Archive for the ‘Photography’ Category

lost another point of light in photography, John Daido Loori Roshi

October 28, 2009

this month October we, the world at large, lost another great photographer and teacher. John Daido Loori 1931-2009.

it was my priviledge to have a few conversations with John Daido Loori Roshi zen priest , teacher, photographer and human being.

I’ve only met him a few times in a casual setting, once at a Change Your Mind day sponsored by Tricycle magazine where he was speaking about his Mountains and Rivers order to the assembled buddhist group sitting on the grassy field in central park. i found him to be a very generous man.

i had asked him a question about reincarnation which other buddhist traditions teach and had been brought up earlier that day. as i recall he said that as far as our atoms being released back into the primordial soup to begin again as some other entity that was about all one could expect.i think he respected all creation and i know he fought hard to preserve his sanctuary and woodland around zen mountain for all beings. his art reflected his spiritual life.

john was an artist/photographer who had studied with Minor White i had always wanted to do a workshop at Zen Mountain Monastery with john. but you know how life is, there was always something getting in the way of taking the time for myself either be it work or money but it never came to be. that is one of my regrets in life.

i have all two of his photography books which if you ever get the chance to do buy. they are still in print at the Monastery Store and the one on creativity.

Making Love With Light is a wonderful study of John’s photography, Zen poems and essays.

Hearing With the Eye are photos from Point , California, makes one remember wandering all sorts of beaches

The Zen of Creativity is about John’s insight on creativity and life. not so much about color photography but more on the creative process as a whole.

i’ve linked these to the monastery store because i believe in supporting the teachings that have helped me. i am sure they can be had from amazon books but i’ve never looked for them there.

I’ve never sat at the monastery nor with john. i do belong to other Buddhist groups namely the Insight Meditation Society and New York Insight but Zen teachers have had a large influence on me beginning with Alan Watts and a non buddhist teacher J.Krishnamurti whom i did see give talks in new york way back when. all of their teachings are still available on-line and in printed form.

i have a very good friend who is a member of the Mountains and Rivers sangha whom i talked to as soon as i learned of john’s illness which even though it’s a big part of the teachings imperemance of this world and time his passing did make me sad. it gives me some comfort to know there are good people in the world even though i don’t know them nor see them regularly it’s just nice to realize they are there.

it’s a big part of metta practice and teachings, to know there are other people in this world wishing me happiness and a good life, even though i don’t know them, they are there. i can be connected to then and this world, even though it’s just a ball of mud and water waiting for its time to evaporate and us along with it. we might as well have some fun and laughs along the way and know that we are loved for who we are.

i just wanted to acknowledge my special feelings about john and other people i’ve come across on my path. yes i felt the loss of this lost point of light, but life goes on until it doesn’t.

wasting time is my pastime

October 21, 2009

i just spent hours changing the password on my wireless dlink network, first logging in, configuring the software, then after not doing this for a number of years, i suggest if one is security consensus to do this more often as one forgets how to or take concise notes. need to really learn to listen more closely as tech support isn’t located in this country so the accents are sometimes hard to understand, i am sure they feel the same way.

getting the wireless router configured  i lost my computer ip address. thank goodness for assistants and apple software. i don’t know how windows people survive especially the ones on high floors.so now onto the business at hand.

i bought a hp 9180 printer which so far has reminded me of a sherman tank running into a wall. i’ve never had a printer shake the table so violently as this one does as it moves the carriage side to side. whoo nelly. but they say this is a good printer so i’ve got a learning curve for sure, especially after all these years using epson printers.

hey what’s life without some sort of challenge. did i think i could just sit down at my desk and create. where did the simplicity of pencil and paper in hand go? tonight i go look see at all the wonderful changes snow leopard has even though my new computer is still in the box with nowhere to go,  because i’ve been wasting my time with security issues. but this is tekserve’s schedule and what the heck it’s only an hour presentation.

meat loaf for dinner is all i can think of right now, guess i must be hungry.

