Archive for the ‘Photography’ Category

MoMA presents “Pictures by Women – A History of Modern Photography

August 26, 2010
Written by Ann Levin, Associated Press
Thursday, 26 August 2010 02:13

Robert-Falcon-Scotts-Hut

NEW YORK, N.Y. – The Museum of Modern Art’s photography collection is so rich that it can present virtually the entire history of the medium using only images taken by women and in many cases, of women. It’s instructive to realize that whatever genre or style in which men worked, even industrial photography, women were doing the same. The show is organized chronologically, beginning with a gallery of 19th and early 20th century photographs that illustrate the two traditions of documentary and pictorial photography. For much of photography’s 170-year history, women have expanded its roles by experimenting with every aspect of the medium.Pictures by Women: A History of Modern Photography presents a selection of outstanding photographs by women artists, charting the medium’s history from the dawn of The show continues with a stunning array of photographs by European artists in the 1920s and 1930s, including Ilse Bing’s 1931 “Self-Portrait in Mirrors,” which shows her looking straight at the viewer and in profile at the same time, an illusion made possible by using her camera as a third eye. the modern period to the present.

Including over two hundred works, this exhibition features celebrated masterworks and new acquisitions from the collection by such figures as Diane Arbus, Berenice Abbott, Claude Cahun, Imogen Cunningham, Rineke Dijkstra, Florence Henri, Roni Horn, Nan Goldin, Helen Levitt, Lisette Model, Lucia Moholy, Tina Modotti, Cindy Sherman, Kiki Smith, and Carrie Mae Weems, among many others. The exhibition also highlights works drawn from a variety of curatorial departments, includingBottoms, a large-scale Fluxus wallpaper by Yoko Ono.

The most compelling in the first category is a series of photos taken by Frances Benjamin Johnston at the all-black Hampton Institute (now Hampton University), founded to educate former slaves. At the other end of the spectrum are the self-conscious, artistic photographs by Gertrude Kasebier, known for her symbolic, soft-focus images of Victorian motherhood such as the 1899 “The Manger” and 1904’s “The Heritage of Motherhood.”

And since the art world seems to be having a Picasso moment, with major shows in museums and galleries and the record-breaking sale of one of his paintings at auction, be sure to look at an untitled work from 1930 by Picasso’s lover and muse Dora Maar, a highly regarded artist in her own right. It shows a woman from the rear with her long black coat lifted up in the wind.

The show continues with a stunning array of photographs by European artists in the 1920s and 1930s, including Ilse Bing’s 1931 “Self-Portrait in Mirrors,” which shows her looking straight at the viewer and in profile at the same time, an illusion made possible by using her camera as a third eye.

Ilse-Bing-Self-Portrait-New

You’ll also want to spend time in front of two prints by French photographer Germaine Krull, whose beautifully composed images of urban landscapes show that women could do muscular photographs of architectural structures as well as any man.

Although Dorothea Lange is among the best-known U.S. photographers, male or female, the curators have rightly devoted an entire wall to almost 20 of her photographs, all the subjects girls and women. They range from her iconic Depression-era picture “Migrant Mother, Nipomo, California” to the poignant image of Japanese-American children saying the pledge of allegiance soon after President Roosevelt ordered the relocation of 120,000 Japanese-Americans into grim camps in the West.

The mid-to-late 20th century is represented by MoMA’s newly acquired colour photographs of New York street life by Helen Levitt, best known for her work in black and white, and uncomfortable but affecting images by Austrian-born Lisette Model and Diane Arbus.

Witty wallpaper just outside the entrance shows close-ups of human buttocks, reproduced from a 1960s-era film made by Yoko Ono. The images look vaguely human up close but resolve into a pillowy abstraction when seen from a distance.

And as you leave the show, “29 Palms: Mortar Impact,” a large, black-and-white photograph by Vietnamese-American photographer An-My Le, depicts a few clouds of smoke rising from the barren desert floor, framed by the distant peaks of a rugged mountain range. It suggests the bleakness of war, hints at U.S. engagement in Iraq, and in its simplicity and clarity, is a work of stunning beauty.

