3.15.2011

ELISABETH BIONDI: La Lettre Interview

Elisabeth Biondi in her Conde Nast office
Photograph by Enrico Bossan

The wall in Biondi's New Yorker office

Helmut Newton photograph above Diane Arbus: "Helmut was so German and this picture is so German. It’s one of my favorites. I grew up in the woods. Only a German can make this picture."

Newton and Avedon on Biondi's New Yorker wall

A photograph is an entity. You don’t crop it, you don’t butcher it, you don’t plaster text over it, you treat it with dignity.– Elisabeth Biondi

Elisabeth Biondi has left an indelible impression on all of us throughout her powerful career at four of the most influential magazines in the world. Biondi joined The New Yorker Magazine as Visuals Editor in 1996, just a couple of years after photography had first been introduced into the three quarters of a century old magazine. From her extensive background at Geo, Stern, and Vanity Fair, she brought her masterful eye to The New Yorker, helping to build their reputation for their award winning use of photography.


I spoke with Ms. Biondi in her Condé Nast office, above Times Square:


FROM GERMANY / TO AMERICA

I left my village in Germany when I was 19. It was a small village, only forty-two houses, two hundred people and four hundred cows. I went to Paris, and then London as an au pair girl. I didn’t really study photography. I was ready to leave Germany and looking to immigrate somewhere. You could go to Australia, South Africa, or Canada if you paid 200 marks, which is about $50.00, and commit yourself to stay in the country for a period of time. They were looking for immigrants, especially Germans, for some reason. I asked for the forms and I was debating where I was going to go. Canada was too cold for me, South Africa had political problems and Australia didn’t really entice me. I was going to do one of those three, when I met my American husband in Frankfurt while I was working for Lufthansa.


We stayed for a year in Germany after we had married, then we came to New York. He worked as an assistant Art Director at London Records. I wanted a job, so he said there’s this job in a photo studio and I went to interview. It was just a little studio with staff photographers. We produced shoots, a 'stock' library, and carried out assignments. It was a very different time, the late 1960’s, early 1970’s. Our photography studio produced magazine covers; they did assignments, anything and everything. I was the assistant to the man who ran the company and I got my basic training how this was done. At some point while working there, I decided I wanted to work for magazines, and I wanted to be a Picture Editor.


PICTURE EDITOR / GEO MAGAZINE

I went to a magazine to get the experience - I don’t want to reveal the name - then I waited until I found a magazine that interested me. German Geo decided to have an American magazine on the American market. It was supposed to be a more contemporary National Geographic and modeled after the very successful German Geo. With the combination of my being German, and now having the title ‘Picture Editor’, which I really wasn’t, I was hired as the assistant Picture Editor. Alice George was the Picture Editor. There was a big upheaval at the magazine fairly early on and I was named Picture Editor. When I joined the staff of Geo I was divorcing, it was an emotional time for me and Geo became my home.


At Geo, Thomas Hoepker was the Executive Editor, in charge of visuals and layout. He is a Magnum photographer now, and my training came from him. I learned from a photographer, and certain basic understandings or rules, if you want, from this time have stayed with me my entire work life; “A photograph is an entity. You don’t crop it, you don’t butcher it, you don’t plaster text over it, you treat it with dignity. You look at it as important as you treat words. It has different properties to it, but it isn’t simply an illustration.”


It was the Magnum time. The premise was, photographers would be sent off for three or four weeks to tell a story with or without a writer, to photograph a story. They would come back and make a presentation to us. We would make an edit and then the visual treatment to the magazine would be put in layout. In some way, the visual treatment was as important, if not more important, than the text. In the beginning, it was more photography driven. Over the years, it changed. In the end, it became more like a travel magazine but the initial premise was not unlike National Geographic-- that you could tell stories in the photographs. In our first issue, we did the Badlands. It was more than thirty pages of exceptional photography. Usually we published six stories -- some were large, some slightly less, but it was always a sumptuous display of good photography.


