6.18.2011

PAUL KRANZLER: Homeland

Father’s Slide Show in the Living Room, with Slides He Took in the States in the 1970s, Hörsching 2008. Photograph © Paul Kranzler

Gregor Exercising His Show Horse Dusty Diamond, Ybbsitz 2008.
Photograph © Paul Kranzler

Father with Mother’s Fox Fur in his Walk-in Wardrobe, Hörsching 2007
Photograph © Paul Kranzler

Austrian photographer, Paul Kranzler, was one of 100 photographers chosen to participate in Review Santa Fe 2011 with his series, Brut. "In Brut, Kranzler turns his lens on his own family, choosing 120 images from among the thousands he has taken of his family since 2004, and providing revealing captions about family history and the realities of everyday life. “In the living room my father likes to show slides he took in the States in the 1970s,” writes Kranzler. “He says that the town of Traun is Austria’s equivalent to Los Angeles, and he’s not wrong.”

“These are images of places and people I have known for a long time, whether related by blood or otherwise. And places and people who know those I know, and also people who I don’t know in places I have known for a long time. You become the way you are in your own environment. Relatives are an integral part of the genetic environment, and people, to whom you are not related and who become your relatives are always your closest environment. Indeed the people, places and landscapes of your own environment are always the most photographed motif in the world. Once you have been in a particular environment for a long time, it becomes your “home”, your “relationship”, your “family”, your “homeland”, your “cemetery”, your “prison”, etc. Perhaps one’s personal environment is four-dimensional: the three dimensions of space plus the fourth dimension, i.e. the emotion inherent to that (living/human) space.” –Paul Kranzler, BRUT, Fotohof edition

Paul Kranzler Website
La Lettre de la Photographie:
Review Santa Fe Part I / Part II

6.17.2011

RUBEN E. REYES: The Raramuri

Ester and Her Siblings. Samachique, Mexico
Photograph © Ruben E. Reyes

Raramuri religious dancers during the ceremonies for the Virgin of Guadalupe, San Ignacio, Mexico. Photograph © Ruben E. Reyes

Ebaristo and his son Santiago from Basigochito, Mexico
Photograph © Ruben E. Reyes

Raramuri parishioners wait outside the village church for the ceremony in honor of the Virgin of Guadalupe to begin, Cusarare, Mexico. Photograph © Ruben E. Reyes

"Raramuri’s are a group of indigenous people that live in the Copper Canyon area of northern Mexico. They are reclusive people that have resisted westernization for almost four hundred years, however in the past twenty years there has been a shift in their culture, due to a prolonged drought, pressure from the Mexican government, and an increase in tourism in the area. As they become modern they begin to loose their cultural essence, their traditional clothing, their language." –Ruben E. Reyes

Documentary photographer, Ruben E. Reyes (México D.F.), was one of 100 photographers chosen to participate in Review Santa Fe 2011.

Ruben E. Reyes Website
La Lettre de la Photographie:
Review Santa Fe Part I / Part II

6.13.2011

JOSE BELTRAN: Despite/Embargo Cuba

Arturo. Photograph © Jose Beltran

Eliany. Photograph © Jose Beltran


DESPITE/EMBARGO
A Portrait of Havana's Youth 52 Years After The Revolution

Born in Mexico City, 34 year old Jose Beltran, now a photographer based in California, was one of 100 photographers invited to participate in Review Santa Fe 2011.

La Lettre de la Photographie:
Review Santa Fe Part I / Part II

6.11.2011

MIKE REBHOLZ: Ice Fishing In Wisconsin

Anson Jimenez Shack #3 Lake Monona WI
Photograph © Mike Rebholz

Un-Named Shack and Blue Whale, Lake Monona, WI
Photograph © Mike Rebholz

Clint Schneider Shack #1, Lake Monona, WI
Photograph © Mike Rebholz

Barry Thoma Shack #5, Lake Monona, WI
Photograph © Mike Rebholz

10 Weeks Ice Fishing In Wisconsin

"I'm a photographer and I live and work in Madison, Wisconsin, or at least that's where the journey begins. I'm happiest on the road going to or from location. There is a profound mystery for me in going some place new - I might see a new building, see something I don't know about, meet a new person, be exposed to something I've never experienced before. Photography is a good occupation for the curious." – Mike Rebholz

Mike Rebholz was one of 100 photographers invited to participate in Review Santa Fe 2011.

