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Archive for June, 2011

Now Accepting Entries for the Best Photo Book 2011 of Latin America

Thursday, June 30th, 2011

Editorial RM announces the second edition of The Best Photo Book of Latin America competition. The Mexico- and Spain-based publisher is dedicated to celebrating the best in Latin American art, and its latest call for entry seeks photo books—with or without text—where the work’s primary message is carried through photographs.

The competition is open to all photographers residing in Latin America, regardless of nationality. Registration is free and open through July 15th at www.editorialrm.com. All submissions must be previously unpublished, shot within the last five years, and prepared for high quality book publication.  Submissions will not be returned.

The winner will be announced November 1st on RM’s website.  His or her work will be published in book form (in both English and Spanish) and promoted internationally by RM. The winner will also receive fifty complimentary copies of the book. In addition to the winning project, RM will display fifteen to thirty outstanding projects on its website as well.

This year’s highly esteemed jury includes Martin Parr (U.K), Horacio Fernandez (Spain),  Ramon Reverte (Spain / Mexico),  Jonathan Rockemore (U.S.A),  Dierre Neubert (Germany),  Iata Canabrava (Brazil), Marcos Lopez (Argentina), Paolo Gasparini (Venezuela), and Andreoti Olivier (France).

For more details, visit www.editorialrm.com.

For questions, email fotolibro@editorialrm.com.

 

And coming next week on EXPOSURES: look for behind-the-scenes coverage of Aperture’s upcoming fall release,

The Latin American Photo Book!

Aperture at the Wild Project

Wednesday, June 29th, 2011

The Wild Project is pleased to present an exhibition of limited-edition prints produced by Aperture Foundation. Aperture Foundation is a leading photography non-profit dedicated to promoting photography in all its forms based in Chelsea. The exhibition focuses on contemporary artists whose work, in many cases, has been featured in Aperture Magazine, Aperture books, in exhibitions at Aperture Gallery or have been winners of the Portfolio Prize contest. This exhibition features Michel Campeau, Maureen Drennan, Doug DuBois, JH Engström, Todd Hido, Kalle Kataila, Mark Lyon, Edgar Martins, and Bas Princen.

Aperture Foundation is proud to have one of the longest running limited-edition print and portfolio programs in the United States. The print program started in the 1960’s with collaborations between the master photographers Paul Strand and later with Edward Steichen. The print program expanded over the years to offer richly diverse editions and portfolios to art lovers and collectors. Today the program works with several artists’ estates and presents prints that range from masters of the medium, to established contemporary artists and finally highlights many emerging artists of tomorrow. Proceeds from the sales benefit the artists and helps maintain the quality of Aperture’s publications and public programming. The print program supports the organization’s non-profit mission to advance photography in all its forms.

May 11–September 7, 2011
Opening Reception: Wednesday, June 29, 6-8pm

Wild Project
195 East 3rd Street
New York, NY 10009

Image: My Sister’s bedroom by Doug Dubois, 2004, courtesy Doug Dubois

SNAPSHOT: Tod Papageorge

Tuesday, June 28th, 2011

By Anna Carnick

Portrait of Tod Papageorge by Deborah Flomenhaft,courtesy of Tod Papageorge

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For this week’s SNAPSHOT, we spoke with respected photographer, teacher, and author Tod Papageorge. Papageorge’s much-anticipated new book, Core Curriculum: Writings on Photography—a series of essays, lectures, reviews, and interviews—offers critical insight into the role of artists like Atget, Brassaï, Robert Frank (with Walker Evans), Robert Adams, Josef Koudelka, and his close friend, Garry Winogrand. It also delves into photography’s relationship to poetry, and how the evolution of the medium’s early technologies led to the twentieth-century creation of the self-conscious photographer/artist. The book is available for pre-order now here.

One of the most influential voices in photography today, Papageorge has been the Walker Evans Professor of Photography at the Yale University School of Art since 1979.