The sixth gallery of the exhibition will close on Aug. 30, and the other five will remain on view through 21 March, 2011.

Visit on the Net: http://www.moma.org/

art knowledge news

jene

Ipad App Flexfolios

August 24, 2010

here is a neat new app for the IPAD which seems to be a must have for the on the go photographer. i am not an IPAD user nor do i think i’ll be one in the future. but for some people i can see the use for this app Flexfolios

it was developed by a fellow i know emmanuel faure and antoine verglas and seems to work like a charm. one can order it directly for flexfolios or through the apple itunes store. it even has a utube video here showing it’s use.

jene

wedding invitation, sounds simple?

August 19, 2010

when mary and i do weddings the part i always love to do are the details, like rings, shoes and bouquets. the same thing when i worked at WNET was the gifts on pledge break, no producers just the cameraman, stagehand myself and the products. loved it.

also a good time to check out my micro stuff with the 5D Mll which i’ve never done changing lenses starting with the 50mm and my adapter lenses of +4 then the +10 whoa, talk about close. but my 72mm doesn’t have a +10 the highest is a +4,+3,+2. i went with the 24-70 72mm lens opening it up to 24mm. the 50mm with the +10 was cool but didn’t show enough of the whole composition.

wedding invitation pic

wedding invitation pic

here is the one mary said she liked best. now getting here seems simple enough but looks can be deceiving.  these images don’t do the picture justice but give you a general idea of final product. it’s like those photo mags who show you pictures of the step by step photoshop actions. only problem are the pictures are too small for a human to read. well i’ll do the same here.

Screen shot

Screen shot

if you can read this i’d be surprised, but it does show you that after capture there are details needing attention. nothing just happens in 6 layers. it all began with the letter mary wrote beginning with ‘ it’s not everyday, that love enters your heart.’ then come the rings, hers was the easiest  but not a traditional wedding ring but called an ‘Eternity’ ring because it’s a band of diamonds surrounding the finger. shes going to wear her mothers wedding ring also so the two rings really go together nicely.i just wanted a plain band which after much consideration is what i went with.

but the devil is in the details and because of needing certain parts of the image in focus, not my usual forte, other parts needed blurring, ugly shadows removed and some bright spots toned down. the last thing i did here was to add the sunflower reflection to the lock face from another capture, because this one looked plain and boring.

whole lighting setup

whole lighting setup

not a pretty site is it? but wait there is more.

the pattern comes from a piece of blackwrap shown here attached to a gobo arm attached to C stand with a mafer clamp. a quick and dirty way of doing patterns something i did on CBS 60 minutes show.

but it all began with tilting the table so i had a better angle, having two of David Pogue’s book came in handy

so the altman fresnel is a source for gobo, a wall reading lamp with a 75 w frosted bulb for right fill and an MR 16 spot with frost lighting the sunflowers from camera left. the shadow in the middle is my tripod.

so just to get this shot is a half a days work. now the next thing on the list is music. mary asked what’s your favorite songs, duh. so the story goes.

hot summer relief, night time swim

August 12, 2010

awhile ago we were invited out to the hamptons to a friends house to get away from the city, it’s always nice to explore new places and see different suroundings. so we gladly jumped in the car and drove out to the hamptons traffic jam. that’s what it become once you exit the LIE onto Rt 27.

i haven’t been out to hamptons in years and even then traffic was slow but manageable now it’s totally unbearable i don’t know how people stand it, no matter what time of day or night. oh well

we stayed in the barn, all the animals had been moved out by the time we got there.  breakfast table and chairs set out for company.

the house was lovely surrounded with flowers all around the yard

but we arrived in plenty of time to wander around the town and see the sights have an ice cream cone before dinner. nice to be a grown up isn’t it?

sunset

sunset

dinner was lovely nice time had with friends sharing fine food and wine. i wonder who was it that first discovered wine making? What would this world be like without google even though they and verizon are trying to put roadblocks on the internet having questions answered is cool.

