10.17.2012

NADAV KANDER: Talks To William Avedon Opens at Flowers Gallery | New York


Chongqing VI (Sunday Afternoon), Chongqing Municipality, 2006
© Nadav Kander,  Courtesy Flowers Gallery, NY/London

Nanjing II (Metal Palm), Jiangsu Province. 2007
© Nadav Kander,  Courtesy Flowers Gallery, NY/London

Nanjing III (after Las Vegas), Jiangsu Province, 2007
 © Nadav Kander,  Courtesy Flowers Gallery, NY/London

Three Gorges Dam IV (Flood Level), Yichang, Hubei Province, 2007
© Nadav Kander,  Courtesy  Flowers Gallery, NY/London
 Old Fengdu II, (Looking At New Fengdu), Chongqing Municipality, 2006 
© Nadav Kander,  Courtesy  Flowers Gallery, NY/London

"Nadav Kander’s photographs, Yangtze – The Long River at Flowers Gallery, New York, capture an authentic un-staged snapshot of people's lives in a region undergoing the most significant and broad sweeping changes to their physical environment in 5,000 years of their recorded history." –William Avedon
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William Avedon: I’ve lived in China the past 12 years and was struck by the sensitivity and depth of understanding of Chinese culture portrayed in your photographs there. What led you to photograph China and the Yangtze River?

Nadav Kander: I wanted to work in China not because I wanted to be a documentary photographer within that landscape, but rather because I found it a troubled land; the reading I had done, the news casts that I saw, it seemed to be a country ill at ease. I think that always attracts me because I can take the kind of pictures that bring up emotions in the viewer that go to the collective consciousness of mankind; reminding us that we are vulnerable, that we have dark sides that we like to shy away from, but I think my photographs make you turn back to that and realize that through vulnerability we connect. So I don’t really see myself as a documentary photographer although I do realize that any series one takes in the world, provided they’re not obviously Photoshopped, become a document. I certainly don’t mind that fact but it was never my intention. I don’t go out to document what it’s like to be in China or how much water goes down the river.

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William Avedon: Your photo in which the local police or government officials are showing on a large ruler where the level of the floodwater is going to reach is particularly interesting and beautiful [above, Three Gorges Dam IV (Flood Level), Yichang, Hubei Province, 2007]. How did you get those subjects posed in that photo? How did you meet them? How did that shot come about?

Nadav Kander: Oh, I like that one. Well I would just snoop around. That was the trip I went around the Dam wall, and I would just ask people to drive and just intuitively see a road and say, ‘Would you try to go up there?’ And they would go up there and I would get out. Some days you’re in a car and you kick some stones around and it just doesn’t seem to be working. You might look through your viewfinder and, I don’t know, it’s just not there. And ten miles on you might get out of the car and everything seems to work, the atmosphere is just perfect, and you make really good pictures. I can’t explain it better than that.

But with those guys, I think they might have been wandering around there measuring for more building. At that time, 2007, the Dam wall had been finished being built but the surrounding area was just becoming a concrete jungle all the time. So I think that’s what they were doing, they were sort of measuring where the water will be because it still has 70 meters to rise.


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Nadav Kander: ...there was one area, the Old Fengdu, where that picture of that man is sitting with his back to me in blue underpants [above, Old Fengdu II (Looking at New Fengdu), Chongqing Municipality, 2006], reminiscent to me of a Caspar Friedrich painting. Where I went to the old Fengdu and saw how most of the town, certainly at a lower level, had been flattened already. As the water was creeping up, they were leveling more and more of the buildings rather than just vacating them and letting the water come around. They had to level everything because they were worried that ships might snag their hulls on buildings so they would bulldoze everything. It was a kind of cruel end to any village or any town that was in the Yangtze’s way,in the rising of the Yangtze. So that was one place, that’s called ‘The City of Ghosts’ because of folklore and ancestry they have. They feel that dead people inhabit that city. That was pretty much covered and they built opposite on the opposite bank, which is what that man sitting in his blue underpants is looking at, the new Fengdu, which was to house about 7 million and when we went there, it was pretty empty. 

