Posts Tagged ‘Emmanuel Fremin Gallery’

to russia with love……… one week and counting

September 2, 2013

I am exhausted from all this planning and it’s not even lunch hour. spent most of the morning doing uploading new images from the abandoned building shoot on to web site,  then doing the SEO info. at least i have that option with photoshelter, my web host, is it a drag to have to change web browsers because they went to html5 but it’s much better in the long run for people searching for images. speaking of which……………….

last week i sold and image from my photoshelter  web page, lesson learned, upload hi res images as i had to replace the jpg with a high res. not a big deal but that wouldn’t happen if i was out of town. i threw in some retouching because i cared i didn’t think the jpg was print quality. from one of the car shows i wander around, it’s a hood ornament from 1956 Chevrolet.

1956 Chevrolet chrome hood

no it wasn’t enough to begin to cover the cost of this new adventure of ours. RUSSIA and all that entails.  we begin in St. Petersburg for eight days then move on to Moscow for another five. we are touring the golden ring around moscow which are some old cities preserving the old way of life. we are pretty excited about the whole thing.

while is St. Petersburg we have tickets for the Hermitage museum for two days and the Kirov ballet for evening. they are performing Raymonda on our night. maybe not the most exciting ballet but a classic for sure. what better place to see classical ballet than Russia? i’ve tried to contact photographers both in Moscow and St. Petersburg that are on Model Mayhem but not heard back from any one of them. internet is expensive over there.

Oh well we did well in Japan, Hirotaka Kasuga and John McDermott in Cambodia both of whom have inspired us.. so i am sure we can find some photography galleries and see what happens.

all these things to prep, how much money to bring, what cameras, camera insurance, travel insurance what to see when. we did manage to go through a travel agent for the russian part, MIR travel agency in seattle wa. yes this is only part of the trip.

we are going through Amsterdam where we’ve rented and apt for a while. i have a friend who’s daughter is a dancer with the Dutch National Ballet who’s invited us to dinner and to see one of her performances. we also know a photographer Eduard Lampe in amsterdam who we showed around new york on his last visit.

we’ve lots of time there with a long list of things to do. also on the list is another dutch tog Vincent Rijs who has a gallery opening when we are there called ‘Behind the Mirror’ at Gallery CNCPT13. cool

so this is how it is  now that we are world travelers. i’ve tried to contact some russian photographers listed on model mayhem but so far haven’t heard a word. i am sure people around the world aren’t as obsessive about www stuff as new yorker’s constantly carrying about their phones in the palm of their hands so they don’t miss a thing.

amsterdamwe are finishing up some work in the basement,sheet rock and mud, how i hate doing that but it saves us money to spend elsewhere.

i am getting ready for a dance shoot next fri so all images need to be processed before we leave next tue. i haven’t even started to pack and mary who usually has packed a couple of times by now is in the same boat.

the day we get back oct. 10 a friend has an opening at his gallery emmanuel fremin gallery. 547 West 27 Street, suite 510, New York City, NY 10001 from 6p-10p. not sure we will be ready for that having just stepped off the plane from amsterdam.

oh well it’s only our life, something to be savored and enjoyed as is most of ours. so i am off to finish sanding the mud before mary comes home with the paint.

love you all

jene

Sex sells @ Emmanuel Fremin gallery opening

June 29, 2012

may have been one of the hottest openings with around 500 people crowding to get in a small space. when i say hot i mean the temperature of the room.

after the crowd cleared out a bit and we weren’t pressed up against each other there was room to see the art hanging around the room

or just have a chance to converse with your fellow gallery goer.

all under the watchful eyes and smiling face of emmanuel who’s always wandering around introducing people to art and artist.

while the lovely lady Mary Nguyen has her own way of attracting people

an enjoyable evening of art and friendship had by all

well some people just want to start out cooler than others as this young lady with her bodypainter friend surrounded by sweaty togs.

exhibit B

or this fellow contemplating his LCD screen, did he get it?