He will be in conversation tomorrow with photographer John Pilson at the Aperture Gallery. More details here.

Papageorge took a few moments to speak with us on the eve of his book release.

 

AC: How do you describe your personality?
TP: Attic.

What is your definition of happiness?
Birdsong. Or Louis Armstrong’s fanfare and solo in “West End Blues.”

Name your greatest hero.
Mozart, for writing The Requiem, The Magic Flute, and his clarinet concerto in the last year of his short life.

Your greatest achievement as an artist so far?
To remain an artist so far.

The greatest challenge you’ve faced as an artist?
To call myself an artist (as I did in the previous response) and not a photographer.

Your greatest personal achievement?
Being Theo’s father.

The biggest life lesson you’ve learned so far?
That life is the thing in front of you, there, immensely larger than the lesson it might seem to promise but, in my experience, withholds.

If you weren’t a photographer, what would you be?
The timpanist for a small-city orchestra who, in his off-hours, writes poetry in strict rhyme.

Your favorite photograph?
Read Core Curriculum.

Your favorite new (or emerging) artist?
Roberto Bolaño. A Chilean writer, actually. And dead since 2003. But the most exciting artist I’ve encountered in the past five-ten years.

Your favorite photography exhibit of all time?
The one I most learned from was the 1968 Brassaï exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art. I just “got” it, at a particularly crucial moment in my development as a photographer, although I couldn’t have said then what it was that I got. Equally remarkable to me, though, in this new century, were the ICP exhibitions of Henri Cartier-Bresson’s “Scrapbook” [Henri Cartier-Bresson's Scrapbook: Photographs, 1932–1946] and Garry Winogrand’s “1964” [Winogrand 1964].

Your favorite photo book ever?
The Decisive Moment, which I initially saw in 1962, a few months after I began to photograph, and, on the heels of that, The Americans, which I discovered in San Francisco shortly before I heard Robert Frank give his first public lecture at the museum there.

Name a person—living or dead—you’d really like to meet.
Shakespeare, preferably after he’d given up writing for the stage. Among other things, I’d ask him why he stopped; how he filled his time and (great) mind; and who he’d name as a person—living or dead—he’d really like to meet.

Do you have a mentor?
Garry Winogrand was a mentor of mine, although what he taught me had as much to do with how to think and live (in the moment) as it did with making photographs.

The natural talent you’d like to be gifted with?
Organization.

For what fault do you have the most tolerance?
Disorganization.

Your favorite quality in a man?
The willingness to acknowledge pain.

What qualities do you appreciate most in friends?
Humor and a ready hand when the waiter brings the bill.

Your favorite motto?
“The best way out is always through.” —Robert Frost


Core Curriculum: Tod Papageorge and John Pilson in Conversation

Thursday, June 23rd, 2011

Core Curriculum: Writings on Photography is the long-awaited collection of essays, reviews, and lectures—some of which have gained a cult following from online postings—by Tod Papageorge, one of the most influential voices in photography today. As a photographer and the Walker Evans Professor of Photography at the Yale University School of Art, Papageorge has shaped the work and thought of generations of artist/photographers. At the same time, his critical writings have earned him a reputation as an unusually eloquent and illuminating guide to the work of many of the most important figures in twentieth-century photography.

Join us as Papageorge, one of the most influential voices in photography today, engages in conversation with photographer John Pilson. Book signing and reception to follow.

Wednesday, June 29, 6:30 pm

FREE

Aperture Gallery and Bookstore
547 West 27th Street, 4th Floor
New York, New York
(212) 505-5555

 

New Video: Simone Rosenbauer from reGeneration2

Wednesday, June 22nd, 2011

In this clip, photographer Simone Rosenbauer speaks about her Small Museums in Australia project documenting the collections and people behind these town museums.

reGeneration2: tomorrow’s photographers today exhibition is now on view at the Centro de las Artes in Monterrey, Mexico through July 17.