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William Avedon: Tell me about the choice of using the quote by the ancient Chinese poet Du Fu in your book? I thought that was a very beautiful choice. How did that come about?

Nadav Kander: I did quite a lot of reading for deeper understanding of the passages of time that have passed China by. He came up a lot and I love that, ‘The State Is Shattered, Mountains and Rivers Remain.’ It’s really powerful. I think what tips its hat for me is how whatever happens to yourself, to humans, there’s always a path onwards. Whatever the world can throw at you, whatever sadness you have, however difficult your life becomes, you can choose to go through this in a way that makes you grow. So it makes a lot of sense for me – it’s almost Buddhist. (read the entire Interview here)

 Nadav Kander: Yangtze - The Long River
October 18th - November 24, 2012
Flowers Gallery, New York
529 West 20th Street



ANDERSON + LOW: Manga Dreams at The Met

Edwin Low and Jonathan Anderson 
photo © Elizabeth Paul Avedon/all rights reserved
Manga Dreams
© Anderson + Low/All Rights Reserved

Untitled (Kit The Swordsman) 2009
© Anderson + Low/All Rights Reserved
 
I spoke with the incredible photography team Anderson + Low at the opening reception for "After Photoshop: Manipulated Photography in the Digital Age" at The Metropolitan Museum of Art. After Photoshop explores various ways in which artists have used digital technology to alter the photographic image over the past 20 years. Anderson + Low's photograph, Untitled (Kit The Swordsman), is on exhibition in Gallery 851 at The Met.

EA: Where did the idea originate for this piece?

Jonathan Anderson: The piece is part of a project called Manga Dreams. The original idea was in 2004, we finally shot the project in 2007 and 2008 and it was released in 2011. It’s based around the influence of Asian comics and Anime movies on youth culture worldwide, not only the Asian diaspora, but increasingly in the West as well. We have particular interest in identity and costume and the projection of self in our work; and this series is part of that.

We created this hybrid world that’s part real, part invented and headhunted people we felt had the spirit of Manga characters inside them, brought them into the studio and helped create new identities for them by negotiation and collaboration with them and this is the result.

This is one of a big series of about sixty works. About half of them are tableaux like this and about half of them are unadorned portraits.
 
Some of the work was shown in the Venice Biennale last year; there is this piece at the Met and we’ve had solo exhibitions of the project in museums including La Maison Européenne de la Photographie in Paris, in the UK [Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts] and Canada this year, plus group shows in The Netherlands, Taiwan and Beijing. Works were also acquired by the National Gallery of Australia. There’s going to be a large exhibition in April of 2013 in Rotterdam, The Netherlands.

EA: Where did you two meet?

Anderson: We met in a photographic facility in London 25 years ago October the 12th this year. We’ve been working as the team 'Anderson + Low' for over twenty years. Edwin Low: We submitted some work for the Royal Academy Summer Exhibition. It was quite unique because it was the first time they accepted Photography as an art form in the Royal Academy. The rest is history.
Anderson: We thought we’d better take ourselves seriously and carry on, so that's where it all started.


The Metropolitan Museum of Art, NY
 September 25, 2012–May 27, 2013

10.14.2012

FAKING IT: The Opening for "Manipulated Photography Before Photoshop" at The Met

Io + Gatto, 1932 (right)  (c) Wanda Wulz

Curator Elisabeth Biondi with 
"Bill Cunningham New York" Producer, Philip Gefter

The Galleries were packed. 
 The following are just a few of the evenings guests.

