centro de la Imagen, Mexico City, in May 2011.

2.21.2011

MIKAEL KENNEDY: Passport To Trespass

No. 101479-71
Photograph (c) Mikael Kennedy
/All Rights Reserved

No. 101479-710
Photograph (c) Mikael Kennedy /All Rights Reserved

Polaroid Vitae Vol. I: October 14, 1979
28 B+W Polaroids, 32 newsprint pages, 1000 copies

+ + +


Hunt Them Out is a Limited Edition Zine
1000 signed + numbered copies

Photograph (c) Mikael Kennedy /All Rights Reserved

Photograph (c) Mikael Kennedy /All Rights Reserved

Loading my SX70 and duffel with some of the last remaining packs of the film in the world I set out to gather as many portraits of the folks I had photographed over the years using this unique film before it disappeared forever...
+ + +

In the Seventh Volume of the Passport to Trespass series we are updated on several of the central characters in this decade long documentation of Mikael Kennedy's wanderings and adventures. Spanning 2008 and 2009 as Kennedy visited old friends and wandered the northern coasts of the country, these portraits give us a paused moment in the journey, where we face the individuals who have played recurring roles in the Passport to Trespass story.

Volume 7 takes on a new form from previous publications, this booklet printed in Zine form is a 24 page piece containing 20 Polaroid portraits shot with the rare Polaroid film; TZ Artistic. These muted and faded images reflect the vanishing Polaroid film.

Hunt Them Out is a limited edition Zine printed in conjunction with the release of these 20 Polaroids in an online only exhibition with Peter Hay Halpert Fine Art, NY.

2.20.2011

STEPHEN MALLON: The Next Stop Atlantic

Photograph (c) Stephen Mallon/All Rights Reserved

Photograph (c) Stephen Mallon/All Rights Reserved

Photograph (c) Stephen Mallon/All Rights Reserved

Kathleen Vance, Associate Director, Front Room Gallery, in front of Stephen Mallon's "Next Stop Atlantic" image

Photograph (c) Stephen Mallon/All Rights Reserved

Photograph (c) Stephen Mallon/All Rights Reserved

UPDATE!
"Next Stop Atlantic"
Visual Arts Center of New Jersey
July 29 - September 25, 2011
68 Elm Street, Summit, NJ

NYC Transit joined the artificial reef building program off the east coast of the U.S. in 2000, sending stripped subway cars on barges to be dropped into the Atlantic Ocean to build refuge for fish and crustaceans to colonize the structures. Photographer Stephen Mallon beautifully traces the progress of the train cars on their last voyage out to sea.

Mallon gained enormous acclaim for his series, "Brace For Impact: The Salvage of Flight 1549," documenting the salvage of the U.S. Airways flight piloted by Chesley "Sully" Sullenberger, who managed to emergency-land in the Hudson River in January 15, 2009 without losing any passenger lives.

Another Mallon Must See: Stephen Mallon produced and directed this video created from over 30,000 still images, posted in The Wall Street Journal: A New York Bridge Delivered (here). Follow the progress of this massive structure as it is floated, dragged, pushed and pulled over one hundred miles of New York's historic waterways.

UPDATE!
"Next Stop Atlantic"
Visual Arts Center of New Jersey
July 29 - September 25, 2011
68 Elm Street, Summit, NJ


2.13.2011

HAPPY VALENTINES DAY!

Jill and Charlie
SmartPhonePhoto (c) Jill Cuticello /All Rights Reserved


Charlie
SmartPhonePhoto (c) Jill Cuticello /All Rights Reserved

Saint Valentine's Day
is an annual commemoration February 14th
celebrating love and affection between intimate companions.

ASMP-NY: Curators + Dealers Panel

(L to R) Moderator Susan May Tell, with Panelists: Jeff Rosenheim, Curator of Photographs, Metropolitan Museum of Art; Howard Greenberg, Owner of the Howard Greenberg Gallery; Brian Wallis, Chief Curator, ICP, The International Center of Photography

Jeff Rosenheim, Howard Greenberg, Brian Wallis

February 2, 2011: Panelists Jeff L. Rosenheim - Curator of Photographs, Metropolitan Museum of Art; Howard Greenberg - top photography dealer and owner of New York City's Howard Greenberg Gallery; and Brian Wallis - Deputy Director of Exhibitions and Collections and Chief Curator, International Center of Photography came together for a conversation on Fine Art Photography. The New York chapter of ASMP (American Society of Media Professionals) was host to this event, moderated by its Fine Art Chair, photographer Susan May Tell. The conversation took place at Soho Photo.

A few of the many topics discussed throughout the evening included, how each of them became interested in photography, their relationships with collectors and auction houses,
how they choose exhibitions, the importance (or not) of prints being editioned and/or signed ("only one signature matters - Henri Cartier-Bresson"), and wet vs digital prints. The evening was casual and fun, while also inspiring and illuminating. One example is Rosenheim's response about editioning prints: "I am less concerned with rarity and more concerned with poetry."

Read more about the evening here:
SHARPEN by Stella Kramer