6.10.2011

TAMAS DEZSO: CENTER 2011 Project Award Winner

Bricks (Budapest, 2009)
Photograph
©
Tamas Dezso

Building (Emod, North-East Hungary, 2009)
Photograph
©
Tamas Dezso

Johanna (Zsambek, North Hungary, 2009)
Photograph
©
Tamas Dezso

Tree and House (West Hungary, 2011)
Photograph
©
Tamas Dezso

Petya (Budapest, 2010)
Photograph
©
Tamas Dezso

Tamas Dezso, CENTER 2011 Project Award Winner

"The map of Hungary is speckled with capsules of time. During the political transformation twenty years ago, as the country experienced change it simply forgot about certain places – streets, blocks of flats, vacant sites and whole districts became self-defined enclosures, where today a certain out-dated, awkward, longed-to-be-forgotten Eastern Europeanness still lingers. There are places which seem to be at one with other parts of the city in a single space, but their co-existence in time is only apparent; places which decompose in accordance with their own specific chronology, determined by their past, such that what remains would then either be silently re-conquered by nature or enveloped by the lifestyles of tomorrow’s generations. Of the inhabitants, who have never fully integrated with majority society, soon only traces will remain, until they too, disappear in the course of time."–Tamas Dezso

Tamas Dezso's series, Here, Anywhere, was chosen as First Place in the 2011 Project Competition by CENTER's hand-picked international panel of esteemed jurors - Simon Baker of the Tate Modern, Alexa Becker of Kehrer Verlag Publishers and Christina Cahill of Getty Images Reportage. In this series, the Hungarian photographer gives us a first-hand look into post-Communist Hungary. The New Mexico Museum of Art showcase's Dezso's photographs in their current exhibition, The Curve: CENTER Award Winners 2011. Tamas was one of 100 photographers invited to participate in Review Santa Fe 2011.

The Curve: New Mexico Museum of Art
Santa Fe, NM, through August 7, 2011
Tamas Dezso website

La Lettre de la Photographie:
Review Santa Fe Part I
/ Part II

6.09.2011

MARJORIE SALVATERRA: Clark | Oshin Gallery

Gwen, 2010
Photograph
©
Marjorie Salvaterra

Screaming Man, 2011
Photograph
©
Marjorie Salvaterra

“...a fine line between sanity and insanity...”– Virginia Heckert, Associate Curator of Photography at The Getty Center

“When most girls were reading Judy Blume, I was reading the DSM," says Salvaterra. "It lists all the psychological disorders and their symptoms. Diagnosis is made on the number of symptoms. And yet, it is easy to go through the list of symptoms for the various disorders and think, ‘that could be me.’ Are we all a little crazy -- at least at certain moments in our lives? Is it nurture vs. nature? Some believe people are either born sane or insane. Others believe we are all born perfect and it's the things that happen in our lives that damage us. I tend to believe the latter. In each portrait, I am looking for that line in each person: the part of ourselves that we tend to hide, the part that scares us, the part that is usually saved for the people closest to us - the ones that know our secrets.”

Marjorie Salvaterra Exhibition through July 7

6.08.2011

LIFE MAGAZINE: 2011 PhotoBlog Winners

Congratulations to Jean Jacques Naudet,
Alex Kummerman, Magnus Naddermier, Sophie Hedtmann,
and all the Correspondents for La Lettre de la Photographie!


...and to Rob Haggert at APhotoEditor.com,
James Estrin & Josh Haner for NY Times Lens Blog

LIFE 2011 Photo Blog Winners

5.20.2011

NICHOLAS VREELAND: "Return To The Roof of The World" Leica Gallery June 4th Last Day!