Busy weekend

October 20, 2009

last weekend was pretty busy running around to different galleries and participating in the hoboken open studios at the monroe center. we, mary & i, met some interesting people to talk with and i always like these things because i meet other artist talk about each others work and share the day. i like to see other artist work as it gets me to thinking about things i’ve never thought of before.

here is mary meeting people, i am the guy behind the curtain, oh camera

mary show our work

mary showing our work

add my pixs

add my pixs

another bus load

another bus load

mary’s jewelry which surprised us didn’t sell. heck she sells it off her body at some of our openings.

IMG_9659-

sometimes i get locked into an idea or work space and can’t easily see my way out of it. that’s one of the values of the Artist Way book by julia cameron and mark bryan, but mark has disappeared from the amazon book page and the web site. maybe some sort of riff between them. i did meet him years ago as he was doing sessions about the book and how to use the information given. i do recommend the book or should i say the system it teaches., although i can’t say i know anybody who’s ever finished the book and all it’s exercises. but the ideas are top notch and it generates an idea of ‘self care’ and appreciation, that can open many a closed door or window. of course now there is an artist way web site.

one of the things i got from mark and out of the book was journal writing . i’ve got somewhere close to 150 legal pads of writings which they call morning pages. i’ve no way of knowing if they’ve helped me or not.but i haven’t thought of walking half way across the george washington bridge lately.

i do remember this nutty girlfriend who was so insecure about our relationship that she would read them when i wasn’t around. well between my comments on that relationship and her reading my private musings it wasn’t very good. that whole relationship was wacky from the beginning but my comments and her insecurity weren’t a good mix.

well maybe i shouldn’t say that exactly because the woman i am with now doesn’t even bother to read them or if she does she doesn’t bring them up in conversation. as painful as breaking up with someone is, and that one was because i thought i loved her, i’ve found that life does get better as i do. so that girlfriend, as i was for her, was the way to move onward with our lives. she left her husband and i found someone who learned to love me, sometimes i don’t make it easy. what i learned from that relationship was that i could try and love again, we should never forget how to love one another.

so the morning pages are a pretty powerful event.

well i was going to write about art and photography and how the printer gods are frowning on me, but i’ll have to do that some other time. my finger are sore.

we did see an interesting young artist photographer at daniel cooney gallery named tim roda who does these ‘creations’ is all i can describe them as. he gave a talk sat attended by a few people and a couple of his friends. mary an di went down to hear him because his work is so different. we dropped in on cooney’s gallery, gallery mega opening day this fall when the streets were alive with wine drinking harpies wandering from gallery to gallery. fine arts halloween evening for sure. some tricks some treats. boo

curator looking for artist

October 16, 2009

here is a link to a small gallery on the edges of williamsburg brooklyn called cccp run by a friend of mine, john, who is always looking for emerging artists. do contact him if you’re looking to show in a small funky gallery setting. let him know you saw this posting here.

jene

a day in the life

October 16, 2009

wandering around new york galleries on wed after an all day sitting at soho photo looking at the lighting system they have and are thinking of replacing as they have received a proposal from the contractor who painted the gallery this past summer. what an improvement over the dingy, paint peeling walls and ceiling. for an art photography gallery to look that run down i thinks reflects on the artist who show there.

i guess i should say the photographers who show there. this distinction i make with my work being art as opposed to just photographs. i create my pictures while i think most photographers capture theirs. i’ve always thought that the proof in my work was the print, that’s where i spend most of my time in creating, not that taking the picture isn’t just important because it is.

i did stop by Madame X, 95 houston St, nyc, ny to see Catlin Mitchells semi nude fashion exhibit. Madame X seems an appropriate place for the show except for the lighting but the decor of red wall paper and golden couches, can we say whore house look, seemed to the welcome the exhibit. i did look to introduce myself to Catlin who was not hard to find in her silver sequined dress, but didn’t have time to talk, who ever does at ones opening, greeting guest, friends and what not. love her carbon prints on cold press paper.

speaking of artists and galleries in the evening i continued around the corner to ward-nasse gallery where i have four prints hanging to re-lable two of them with the awards they have received, Blue the 2009 Prix de la Photographie, Paris (PX3) and Ascending the 2009 International Photography Award. because there is an opening reception at ward-nasse this saturday 10/17/09 at 7pm for this lovely young artist who paints hearts. She usually sells out and has a large following. i sold two prints at her last show. woohoo.