Certainly wine, as a natural phase of grape spoilage, was “discovered” by accident, unlike beer and bread, which are human inventions. It is established that grape cultivation and wine drinking had started by about 4000 BC and possibly as early as 6000 BC. The first developments were around the Caspian Sea and in Mesopotamia, near present-day Iran. Texts from tombs in ancient Egypt prove that wine was in use there around 2700 to 2500 BC. Priests and royalty were using wine, while beer was drunk by the workers. The Egyptians recognized differences in wine quality and developed the first arbors and pruning methods. Archeological excavations have uncovered many sites with sunken jars, so the effects of temperature on stored wine were probably known. see wine pros

but after the dishes were cleared and coffee served the swimming pool beckoned under the clear starry night. we all rushed off to change and splashed into the pleasantly cool waters. i am not very quick to pick up my camera, something i might have to learn, but i am more about being part of rather than looker on,  if you know what i mean.

but because of the loveliness of the setting i wanted to linger on the memories longer that my mind could be trusted. only a few came out but i did like them anyways.

mary being sillythat’s why i love her

m&l racing

another friend

friend

but this is one of my favorites below. i call it ‘ swimming off world ‘

swimming off world

while these images aren’t perfect and wouldn’t make any of the people’s scrapbooks because you can’t see faces i hope that sometimes my work captures the feeling of the moment. would i make the cut at life magazine if it were still around, i don’t think so.

i call this blog fuzzypictures because what with the advent of auto focus cameras, yes i have a few myself, it’s not about a fine focused image. yes i do have a few around here somewhere but sometimes it’s just not important.

jene


Vogue “ITALIA” Takes On The Gulf Oil Spill

August 12, 2010

With Photographer Steven Meisel
Written by Lisa Orkin Emmanuel, APWriter
Wednesday, 11 August 2010 01:51

Vogue Italia’s August issue features an all black-clad Kristen McMenamy on a sinister, tar-slicked beach. : Photo by Steven Meisel

Vogue-Italia-August-Cover

Vogue-Italia-August-Cover

MIAMI (AP).- The model is in black, prone and dirty on jagged rocks, netting draped around her legs like a dead sea creature. There she is again, lying on her back in a feathered dress, and in close up, her hair and face sleek with oil. A stirring photo spread in the August issue of Vogue Italia was inspired by the Gulf oil spill, leaving readers wondering if the magazine crossed from evocative to insensitive. Editor-in-Chief Franca Sozzani understands the debate stretching from blogosphere to beaches and said the motivation is straightforward. “The message is to be careful about nature,” she said by telephone from Milan, Italy. “Just to take care more about nature. … I understand that it could be shocking to see and to look in this way these images.”

The spread, featuring Kristen McMenamy, is titled “Water & Oil” and was shot in Los Angeles by a leading fashion photographer, Steven Meisel. In another of the photos, the gray-haired McMenamy is covered in oil, spitting up water while clutching her neck.

Water-and-Oil-Steven-Meisel-Vogue-Italia

Water-and-Oil-Steven-Meisel-Vogue-Italia

Virginia Contreras of Navarre, Fla., said the photos were making light of the disaster. “I think they are making light of the oil spill. Everyone isn’t going to the beaches and people have lost their jobs here because of the oil,” she said.

Sozzani said the shoot reflects the magazine’s effort to “find an idea that comes from real life. … There is nothing political. There is nothing social. It’s only visually. We gave a message but in a visual way.”

Some bloggers weren’t pleased. Dodai Stewart, deputy editor of Jezebel, called the spread inappropriate. “I didn’t feel it made a statement,” she said in an interview. “I felt that they used the oil spill as a backdrop. There was one picture that had feathers. … What makes a stronger statement about oil-slicked birds is an oil-slicked bird.”