Following the worldwide critical acclaim of the book and exhibition reGeneration: 50 Photographers of Tomorrow in 2005, a breakthrough publication for artists such as Pieter Hugo or Nathalie Czech, Aperture Foundation and Musée de l’Élysée in Lausanne, Switzerland, have collaborated on a new edition. This second volume and exhibition–the broadest survey of its kind–features the works of eighty up-and-coming photographers selected from 120 of the world’s top photography schools.

Click here to purchase the accompanying publication of reGeneration2: Tomorrow Photographer’s Today

Photo Camp Opening Reception and Exhibition

Tuesday, June 21st, 2011


© Alon Sicherman, Columbia University

 

Photo Camp: The Culture of Now
Opening Reception:
Tuesday, June 28th
6:00 – 8:00 pm

Exhibition on view:
Tuesday, June 28th – Friday, July 15th
Aperture Gallery & Bookstore
547 W 28th Street, 4th Floor
New York, NY

Join Aperture in celebrating the student work made during Photo Camp, a unique educational experience presented by Sony and Aperture. Students representing seventeen different collegiate institutions and photo programs attended hands-on, intensive weekend workshops in Los Angeles (April 1–3) and New York City (April 8–10) with the goal of fostering community and new learning opportunities.

The exhibition is printed by Gotham Imaging, with ink and paper provided courtesy of Epson. Additional support was provided by D.A.P. | Art Book Press.

Erwin Olaf: De La Mar

Monday, June 20th, 2011

By Anna Carnick

Erwin Olaf, Angels in America, 2010

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Now showing: Erwin Olaf: De La Mar at Hasted Kraeutler.

For his latest series, Erwin Olaf casts his highly stylized, cinematic eye on the theatre world. Commissioned by the DeLaMar VandenEnde Foundation for the new De La Mar theatre in Amsterdam, Olaf’s series reinterprets scenes from eight classic plays, with a star-studded cast of Dutch film and theatre actors. The De La Mar series was shot primarily in film studios and theatres in and around Amsterdam in 2009.

Describing the role of theatre in his work, the Dutch photographer says, “I have always been involved with the theatre and dance world, mostly through theatre posters, but also as an inspiration, so there is a close relationship and love for the theatre.” He goes on, “I have always been influenced a lot by film, and I think this is one of the most literal translations of that influence.”

For the series, which will be permanently displayed at the new theatre, Olaf chose scenes from Angels in America, A Streetcar Named Desire, Amadeus, Cyrano, Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, Sunshine Boys, Waiting for Godot, and Three Sisters. Describing his selection, Mr. Olaf says, “We were looking for classic plays which have iconic scenes in them, instantly recognizable to the visitors of the theatre. Plays that the actors are very fond of, as well as the audiences.”

Notably, in several of the photographs, at least one individual seems to be working behind-the-scenes, such as a stagehand or ticket-taker. “The little people should not be forgotten,” Olaf says. “It’s the whole crew that makes a play, movie, or photograph.”

According to gallery partner Joseph Kraeutler, what makes the series most impressive is the modern twist Olaf has given to such classic plays. “Although these plays were originally produced on paper, they have been translated to the stage time after time by various theatre productions, each with their own views,” he says. “Olaf takes the imagery of these plays and injects both his unique style as well as Dutch celebrity into the imagery, making them entirely his own, as well as modernizing the images to fit into current Dutch culture. He does this while still staying true to the original story of the play. The ability to depict a play in a single image is not just a monstrous undertaking, but also one that invites criticism as different interpretations range dramatically and [are] fueled by the passions of theatre goers.”

Erwin Olaf: De La Mar is on view at Hasted Kraeutler’s Gallery 4 through July 1.

Hasted Kraeutler
537 West 24th Street
New York, NY
www.hastedkraeutler.com

 

Look for more of Mr. Olaf’s work in the upcoming Aperture book and exhibition, The New York Times Magazine Photographs. Mr. Olaf’s self-titled monograph, published by Aperture, is available now here. And his limited-edition portfolio – I WISH, I AM, I WILL BE – is available here.

