Archive for the ‘art’ Category

2013 Manhattan Arts Grants applications & guidelines

June 20, 2012

 

2013manhattanartsgrantsheader-640px

Grants for 2013 Arts Projects
– Information Sessions Announced!

Each year LMCC offers three grant programs that award over $500,000 in project grants in every artistic discipline

across Manhattan’s neighborhoods.

 

To learn more about the programs and how to apply, attend one of our free information sessions this summer.

The schedule is now available online.

 

Guidelines and Applications available online: Monday, July 2
Application Deadline: Thursday, September 13

_________________________________________________________________________________

 

THE FUND & MCAF

The Fund for Creative Communities (The Fund) and Manhattan Community Arts Fund (MCAF) are community arts

programs providing grants of up to $5,000 for projects that bring high quality art projects to people and places all over

Manhattan. The grants are for Manhattan-based artists, organizations, and arts groups to share their work and engage

audiences and communities.


CREATIVE CURRICULA: Important Program Changes for 2013

Creative Curricula is an arts education program that supports teaching artists and arts organizations for in-school

partnerships with Manhattan public schools to offer K-12 arts education projects in the classroom.

Program focus and requirements have changed. Find out more by attending an information session,

required for all 2013 applicants.

LMCC’s Manhattan Arts Grants are supported, in part, by public funds from the New York City

Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council, the Decentralization program of the

New York State Council on the Arts, and Wells Fargo.

LMCC funders logo

Karin + Raoul a morning read that is when i have one

June 20, 2012

i’ve been very busy these past few weeks planning  trips to alaska and another one to hati so i’ve not had much time nor energy to write anything. this is  a reblog from my sometimes morning read from a couple of togs Karin  and  Raoul  who’s work  i find interesting and i might learn from, if only i had a budget to work with. most of my works budgets are under $100 to below. not much to work with for sure.

maybe you’ll find their blog interesting enough to follow it yourself. i’ve always been a newton fan especially since seeing a doucmentary on PBS about his life and work, but today i can’t find the link, as Phoo would say i have a very small brain.

HELMUT NEWTON – AWKARDLY TWISTED AND STRETCHED, MANIPULATED AND RAW AND SEXY – WRITTEN by {HEIDI SHAPIRO}

Posted by Hassan Kinley | Filed under Literature | Book Review

Heidi Shapiro  – Photographed by Hassan Kinley

Defeat is never a wise opening for a writer, although I begrudgingly begin from this cornered position.  If it helps, think of me as the six-foot-tall -model that I am, naked and tense and faced – as many a model has been – with the gaze of Helmut Newton’s authority, overshadowed and unable to assert myself except through his lens.

This… this is supposed to be tribute to Helmut Newton, in words.  The laughable quandary is that such icons have already surpassed this stage of reportage.  A cacophony of language – awkwardly twisted and stretched, manipulated and raw and sexy – might be the only path left to honestly travel.  Yet it would make for an odd piece indeed, and one in which you’d only see Helmut through the fetishized spaces if you knew to keep a keen eye out for him.

The fact is, tributes to Helmut Newton are already rank.  Ask any established or aspiring photographer of women to list his/her influences, and you’re bound to hear Helmut’s name gurgled out in wave after wave of husky admiration.  If you resist this urge to inquire and rely instead on your eyes, you’ll see the etched outlines of Helmut far, far more.  Newton’s must be one of the most prolifically imitated styles in photography, and glimpses of his iconography ooze from nearly every corner of the fashion industry.  The man’s mark is a meme, replicating rabidly throughout the generations of artists who have come after him and have been unable to escape the insidious weight of his influence.  When it’s not a clear case of compliment through imitation – and certainly those abound – Helmut’s presence is often still felt in his absence.  If you are not acquainted with the breadth of his work, you risk replicating it.  And when you have diligently done your homework in an attempt to seek a niche of originality, Helmut’s shadow hounds you yet, concentrated as you must be on ensuring non-Helmutian styles or ideas.  In this way, the postmodernists had it right; Newton is the unspoken absence who permeates our presence, that which is inescapably linked, if only subconsciously, to the whole symbolic system.  We can no longer extricate him from the photographic discourse even if we wanted to.