Miranda Lash, curator of modern and contemporary art at the New Orleans Museum of Art, said artists should be free to take on any topic. “When I look at it, I feel pain. It evokes pain and a feeling of loss and sadness because this is going to hurt my region for a very long time,” Lash said.

Beth Batton, curator of the permanent collection at the Mississippi Museum of Art in Jackson, Miss., said in an e-mail that the spread humanizes the condition of the Gulf coast animals and environment. “Looking at Steven Meisel’s photographs, you know something is terribly wrong because, as sensual as the images are, the human mind understands the toxicity of the oil that has coated model Kristen McMenamy’s skin, hair, and feathery gloves,” she said.

On Twitter, type in keywords Vogue Italia and you’ll get various opinions.

Brandie Hopstein, who lives in New Orleans, tweeted about the shoot after seeing the photos days ago. “There is this oil spill going on. It’s not going to be slipped under the rug,” she said. “I happen to love the shoot.”

Angelia Levy of Silver Spring, Md., tweeted that the spread was “kind of iffy, but it’s provocative.” She said she wasn’t offended, and questions whether an American magazine would have run it. “There is no way that would go down,” Levy said. “It seems distant for them so they can afford to have models rolling around in oil.”

While we’re not sure, we have to assume Meisel shot this spread as a response to the environmental tragedy that is the 107-day old Gulf oil spill. And while the irony of using clothing worth thousands of dollars that was probably flown halfway around the world for the shoot is not lost on us, we can’t help but think that if this isn’t art, we don’t know what is….said Art Knowledge News

By: Lisa Orkin Emmanuel, Associated Press Writer / Associated Press Writer Melissa Nelson in Pensacola, Fla., also contributed to this report.

courtesy Art Knowledge News

jene

Richard Avedon’s Lively Fashion Images at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

August 12, 2010

Richard Avedon’s Lively Fashion Images at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

Written by Vincent Baldino
Wednesday, 11 August 2010 01:53
BOSTON, MA.- Richard Avedon (1923–2004) was the man who brought fashion photography to life. Instead of perpetuating static images of human mannequins posing stiffly in magazines, Avedon depicted his models as real women whose energy and exuberance complemented their modern lifestyles. Considered one of the great image-makers of the 20th century, he redefined fashion photography and his lasting contributions are explored in the traveling exhibition Avedon Fashion 1944–2000, a major retrospective devoted exclusively to his work in this medium. On view in the Foster Gallery at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston (MFA), from August 10, 2010, through January 17, 2011, the exhibition highlights approximately 140 objects, including photographs, magazines, engravers’ prints, and contact sheets that span almost six decades of his successful career.

Richard-Avedon-Seymour-Versace

Richard-Avedon-Seymour-Versace

Avedon Fashion 1944–2000 examines Avedon’s years as a photographer who helped shape the image of the fashionable woman, drawing from thousands of pictures he took as staff photographer for Harper’s Bazaar and Vogue. It unfolds by decade, with the greatest emphasis on the classic work from the 1950s and 1960s, when Avedon’s distinct vision of the ideal American woman revolutionized magazine photography.

“Richard Avedon was one of the greatest photographers of all time, who forever transformed the way we look at fashion. The MFA is delighted to be able to showcase his supremely stylish and important work,” said Malcolm Rogers, Ann and Graham Gund Director of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.

Richard Avedon – Veruschka, dress by Kimberly, New York, January 1967. – © Richard Avedon FoundationThe exhibition begins with elegant, romantic, and lively images taken in Paris, where he visited extensively from 1947 to 1965 on assignment for Harper’s Bazaar.