*All images courtesy of Hasted Kraeutler.

Natural Woman: An Interview with Sanna Kannisto

Monday, June 20th, 2011

By Anna Carnick

Sanna Kannisto, Close Observer

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Sanna Kannisto’s latest series, Fieldwork, explores the dialects of nature and art. Since 1997, the Finnish photographer has spent several months each year living alongside biologists in the rainforests of Peru, Brazil, French Guyana, and Costa Rica. Adopting elements of her companions’ scientific methods and concepts, she’s developed her own form of visual research, extending her depictions of flora and fauna beyond the confines of the natural sciences. Her work addresses the acts of staging and image-making, showing not just the beauty of nature, but also the tools used to achieve her images. With gentle humor, Kannisto recognizes and uses the constraints of photography and science alike, investigating the concept of truth in photography to challenge how we perceive and “know” the natural world.

Kannisto’s Fieldwork exhibition is on view now through June 23 at the Aperture Gallery.

We spoke with Ms. Kannisto earlier this week.

 

AC: Where did your fascination with nature come from?
SK: I’m used to being near nature and forests. When I was child, we spent summers and weekends in our countryside home. I was always playing in the forest, singing, making huts, and collecting insects, frogs, mushrooms, and such with my little brother. We also went picking berries and fishing. It was a great, outdoor life. I also did some early nature studies. Maybe that has influenced my attitude towards nature. I have always been fascinated by how science explains the world to us.

You’ve been shooting in Latin American rain forests for almost fifteen years now. What was the original motivation for this setting?
My first idea was to make portraits of the plants and small animals of the rainforest. I wanted to find the most spectacular species imaginable. I was very interested in the huge species-richness and in the beauty of the rain forest. At the time, I was twenty-two, and I was just doing my final thesis for the first art school where I studied.

Why scientific stations?
I chose to work in scientific stations because I wanted to learn how scientists do their fieldwork. And I wanted to borrow some of their working methods as well as scientific methods of representation for my work.

How has your series evolved over the last several years?
I gave up on making portraits of animals and plants with white backgrounds quite soon, and I started to show my own photographic arrangements as part of the image. I also wanted to look more closely at what the scientists were doing. I started to think about how we actually approach nature in art and in science. I began to use different approaches and perspectives in my photographic work. I took different roles: the artist, the scientist, the animal, the visual researcher, and sometimes I adopted the attitude of a romantic traveler.

Prior to Fieldwork, did you have any formal scientific training?
No. I just have “practical training,” which has grown over the years.

What is your relationship or interaction like with the scientists at these field centers?  Is there a sense of collaboration?
The collaboration happens in small things. Everyone has their own projects and people are often busy with them. There is still always some collaboration—because most of the people are curious of others’ work as well. There’s discussion, sharing ideas and problems of everyday work. I have I teamed up with researchers for going out at night to mist-net bats, to count reptiles or mammals. I have been studying how birds are being captured with mist-nets. A few times, I have helped collect samples and pressed samples for herbarium. Some scientists have helped me with my shooting, and many of them have brought me “materials” from the forest. I have also gotten tips about where to find things. Scientific stations are quite isolated from the surrounding world (or they used to be!), so people do get to know each other when they are working in the same place for months and months. And they do help each other if needed.

How do you perceive the relationship between art and science? Has your understanding of that changed over time?
I like my role as a sort of mediator between art and science, drawing parallels between them and working very freely with different ideas. I think art and science are too separated. I wish that there were more interdisciplinary projects. Universities and research organizations have wonderful projects and also interesting equipment; it would be very fruitful if artists had more opportunities to work together with scientists.

Duct tape, wiring, and set construction are incorporated into many of these photos, exposing the methods of conventional nature photography, and even documenting your own role in the process. Why did you choose this approach?
I wanted to show the process and study my own role as an actor, as someone experiencing this world. I was interested in that.