the next sunday 10/18/09 mary and i are showing our work in Hoboken at the Monroe Center for the Arts for their open studio tour, 12 noon to 5 pm affair.if you’re in the neighborhood stop by or better yet make the trek to the center and say hello. we are showing some of our bump, wedding and children laboroflovepixs hoping to drum up some more business.mary makes sure there’s lots of wine and popcorn, don’t ask. she will also be bring some of her wearable art, which women seem to like, as that’s what the conversation always seems to move to at our gallery openings etc.

where does our life go? mary the energizer bunny and me, i get tired just watching her, are getting ready next month for a friends art/gallery shop opening on 231 Bedford Ave in williamsburg Brooklyn called Barking Lizard. some of the art works there are fabulous. do stop by and take a look.

Study Old Paintings to Breathe New Life into Your Photography

October 9, 2009

reprint from rising.blackstar com

By John Sevigny

John Sevigny was born in Miami and studied English and art history at Miami Dade College. He has spent more than 15 years as a professional photographer, working for the Associated Press, EFE News, and many newspapers. Currently working as an independent fine art and documentary photographer, he has exhibited his work in the United States, Portugal, and Mexico, where he currently lives. He is finishing a degree in art education at La Universidad Veracruzana and regularly gives photographic workshops. His writing on photography and the arts regularly appears in a number of online magazines. Check out his Gone City blog. in Art of Photography on September 22nd, 2009

Photography has existed since the 1820s, according to most historians, giving the medium a history of less than 200 years. Two-dimensional art, meanwhile, has been around for 20,000 years, as far as we know — with the animals painted on cave walls in Lascaux, France, being among the first-known examples.

As the infant of the visual arts, photography inevitably draws upon the millennia of picture-making that came before it. And the thousands of years of development, thought, research and hard work that have marked the history of art can provide powerful sources of photographic inspiration.

Here are just a few lessons that old paintings can teach us about photography.

Impressionism: Qualities of Light

Most photographers are aware of Impressionism, primarily because it is a movement dealing with natural light and the changing qualities of light. Claude Monet, Georges Seurat and others were more concerned with the way things were seen than with creating realistic descriptions of their subjects.

The movement paralleled the rise of photography. From about 1860 onward, there was a push and pull between the two, as each strove to define itself in relation to the other. At least one painter, Edgar Degas, created photographs himself, and those who study his compositions will recognize immediately that his unusual use of cropping was intrinsically photographic. In fact, it mirrors what most of us do today with Photoshop and other imaging software.

More than anything else, Impressionism reminds us that light is the primary source of an image, painted or photographed, and that the quality of light, which was of great interest to the Impressionists, can make or break a picture.

Chiaroscuro: Using Contrast

An Italian word for “light-dark,” the term “chiaroscuro” is used to describe the dramatically lit, high-contrast oil painting that reached its peak in the 16th Century. When a photographer today makes a portrait lighting a single side of the face while allowing the other to fade to darkness, he or she — perhaps unknowingly — is using a tool wielded by Ugo da Carpi, Giovanni Baglione, and still later, Caravaggio.

Chiaroscuro was a powerful technique in Renaissance art, and it remains so today in the hands of countless photographers. But as anyone who has worked in the studio knows, directing a single, highly directed light source can be a tricky business. Studying Mannerist and Baroque painting is one way to help master the technique.

Mastering Composition

The first and best masters of composition were painters and draftsmen. Most photographers have some awareness of the basic principles of composition: lines, the rule of thirds, shape, proportion and balance. The best painters were masters at using these elements together to create eye-trapping scenes.

Peter Paul Rubens, a Flemish painter working in the 16th and 17th Centuries, took compositional complexity to an extreme. Joan Miro, a 20th Century painter from Spain, used the same principles but applied them sparingly, including few elements in his paintings and drawings.

Some of our greatest photographers, such as Henri Cartier-Bresson and Miguel Rio Branco, worked with brushes first and cameras later. Both are masters of formal composition because they spent long hours studying it. A deep familiarity with composition in painting can be applied to photography to create true works of art rather than snapshots.