Richard-Avedon-Veruschka

Richard-Avedon-Veruschka

Despite the bleakness of the post-war years, Paris still represented the height of sophistication, and Avedon infused his photographs with a sense of optimism, helping the City of Light reclaim its position as the capital of the fashion world. The photographer created imaginative narratives—sometimes continued through several issues of the magazine—highlighting couture collections and featuring his favorite models: Dorian Leigh, her sister Suzy Parker, Sunny Harnett, Dovima, Carmen, Elise Daniels, and even his wife, Doe Avedon. He took these smartly outfitted women out of the studio and photographed them in French locales: Daniels, dressed in a Balenciaga suit, watching street performers in the Marais district in 1948; Harnett, in an evening dress by Grès, playing roulette at the Casino in Le Touquet, France, in 1954; and Parker, draped in a Grès gown, sitting near cancan dancers at the Moulin Rouge in 1957. Avedon’s famous night scenes in Paris, which began in 1954, broadened his creative range. Like movie sets, the complex fashion shoots he directed used generators to light up entire city blocks, allowing him to capture stylish bon vivants enjoying Parisian nightlife.

During his early years at Harper’s Bazaar, fashion photographs by Avedon were more than just a vehicle to market luxurious clothing to post-World War II American women—they were the embodiment of a dynamic lifestyle. His expressive images celebrated spirited women laughing, jumping, and dancing—even roller skating in Paris—all while wearing the most beautiful clothes.

“Those candid snapshots were in direct contrast to what was being done. I came in at a time when there weren’t any young photographers working in a free way. Everyone was tired, the war was over, Dior let the skirts down, and suddenly everything was fun. It was historically a marvelous moment for a fashion photographer to begin. I think if I were starting today, it would be much harder,” said Avedon in 1965.

The son of a women’s clothing store owner (Avedon’s Fifth Avenue), Avedon became fascinated with fashion photography as a boy. As a young man, he joined the Merchant Marine (1942–44), where he was assigned to the photography division. After leaving the service, Avedon enrolled in design classes at the New School for Social Research taught by Alexey Brodovitch, the art director of Harper’s Bazaar. In 1944, at age 21, Avedon joined the magazine, primarily as a photographer for Junior Bazaar. Shortly thereafter, he became an official staff photographer, working with the now legendary figures Carmel Snow, Brodovitch, and Diana Vreeland.

During the height of his career, Avedon became fashion photography’s most influential and prolific practitioner. His style was energetic and playful, with a flair for the dramatic, and while Avedon’s location shoots were groundbreaking, his major studio shots were also ingeniously inventive. The photographer illustrated the excitement of the “new look” of Dior—featuring cinched waists and voluminous circle skirts—by showing his model twirling on a Parisian street (Renée, “The New Look of Dior,” Place de la Concorde, Paris, August 1947). He developed the “Avedon blur” using variable focus, a technique creating a subtle background scene while highlighting the model in the foreground, as seen in an image of a well-turned ankle showing off a fur-trimmed bootie in front of the softly visible Eiffel Tower (Shoe by Perugia, Place du Trocadero, Paris, August 1948). Avedon also liked to show models “behind-the-scenes”—sitting at a café, seemingly in tears (Elise Daniels, turban by Paulette, Rue François-Premier, Paris, August 1948); assessing an outfit in the mirror (Dorian Leigh, evening dress by Piguet, Helena Rubenstein’s apartment, Île Saint-Louis, Paris, August 1949); or shown within the backdrop of a studio set (Suzy Parker, evening dress by Dior, Paris, August 1956). In many of his photographs, dogs and other animals share center stage with the models—Dovima in a Balenciaga suit and Sacha, an afghan, sitting next to one another outdoors at the Café des Deux Magots, Paris (1955), or Dovima in a Dior evening dress, shown alongside elephants at the Cirque d’Hiver (1955)—one of the photographer’s many iconic images.

