Archive for the ‘awards’ Category

Musée de l’Elysée suspends Prize in wake of censorship of Palestinian artist

December 22, 2011

 

.

Photo from an exhibition of works by Larissa Sansour: Ex-Terrestrial, Kulturhuset, Stockholm. 23 October 2010 – 13 February 2011. (http://www.larissasansour.com)

Introduced in 2010 to support young photographers, the prestigious €25,000 Lacoste Elysée Prize is awarded by the Swiss Musée de l’Elysée in Lausanne Switzerland, with sponsorship from Lacoste, the clothing brand.

The Musée de l’Elysée has decided to suspend the organisation of the Lacoste Elysée Prize 2011 in response to the decision of the organizers to exclude the work of Palestinian artist Larissa Sansour’s work.

Sansour was among eight finalists shortlisted for the 2011 prize

Eight nominees for the 2011 prize were selected to take part in the contest, and asked to produce three photographs on the theme la joie de vivre.

With the help of a grant of €4,000, each nominee had “carte blanche” to interpret the theme how they saw fit, whether directly or indirectly. The nominees were free to make a submission based upon their existing work or as an entirely new project.

An expert jury was scheduled to meet at the end of January 2012 to select the winner of the Lacoste Elysée Prize 2011.

Larissa Sansour was among the eight artists shortlisted for the 2011 prize. In December 2011, sponsor Lacoste demanded that Sansour’s nomination be revoked. Lacoste stated their refusal to support Sansour’s work, describing it as “too pro-Palestinian.”

In November 2011, three photos from Sansour’s ‘Nation Estate’ project were accepted, and she was congratulated by the prize administrators for her work and professionalism. Sansour’s name was subsequently included in all literature relating to the prize and on the website as an official nominee. Her name has since been removed, however, and her project was withdrawn from an upcoming issue of contemporary art magazine ArtReview introducing the nominated artists.

Sansour was asked to approve a statement saying that she voluntarily withdrew her nomination “in order to pursue other opportunities.” Sansour refused to agree to such a statement.

Sansour says, “I am very sad and shocked by this development. This year Palestine was officially admitted to UNESCO, yet we are still being silenced. As a politically involved artist I am no stranger to opposition, but never before have I been censored by the very same people who nominated me in the first place. Lacoste’s prejudice and censorship puts a major dent in the idea of corporate involvement in the arts. It is deeply worrying.”

Sansour’s multimedia project ‘Nation Estate’ was “conceived in the wake of the Palestinian bid for UN membership. Nation Estate depicts a science fiction-style Palestinian state in the form of a single skyscraper housing the entire Palestinian population. Inside this new Nation Estate, the residents have recreated their lost cities on separate floors: Jerusalem on 3, Ramallah on 4, Sansour’s own hometown of Bethlehem on 5, etc.

Sansour’s shortlisted work, ‘Nation Estate,’ conceived in the wake of the Palestinian bid for UN membership, is a multimedia science fiction project that imagines a future Palestinian state in the form of a skyscraper. The single skyscraper houses the entire Palestinian population, with residents recreating their lost cities on separate floors.

Sansour from Bethlehem is a prominent Palestinian artist and filmmaker. Her most recent film, ‘A Space Exodus,’ was nominated for the short-film category at the Dubai International Film Festival

The Musée de l’Elysée has announced its suspension of the 2011 Prize and has offered to exhibit ‘Nation Estate’ outside the framework of the prize and Lacoste’s sponsorship.

originally reported in ahramonline

more on Larissa Sansour rejection at Artinfo or see her web site larissasonsour for more info on her.

not all shadows are dark, 2011 Mercury Cougar nationals

July 25, 2011

wow it’s been over a month since i’ve had time to sit down and write about my life and photography. here is the reason, i’ve been working so hard on this ‘ THE CAR PROJECT ‘ and it’s taken over our life.