I have – unsurprisingly – mixed reactions to Newton’s work.  On the one hand, I’m unapologetically smitten with night photography and beautiful, powerful women.  And without question, I fall into the camp of the voyeur.  But what makes Newton’s photography so powerful and influential, I believe, is the repulsive tension it exudes.  Yes, yes, there was an “edginess” to his work, a pushing of boundaries into the fetishistic and erotic; all old hat by now.  And yes, he has a flare for the decadent – photography reeking of wealth and sex.  What fascinates and disturbs me is the hint of cold cruelty in some of his work.  While Helmut was drawn towards statuesque and powerful women, the lure seems less in the women themselves and more in his power over them, in his ability to manipulate their bodies to his asserted desire, to subjugate, to manage, to control.  His seems like the desire we models encounter in many a male photographer: a playing out of dominance over apparently untouchable beauties, that if you cannot have them in the real world, you can seek some satisfaction (and revenge?) by bending them to your camera’s will. If what you voyeuristically desire in a photograph is a sense of some intimate insight into a woman’s character, you will not find it in Newton. But again and again, you will find Newton himself.  His skill is largely in his ability to self-reflect.  Nothing about his work conveys any desire to produce a picture that will sate the vanity of his subject.  Newton could seemingly care less about her desires; she is a tool to manifest his vision alone.  I suspect this quality of his art is indicative both of brilliant talent and unshakable egoism.  But then, you don’t break into the highest echelons of the fashion industry without precisely those two characteristics.

Similarly, if you seek in a photograph a sense of authenticity, some real moment captured and undirected, you will not find it in Newton.  His staging is screamingly apparent, his style defined by his mise-en-scenes.  Perhaps Newton intended his conspicuous posing as caricature to the fashion industry, as critical commentary, even as satire (disposable clothes, indifferent clothes, desired clothes; disposable women, indifferent women, desired women).  But if that’s the case, it’s just as apparent that his satire-as-documentary style has secured itself as a staple of the industry, an unshakable totem.  The Newtonian fantasies of his photographs use sex as a commercial tool – and though hardly his invention, Helmut realized this marriage so successfully that I have trouble seeing any way of rescinding the associations.  From the standpoint of human psychology, I’m not even sure such a reversal is possible or desirable.  But it does have me recognizing that some element of both my praise and critique lies not in Helmut’s lack of skill, but in the recognition of his utter and unquestioned efficacy. – Heidi Shapiro

their blog has some interesting links to photographers and some new york shows. i like karin’s photography, very sensual but some women are built that way.

jene

Sex cells and here at Emmanuel Fremin gallery it’s on or off the walls

June 14, 2012

“Sex Cells” at Emmanuel Fremin Gallery
Curated by Asli Unal

The most universal subject of art through the ages, the human nude has been a vehicle for commercialization, a symbol of freedom, and a topic of heated debate. In “Sex Cells,” eig…ht contemporary photographers explore how we direct sex appeal, both consciously and unconsciously, as a means of empowerment and manipulation. From the provocative to the grotesque, the featured artists combine familiar props and subjects in an original manner as they tackle themes of seduction, bondage, religion and bestiality. A reception on Thursday night, June 28th, kicks off the month long exhibition at the Emmanuel Fremin Gallery.


Reka Nyari’s jarring compositions juxtapose lust and disgust by pairing a beautiful model with animal carcasses. Her stark compositions present the objectified body as a target for consumption and challenge the viewer’s ability to hold two opposing emotions simultaneously. Using herself as the model, Brooklyn artist Erica Simone poses nude in public while unabashedly going about her daily routines. Simone wittily challenges the nature of the nude in art, examining the line between the mundane and the sexualized. The context tells us to interpret her as the subject of the photographs rather than the object of a sexual fantasy.