Circumambulation, Labrang Tashi Kyil, Amdo, Tibet
Photograph © Nicholas Vreeland

Monks, Labrang Tashi Kyil, Amdo, Tibet
Photograph © Nicholas Vreeland

(l) Novice Monk, Labrang Tashi Kyil, Amdo, Tibet, 2003.
(r) Senior Monk, Wato Monastery, 2003
Photograph © Nicholas Vreeland

Debate, Sera Monastery, Lhasa, Tibet, 2003
Photograph © Nicholas Vreeland

Guard Dog at the entrance to HH Dalai Lama's Birthplace, Takser, Tibet
Photograph © Nicholas Vreeland

Nicholas Vreeland Exhibition
Leica Gallery • 670 Broadway • NYC

5.17.2011

JESSICA HINES: The New Yorker Magazine's 'Photo Booth'

Chapter 4, Untitled #56, The Beginning
Photograph (c) Jessica Hines


VOTE: Maasai Wildlife Conservation



VOTE to help this non-profit win a $50,000 grant

Ed Norton helps the Maasai Wilderness Conservation Trust preserve the people, plants, and animals coexisting on thousands of acres of wild African plains.

As U.S. director of the Maasai Wilderness Conservation Trust, Ed Norton’s helping the organization protect more than 280,000 acres of African plains, home to more than 1,000 of the world’s most unique plants and animals including lions, black rhinos and giraffes. The MWCT also helps provide healthcare, employment, and education to the local Maasai community that has shared the land for centuries

5.14.2011

NYPH11: Enrico Bossan Curates "Hope"

Mikhael Subotzky & Patrick Waterhouse, Ponte City, Johannesburg
Hope: between dream and reality curated by Enrico Bossan

Andrea Gjestvang, Greenland Disappearing Ice Age
Hope: between dream and reality curated by Enrico Bossan

Benjamin Lowy, iAfghanilandistan: Afghanistan by iPhone

Benjamin Lowy, iAfghanilandistan: Afghanistan by iPhone

Benjamin Lowy, iAfghanilandistan: Afghanistan by iPhone

"There is too much noise and too many photos that don't mean anything. We need to take a step backward and look conscientiously what surrounds us, being humble. Maybe we will rediscover the true sense of photography"–Enrico Bossan, Curator

Sunday, May 15 - last day!

Hope: between dream and reality
Curated by Enrico Bossan

"Hope: between dream and reality, features the work of young photographers who, in his words, “neither provide a faithful representation of reality nor create an illusion, but who have impressed me with their ability to capture the essential aspects of life.” Artists include Olivia Arthur, Clemence de Limburg, Matt Eich, Simona Ghizzoni, Andrea Gjestvang, Sean Lee, Margo Ovcharenko, Andy Spyra, Mikhael Subotzky, Ali Taptik and Peter van Agtmael." 81 Front Street, Dumbo

Multimedia Works
Curated by Elisabeth Biondi & Enrico Bossan
Artists CIA DE FOTO and Ben Lowy, and six viewing booths featuring work by various industry luminaries. 30 Washington Street, Dumbo

Elisabeth Biondi and Enrico Bossan
New York Photo Festival
Sunday, May 15 - last day!
81 Front Street, Brooklyn, NY

5.13.2011

MARTINE FOUGERON: NYPH11 Tête-à-Tête

Photographer Martine Fougeron and Curator Elisabeth Biondi
Photograph © Elizabeth Avedon

NYPH11 : Subjective/Objective Curated by Elisabeth Biondi
Martine Fougeron, Tête-à-Tête series

Tête-à-Tête, Photograph © Martine Fougeron

"Martine Fougeron's Tête-à-Tête project is a series of intimate portraits of the photographers two adolescent sons and their friends in New York and in France...The work explores adolescence as a liminal state, between childhood and adulthood, between feminine and masculine, and between innocence and a burgeoning self-identity."
+ + +


"Subjective/Objective argues that documentary photography today is remarkably vibrant and creatively thriving, despite the bleak financial picture and vanishing support from a publishing industry challenged by digital media. Biondi has selected photographers who refract reality through their own distinct visions, often venturing into a more personal visual language. Subjective/Objective includes Alejandro Chaskielberg, Stefano De Luigi, Carolyn Drake, Martine Fougeron, Balazs Gardi, Jessica Hines, Ethan Levitas, Irina Werning and A Yin."