1970 xr7 convertiable

1970 xr7 convertible

i would suggest if you’re ever thinking of restoring a classic car you pinch yourself until you come back to the real world. everything i’ve heard from people who’ve done this is buy it all ready done.

that’s certainly my advice having spent years crawling around over & under this car spilling my blood in places i never dreamed of, never mind making up new and original curse words. they say let the professionals do if and i probably would if i can find any. there are very few craftsmen out there working on rebuilding classic cars, but they are out there they are few and far between.

not sure how we did it but the last piece of the car came to us, well last piece might be a misnomer as there are always more things you can do, on tuesday before the friday 2011 national cougar car show, in bridgewater nj hosted by the Cougar Club of NJ/PA.

mary drove the xr7 down with me following with the cat behind her, i could just see her head sticking up above the seat but couldn’t get any pictures, oh well. i thought this was pretty cool with both of us going to the show as i never had anyone in my life interested in doing this with me.

Parking lot

i remember my only other national cougar show in 2003 where i was alone which isn’t half the fun. no matter where or when these are always given in parking lots which on hot days aren’t too much fun standing around, but mary came prepared.

mary's umbrella and xr7 convertible

at least the hotel had a swimming pool which we soaked in daily helping to refresh ourselves before dinner.

the first night we arrived there was a cruise through somerville nj which during the summer has a huge impromptu car show with people parking their classic and antique cars along main street along with a dj in front of the church.

main street

1958 impala

we ate a mediocre italian dinner in a restaurant that had signs saying it was a famous nj restaurant. oh well so much for signs unless they come with lightning bolts. but back at the campgrounds and car show.

2011 cougar nationals

more cars

eliminator line

but this post is about our experience at this show. what with all the time spent on judging the cars with mary learning all she didn’t have on the car i.e. stickers and autolite rubber hoses along with some of the wrong parts, not even ford parts. so buyer beware. see the winners pdf list here or offical pictures here.

mary & i

the kiss

we did go to the awards dinner with me not expecting anything because it after all just a learning experience. the hotel offered some strange choices for dinner we kept with chicken which was pretty good considering how lacking in taste everything else was. i always do like to win door prizes as they can be quite nice. when it came to judging my category Daily driver i was completely surprised the Cat won. woo hoo. personally i’d rather gotten the chrome valve covers but hey can’t have everything.

the cat

but this story is about the xr7

1970 xr7

1970 mercury xr 7 cougar convertible

1970 mercury xr7 cougar convertible dashboard

so if you’re driving around the country side and see a red 1970 mercury cougar convertible go by wave and say hello. there aren’t too many of them out there, only under 500 out of 1700 produced.

next is the hard part figuring out where and when we will drive around across the United States and what to see when. we haven’t yet named the xr7 other than SHADOW in memory of our beloved dog who we wanted to share this adventure with. old age and pain had diminished her life where it just wasn’t as much fun anymore. we all have that to look forward to.

Cougars aren’t all that popular with the muscle car people like cameros & mustangs but i love my cars. here is a testimonial from a cougar owner.

I LOVE that cougar! Just that one time that the old lady with the walker (with tennis balls on the feet) and the arthritic fingers (she must have been at least 80 years old) stopped in the middle of the Casey’s parking lot while following her husband into the store and gave me a thumbs up, convinced me that it really is a special car. If I did the math right, that gal most likely was about 25-35 years old when my car was new. And she still thought enough of it to risk letting go of her walker. It just made my entire year…LOL! I laughed on the way out of the parking lot, reflecting on her jesture…her thumb was so bent from arthritis she might have been trying to hitch a ride with me…it really wasn’t straight up in the air, kind of bent off to the side…but I got the message. Every single time I go out in it, somebody tells me how much they like it. Just the fact that they don’t make them any more makes them more valuable to me than any Mustang could ever be.

as that old singing cowboy sang……………’ happy trails to you’

jene

www.jeneyoutt.com

FM jockeys out there? Open Call for Artist Projects – ExiTrip

January 10, 2011

Open Call for Artist Projects – ExiTrip

For this project, we will distribute hacked low power FM transmitters (called the iTrip) to artists of different creative disciplines and work with them to create artworks using, though not necessarily focusing on, this device. An express goal of this project is to empower artists with diverse technical and economic backgrounds to create works using radio. This constitutes a social experiment involving creative responses to a common tool. Once an artist has completed their project, we will document the work for a book that will go to print early next year. This is a great opportunity to work with an extremely flexible piece of electronics and have your work published in a very sexy looking book.