Manga Dreams, Untitled (Kit The Swordsman) 2009
Edwin Low and Jonathan Anderson
 
Mia Fineman, Asst Curator, Department of Photographs

Known collectively as MANUAL

Okinawa 001, 2008 and Okinawa 009, 2008 
 by Osamu James Nakagawa

 Collector Wm Hunt and Author, Producer Philip Gefter 
 
 Manipulated Photography Before Photoshop
The Metropolitan Museum of Art, NY
October 11, 2012—January 27, 2013
VIEW:

FAKING IT: Curated by Mia Fineman

 Mia Fineman, Asst Curator, Department of Photographs
Faking It: Manipulated Photography Before Photoshop

EA: How long did you research for this exhibition? Mia Fineman: About three years traveling all over Europe and North America visiting collections, museums, archives, and private collectors. EA: Are there certain images that are your favorites? Mia Fineman: I was extremely happy to discover the negatives for the Yves Klein “Leap Into The Void”.  That was very exciting. I’ve always loved that image. That would probably be what I’m proudest of.

 Leap into the Void, 1960
© Yves Klein, ADAGP, Paris; Photo: Shunk-Kender 
© Roy Lichtenstein Foundation 

 Dimanche–Le Journal d'un seul jour
Yves Klein, November 27, 1960

Mia Fineman: I also love the vernacular images of the decapitations. EA: I had no idea there were so many. Mia Fineman: I didn’t either until I’d started working on this show seeing so many of them and wondered why this was such a popular motif. I eventually figured out the motif of decapitation was a big thing in stage magic at the same time.

 Man Serving Head on a Platter Date, ca. 1900
William Robert Bowles (1861–1918 Hopkinsville, Kentucky)
Twentieth-Century Photography Fund, 2011

 Man Juggling His Own Head, ca. 1880
Saint Thomas D'Aquin

He Lost His Head, 1910s
Unknown, American
Gift of Robert, Catherine and Molly Yoskowitz, 2011

Faking It: Manipulated Photography Before Photoshop
 October 11, 2012—January 27, 2013
The Metropolitan Museum of Art

 ALSO VIEW:
Faking It: The Show | Faking It: The Opening

FAKING IT: Manipulated Photography Before Photoshop at The Met

Man on Rooftop with Eleven Men in Formation on His Shoulders
Unknown, American, ca. 1930

Group of Thirteen Decapitated Soldiers 
Unknown, ca. 1910

 New York City, New York City, ca. 1959
Weegee (American, born Hungary, 1899–1968)

 The Pond - Moonrise, 1904
Edward J. Steichen, Alfred Stieglitz Collection, 1933

 Le simulateur, 1936
Dora Maar (French, Paris 1907–1997 Paris)

 Faking It: 
Manipulated Photography Before Photoshop
Organized by Mia Fineman
Asst. Curator, Department of Photographs


"Featuring over 200 visually captivating photographs created between the 1840s and 1990s in the service of art, politics, news, entertainment, and commerce, the exhibition offers a provocative new perspective on the history of photography as it traces the medium’s complex and changing relationship to visual truth."

"The photographs in the exhibition were altered using a variety of techniques, including multiple exposure (taking two or more pictures on a single negative), combination printing (producing a single print from elements of two or more negatives), photomontage, overpainting, and retouching on the negative or print. In every case, the meaning and content of the camera image was significantly transformed in the process of manipulation. Faking It is divided into seven sections, each focusing on a different set of motivations for manipulating the camera image. The exhibition was made possible by Adobe Systems Incorporated" –The Met


Faking It: Manipulated Photography Before Photoshop
 October 11, 2012—January 27, 2013
The Metropolitan Museum of Art

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After Photoshop: Manipulated Photography in the Digital Age
September 25, 2012—May 27, 2013

An addendum to Faking It, After Photoshop exploring various ways in which artists have used digital technology to alter the photographic image over the past 20 years.