to see more pictures of the opening check out the farcebook page here

my favorite pic of the night happened when we were walking from the bus to gallery on 11th avenue.  my wife against the sunset

in her sexy shoes and summer skirt woohoo

jene

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

June 14, 2012

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

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


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

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

Young Sam Kim @ Emmanuel Fremin gallery

May 25, 2012

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

gallery entrance

waiting for the crowds

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

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

crowd

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

my favorite piece

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

of course here is Young Sam Kim ready to welcome everyone

welcome

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

Young Sam Kim artist & Emmanuel Fremin gallery owner

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

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

jene

Yesterdays work, more like my daily blunders

April 3, 2012

like calvin, of calvin and hobbs who thinks about sledding down hill that his brain is trying to…….. well that is the way i think at times. maybe if i do this then that will happen or that. i just never really know, well do we ever? someday all this will be over or it will continue without me.

i remember my first time as a photographer. our family had a classic Kodak Brownie 2a box camera, i don’t remember my age but i was younger than today i took the camera out into the backyard along with Ginger our golden cocker spaniel for a photo session. Ginger ran around opposite me and i pushed the shutter. we had a great time, i must have been copying something i’d seem somewhere. ‘thomas’ the character from blow up would have been proud of me.

except for one thing i overlooked, advance the film. thank goodness for digital photography, but like all technical things it does have it’s rules and while some think everything can be fixed in photoshop i am here to say not really. the idea i started out wanting to do was photograph a woman in a tight black dress against a white background. that i did

Diletta Carutti in a little black dress

so here is a beginning, a  nice italian dress draped on Diletta Carutti the model, an acquaintance of ours who’s working for Art Strong bags and emmanuel fremin galley.

mary when out and bought some cute cheap hats at tjmax for the shoot, i’ve yet to edit them yet way too many images and it’s overwhelming, like editing wedding images.

i am beta testing photoshop 6 which has some very powerful upgrades but my ‘puter switches back and forth between PS4 & 6 so it keeps me on my toes and i was tired last night. i don’t usually edit images right after a shoot, i let them develop on their own.

the dress is great like most of italian things, never had a bad meal in italy maybe they exist but food, wine and coffee seem to be a religion over there.

people live differently in europe. europeans dress up to go out for a cappuccino at the local cafe. not like here in new york where sweat pants and t- shirts are the norm.

and the shoes, i’ve two pair of italian shoes that make me feel like a king.

but today i’ll dwell on my mistakes which i’ve fixed somewhat with style and photoshop. i read a query last night from someone wanting terry richardson type of images. he’s a very trendy type of paparazzi photographer being in more of his pictures than not. reminds me of wee gee i’ve written about here. my question is why? the snapshots are just that, snapshots.ugh

black hat blond hair

great hat although we didn’t get a chance to use the other one as this worked out fine. for not being a model Diletta worked out pretty cool very playful.

seems she’s had years of dance training soooo you’ll see more of her in my dance portfolio.

a few adjustments were needed here on the back of the hat needed brightning while the dress needed to come down, it waas a dark blue and i wanted black.

maybe a little flesh tone tweaks and cropping.

but the day wore on and i was getting stupid, well more than usual. so i moved her around closer to the beauty dish and not even thinking snapped away just like my first session wit ginger.

at least this camera was smarter than i a moved forward every time but didn’t adjust for the lighting changes as that was my job. duh

oh well thank goodness it’s not a wedding so a do over is possible until i learn my lesson.

coy

but she’s wearing a bracelet………… where is the stylist when you need one, oh we don’t have…… one that’s my job also

now it gets interesting and the painter in me comes out.

the look

don’t worry it gets worst, that is unless you like this type of image

what was i thinking, it couldn’t be about what’s for lunch

so this is todays work. i remember a fellow down south having a conversation with one of our actors that they both seemed to enjoy until the fellow ask what the actor did for a living?’ i am an actor’ was the reply.  the fellow paused and took a good long look at the actor and said ‘that don’t seem something a grown man would do for a living’.

well that could be said about me i guess. WORK is that what they call it?

jene youtt

Dreams from the dark room” Thomas Barbey solo exhibition at Emmanuel Fremin gallery

March 12, 2012

Emmanuel Fremin Gallery is pleased to announce its second exhibition for renowned photographer Thomas Barbèy. “Dreams from the dark room” will run from March 15 to April 21 2012, the opening reception will be held on Thursday, March 15 from 6 to 8 PM. 547 West 27 Street, suite 508, New York City, NY 10001.