Some background about the iTrip: We recently found these devices on ebay for about .80 cents a pop…. So we bought 500. The device’s original use was a way to listen to an Ipod through the car radio while driving.  As is, the iTrip can only take signal from a specific generation of Ipod, but with a little reprogramming, we have found a way to allow the device to be able to take any audio input. This opens up the iTrip to an array of artistic possibilities including audio effects, oscillators, wireless microphones, sensors, transmitters, micro-controller etc.   Because they are so cheap we can give you quite a few, if you want many.  While radio is the intended application, these things cost dimes on the dollar in just hardware so this could be a really cheap way to build a synth or performance gear, add some layers to visual or installation pieces, or just learn things.

Here is a link to the project website that has examples of projects in progress and more detailed technical info on the device: https://sites.google.com/site/exitrip2012/ and also:

http://www.free103point9.org/works/496

An essential aspect of this project is to involve a diverse group of artists, some of whom have worked with creative electronics and transmission, and some who have not. We are looking to work closely with artists who need hands on assistance to work with the device, in order to further modify it to suit the needs of their projects.

To apply, send the following to: Edbearleab@gmail.com

–          Current CV

–          Link to a website or 5-10 images, sounds or video that best represents your previous work

–          A short (less than 2 pages) proposal of how you might like to work with the ExiTrip.

Deadline is Feb 15th 2011

For questions: Lbertucci@gmail.com

————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————


Call for Papers – ExiTrip Project

We will repurpose the iTrip Nano FM transmitter to function without an Apple iPod, giving the device a new life as a self contained open-source hardware platform for subversive/creative acts by selected contemporary artists. We will then compile and document the projects produced by these artists and develop a multimedia web and print catalog around the new work.  We have selected this specific outmoded device, the iTrip Nano FM transmitter, to exemplify the potential impact of re-engineering consumer devices originally destined for landfills.  At 40¢ each on Ebay, the low price creates unprecedented distribution opportunities for a low power transmitter and encourages end-user experimentation.

An express goal of this project is to empower artists with diverse technical and economic backgrounds to create works using radio. This constitutes a social experiment involving creative responses to a common tool.

The end product of the archive research and vigorous documentation will be an online and print multimedia book. The document’s purpose will be threefold: to provide detailed technical instruction for the iTrip hack, to document the resulting artists’ projects, and to provide critical and historical context to the newly created work

The occupation of the public in Hertzian space is fundamentally controlled by access to electronic technology.  To advance the practice of repurposing commercial electronics is to further the reach, relevance, and accessibility of transmission in art and society.  The proposed project will critically, materially, and publicly develop, experiment with, and codify the historical and contemporary relationship between creative electronics and transmission artists.

For more info and descriptions of projects in progress, please see: https://sites.google.com/site/exitrip2012/ and  http://www.free103point9.org/works/496
We are looking for writers to contribute on any of the following topics:

1.     Creative Electronics

2.     Transmission/Radio Art

3.     Parallels between Creative Electronics and Radio Arts

4.     Design Practices (Planned Obsolescence, consumerism etc)

7.     This project as social experiment and community building

8.     Electronic Waste/ Recycling

9.     Art Historical context (hacking, radio, trash art)

10.     Subverting corporate electronics/design to make weird stuff, violating FCC regulations, pirate radio, general naughtiness etc.

** This list is in no way all inclusive, so any topics that were not listed and are relevant to the project, please feel free to mention.

To Apply send the following to edbearleab@gmail.com

1.      A short summary of your essay.

2.      Proposed word count. We are offering three different word count ranges – Short: 700 – 1100 words, Medium: 1100 – 1800, Long: 1900 – 3000000000

 

3.      CV and links to any previous writing.

Deadline: Feb 15th 2011

For questions please email Lbertucci@gmail.com

GOOD LUCK

jene youtt

Smack Mellon call for proposals, artist & curators

December 1, 2010

Call for Proposals:

EMERGING ARTISTS and EMERGING CURATORS
Deadline: January 15, 2011

Interior Space 1
Note: Applications will only be accepted through an online process starting

December 1, 2010.  Deadline is 11:59pm, January 15, 2011

Proposals are accepted annually from Emerging Artists and Emerging Curators for Smack Mellon’s Summer Show. The selected Emerging Curator will review submissions from the Emerging Artists.  The Curator will be expected to select half of the exhibiting artists from these submissions.

The exhibition will be presented June 18 – July 31, 2011.