Fieldwork explores the concepts of scientific visualization and, at the same time, questions the objective nature of photographs. [For example, for Monkey Bones, you created a scientific scene by gluing teeth back into the skull of a howler monkey in the lab alongside a scientist, then took the bones out to the forest to shoot.] How do you reconcile these two ideas?
The conception of the world that science gives us needs constant specification and correction. Photography and science are closely linked. There are similar ideas of objectivity or apparent objectivity in both practices. Like we all know, photography has been used as scientific tool since its beginnings. Both scientific and photographic truth is often something constructed according to institutional needs, or, in my work, according to my artistic needs.

Beyond general staging, the box sets you use also lend a theatrical element to some of these photographs. It makes them stage-like, and you a kind of director. What are your thoughts on this?
Photographing plants and animals in my small-scale studio has become one important working method for me. It’s one way to reduce and frame the abundance of the rain forest.

Strongly lit, simplified, white space is to focus the viewer’s attention, metaphorically creating the same kind of situation as in the theater. When the object has been isolated, taken out of its original setting—out of nature—and put to the stage it becomes special. The still lifes in the studio also have an allegorical nature. For me, photography is a medium that in itself documents the transience of life. Practically speaking, the studio enables me to work regardless of weather conditions, which is an advantage in the tropics.

You’ve mentioned previously that some of your images are inspired by sixteenth- and seventeenth-century scientific still life paintings. Are there any particular artists of those eras or others that particularly inspired you?
Especially the Dutch and Flemish painters like Frans Snyders, Rachel Ruysch, Jan Davidsz de Heem, Jan van Eyck, Johannes Vermeer, and many others.

There’s also an interesting back-and-forth between order and chaos, which seems to arise from trying to monitor something that is very much alive without disturbing it. Can you tell us a bit about working in a living environment?
Even though I have a clear idea of how an image should be, some situations can be unpredictable with live animals. This is something I enjoy.  I always like to work with some chance and intuition. It’s great when birds challenge the frame with their speed, or when I have had the chance to observe and find a way to photograph bats flying in my tent many nights . . . I guess learning more and more every year has changed my perspective and also trained my eyes to see always more in the nature.

At the same time that these photos realistically depict the natural world, there is an undeniable, whimsical element to them. Can you speak to that combination?
One of my aims is to use irony and humor to investigate the concept of truth in photography, and to ask how we actually want to view nature. According to Claude Lévi-Strauss, during the course of cultural evolution, man changes a raw and unpalatable nature into one that is cooked and digestible. Photography can resemble a cooking process of sorts. The photographed objects are made intelligible by being photographed, and are incorporated into culture. In the same way as in science, art, too, is used to try to bring the world under control. The impossibility of this task is also linked with a certain absurdity that I have noticed in my pictures.

 

Fieldwork is available now through Aperture.

The Fieldwork exhibition is at the Aperture Gallery through June 23rd.
547 West 27th Street, 4th Floor, New York, NY

This exhibition was made possible, in part, with generous support from FRAME, the Finnish Fund for Art Exchange; Finnish Cultural Foundation; and the Consulate General of Finland.

Watch our video of Ms. Kannisto discussing her work here.

Artist Profile:
Sanna Kannisto (born in Hämeenlinna, Finland, 1974) studied photography at the University of Art and Design in Helsinki. Her work has been exhibited at venues in more than twenty-five countries around the world, including Centre Pompidou, Paris; Maison Européenne de la Photographie, Paris; and Fotomuseum Winterthur, Switzerland.

Aperture on Press: Brian Ulrich

Friday, June 17th, 2011

Brian Ulrich is on press for his upcoming book Is This Place Great Or What at Main Choice Printers in China. This monograph presents the photographer’s decade-long exploration of the shifting tectonic plates that make up American consumer society. Ulrich focuses, in part, on photographing the architectural legacies of a retail-driven economy in the midst of collapse—shopping malls on the brink of demolition, empty big-box stores, and other retail structures in transition. Look for the book in stores this October! Is This Place Great Or What will accompany an exhibition at the Cleveland Museum of Art.