Abstract Expressionism: Going Deeper

Often characterized by the loved-and-loathed drip paintings of American artist Jackson Pollock, Abstract Expressionism was much more than that. The idea of covering an entire surface with marks, and using non-representational imagery, was one of the most important artistic revolutions of the 20th Century.

The idea is that there is something deeper, something that flows from the subconscious, which can be captured and expressed in art. This is fertile soil for fine-art photographers and those who are interested in pushing their photography in new directions.

Remember, two-dimensional art is at least 10 times as old as Christianity. Photographers should not ignore this part of their visual heritage, but rather, embrace it, build upon it, and apply it to their work. Painting is not photography — but it contains lessons that can make us better at what we do.

Talk and Presentation “Fred Stein: Art of the Street/Art of Intimacy”

October 9, 2009

Save The Date!    October 27, 7 PM

Talk and Presentation
“Fred Stein: Art of the Street/Art of Intimacy ”
Paris 1930’s, New York 1940’s, Portraits

Peter Stein, the son of noted photographer Fred Stein will be giving a talk and video/slide presentation about his father on October 27, 2009, at the Soho Photo Gallery located at 15 White Street, between West Broadway and Avenue of the Americas. There will be a reception starting at 6 pm. The program will begin  at 7 pm.

Street scenes of Paris in the years just before the German occupation, and New York during and just after World War II, capture the vitality and pathos of these two vibrant cities His portraits of intellectuals, artists, and statesmen reveal the unique character of the men and women who shaped the political and cultural events of the 20th century.

Educated as an attorney at German universities and deeply involved in anti-Nazi politics from his youth, Stein was forced to leave his country in 1933.  Unable to practice law in his adopted country, France, he made a vocation out of his photographic skill.  In 1941, before the occupation of Paris, Stein and his family again escaped the Nazis by emigrating to New York City where he worked as a freelance photographer until his death in 1967 at the age of 58.

Stein, whose works were recently on exhibition at the International Center of Photography (NYC), is represented in collections of The National Museum of American Art (Smithsonian), The National Portrait Gallery (Smithsonian), the ICP, The Jewish Museum (NYC), The Center for Creative Photography (Tucson), and museums, galleries, and private collections around the world.
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Peter Stein is a Professor of Cinematography in the Graduate Film Program at New York University. He has photographed over 50 feature films and television movies for the last 35 years.

Visit Soho Photo

Soho Photo Gallery has been showcasing a broad spectrum of imagery by emerging and veteran photographers since 1971. The Gallery is in New York’s historic TriBeCa district, three blocks south of Canal Street between West Broadway and Sixth Avenue. Subways: #1 to Franklin Street or the A, C, E, W, N, R or #6 to Canal Street.

Canon 5D Mark ll opinion

October 2, 2009

hi gals & guys

i am somewhat disappointed with my 5D Mll especially now that the 7D is around the corner which seems to be a much better camera video wise at least.i do come from a film/video background so i am somewhat opinionated about this.

i moved up to 5DMll because i wanted a full frame camera and the people selling used 5D’s were asking way too much around here. the video component also was very enticing but 30 frames and no locked auto focus or face recognition software seems like they are just waiting for Mark lll to come out.reminds me of the epson 4000 & 4800 introductions.

to not be able to sync sound to video seems silly. i looked at some video i lit for some other shooter and i see how silly it looks. picture looks nice but since edison figured out how to record voices  and made pictures you’d think canon who makes video cameras might have married the two together on this camera. but i guess it had something to do with turf wars.

one the plus side the sensor on the Mll gives great color rendition well it is an improvement over my 20D that’s for sure.the file size for my usage is over the top, i don’t shoot billboard art but some do. with genuine fractal’s i seem to be able to get the size prints i want. i might want to do billboards later in life so maybe having such big files will come in handy.i get a whooping 300 some odd images on a card now. lexar should be happy.

as far as the seals go i try and keep my cameras out of water etc but it would be nice to have it sealed well.

as far as the software is concerned i am still learning it. i shoot mostly 4 gb cards so i can back them up on dvds and the new 9999 images on a folder threw my backup workflow off. i am adjusting as i know others are. so it’s just not a matter of dragging and dropping a folder onto a drive. yes redundancy backups on hd and dvds.