FROM GEO / TO VANITY FAIR

Vanity Fair was then edited by Tina Brown. It was the early years, it wasn't successful yet. She had already been there for two years and Annie

(Leibovitz) was already present at the publication. Vanity Fair was very different from many other publications---basically Tina didn’t make a

judgment between words and pictures. Whatever was interesting, or as she would say, “Hot. Hot. Hot. Hot. Hot!”, got more space and was promoted.


Certainly there were the important word pieces, but photos were important too, and they contributed to it’s success. I would say there was a Vanity Fair style of photography, particularly portrait photography. I think Annie was a big part of that, and it helped make Vanity Fair successful. One of the early success’s was Harry Benson photographing the Reagan’s in the White House dancing. That was a coup and was noticed. And then of course Helmut (Newton) shooting Claus von Bülow, which was much talked about.

I was there for seven years. It was time for a change. I moved back to Germany and went to Stern.


RETURN TO GERMANY / STERN MAGAZINE

From 1968-1996, I was in the U.S. exactly 23 years. I came when I was 23, and I went back when I was 46. Half my life was spent here and half my life was spent there. I really had not kept up with my German life. I came here to immerse myself in all things American and I stayed away from everything German. And it was hard, it was really difficult being in Germany, working for a big fat weekly, because before I didn’t read in German, I didn’t know German politics anymore, I didn’t know German TV. When I was in the U.S. I didn’t see Fassbinder, just to illustrate how much I had focused on giving up my past. German popular culture was alien to me, it was all an enormous challenge. But in the end, I reconnected with Germany--with my past, with German literature, and German films, and that was terrific and great. I am so grateful for the opportunity.


Stern is a weekly magazine: a combination of Newsweek, Life Magazine, Paris Match, not the way it is now, but Paris Match at that time, and the London Sunday times a little bit. It was a mixture of hard news and soft news. There was usually a big portfolio feature, news in front, and then celebrity coverage. Visually it was mainly photography, and illustration was minor. I’d never worked for a weekly magazine before. After three quarters of a year, I had information overload, nothing would go in my brain anymore.


We had 15 staff photographers, but in some way that model had outlived itself. Originally it made sense, but the photography world grew bigger and one could hire photographers all over the world and have access to everyone, so it was a changing time. You worked with freelance people as much as you worked with staff people. I stayed five years.


RETURN TO AMERICA / THE NEW YORKER

I decided I wanted to go back to America. I’d been in Germany five years. At first it was all new and fresh and then I got used to it and decided I really preferred to live in America. I thought I didn’t want to spend the rest of my life in Germany. I decided I was going to leave when I got a phone call from Pamela McCarthy, the deputy editor at the New Yorker and she said, “Have you thought about coming back to America?” “As a matter of fact I have”, I said. It all happened very quickly after that conversation. It was the only time in my life something happened I really wanted, without doing anything for it.


Tina had already been at the New Yorker for a few years. I came at the time when she decided to have a proper photo department in a more conventional sense, i.e. like other magazines had, and that’s when she hired me.


Photography first came into the New Yorker in 1992, of a fabulous full-page photograph of Malcolm X by Richard Avedon. At the beginning he was the only photographer. I think it was a very smart choice. He introduced New Yorker readers to photography gradually. It was a really smart decision Tina made. And then it evolved and we added other photographers. It’s really hard to do a weekly with one photographer who was prominent and very busy. It just naturally evolved.


The challenge for me was to help develop a language in photography that suited the New Yorker, which is and was a text magazine. It’s a natural with Richard Avedon; he sets the tone of the magazine. He’s sophisticated and the magazine is sophisticated, so that’s sort of a no brainer in a way. Then if you open it up, I think at first it was done by doing, rather than sitting down and planning what photography should be in the New Yorker.


I think magazines change all the time and I’m sure if I looked at the New Yorker from ten years ago, the photography, I would say it was different then, but there was never a decision to make it categorically different, it just evolved. And one always needs to think about it and to change things before readers get bored. One has to always be ahead of the reader.


I was friends with Helmut (Newton) from Vanity Fair. It was great to have him work for the New Yorker. We had to find the right stories for Helmut to photograph for the New Yorker and we did. I think Helmut was a great portrait photographer, and oddly enough his male pictures were as strong, if not stronger than his pictures of women. They were psychological.


