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Archive for August, 2011

The Summer Show at the Scott Nichols Gallery

Wednesday, August 31st, 2011


Young Girl, 1962. © Dorothea Lange

The Summer Show

Exhibition on view:
July 7–September 3, 2011

Scott Nichols Gallery:
49 Geary Street
Fourth Floor
San Francisco, CA
(415) 788-4641

The Scott Nicholas Gallery is currently exhibiting photos from their own collection. The Summer Show features works by legendary and contemporary photographers, including many published by Aperture: Wynn Bullock, Imogen Cunningham, Dorothea Lange, Edward Weston, and (Aperture founding member) Ansel Adams. Aperture books from these photographers include Wynn Bullock: Masters of Photography and Edward Weston: Nudes. The second photogravure edition of Dorothea Lange’s Migrant Mother is available from Aperture. Many of these artists’ works can also be found in Aperture’s golden anniversary book, Photography Past/Forward: Aperture at 50.

New Limited-Edition Photograph by Jason Lazarus

Tuesday, August 30th, 2011

Untitled © Jason Lazarus

We are excited to introduce this limited-edition print, Untitled by Jason Lazarus to our collecting audience. The photograph is drawn from the ongoing series 2004-present, in which Lazarus utilizes the conceptual self-portrait as a mode of personal and cultural investigation. Whether personally, politically, or culturally oriented, the photographic works are consistently tied back to the artist’s insistence on using contemporary photography as a conceptual parameter with which to investigate. The sometimes visually disparate results beckon the viewer to actively navigate the place where, conceptually, the images coalesce.  This place is not only filled with the personal and the public, but an uncertainty that seeks to empathize with an audience in the predicament of the same-shared world.

Lazarus collaborated with Aperture earlier this year on his Too Hard To Keep photo archive. Visitors were encouraged to bring in sentimental photographs that were too hard to keep, but too meaningful to destroy. In addition to being added to the project’s ongoing blog, an installation of the images was on view at Aperture Gallery, and was also part of a group exhibition at the Queens Museum of Art.

Jason Lazarus (b.1975) received his MFA in Photography in 2003 and has actively exhibited around the country and abroad while teaching photography part-time at Columbia College and the School of the Art Institute in Chicago. Notable honors include an Illinois Arts Council Fellowship award, 2009; the Richard H. Driehaus Foundation Award, Emerging Artist, 2008; and the Emerging Artist Artadia Grant in 2006. Jason’s work can be found in the collections of the Art Institute of Chicago, the Milwaukee Museum of Art, and the Bank of America LaSalle Photography collection among many others.

2011 Auction Catalog Now LIVE! Auction Spotlight: Sasha Rudensky

Friday, August 26th, 2011

Aperture’s 2011 Benefit and Auction catalog is now online and open for bidding! This year’s catalog features many talented artists, from emerging to established photographers. You can bid online through our website, and at the event on Monday, October 17th. The proceeds from our 2011 Benefit, Auction, and SNAP! Party—our most important fundraising event of the year—are essential for Aperture’s publications, exhibitions, and public programs, which provide unmatched exposure for artists and scholars working in photography.

In this clip, auction-featured photographer Sasha Rudensky explains how her work is related to her personal history. She describes her practice as being in between documentary and staged photography in a “loose way.” Rudensky also speaks about the polished, aesthetic style that emerges from the reGeneration2 artists, and her experience being a part of the group.

 

Rudensky’s image Red Square is part of our SNAP! Benefit Party Emerging Artists Auction. She writes, of the image:

Red Square was taken from a friend’s window in January of 2010. Initially I wanted to climb out on the roof deck in order to shoot from outside but due to heavy snowfall, the door has been barricaded. As it often happens, limitation became a source of strength, so when I set up to have the view framed by the window I realized it clarified the ideas behind the work. The iconic glitter of the red square presented as a projection, rather than a real space, sets up for the underlying theme of the project, an interweaving between illusion and fantasy as well as every day reality in post-Soviet Russia.

Stay tuned for weekly blog posts giving insight into select items from our Benefit’s Live, Silent, and Emerging Artists Auctions!

Click here to start bidding online for this work and others!

Click here for more information about our 2011 Benefit & Auction.

Le Mois de la Photo à Montréal

Friday, August 26th, 2011

Interrogation et interrupteur, de la série en cours de route (detail), 2010, © Corine Lemieux

Lucidity. Inward Views:
September 8–October 9, 2011
Numerous events and exhibits in several locations throughout Montreal, Canada.