oh did i mention battery size. if the 7D can use the same legacy batteries then why did i have to buy new ones for the Mll, oh the camera didn’t cost enough money, i see. at least i don’t have to get new lenses.

but hey nothing is perfect in this world and we all need to make a buck, well except me, i seem to be supporting manufactures of equipment while art sales have plummeted bouncing off the floor but hey we all got to eat. maybe i can crack open some 20D batteries and see how they taste.

well maybe my tune will change once i learn the new camera system. remember the old camera where there was a f stop ring & focus thingy that seemed to work pretty good, still have my F1 loved the look of that camera and the metering system, whew be still heart.

just my uninformed take on the subject maybe some day i’ll know more, but i do like fast lenses and cool cars.

jene
http://www.jeneyoutt.com

hey hot shot update

October 1, 2009

what a small world. i know it doesn’t seem that way as we jump on a crowded subway car at rush hour, well maybe it does.there is a TED talk that shows exactly where we are in the cosmos which is informative. it’s given by jill tarter who is the head of SETI titled ‘are we alone?’ a question which has always interested me since lying on top of my garage looking at the stars.

Mary and i picked a photo out of the first batch put up, we both loved the colors and composition of this rather abstract image. it reminded me of a padlocked door i found in panama so i told mary why not pick it, which she did.

the small part of the world was that photographer picked my photo.Blue Ladyher name is christine finkelson and we both print on some of the same hahnemuhle papers. and i think but i am not sure but christine might be over 23 years old.

looking at the hot shot crowd makes me feel old for an ’emerging photographer’ but there were some of us there. mostly the crowd seemed right out of collage and comfortable with the single bar scene. but hey i’ve been wrong before.

we got out of there alive and had dinner around the corner and maybe made a few friends along the way. not a bad evening at all

Hey Hot Shot print exchange

October 1, 2009

last night we went down to hey hot shot print exchange. this is something i’ve always been interested in doing. i remember some online photo groups i’ve belonged to where some members exchanged prints amongst themselves. i always thought this was a pretty neat way of learning what’s out there. i even tried doing this when i was on musecube but nobody seemed interested i doing it except one fellow nik walking bear, but oddly when i left the cube he wasn’t interested in continuing the conversation any more. oh well

to me my photography doesn’t exist unless i have a print in hand. what else is there? we can see pixels on the screen but once the power goes out what’s left? not much. but a print is something solid, while the image just sits on the paper well maybe more in the nooks and crannies of the paper, i like texture on my paper but i print on matt papers, a personal preference. it’s the print that exist as the art form, that might explain my thin negatives.

hey i shoot digital now so don’t have to worry about that. i do miss the feel of wet film in my hands as i am a very tactile person and always loved handling film. but it’s so time consuming developing boring agitating looking at the clock etc. oh did i mention the smell of the fixer?

well i digress from the subject at hand. the print

now the people running the swap weren’t very organized, first set back, lost microphone, so communication with the crowd began with cupped hands moving later to a megaphone which wasn’t much of an improvement but at least they could be heard over the crowd noise. there wasn’t much of a plan, maybe they were overwhelmed by the number of people attending, the print i picked up was labeled 81 and my number was 67.

one of the things i learned touring theater show was how to make the venue i was in then work the best it could be for the show we were performing. it had to work, the producer wasn’t going to give back the money and the artist was there  wanting to be paid after the show, so my job was to make the venue work for the production. i learned soon enough ‘no show no check.’ simple enough.

but some people seem to get lost in the details which this seemed to be the case. they put out the first selection of images and the whole heard swooped down like Harpies on the photos. both mary’s and my images were gone right away but i didn’t see who took them, i always like to see who likes my work.

i got to the front in time to see a small black and white print of the world trade center taken from the williamsburg waterfront and looking down the line at the only one other print struck my eye  of a hood ornament but i can back the the simplicity of this print. it’s by a photographer Geralyn Shukwit whom i’ve looked at her web site and it works for me. while she and i do way different stuff that doesn’t mean i don’t like what others do. it really keeps me interested in the craft and art of photography.