An Emerging Artist is considered to be an artist without commercial representation who shows significant potential; has some evidence of professional achievement but not a substantial record of accomplishment; and is recognized as emerging by other artists, curators, producers, critics, and arts administrators.

An Emerging Curator is defined as an independent curator who is beginning his or her career as a curator. Emerging Curator proposals must show history of at least 3 examples of prior curatorial projects successfully presented to a public audience.

Emerging Artist guidelines are here and Emerging Curator guidelines are here.

2nd edition, THE JACOB RIIS AWARD

November 23, 2010
PDFPrintE-mail

Selected among thousands of photographers from all over the world, Kamil Vojnar from France won the first edition of The Jacob Riis Award. Andrea Land (USA), Heather McClintock (USA), Nermine Hammam (Egypt), Mitch Dobrowner (USA), and Robert Baum (Belgium) were the Runner Ups in this competition.

With this second edition offers again outstanding recognition opportunities for professional and non professional photographers worldwide WPGA is committed to discover and distinguish new talents as well as to acknowledge established artists. Be part of the group of photographers that are shifting the world of photography: enter your images to one of the most challenging and rewarding photographic competitions for pro and non pro photographers.

Until November 30th you have the chance to enter with Early Bird discounted entry fees, and submit your images at any time before the final deadline; therefore you can save today and still have lot of time to prepare your work.

The winner will receive a cash prize of $3,000, and a selected works of his/her winning portfolio will be featured in the convcer of the book 2nd. Edition of The Jacob Riis Awad to be published during 2011. The first Runner Up will be featured in the back cover.

The Worldwide Photography Gala Awards organize the second edition of THE JACOB RIIS AWARD (named after the Danish-American photographer, 1849-1914) benefiting Save the Children Foundation. It will focus in portfolios (minimum of 8 and maximum of 12 images) inviting photographers working in all mediums, styles and schools of thought. Traditional, contemporary, avant-garde, creative and experimental works that include old and new processes, mixed techniques, and challenging personal, emotional or political statements will be welcome. The Award is open worldwide to all professional and amateur photographers working with digital or traditional photography or combinations of both. There is no theme for this Award, and the images will be evaluated as a cohesive body of work (a theme or images representing the artistic trajectory of the photographer), rather than individual images.

The Award will consist in a cash prize of $ 3,000. A selected image of the winner portfolio will be featured in the cover of the Book The Jacob Riis Award 2011. JURORS:

The Jacob Riis Awards will be juried by Chris Steele-Perkins, UK (Magnum Photos), Tim Anderson, USA (publisher Red Dog Journal), Larry Padgett, USA (founder and former Managing Director of The Center for Fine Art Photography), Sucheta Das, India (Photographer), and Julio Hardy, Argentina/Spain (Managing Director, WPGA).

Awarded portfolios will be exhibited during 2012 in a city and venue to be decided

AWARDS DATES:

Early Bird Deadline (with discounted entry fees): November 30th at 11:50 EST

Final Deadline: January 31th, 2011 at 11:50 EST.

Juror’s Announcement: Last week of March, 2011

ENTRY FEES:

Early Bird: $60 for the first portfolio; $30 each additional portfolio

After the Early Bird deadline: $80 for the first portfolio; $40 each additional portfolio

Each portfolio should be composed of a minimum of 8 images and a maximum of 12. Submission of entries can only be done online.

COPYRIGHT:

Submtted photographs may be reproduced for the purpose of marketing and promoting WPGA contests and awards, in catalogs, posters, postcards, publications, and on the INternet. Such use is granted for not more than two years after the announcement of the awards and without payment to the photographer of featured models. Photographers will receive photo credit with each use, and will allow WPGA to sub-license their photographs to the press for reproduction in connection with the contests and WPGA exhibitions.

To see the image specifications requirements and to submit your portfolios click here.

To see the awarded portolios of the first edition of The Jacob Riis Award click here

My life as a photography subject. who needs photo salon?