 

Pre-Launch Party:
Wednesday, September 7, 2011
6:00–10:00 pm

Arsenal
2020 William (Corner of Canning and Notre-Dame W.)
(514) 390-0383

$50

Event Launch Party:
Thursday, September 8, 2011
6:00–11:00 pm

Arsenal
2020 William (Corner of Canning and Notre-Dame W.)
(514) 390-0383

FREE

Lucidity. Inward Views is the theme of the 12th presentation of the photography festival Le Mois de la Photo à Montréal. From September 8 to October 9, 2011, 25 solo exhibitions will take place all over Montreal featuring works from Canadian and international artists. The Aperture-published photographers Roger Ballen and Rinko Kawauchi will both be exhibiting their work in the festival. The work of Ballen was featured in Aperture issues 173 and 201 and Aperture also offers his limited-edition print Hideway.  Kawauchi’s work was featured in Aperture issue 177 and Aperture recently published her book Illuminance. Aperture also offers two of her limited-edition prints, Untitled, from Illuminance and Untitled, 2011.

Both the Ballen and Kawauchi exhibitions will be presented at the Arsenal, from September 8 to October 9.

Staff Picks: The Mexican Suitcase

Thursday, August 25th, 2011

Trisha Ziff‘s new film The Mexican Suitcase explores the story of the suitcase and the context of the Spanish Civil War. It is complex and layered and raises lots of issues about photography and history. It will be shown at the IFC Center in New York for one week beginning August 26th, with Ziff doing a Q&A session after the first showing of the film at 5:25pm.

— Chris Boot, Executive Director, Aperture Foundation

Click here for movie times.

Click here to read an interview with The Mexican Suitcase director Trisha Ziff.

 

Aperture at DUMBO Arts Festival 2011

Wednesday, August 24th, 2011

This year’s DUMBO Arts Festival runs from September 23 – 25, centrally located on a stretch of DUMBO’s Water Street. For the event, Aperture will create a pop-up bookstore, featuring titles from our fabulous Fall lineup, as well as older classics.

Our partner United Photo Industries will be using an eco-friendly but unusual exhibition model: shipping containers. They are also looking for work by American photographers to include in their foto/pod “shantytown.” With upwards of 185,000 visitors over the three day festival, it’s a great opportunity to network and be seen. Click here for more information and to find out how to submit your work before the September 1st deadline!

DUMBO Arts Festival 2011
Friday, September 23, 6:00 – 9:00 pm
Saturday, September 24, 12:00 – 8:00 pm
Sunday, September 25, 12:00 – 6:00 pm

Fall Issue Available Now!

Wednesday, August 24th, 2011

Issue 204 features:

Photographer Tod Papageorge discusses photography, teaching, and his new collection of writings.

A selection from Cyprien Gaillard‘s Polaroid series Geographical Analogies.

Mary Panzer revisits the political and controversial group The Photo League.

Martin Parr presents Rimaldas Viksraitis‘s raw documentation of a rural Lithuanian village.

Lois Conner, featured on our cover, shares new color work from her residency at the Italian home of Sol and Carol LeWitt.

A group of writers and photographers examine the role of images, ten years after the 9/11 attacks.

 

Click here to subscribe now and get a FREE book!

 

25 Years 25 Artists: An Interview with Julie Saul

Wednesday, August 24th, 2011

Julie Saul © Elliot Black Photography

Art dealer Julie Saul was honored for her contributions to photography at last year’s Aperture’s 2010 Benefit. This year she commemorates her gallery’s 25th anniversary with the exhibition 25 Years/25 Artists and an accompanying catalogue. The show features a single photograph from each year of her gallery’s history and will be on view through Friday, August 26th. Among the artists include Luigi Ghirri, Maira Kalman, Sally Gall, Penelope Umbrico and James Welling.

What are some of your favorite photobooks?

Some of the earliest books when I first became interested in photography. There were very few books published on photography so you could virtually own all of the photography books back in the 70s. There was Diane Arbus, there was George Platt Lynes there was Danny Lyon…but there were very few books so you ended up spending a lot of more time really scrutinizing the individual images than you do today because now there are so many you can barely flip through the books that you own. Perhaps my favorite photobook was one given to me when I left the Met’s department of 20th century art where I interned in 1982. They gave me this gorgeous huge George Platt Lynes book that I think was one of the first books published by Jack Woody with Twin Palms, and I loved that book. Then I did a show of his work later at my gallery and somebody stole it! It had been signed by everybody in that department and that was truly one of the worst losses that I have had.