“Sex Cells” is on display from June 28th-July 28th, 2012 at the Emmanuel Fremin Gallery, 547 West 27th Street, Suite 508, New York, NY 10001.
Vernissage: June 28th, 6-8 p.m.

this weeks work or play, whatever you call it

June 1, 2012

this weeks work or play, whatever you call it.

this weeks work or play, whatever you call it

June 1, 2012

it’s exhausting and exciting creating. so exhausting setting up the studio from a living area but that’s the only way i can afford to make images with people. maybe i am going about this the wrong way but i really don’t know of another way. it’s like the rest of my life learn a trade then go about practice it. some become masters, i am considered  pretty good at what i do but don’t ask me.

all i see are the missed shots, the ones i could have done better, i must have funny eyes in order to see this way or could it be my irish heritage? but it is what it is and i do best i can, as Phoo would say ‘with a very small brain.’

i’ve been meaning to write again about apple and so many other things that course through my brain, for a small one it’s pretty active. but i just finished up on this photo shoot, editing and doing the post production that saves my ass. i can only fix the fixable nothing can save stupidity.

i contact a few people a week on model mayhem some who are looking for work some want to be’s looking for a professional photographer, makes me smile some i just shake my head at. but some are sincere so you never know what will walk through the door. this is what we start with.

semi nude beginning

not impressed? me neither but wait these’s more, i must admit michelle does have some bumps on her forehead which i softened in PS 4 as my PS 6 trial is over. i’ll probably buy 6 for some of it’s features but not today.

over the shoulder,

what i wanted to shoot  with this woman was lingerie but she didn’t have any outfits that matched other than this garter belt that i liked and i’ve none to share with her.

garter strap

so now what am i going to do? mary bought some hats weeks ago so i’d give this a try

almost a halo

thanks TJ Max but michelle brought her fur wrap which we used

rabbit fur

more fur fun

but see the spectral lens refractions, lighting problems all day but i include this image because i like michelle’s quality

i also had another new toy some satin fabric one of my  jobs was throwing out so i dragged that back to studio

white satin with nude

which reminds me of ‘Last tango in Paris’ and i’ve no idea why

waiting

now that’s a nice sandwich, as the say at the stage deli

i tried to keep things simple, well simple for me at least.  but i am pretty committed to learning to work with my white lightning strobes instead of my tungsten lighting. i should sell it , way too much space lost to stuff.

take care and good night, i’ll be gone for a week or so doing the tony’s to earn a few bucks for gas money for the guzzler. last weekend driving back from the shore a NJ trooper pulled in behind us, then along side until he was in front, just looking at the car. people do that because it’s not every day you see american history before your eyes.

1970 mercury xr7 cougar convertible.

jene

David Pogue’s review of Canon’s G1X…….opps

May 29, 2012

May 24, 2012, 5:07 pm

The Canon G1 X: Big Sensor, Major Disappointments

You know why people carry around those big black S.L.R. cameras, don’t you?

Trust me: it’s not for fashion’s sake.

FDDP
The Times’s technology columnist, David Pogue, keeps you on top of the industry in his free, weekly e-mail newsletter.
Sign up | See Sample

No, they carry them around because the cameras contain big sensors. If there’s one statistic that predicts photo quality, it’s not megapixels: it’s sensor size. Big sensors mean great photos in low light — and the ability to create that pro-style blurred background behind your subject.

The most exciting camera developments of the last two years have been smaller camera bodies with big sensors in them. I was incredibly excited, in particular, to hear about the new Canon G1 X: a coat-pocketable zoom camera with a huge sensor: 0.92 inch diagonal. That’s nearly the size of the APS-C sensor found in S.L.R. cameras like the Canon Rebel. It’s 16 percent bigger than the Four Thirds sensor used by Olympus and Panasonic, and over six times the size of the sensors in previous Canon G cameras (and most other compacts).

The G1 X is the latest in a long line of the peculiar cult-classic cameras in Canon’s G series (G10, G11, G12 …). Peculiar because it’s a one-piece camera with lots of features that high-end photo nuts want: metal body, a hot shoe for accessories, full manual controls, lots of buttons with amazing amounts of customization, and an actual eyepiece viewfinder. You don’t swap lenses on this thing. Like its predecessor, the G1 X has a fantastic hinged screen that lets you shoot over your head, down at waist level, or even facing yourself.