November 17, 2010

i’ve been asking a member of photo salon held each 3rd wed at soho photo to show my work there to the members who are mostly commercial photog’s and have been ignored by emmanuel on each request.

photo salon is the playground of The Photogroup Salon Committee
Jay Maisel, Howard Schatz, Bill Westheimer, Jack Reznicki, David Hodgson, Rich Pomerantz, Emmanuel Faure all of whom are excellent photog’s in their own right, they started photo salon to show their work to friends and family, but have expanded to show others as well.

shadows

i am the type of person who takes these things personally; rejections, acceptances, awards etc but try and put on a humble public face. yes it does hurt not to be accepted no matter where from the playground as children to the workplace.

it’s true i didn’t voter for myself during voting for my first emmy back in 1985. i thought that it wasn’t right to vote for yourself, of course i was lucky others voted me a winner. where did i get these cockamamie ideas? the next year of my second nomination i did vote for myself and won again. but that’s neither here nor there.

Philip F Clark writes in his The Artpoint blog about the painter Max Rodriguez that he ‘understands that art is an act of freedom.’ well so do i and others have that same right.

reflections-inspired by jay maisel

but looking at my work now, maybe they are right that i don’t fit the groups esthetic nor commercial aspect.

man on the stairs

after all my work is really just a snap shot of my life. i can’t take pictures of someplace i’ve not been to. it’s a real chore keeping up with my life photography and trying to run an informative blog such as this, but what the hell else do i have to do during the daytime? so these images are a part of my life where i’ve been

metal door

but my life isn’t something i do for others pleasure, I DO IT FOR ME. i love to share my occurences and discoveries with others, how i see things

hallway

or what i don’t see but am there anyways. so i’ve come to the same conclusion that groucho marx came to, of not wanting to belong to any club who would have me.

man with cell phone

so i’ll just continue doing what i do, wandering around the city taking pictures as  photographers have done since the invention of photography or maybe i’ll go below and see what there is to see.

hallway

radios

textures

hatchway door handle

moving down deeper into the innards of life, as was shared by a teacher of mine’ Self discovery isn’t always good news’

ship walls

engine room

until we get to the proverbial locked door, do we have what it takes to open the door and see what’s behind it?

chained door

oh well so photo salon won’t let me be a part of them. i’ll just have to continue doing what i do and they will be the lesser for it. i know i am loved and a fairly talented guy who’s just doing this because i love to make pictures. this is my life. thank you for sharing in it.

2011 Charlatan Ink Art Prize

November 17, 2010

The Charlatan Ink Art Project

was established in 2009 within the walls of the iconic Carlton Arms Hotel, New York, by two visual artists, Dariusz Solarski from Poland and Austrian born Andre van der Kerkhoff. From the moment of its conception, the Charlatan Ink Art Project has grown from a whimsical idea into an ever expanding universe of ideas, which will touch over time all aspects of the visual arts in whatever form or shape.

Within those expanding ideas the Charlatan Ink Art Project contains the essential nucleus of its creation, the establishment of the CHARLATAN INK ART PRIZE for the VISUAL ARTS. Which is part of the CHARLATAN INK COLLECTIVE.

The CHARLATAN INK ART PRIZE for the VISUAL ARTS will be the gateway for the Charlatan Ink Art Project to connect worldwide with artists, galleries and art organizations, facilitating cross pollination and creation of fertile soils to establish new and exciting means to present art to a wider public.

Once the Charlatan Ink Art Project has established itself within the New York art establishment and with time on a global stage, Charlatan Ink LLC New York will pledge itself to metamorphose into an art-entity, that will not only search for new inventive art and art practitioners, but will commit itself to nurture new talents through its facilities of publishing and art management. Charlatan Ink LLC New York will create an innovative new model in artist representation, allowing artists to be free of commercial conformity and limiting art market policies.

remember to click on the fly. to contact Charlatan Ink LLC

Charlatan Ink LLC
1133 Broadway, Suite 708
New York, NY 10010
212-330-8214

TED winner J R, The Parisian “photograffeur”

October 20, 2010

see more photos

NEW YORK – TED, the progressive California nonprofit that brings luminaries of technology, entertainment, and design together for the sake of world betterment, has made an unexpected choice for its seventh annual $100,000 TED Prize: JR, a 27-year-old street artist who, under a mysterious cloak of semi-anonymity, has been pasting monumental black-and-white photographs across the urban infrastructure of the world’s poorest slums.

In the past, the prize — given to a charitably-minded figures from diverse fields who then choose a “wish to change the world” — has been allotted to such global figures as Bill Clinton and Bono, as well as members of the arts sphere like author Dave Eggers, architect Cameron Sinclair, and photographers James Nachtwey and Edward Burtynsky. According to a statement, TED singled out the 2011 winner for the dramatic interventions the artist — whose provocative London dealer was recently profiled in Modern Painters — has staged around the globe.