Avedon was one of the most engaging image-makers of the 20th century. He revolutionized fashion photography with his dynamic images that set an ideal of the modern American woman. His enormous success led to great fame, and the status he attracted helped define the role of the high-profile fashion photographer that we are familiar with today,” said Anne Havinga, the MFA’s Estrellita and Yousuf Karsh Senior Curator of Photographs, who is responsible for the show in Boston with Emily Voelker, the MFA’s Estrellita and Yousuf Karsh Assistant Curator of Photographs. The exhibition was curated by Carol Squiers, curator, and Vince Aletti, guest curator, for the International Center of Photography (ICP), in conjunction with The Richard Avedon Foundation, New York.

Richard-Avedon-Stephanie-Seymour

Richard-Avedon-Stephanie-Seymour

Avedon’s innovative approach enlivened the vocabulary of fashion photography, and even made him famous. The 1957 movie musical Funny Face is loosely based on Avedon, who served as the visual consultant for the production. Starring Fred Astaire as “Dick Avery,” a photographer working in New York and Paris, it co-starred Audrey Hepburn as his muse, a model chosen for her spirit and intelligence. Avedon’s own models were not only beautiful, but also embodied the idealized American woman, who had wit, personality, confidence, and a sense of adventure. They also reflected Avedon’s awareness of social and cultural changes. He was the first major photographer to use models of color, such as China Machado, a Portuguese-Chinese beauty he featured in the 1950s, or Donyale Luna, a sinewy model of African, Mexican, Egyptian, and Irish descent he worked with in the 1960s. His images elevated many of his models to celebrity status, especially in the 1960s and ’70s, when he worked with Jean Shrimpton, Lauren Hutton, Anjelica Huston, Twiggy, Penelope Tree, and Veruschka. In the 1980s and ’90s, his photographs helped bring supermodel fame to Kate Moss, Naomi Campbell, and Stephanie Seymour.

Avedon Fashion 1944–2000 includes a wide range of photographs that document the 1960s era, when advances in technology and demands for social reform became part of the evolving modern American experience. Among them are Avedon’s pictures of models wearing the “mod” fashions of the period at Cape Canaveral near an Atlas missile, or in the spacesuit-inspired fashions of André Courrèges, as seen in the famous April 1965 Harper’s Bazaar, the magazine’s 20th anniversary edition, which Avedon guest edited. The cover featured a Pop Art-inspired photograph by Avedon of Shrimpton in a day-glo pink helmet—the same photograph that appears on the cover of the exhibition’s catalogue, Avedon Fashion 1944–2000 (Abrams, New York, 2009). The photographer also embraced changing social mores with his forays into imagery that included nudity, or were discreetly erotic, as seen in his depiction of a suggested “ménage a trois” (Natty Abascal and Ana-Maria Abascal with model Helio Guerreiro, bathing suit by Brigance, Ibiza, Spain, September 1964).

In 1966, Avedon joined Vogue, where Vreelend had become its editor-in-chief. He captured the youthful brashness of the 1960s and turned Brooke Shields, Isabella Rossellini, and Barbra Streisand into fashion icons. With Vreeland’s approval, he also sought out quirky, unconventionally beautiful models, such as the wide-eyed waifs Penelope Tree and Twiggy, for his compelling photographs featuring Pop Art and “mod”-inspired fashions. Avedon’s work was included in most issues of Vogue until the mid 1970s. Vreeland was dismissed from the magazine in 1971, but Avedon stayed on, taking every cover photograph after 1980 until he quit in 1988. Avedon also photographed many imaginative advertising campaigns during his long career for clients including Versace, Calvin Klein, and Dior. In 1992, he was named the first staff photographer for The New Yorker, where his post-apocalyptic, wild fashion fable “In Memory of the Late Mr. and Mrs. Comfort,” featuring model Nadja Auermann and a skeleton, was published in 1995. In these later years, Avedon continued to contribute to Egoïste, a journal of fashion and the arts, where his photographs appeared from 1984 through 2000. He also pursued his own work as a portraitist, photojournalist, and the author of photography books until his death in 2004. His innovations are still evident in portraiture and fashion photography today.