But the huge sensor makes the G1 X a whole new ballgame.

I’ve spent a couple of months with the camera I was dying to love, and I have to say that I’m a little disappointed.

Which is hard for a true-blue Canon nut to admit.

read the rest of article here

oh well enjoy Jene

art takes time square: collect Jene Youtt’s work for free.

May 25, 2012

a shameless plug for my own photography, i thought i posted it here but can’t find it, oh well a mind is a terrible thing to loose, where oh where did i put it?

Art Takes Times Square competition officially ends TONIGHT at Midnight EST, making these your final hours to upgrade your entry and/or be collected.

you can help by following the link below and another one called collect. it doesn’t cost you anything but you time and it would mean so much to me.

Your work currently appears in: 1 collection

Keep in mind that only artists who have upgraded submissions or appear in 77 or more collections will be shown during the Art Takes Times Square Billboard Premier on June 18th. Take advantage of these final hours to:

Keep sharing and get collected. Your Portfolio link is:

Don’t forget, upgrading and voting will be disabled TONIGHT May 25, 2012 11:59pm EST!

Can’t wait to see who will be the star of Art Takes Times Square on June 18th, best of luck!

Young Sam Kim @ Emmanuel Fremin gallery

May 25, 2012

last night mary and i  were delighted to attend the opening of a koren montage artist Young Sam Kim @ Emmanuel Fremin gallery at 547 W. 27th Street Suite 508 , New York, NY 10001  212.279.8555    646.245.3240

gallery entrance

waiting for the crowds

as Young Sam Kim bio says ” Young Sam Kin is a photographer, living both in Long Island City, New York and Busan, Korea.  He was born in Busan, Korea in 1978. With unknown etiology, his hearing became profoundly impaired at two years of age. At age three, he began drawing and painting lessons, using visual language as a form of communication.” read the rest here

then the crowd finally appears with the  opening of the gates on a rainy night in manhattan

crowd

we were quite impressed with the artists vision and history. not living in another persons world it’s hard to understand their perspective. Young Sam Kim art crosses that boundary visually so even i can see a POV from his perspective. confinement, freedom and release are his themes.  cool huh?

my favorite piece

all though it’s pretty hard to just pick one because there were others i liked as much.

of course here is Young Sam Kim ready to welcome everyone

welcome

and here are a couple wild and crazy guys just ready to tell you all about the exhibit

Young Sam Kim artist & Emmanuel Fremin gallery owner

mary learned about the artist and his new wife of one month whom she was introduce to. the couple knew each other since the seventh grade but just now got married. i being a male would have never even thought to learn something like this as i asked Young Sam Kim about his creative process. mary brings a human side to our lives which helps balance out who we are. i listen to her most of the time and it helps me be a better person. the yin & yang of a relationship.

being in love and being with love is such a pleasure that really lightens ones life, giving one breathing room to just enjoy the what ever we come across. so do stop down to Emmanuel Fremin’s gallery and see what they have to offer. i am sure you can find something interesting.

jene

May 25, 2012

who knew, well learning something new everyday keeps us young.

May 24, 2012

always an interesting read, especially on a rainy day like today

Patricia Silva's avatarFans in a Flashbulb

Currently, Francesca Woodman has two shows in New York: at the Guggenheim and a separate selection of blue prints at Marion Goodman. To look at Woodman’s photographs is to constantly read the environment through the psychological and vice versa. At the Guggenheim, I related the logic of Lucy Soutter’s essay Dial “P” for Panties: Narrative Photography in the 1990s; the examination of female self-representation and how such constructions are built, layered, and interpreted in the composition of photography.

The following selections from the ICP’s permanent collection were pulled to show how women photograph themselves and each other, especially in relation to environment. Works by Justine Kurland, Katy Grannan, Dayanita Singh were included in Another Girl, Another Planet, the 1999 photography exhibition curated by Gregory Crewdson and Jeanne Greenberg Rohatyn— Another Girl, Another Planet was the basis for Soutter’s essay.

But this time, let’s not look at these photographs…

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