“In Rio, he turned hillsides into dramatic visual landscape by applying images to the facades of favela homes,” the statement says. “In Kenya, focusing on ‘Women Are Heroes,’ he turned Kibera into a stunning gallery of local faces. And in Israel and Palestine, he mounted photos of a rabbi, imam and priest on walls across the region — including the wall separating Israel from the West Bank.”

According to JR’s own Web site, his artistic practice — which he writes “mixes Art and Act, talks about commitment, freedom, identity and limit” — began when he found a camera in the Paris subway leading to his ownership of “the biggest gallery in the world”: the world itself. He dislikes being called a street artist, and prefers the title “photograffeur” (graffeur means “graffiti artist” in French), the New York Times reported. The Times also referred to JR as a “Robin Hood-like figure,” although he will not announce until the TED Conference next March how he plans to use the prize to help the impoverished subjects of his work.

In recent years, the money has been to fight against obesity (British chef Jamie Oliver, the 2010 winner) and to build up a healthcare system in Rwanda (Clinton, a 2007 recipient). JR will likely use his winnings to continue his guerrilla artistic installations, as he has done with money earned at auction and in galleries in the past

JR first heard of the existence of the TED prize two weeks ago, and initially was wary in communicating with prize officials through Skype, disguising himself in dark glasses and a low-brimmed hat, according to the Times. “I’m kind of stunned,” he told the paper. “I’ve never applied for an award in my life and didn’t know that somebody had nominated me for this.”

artinfo

NYTimes

Guardian

Robert Cornelius awards winner’s list woopee

October 14, 2010
 

Press and Media:
You may request images of the awards to press@thegalaawards.com

 

 

The Worldwide Photography Gala Awards
announces the awardees of
THE ROBERT CORNELIUS AWARD

Juried by Stephen Perloff (Founder and Publisher, The Photo Review)

 

band on the run

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Winner of the Robert Cornelius Portrait Award:
Sandra Chen Weinstein (USA) for her work Band on the Run

 

Runner Ups  

Tom Chambers, Francesca Fago, James Thomas Josephs,Abel de Leon Trespando,

Jimmy Williams, Frank Rodick, Sarah Corbins, Sonia Paulino, Ken Merfeld,

Natalia Engelhardt, Joy Goldkind, Glennis Siverson, Estelle Dougier,

Francisco Bermejo,Gloria Baker Feinstein, Frank Rodick, Beth Yarnelle Edwards


Category winners:


Digital Manipulation:

First Prize: Tom Chambers (US), “Meant for Love”

Editorial and Documentary:

First Prize: Francesca Fago (Italy), “Eyes of Africa”

Figure and Nude:

First Prize: James Thomas Josephs (USA), “Papa John 05”

People:

First Prize: Abel de Leon Trespando (Spain), “Refugian”

Performing Arts:

First Prize: Jimmy Williams (USA), “Bishop Dreary and Marie Manning”

Portrait:

First Prize: Frank Rodick (Canada), “Three Studies for a Mouth”

Self Portrait:

First Prize: Desert

Alternative Processes:

First Prize: Desert


Honorable Mentions:


Sarah Corbins (USA), “Kinescape”

Sonia Paulino (USA), “Jackie and Dolce, Echo Park”

Ken Merfeld (SA), “Senora Plastica”

Natalia Engelhardt (USA), “Stasya, Moscow 2007”

Joy Goldkind (USA), “Image 6231”

Glennis Silverson (USA), “Conjoined”

Estelle Dougier (France), “Sleeping Beauty”

Francisco Bermejo (Chile), “A circus child in his trailer, Chile”

Abel de Leon Trespando (Spain), “Betty Lakhone”

Gloria Baker Feinstein (USA), “Elise and Coco”

Beth Yarnelle Edwards (USA), “Katherine M.”