This  will be an exhibition of Barbey’s black and white photo compositions that give evidence to his ability to capture the impossible and fantasized through the manual process of developing film negatives and the assemblage of various imagery.


The French poet and founder of the surrealist movement André Breton may turn a blind eye in disbelief, René Magritte  roll over in his grave green with envy at the absurd and imaginative compositions of Barbèy. While the artistry and imagination of Man Ray might smile down knowingly.

Barbèy who For the past 20 years has been collecting and combining photographs that depict a variety of subject matter: cityscapes, trees, beaches, gondolas, and cathedrals. In other words, relatively mundane images that, when viewed independently, may fail to illicit a response.

When taken to the dark room, Barbèy coalesces these negatives through a series of unique and impressively orchestrated steps. For many artists, photoshop and graphic editing has become a shortcut in contemporary photography. Thomas Barbèy has chosen the road less traveled. His process is a personal and intricate labyrinth resulting in compositions best described as impressively surreal. Each negative is selected after years, and sometimes decades of storage, and then matched with other negatives to meet an unimaginable transmogrification.

“The process of my montage starts with concept. It is then followed by the exposure and selection of negatives. The design is then created by carefully choosing printing procedures as combination printing: sandwiching negatives together, thereby printing them simultaneously; pre-planned double exposure in the camera; the re-photographing of collaged photographs; and/or a combination of the above.”

Thomas’s works along the same ascetic as Jerry Uelsmann’s creations in photomontage which is not new as  this working method may date back to the 1860’s which may have been a high point in Europe  “In the 1860s and subsequent decades publishers of binocular photographs, such as the London Stereoscope Co. and the American firm Underwood & Underwood, marketed an entire series of ethereal ghosts, angels and fairies for the amusement of the public.” — from: The Perfect Medium,s p.52.

Thomas’s photo montages join the ranks of many other artist exploring the illusionistic quality and juxtaposing imagery that prevails in this type of process.  A ski slope that drapes like a bed sheet or a highway in San Francisco that intersects through a Banyan tree; each title is a play on words, as with “Wet Dreams”, showing a seascape beaching out onto a bedded mattress where the sun kissed figures stroll, play, and lounge on the sand.

The use of film and the manual exposure of each photograph in a darkroom is an essential element to the process and final product of Barbèy’s work where the images must pass the “So what?” test. That is, if the final montage of two or more images does not affect the artist in a particular way he throws it out and starts over. It is not until after that Barbèy experiments with different images, sometimes by accident and other times willfully, does the combination fit by transcending one into another world.

Thomas Barbèy was born in Greenwich, Connecticut and spent his childhood in Geneva, Switzerland. He began drawing seriously at an early age, using black “encre de Chine” and gouaches for color. Some early influences for his surrealistic images have been Philippe Druillet, Roger Dean, René Magritte, M.C. Escher and H.R. Giger. He has been interviewed and featured on the cover of “Inked” Magazine and featured in the New Britain Herald.

So if you’re in the neighborhood or don’t need to see your accountant who’s preparing your taxes or if you’ve a large return why not stop down and see some unusual art. Buy a piece of history, you never know.

Emmanuel Fremin Gallery at Scope 2012

March 10, 2012

last night we visited Scope as part of Armory week and visited with Emmanuel Fremin who has a wonderful exhibit in his space. what attracted me the most, well i think of myself as a photographer, was his new association with Yves Marchand and Romain Meffre ” The Ruins of Detroit ” book and C prints. a gotta see, the prints are beautiful.

not to take anything away from the lovely oversized book which i’d love to have on my coffee table or bookshelves. this photographic essay of Detroit and it’s architectural fall from grace due to economic shenanigans is a serious comment on our lives and time. i remember the tragic  loss of New York’s  Pennsylvania Station to developers but this study of an American city Detroit which i first became aware of  in Time magazines coverage.