What has been your favorite show you’ve seen this summer?

La Carte D’Après Nature at Matthew Marks, curated by Thomas Demand. I love the fact that it was curated by an artist. I think shows curated by artists are very interesting and it gives me a whole new insight into Thomas Demand’s work. It also includes 50 prints by one of my favorite photographers who I have shown a couple of times over the years- Luigi Ghirri.

You were the first American dealer to show Ghirri’s work, correct?

I was. And I still think that he is a completely brilliant and under-recognized (although probably not for long) European artist. He’s sort of the William Eggleston of Europe in the 70s, and from what I’ve seen from European work of that time, particularly of Italian work, it was very romantic, it was black and white. Ghirri had this very conceptual point of view and worked in color and really understood media so I think that it’s great that he’s finally getting the attention he deserves. Seeing his work in the context of the Matthew Marks exhibition will really be an important step for him.

What are some of your most meaningful relationships that you have had with artists over the years?

Often a long relationship is a good relationship and you can get used to each other and you get closer to each other just like a long term [romantic] relationship. If you look at my 25th Anniversary show, the first artist I ever showed, Andy Bush, is still with the gallery and we’ve certainly had our ups and downs over the years but I’ve been able to gain an understanding of the way he works and thinks by having such a long term relationship. I would say that what makes a good relationship is the artist’s ability and willingness to really collaborate with you. Not to see the gallery as a battlefield, but see it as a matrimonial bed, a place of collaboration, sharing resources and ideas. One of the more fun things I’ve done is working with Maira Kalman who had never really had gallery representation before because she normally does books, theater design, textile design and applied arts. So for her it has been a great adventure, and for me to figure out how to promote some of these works, because she has never thought about trying to fit within the traditional gallery system, its been really fun.

Although you represent artists working in a variety of media, what made you want to specialize in photography?

I started with a specialization in photography because I felt like it was important to have a distinct identity within the larger New York art world. Within my larger academic studies in art history I did my thesis on a Bauhaus photographer, but as you know the Bauhaus is about work in many different media. Moholy Nagy believed that every medium has its proper application so he thought for representational art, photography was the medium and for abstract art, painting was the medium. I identify with, and show a great deal of, photography but my interests and enthusiasms are by no means limited to strictly photography. And furthermore a lot of the artists I represent, actually enjoy working in the way that I described, different media for different projects. I’m very interested in artists who take a very freewheeling approach to the medium.

What are some of things you are most proud of exhibiting over the past 25 years?

Well I think the 25th Anniversary show itself is a good example of that. We do eight or nine shows a year and I’ve had the difficult task of choosing one work from one show during a year where literally hundreds of works have been exhibited.

More information about Julie Saul Gallery.

Click here to buy tickets to Aperture’s 2011 Benefit and Auction, honoring Bruce Davidson, Gerhard Steidl and Robert Anthione.

Interview by Aperture Work Scholar Aliza Sena.

Charlotte Dumas: Sneak Peek from our 2011 Benefit and Auction

Thursday, August 18th, 2011

Moxie, 2011 © Charlotte Dumas/Julie Saul Gallery, NY

Aperture’s 2011 Benefit and Auction catalogue will be live and open for bidding next week! In the meantime, you can check out auction-featured photographer Charlotte Dumasprofile in the New York Times Magazine. Her Retrieved series shows retired 9/11 rescue dogs, and the above portrait Moxie will be one of the many fantastic items up for bidding.

Click here for more information about our 2011 Benefit and Auction

Stephen Shames’ Bronx Boys

Wednesday, August 17th, 2011


© Stephen Shames

Stephen Shames spent over twenty years photographing young boys growing up in the Bronx. Although the project started as a simple photojournalism assignment, Shames quickly became fascinated by the neglected New York borough and continued to document the vibrant streets. The fruits of his labor are finally being published as a digital monograph titled Bronx Boys (FotoEvidence). The unconventional format provides universal access to readers from around the world, as well as options to zoom in on images for close viewing.

Stephen Shames worked with Aperture for his book The Black Panthers, commemorating the fortieth anniversary of the Party. The Black Panthers Portfolio, an accompanying set of photographs is now on sale! Visit the Black Panthers microsite.

Shames is founder of Lead Uganda, which puts AIDS orphans and child soldiers into school in Uganda. He is represented by Steven Kasher Gallery, New York, and Polaris Images. He currently resides in Brooklyn.