Read more here from Brian’s experience making the book on his blog Not if But When.


Southern Hospitality at LOOK3 Charlottesville

Thursday, June 16th, 2011

By Paula Kupfer

In every sense, the sun shone brightly on Charlottesville, Virginia last weekend. As our naturally ventilated automobile (read: no AC) made its way from New York, hundreds of photographers flocked to Virginia for three days of photo discussions, talks, and exhibits at LOOK3 Festival of the Photograph. Blame it on my short history of photo festival attendance, or perhaps consider it a testament to the uniqueness of this particular gathering, but LOOK3 carried a vibe more akin to a summer camp reunion than a meeting of industry professionals. The atmosphere was relaxed, the setting pleasant and casual—the green, Southern town a welcome change of scenery for most city dwellers—and the festival seamlessly organized and smoothly run. Charlottesville’s quiet charm was underscored by the practical layout of the pedestrian plaza, which LOOK3 attendees and photo exhibitions took over for three days of lively conversations and encounters.

The subject of this year’s festival—the fourth incarnation of LOOK3—was “home,” and it coursed through the weekend with a force that could only be matched by the desire, on such hot, summer days, to run off the pedestrian plaza and wade into the river. (Arguably the most popular part of the festival, the swimming hole, surrounded with its earthy banks and green foliage, became a drifting haven for LOOK3 attendants. Camera toting, bathing suit-clad folks gathered on the banks, while small groups floated up and down the stream.)

The theme was especially palpable throughout the talks and slideshow presentations on the festival program: Prom, Mary Ellen Mark and Martin Bell’s quirky, humorous film, recalled the awkwardness and uncertainty of this ritual celebration, while Gillian Laub’s slideshow about her grandparents brought back memories of our own, crazy uncles. Chris Anderson engaged the audience with photos of his latest project, focused on his family; Ashley Gilbertson passionately reminded his audience of the difficult challenges faced by soldiers returning home from the front lines; and LaToya Ruby Frazier presented a lyrical poem and photographs of her hometown, Braddock, Pennsylvania, and her artistic collaboration with her mother. The eclectic, sincere conversation between Sally Mann and Nan Goldin, probably the most anticipated and memorable of the weekend, turned the stage of the Pavilion Theater into someone’s living room, and us into invisible spectators, witnesses to this most frank of exchanges between two legendary photographers. Among its many twists and turns, the heart-to-heart revealed unexpected affinities between the two strikingly different women.

Photographs and videos of war and conflict were prominent throughout—a different kind of reflection on “home.” The slideshow presentations on the last evening showcased thought-provoking projects by Peter Van Agtmael, presenting visual reportage from Iraq, Afghanistan, and the U.S.; Richard Mosse, juxtaposing footage from military helicopters (à la Wikileaks’s “Collateral Murder”) with screens of war-themed videogames played by recovering soldiers at the Walter Reed Medical Center; and Erin Trieb, combining her own voice with black-and-white photographs to evoke the strenuous return home of a soldier.

Standout satellite exhibitions included Prime Collective’s Prime Show exhibition at Random Row Books, which held an early morning opening enhanced by coffee and pancakes, and Luceo Images’s Altered States: The Way We Live Now at The Bridge Collective Arts Alliance—both showcasing documentary projects by young photographers.

The presentation of Jacob Krupnick’s “Girl Walk//All Day,” a music video of dancer Anne Marsen boogieing her way through New York’s public transport system, closed the festival on a celebratory and lighthearted note. As the film ended, Marsen herself poked her head out from under the projection screen, launching an impromptu dance party amid enthusiastic applause.

Without a doubt, the festival succeeded in capturing the present-day pulse of photography and set high stakes for the next LOOK3.

Paula Kupfer is a Brooklyn-based photographer and writer, and the Editorial and Circulation Coordinator for Aperture magazine.