Time Cover

but the real tragedy is conveyed by the pictures which begin with the Michigan Central train Station.

and you could say ends in a ballroom full with ghost of many memories

do stop by and see the prints and book, but wait there’s more also sculptures by Ted Lawson who works in salt, hard marble and other mediums

Entropy

That’s right there is still more from another artist working in unique and different mediums Fernando Mastrangelo

This too shall pass ( virgin mary )

made from Gunpowder, 13 rosaries, MDF, hemp, and automotive paint. while another piece in the show is made from

La Salva Mara ( santa muete )

Cremated human ash

the artist creates his work through a variety of materials, including sugar, coffee, corn, gunpowder, human cremated ash, and other controversial materials, Mastrangelo’s large scale sculptures often address social, cultural, and political issues relevant to the contemporary experience.most of the projects function as sculptural tableaus, and combine content, form and materials as a conceptual strategy.

this show along with his chelsea gallery and the selection of artist is one of the reasons i find emmanuel’s choices so interesting. i never know who or what i’ll find at his openings. so stop by Scope this weekend and say hello to this charming fellow.

Emmanuel Fremin

say Fuzzy sent you.

jene youtt

Emmanuel Fremin Gallery is pleased to announce its grand re-opening 1/5/12

January 4, 2012

EXHIBITION: INDEPENSENSE by GIUSEPPE MASTROMATTEO

Emmanuel Fremin Gallery  is pleased to announce its grand re-opening in
its new, larger Chelsea space located at  547 West 27 Street, suite 508.
The gallery first vernissage will be held on January 5, 2012 from 6-8 PM,
introducing a 5 week solo show for Italian born artist Giuseppe
Mastromatteo
for his “Indepensense” series. Following a wide acclaim
reception in 2011 at Art Hamptons, the AAF, Greenwich Art Fair and Red Dot
Miami, this will be be the first solo show for Giuseppe in the United
States.

Giuseppe Mastromatteo was born in Italy in1970 . After a period spent as a
recordist’s assistant inside a record company, he graduated from Accademia
di Comunicazione di Milano in art direction. He writes about the Arts,
teaches Advertising at various significant academic institutions, and
collaborates with the Triennale Museum of Milan in the role of art
director. Since 2005 his works have been exhibited at the Fabbrica Eos Art
Gallery, Milan as well as at national and international art fairs. He
currently lives and works in Milan.

Mastromatteo’s portraits bring poetic Surrealism back to life. They could
be collages, but take advantage of the subtlety of digital technology to
reproduce humanity in impossible and illusory dimensions. Ripped faces,
eyes and ears which run through hands, are the centre of an imaginary truth
that draws inspiration from the visions of Magritte and Man Ray to land
inside a new visual synthesis with stylistic patterns representing the most
contemporary photography of our time, in a continuous overlapping of visual
languages that live in the world of advertising and genuine research.
Backgrounds are white, the light homogeneous: nothing averts the detailed
expressions in the characters of this silent and fascinating theatre of the
absurd. Transfigured bodies, pierced and lacerated do not show any form of
violence, but instead pose solemnly in front of the photographer=92s lens,
beyond any suffering. No expression exists in these faces, there is no
tension, but rather a sense of timelessness that leaves us open to reflect
about the uncertainty of this third millennium. The observer’s eye is
immediately attracted by the extravagance of these creatures, which at the
same time produces a true sense of discomfort and uneasiness. Mastromatteo
intervenes in the interior sense of beauty. The models he chooses for his
images bring to the stage classic canons of harmony and equilibrium
creating a complex dialectict between fascination and repulsion. From here
the evident sensation emerges of discovering oneself in front of a Pantheon
where every possibility of self identification is precluded. A universe
unto itself is the object of aesthetic contemplation and intriguing
reverence, magnified by the means with which this is all narrated because
photography continues to maintain a link with an indissoluble reality of
facts. The process of recognition inherent in portrait photography appears
as something distant. Physiognomy comes to light only to recover the
aesthetic detail of our time. Reality and fiction appear as outdated ideas
with full attention focusing on memory. As a conclusion, in order to bring
together feelings and fragments of this project, photography in itself
seems not enough and becomes something more, transforming into a metaphor
of itself, reaching the final objective of communicating through other
forms and channels.

Denis Curti.

Emmanuel Fremin Gallery
547 West 27 Street suite 508, New York, NY 10001
646.245.3240