A Must See Exhibition!
New York Photo Festival • thru May 15th only
81 Front Street • DUMBO Brooklyn NY

RUTH GRUBER: ICP Infinity Awards 2011

Ruth Gruber, Cornell Capa Award recipient, May 10, 2011
Photograph © Elizabeth Avedon

Refugees who had been on Exodus, 1947
Photograph © Ruth Gruber

La Lettre de la Photographie / Photo Image Inguilere

My tools were words and images and I could use those tools to show injustice –Ruth Gruber, recipient of the Cornell Capa Award

Ruth Gruber photographed as a foreign correspondent for the New York Herald Tribune. In 1944, while the war and holocaust raged, Gruber was sent on a covert mission by President Roosevelt to escort 1,000 refugee’s across the Atlantic to the U.S. When she took the stage to receive her award, now 100 years old, she also took everyone’s heart."
– La Lettre de la Photographie

5.12.2011

NYPH11: Elisabeth Biondi + Enrico Bossan Curate "Photography Now"

Irina Werning, Mi Pelo Largo Querido
Subjective/Objective curated by Elisabeth Biondi

A Yin, Mongolia Transformed
Subjective/Objective curated by Elisabeth Biondi

Balazs Gardi, Basetrack: One-Eight
Subjective/Objective curated by Elisabeth Biondi


Balazs Gardi, Basetrack: One-Eight
Subjective/Objective curated by Elisabeth Biondi

Jessica Hines, My Brother's War
Subjective/Objective curated by Elisabeth Biondi


Jessica Hines, My Brother's War
Subjective/Objective curated by Elisabeth Biondi

Martine Fougeron, Tête-à-Tête
Subjective/Objective curated by Elisabeth Biondi


New York Photo Festival 2011
81 Front Street - Dumbo - Brooklyn NY

PHOTOGRAPHY NOW: engaged, personal, and vital
Curated by Elisabeth Biondi and Enrico Bossan
"The state of documentary photography today"

Subjective/Objective, May 11 - 15
An Exhibition Curated by Elisabeth Biondi

"Subjective/Objective argues that documentary photography today is remarkably vibrant and creatively thriving, despite the bleak financial picture and vanishing support from a publishing industry challenged by digital media. Biondi has selected photographers who refract reality through their own distinct visions, often venturing into a more personal visual language. Subjective/Objective includes Alejandro Chaskielberg, Stefano De Luigi, Carolyn Drake, Martine Fougeron, Balazs Gardi, Jessica Hines, Ethan Levitas, Irina Werning and A Yin."

Hope: between dream and reality
Curated by Enrico Bossan
(not shown above)
"Hope: between dream and reality, features the work of young photographers who, in his words, “neither provide a faithful representation of reality nor create an illusion, but who have impressed me with their ability to capture the essential aspects of life.” Artists include Olivia Arthur, Clemence de Limburg, Matt Eich, Simona Ghizzoni, Andrea Gjestvang, Sean Lee, Margo Ovcharenko, Andy Spyra, Mikhael Subotzky, Ali Taptik and Peter van Agtmael."
+ + +

Multimedia works by artists CIA DE FOTO and Ben Lowy, and six viewing booths featuring work by various industry luminaries. 30 Washington St.

Also at NYPH11:

The FotoVisura Latin American Pavilion
111 Front Street

SlideLuck Pot Show XVI
Curated by Whitney Johnson
May 14, 5:30-10PM, 38 Water Str, Dumbo


Win-Initivative / Live-On Set Photo Shoots
Andrew Eccles, Sebastian Smith, Sarah Small, Brett Beyer, Gemma Fleming...
NYPH11 Festival Headquarters / 12-7 PM
1 Main Street - Dumbo - Brooklyn NY

Leica Booth: Borrow a Leica M9
Photo enthusiasts may borrow a Leica M9 digital rangefinder camera free up to four hours. Each day there's a set theme, challenging participants to capture the best photo that embodies that topic. Winners will receive a special Leica prize. Read more on LeicaRumors.com 1 Main Street - Dumbo

Martine Fougeron
May 14, 11AM, 38 Water St
Andy Adams
May 14, 1PM, 38 Water St
Jessica Hines Lecture
May 15, 11AM, 38 Water St


May 15, 4PM
An Intimate Screening and Discussion
Love and War Exhibition

Moderated by Adriana Teresa, Curator
The FotoVisura Pavilion 111 Front Street, Suite 212