And Robert Polidori is a great artist, great photographer. His big story was Havana. The book is in its third or fourth printing and has become a classic. Basically it was not a challenge to get the people to work for us. Even though we didn’t use a lot of pictures, photographers like to work for us. It’s prestigious to be published in the New Yorker. I think most photographers are very happy to work with us. It's wonderful. And I work very hard to make new photographers understand the New Yorker.


When I work with photographers, it’s a collaborative process. My job is to translate the magazine to the photographer and the photographer to the magazine. It's what I see as my role. I believe very much that personality is a factor, in addition to talent. I want to know the photographer so I can pair him with the right person for portraiture, for example. We work with artists, we work with photojournalists, we work with portrait and still life photographers. I’ve worked with all these different disciplines, if you want to call it that, and I love diversity.


COLLECTING PHOTOGRAPHY

When you look at my Collection it’s pretty much like my wall. I’m not saying the same pictures, they connect to my personal experiences. Often photographers ask me if they can give me a photograph - and then I think very hard about it, which one I want to live with. The pictures I’ve bought myself are all very personal, all pictures I like for personal reasons. I never thought about building a Collection, they are just my photographs and they are interesting and take different directions. Very few still life’s, but other than that, there’s a little bit of everything.


The ones that are on my wall are there for different reasons, sometimes I like the pictures, sometimes I like the picture and it was special to work on it, or because the photographers were important in my life, like those two guys (pointing to the photo of Helmut Newton and Richard Avedon together shown above). I came across the picture by chance. And that’s a Helmut up there, the naked woman (image above). Helmut was so German and this picture is so German. It’s one of my favorites. I grew up in the woods. Only a German can make this picture.


Elisabeth Biondi left the New Yorker Magazine March 15.

She is curating an exhibition for the New York Photo Festival May 2011.

And Juror for SlowExposures Photography Exhibition September 2011

more info SlowExposures here


–Elizabeth Avedon



3.12.2011

LIFE SUPPORT JAPAN: Online Auction

Doll In The Living Room (6 available) $50
Photograph (c) Kevin Miyazaki

(Click to Enlarge Images!)

Untitled $50
Photograph (c) Aleksandra Patova

No. 61 2011 $50
Photograph (c) Kerry Mansfield

Jun Masuda as Oyanagi / SOLD OUT
Photograph (c) Hiroshi Watanabe

Rikugien Garden, Tokyo, 2009 / SOLD OUT
Photograph (c) Emily Shur

Tokyo Subway, 2010 / SOLD OUT
Photograph (c) Jeffrey Aaronson

Mudflat Ariake Sea / SOLD OUT
Photograph (c) David Burdeny


Vineyard Blush / SOLD OUT
Photograph (c) Tom Chambers


Fireworks / SOLD OUT
Photograph (c) Gabriel Herman


Ocotillo Tree in Pinto Basin $50
Photograph (c) Ron Resnick


Some Days / SOLD OUT
Photograph (c) Aline Smithson



Lucky Cats:White Cat 001b (5 available) $50
Photograph (c) Sheri Lynn Behr


life support japan
+
wall space gallery

new images posted daily
seattle 206.330.9137 | santa barbara 805.637.3898
gallery@wall-spacegallery.com


this is the first of many auctions the photo community has pulled together asap, powered by aline smithson of lenscratch and christa dix of wall space gallery. over 100 more photographers are donating their work and images are being uploaded every day, so check back often - for $50 you will get an 8 X 10 signed print, one of a special limited edition of ten - 100% of the proceeds will be donated to non-profit organizations, Direct Relief International and Habitat for Humanity Japan, benefiting disaster victims...and check-out the silent auction on march 19th at jennifer schwartz gallery. please visit these sites and *purchase a piece of art!

*purchase thru google check-out.
international buyers: email for an invoice and pay thru paypal. buy multiple prints, pay shipping once. new images posted each day.

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

+ + +

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

+ + +

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