ALSO VIEW:
Faking It: The Show

10.08.2012

EDWARD CURTIS: In Honor of Columbus 'Discovering' America


 Hastobiga, Navaho Medicine-Man
Photograph by Edward Curtis

 Tobadzischini Navajo 
Photograph by Edward Curtis

Cheyenne Warriors
Photograph by Edward Curtis/Library of Congress

 
Apache Man with Wife
Photograph by Edward Curtis/Library of Congress

Piegan Camp
Photograph by Edward Curtis/Library of Congress

 
Short Nights of the Shadow Catcher: 
 The Epic Life and Immortal Photographs of Edward Curtis

Catching The Shadow of a Lost World
  

10.07.2012

ERIKA DIETTES: Sudarios

SUDARIOS: Exhibition
Photographs (c) Erika Diettes

SUDARIOS: Exhibition
Photographs (c) Erika Diettes

SUDARIOS: Exhibition
Photographs (c) Erika Diettes

 SUDARIOS: Exhibition
Photographs (c) Erika Diettes

"The rivers of Colombia are the world´s largest graveyard."

I first met Colombian photographer Erika Diettes several years ago when she was exhibiting her very moving project SILENCIOS. Silencios was an ambitious project Erika compiled of portraits and testimonials of the Jewish population in Colombia that had survived the concentration camps of Nazi Germany during World War II. Please read more and view photographs of Erika's human rights projects on her website.  

Capilla de Los Remedios
Santo Domingo, República Dominicana
September 4 - 30, 2012

 DRIFTING AWAY: Clothing of the Disappeared
Photographs (c) Erika Diettes

Clothing of the Disappeared
Photographs (c) Erika Diettes

In DRIFTING AWAY my intention is to draw attention to the victims of forced disappearances of the Colombian armed conflict. The project is a response to a number of press reports and news broadcasts which explain how the paramilitaries and the guerrillas torture people, mutilate them and make them disappear by throwing their bodies into a river. This is the source of the saying "the rivers of Colombia are the world´s largest graveyard".

To create an expression of this horrible situation, I decided to submerge pieces of clothing or personal objects of the victims in turbulent water, and then photograph them. I print these photographs on glass to convey the feeling of the ethereal and fragile character of life in those parts of our country.

These very large glass photographs are then displayed upright in the ground, like translucent tombstones in a cemetery. This way people can walk in and around them, and begin to experience the grief of loss. It has been very difficult for the families of the disappeared to feel the healing power of grief, especially since there is often no certainty whether one of the disappeared is actually dead or alive.

I started in Bogotá by looking for clothing or objects belonging to people who had disappeared. Then I continued my search in other areas of conflict, including Eastern Antioquia, Caquetá and Medellín, amongst other places.

During these macabre visits I was able to talk to the families of the victims, who are indeed the voice of all Colombia, clamouring not only for the respect for life, but also for the right to be able to bury their dead. — Erika Diettes




10.04.2012

LAURIE LAMBRECHT: China 2009


Hangzhou (#2), 2009
Photograph (c) Laurie Lambrecht

 
Hangzhou Koi, 2009
Photograph (c) Laurie Lambrecht


Hangzhou Pond, 2009
Photograph (c) Laurie Lambrecht

These places are something I am curious about - to be experienced. A lot of these pictures have to do with relationships formed in my mind and known from art history or painting from China... At the same time, there were unexpected things, aspects that provided an intimate relationship with my experience of these places. - Laurie Lambrecht on China, 2009 

"Of her experience photographing in China in 2009, Ms. Lambrecht states, "...the thousands of years of visual artistry and poetry that preceded these scenes. I wanted to feel that landscape for myself that others had interpreted for eons, with some sense of feel for a newer time frame. How we perceive time is a real cultural difference."

"While Ms. Lambrecht is best known for her extended portraits of artists, particularly her work with Roy Lichtenstein in the early 1990s (Roy Lichtenstein in His Studio, The Monacelli Press, 2011) she has applied the same dedication to her landscape work for over 25 years."–Rick Wester Gallery

September 20 - November 3

10.01.2012

ICP: Rise and Fall of Apartheid

Nelson Mandela, Treason Trial, 1958. Photograph by Jurgen Schadeberg, Courtesy the artist.
 