Ken Merfeld (USA), “Awele”

Julie Ramage (France), “Portrait 1”

Sally Dennison (USA), “Ingrid”

Virginia Saunders (USA), “Incognito”

Braden Summers (USA), “We Can’t Do It Alone”

Bill Jackson (UK), “The Man Who Shot Weegee”

Nic Lyons (USA), “Self Portrait with Geiser Counter”

Teri Havens (USA), “Charlotte, 2008”

Graham Crouch (India), “Hunger”

Heather McClintock (USA), “Obwana Patrick Koch Lila Chope, Uganda”

Kurt Hoerbst (Austria), “Tagar, 30 with his 3 daughters”

Nancy Newberry (USA), “Untitled form the series MUM”

Pierpaolo Mittica (Italy), “Sulfur Miner blinder by toxic fumes”

Mark Sharfman (USA), “Has Pollock worked for Playboy”

Joy Goldkind (USA), “Adagio 47”

Anna Tomczak (USA), “From the Garden”

Jene Youtt (USA), “Fall

Ken Merfeld (USA), “Nobuko¡s ki”

Joydeep Mukherjee (India), “His Master”

Nina Doran (USA), “Untitled, Harlem, NYC”

Jimmy Williams (USA), “John Dee Holeman”

Lee Tonks (USA), “Ballerina Obscura 2″

Nicholas Fedak II (USA), Baby Blue”

Mark Tedeschi (Australia), “Snake Man”

Claire Schneider (USA), “Megan Miracle”

Alyson Aliano (USA), “Angelina Valentine, Porn Star”

Robert Kalman (USA), “Police, Nicaragua”

Laetitia Molenaar (Netherlands), “Automated Face Processing #2, Fay”

Paul Murphy (UK), “East End Portrait 3”

Charlotte Draycott (UK), “Untitled 3”

Stu Levy (USA), “Walter Chappell”

Ellin Hoyland (Norway), “Brothers No 1”

Steven Beckly (Canada), “Everything Must Break To Be Beautiful”

Ellen Rennard (USA), “Ponce”

Linda Elvira Piedra (USA), “Alchemy, El Rito, 1997”

Mare Vaccaro (USA), “Secrets”

Angela Bacon-Kidwell (USA), “Balance”

 

and the good news is that i made honorable mention with the “Fall” 

 

the fall

The Robert Cornelius Portrait Award….. nomination…. woo pee……

September 28, 2010

late last night  i received this email, i was tired been working all day on the ‘rainy monday morning’ post and it was amongst all the other emails that fill my inbox.  i always like to see if there are links to others work, i am very confused by what work is selected by whom, it’s all a crap shoot and so many contest i enter i never hear from. what would camera Obscura be looking for but i entered two images in their contest thinking  my stuff can be pretty obscure.

but every once in awhile some pretty prestigious award or honorable mention comes my way. last year it was International Photography Award and Prix de la Photographie, Paris (PX3) which are pretty cool which another photographer reminded me ain’t chopped liver.

Dear jene

The Worldwide Photography Gala Awards announces the finalists of

The Robert Cornelius Portrait Award and The Nadar Award for Students
The winners will be announced on October 8th and 12th respectively
Click in the following links to see the names of the finalists:
Robert Cornelius Portrait Award

Nadar Award for Students

CorneliusTHE ROBERT CORNELIUS PORTRAIT AWARD

In this first edition, 1622 images were submitted from the following 37 countries: Argentina, Australia, Austria, Belgium, Brazil, Canada, Chile, Croatia, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, India, Ireland, Israel, Italy, Japan, Mexico, Moldova, Netherlands, New Zeeland, Norway, Puerto Rico, Qatar, Russian Federation, Singapore, Slovenia, South Africa, Spain, Switzerland, Taiwan, Thailand, United Kingdom, United States, and Venezuela.

92 images submitted by 73 artists were selected as finalists in the 8 thematic categories.

These are the finalists that will compete for the Robert Cornelius Award, and the category prizes and honorable mentions. The announcement will be done on October 8th.

Category Figure and Nude

Mark Scharfman, Had Pollock worked for Playboy

Peter King, Mirror Images

Joy Goldkind, Adagio #47

James Thomas Josephs, Papa John 05

Anna Tomczak, From the Garden

Jene Youtt, Fall

Ken Merfeld, Nobuko’s ki

Ken Merfeld, Senora Plastica

Binh Trinh, Nude 1

Binh Trinh, Nude 4

The Fall

male nude depicting the fall of adam

male nude depicting the fall of adam

but i do get discouraged and encouraged at the same time. thats life. enough about me today. woo pee