Visit the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston at : http://www.mfa.org/

posted from Art KnowledgeNews

jene

so many other things on the list, new photoshoot look see

August 5, 2010

but i am dancing as fast as i can, trying to keep up with this lightspeed life of mine as the sun has sent an unusually fast corona mass ejection of a large cloud of charged plasma toward earth creating beautiful auroras over parts of the planet. see nasa link

but i am looking through a photoshoot that mary wehrhahn did on fri with a traveling nude figure study model keira grant who’s pictures are posted below.  any photoshoot is an opportunity to learn something about the craft which mary and i did. mary is looking for emotion emitting people for her series inner sanctum and all that glitters.

i am trying to add to or just finish my cave dwelling adam and eve series which really hasn’t been posted on my web site which is under construction. well i thought keira would make a lovely addition. but as you’ll see here, lovely pictures but something doesn’t work which i’ll try and point out. not that keria did anything wrong, she didn’t but it her training and my total lack of  seeing that’s the problem.

part of doing these shoots is to learn how to direct the models or participants in order to get what i am looking for, sometimes the magic works sometimes it doesn’t. so you can be the final arbitrator and i’ll just add my commentary and see what develops.

here are the first ones letting mary work with her gold cloth, i lit the space with tungsten softboxes for her and flash for me. i was trying out my tota umbrella on my white lightning 1200’s. key light here 1200 with 216 on reflector and tota umbrella softbox back.

female nude

keria with gold cloth

notice the placement of her hands and how she uses her feet, more on that later but it seems this is a fine art model style, me not being a fine art model i wasn’t aware of this nuance.

white female nude

keria nude

now after this image i should have just sat down and rested.

after the shoot i asked mary if she got anything and she said not too much but some over and under exposed ones she liked. some days are like that. during this section was mostly me backing away from my take charge personality and letting mary direct the model. but i did fool around while waiting my turn.

female semi nude

keria semi nude

here i took off reflector and added some blackwrap to a front 1200 because i don’t have any barndoors nor did i want to fool around with setting flags. working in movies i’ve learned to work fast never wanting to be the person or department to hold up production. very big no no. below is a more traditional light cropping.

female semi nude

female semi nude

but again notice her hands and feet. the thumbs extended away from the hand forming a V and her feet curled away from her body pointing down or away in this case. this isn’t a problem really more about style or form.

but in this next series it’s not something that i am looking for. maybe i am just picky and seeing something that others don’t notice. here i switched over to tungsten with strip box overhead gelled and 750 zip light fill.

female nude

keria's nude back

here again are the hands, notice the V. while the feet are again pointing away from the body. she does have a lovely back and cute tush which adds to the overall form and line of the figure.

another image this time sitting.

keria sitting

i remember a discussion keria and i had about the style i wanted from her as she showed me her pointed feet saying how this was fine art modeling to which i replied ‘i wanted a more natural look’. we did discuss what this series was about and who i thought she was as a character. during some of the poses i told her exactly what i was looking for, emotion, which was hard for her to do. models aren’t actors as their training is so different, so asking someone to do something they are not use to nor trained for is difficult.

it’s not about a pretty body but the emotional impact the image has, either through the tension in the body’s hands or face. i like to tell a story with my images beginning in the viewers mind, i want them to think. if the work does that then i’ve got them.

female nude

keria kneeling

this is one of the first shots in this series and really works. so any complaints i have about her really come right back to me. she was an all around trooper and really tried to give me a successful session. did i get something i can use and did she give me what i asked for?  who knows

life is just stuff and then more stuff. the problem is to be able to live with just the stuff that’s here now and forget about the stuff from yesterday.

so if you’ve gotten this far maybe you’ve gained an insight to my work, if you have, fine. at least no animals were hurt in the creation of this post.

jene youtt

last roll of Kodachrome, this is kansas

August 4, 2010

Photographer Steve McCurry Shoots De Niro, Brooklyn, India on Last Kodachrome Roll