Part of the crowd near the Drill Hall on the opening day of the Treason Trial, December 19, 1956. Unidentified Photographer, Times Media Collection, Museum Africa, Johannesburg. 


This landmark exhibition includes the work of nearly 70 photographers, artists, and filmmakers; and  encompasses the entire museum, including the exterior windows at The International Center of Photography (ICP).  

 
Nelson Mandela portrait wearing traditional beads and a bed spread. Hiding out from the police during his period as the “black pimpernel,” 1961. Photograph by Eli Weinberg, Courtesy of IDAFSA.

"Rise and Fall of Apartheid: Photography and the Bureaucracy of Everyday Life is an unprecedented and comprehensive historical overview of the pictorial response to apartheid that has never been undertaken by any other museum. This exhibition explores the significance of the 50-year civil rights struggle, from how apartheid defined and marked South Africa’s identity from 1948 to 1994, to the rise of Nelson Mandela, and finally its lasting impact on society."

"Curated by Okwui Enwezor with Rory Bester and based on more than six years of research, the exhibition examines the aesthetic power of the documentary form – from the photo essay to reportage, social documentary to photojournalism and art – in recording, analyzing, articulating, and confronting the legacy of apartheid and its effect on everyday life in South Africa."

"Apartheid was the political platform of Afrikaner nationalism before and after World War II. It created a political system designed specifically to promote racial segregation and enshrine white domination. In 1948, after the surprise victory of the Afrikaner National Party, apartheid was introduced as official state policy and organized across a widespread series of legislative programs...the system of apartheid grew increasingly ruthless and violent towards Africans and other non-white communities. Apartheid transformed institutions, maintaining them for the sole purpose of denying and depriving Africans, Coloureds, and Asians of their basic civil rights."

"...South African photography, as we know it today, was essentially invented in 1948. No one else photographed South Africa and the struggle against apartheid better, more critically and incisively, than South African photographers. It is the goal if this exhibition to explore and pay tribute to their exceptional photographic achievement."–The International Center of Photography

Rise and Fall of Apartheid: Photography and the Bureaucracy of Everyday Life was made possible with support from Mark McCain and Caro Macdonald/Eye and I, The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, the National Endowment for the Arts, Joseph and Joan Cullman Foundation for the Arts, Deborah Jerome and Peter Guggenheimer, the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council, and from the Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation in honor of 30 years of committed ICP service by Willis E. Hartshorn.

September 14, 2012 – January 6, 2013 
1133 Avenue of the Americas, NY

9.28.2012

NY BOOK FAIR: MOMA PS1 This Weekend!

  Self Publish, Be Happy 
Book Club 1, 2012

2nd floor, Q42


Antonio de Luca (left), Art Director, and Bruno Ceschel (right), Director of Self Publish, Be Happy. Check out their selection of remarkable, rare contemporary books at the NY Book Fair, 2nd floor, Q42!

Bruno Ceschel, "Self Publish, Be Happy" Founder/Director, talks to photography students from my School of Visual Arts "Professional Community" class.

"Self Publish, Be Happy is an organization founded by Bruno Ceschel in 2010 with the aim of celebrating, studying and promoting self-published photo books through events (such as exhibitions, displays and talks), publications and online exposure. Self Publish, Be Happy also organizes workshops that help artists and photographers make and publish their own books." selfpublishbehappy.com


"A-Jump Books is a small publishing house dedicated to producing photo-based books that challenge convention through understatement and artistic rigor. a-jumpbooks.com/Home.html


Limited edition (100) silk-screened box, hand numbered and signed by the artist. Contains additional 11×14 traditional c-print, and loose silkscreen cover image.

 Photography Critic Vince Aletti at the NY Book Fair

There are literally hundreds of incredible book publishers to check out at the New York Book Fair this weekend at MOMA's PS1 in Long Island City. Easy to get to on the M, G, 7 trains. 

September 28-30
iPhone snaps © Elizabeth Paul Avedon/all rights reserved.