Steve-McCurry

ROCHESTER, NY (AP).- What should a photographer shoot when he’s entrusted with the very last roll of Kodachrome? Steve McCurry took aim at the Brooklyn Bridge, Grand Central Terminal and a few human icons, too. Paul Simon, the crooner synonymous with the fabled film’s richly saturated colors, shied away. But Robert De Niro stood in for the world of filmmaking. Then McCurry headed from his base in New York City to southern Asia, where in 1984 he shot a famous portrait of a green-eyed Afghan refugee girl that made the cover of National Geographic. In India, he snapped a tribe whose nomadic way of life is disappearing — just as Kodachrome is.

see a link to The Wichita Eagle where the last Kodachrome lab exists Dwayne’s Photo Service or listen on NPR’s blog which also has some of McCurry’s India photographic work on a slide show. i’ve seen large prints of McCurry’s India studies at the Friends Without A Border auctions which we, Mary Wehrhahn and i belong to also donating prints of our work towards this wonderful charity which supports a children’s hospital in Cambodia which was first started by photographer Kenro Izu for the children of Cambodia whom he first met at Ankor Wat while photographing this amazing place. it is an infectious place.

Library of Congress Places William P. Gottlieb’s Iconic Jazz Images on Flickr

August 4, 2010

Washington, DC – In the late 1930s, a Golden Age of Jazz started to emerge, as hard economic times began to fade

Cozy-Cole-Latin-Dancers

Airwaves were pulsating with jazz and record sales were rising.  Legends like Billie Holliday, Louis Armstrong, Duke Ellington, Charlie Parker, Dizzy Gillespie, Ella Fitzgerald, Frank Sinatra, and many more were on the scene – and so was William P.Gottlieb.Equipped with a bulky Speed Graphic camera, Gottlieb, a young columnist for the Washington Post and later a writer for Down Beat magazine, photographed jazz musicians and performers, capturing classic images that are well-known today.  Gottlieb photographed the jazz greats from 1938 to 1948.

the end or an era, where in manhattan do artist fit in?

August 4, 2010

Last Carnegie Hall Resident, Elizabeth Sargent, Forced Out of Carnegie Towers

Editta-Sherman

In this image taken Thursday Aug. 2 , 2007, New York photographer Editta Sherman, then 95, stacks celebrity portraits at her studio residence in New York’s Carnegie Hall. The Italian-born Sherman, 98, who photographed famous faces from Monroe and Andy Warhol to Elvis Presley and called the “Duchess of Carnegie Hall” for being its longest resident, was forced from the studio she called home since 1948. She’s not been allowed to sleep there since early July and must also remove her belongings by Aug. 31. A resident since 1949, she raised five children in a studio with 25-foot ceilings and a view of Central Park. Her rent was frozen at $650 a month.- AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews

NEW YORK (AP).- All of her neighbors are gone, forced out. Now Elizabeth Sargent, the last holdout tenant of Carnegie Hall’s towers, is preparing to leave the her affordable studios that for more than a century housed some of America’s most brilliant creative artists. Red scaffolding surrounds Carnegie Hall as the city-owned towers are being gutted this summer in a $200 million renovation that includes adding a youth music program. Celebrities like Robert De Niro and Susan Sarandon had fought to save the homes, petitioning the city not to “displace these treasured artists and master teachers.”

Musicians, painters, dancers and actors thrived in the two towers built by 19th-century industrialist Andrew Carnegie just after the hall went up in 1891. The towers—one 12 stories high, the other 16—housed more than 100 studios, some with special skylights installed to give painters the northern light they prize.

Ms. Sargent, a one-time dancer, is now in her 80s and in remission from cancer. For 40 years, she’s lived on the ninth floor of the red-brick southern tower above the famed stage of the 119-year-old landmark. She has until Aug. 31 to clear out.

After a years-long legal battle, the two women finally reached agreement for new Midtown Manhattan apartments where rents will be subsidized by Carnegie Hall Corp. for the rest of their lives.