Thursday, April 30, 2009

FotoTapeta, Nan Goldin and Annie Leibovitz

Nan Goldin by Nan Goldin; Annie Leibovitz by Krzysztof Wojciechowski

Out there in the ethersphere is a photography-related site by the name of FotoTapeta or Photo Wallpaper. The thing that led me there was an interview with Nan Goldin that I stumbled on. A quite interesting interview actually, where she is much more open than usual. Backtracking, I found an interview with Annie Leibovitz as well. Both are a little old but still relevant. Those are the only two things in English on the site; everything else is in Polish.


Photographs by Jerzy Lewczyński

Still, it does offer one a chance to see what contemporary photographers in Poland are doing and discover some non-contemporary photographers that might be unknown to you. For instance, I didn't know Jerzy Lewczyński work. It's not all great but some of it is very nice. (From 2005 and from 2009.)

Steven Meisel

Meisel, right of center, in black


I find this one awe-inspiring:

April 27, 2009
‘Three Hundred and Seventeen and Counting’
By David Sebbah The photographer Steven Meisel has photographed every single cover of Italian Vogue for the last 20 years and nine months. From visual parodies of super models heading into rehab, to B-listers posing on the red carpet, to photographing artist Elizabeth Peyton for the cover way back in 1998, Meisel has used his lens to tap into the zeitgeist. This week, the photographer’s third book, “Three Hundred and Seventeen and Counting,” will be published by Mallard/Janvier. For information about purchasing the book, write to mallard.janvier@gmail.com. © 2009 The New York Times Company


249 Italian Vogue covers in a row? For 20 years? 317 magazine covers? The guy has been making photographs for almost 30 years, that's over ten covers a year. That is an incredible run. (And beyond my capacity to figure out just how lucrative it would be.)

Actually, I don't find Meisel a particularly interesting photographer--especially, for fashion work--but he is remarkably ubiquitous and quite a few curators, gallery owners, editors and the like disagree with me. He's in every museum show with fashion as the theme. He shot the book "Sex" for Madonna. So, he's worth checking into.

Here is a very interesting article/interview with Meisel. It's been cut down from a longer article in the May 2009 issue of Vogue.

Robert Capa, Gerda Taro, David Seymour (Chim)

B&W photos by David Seymour/Magnum; Color photo by Tony Cenicola/The New York Times


One of the most wonderful stories from the history of photography is the rediscovery of the Robert Capa/Gerda Taro/David Seymour negatives. The neg strips, rolled up and stored in three cardboard boxes, are thought to have been given by Capa to his darkroom manager for safekeeping when Capa fled Paris for New York in 1939. They ended up in Mexico. Their existence was revealed in 2007 and finally given to the International Center of Photography (founded by Capa's brother, Cornell.)

The latest episode of this story was reported in today's New York Times. It's an interesting article. And the slideshow is good too.

Wednesday, April 29, 2009

New Listings Added to Events Page

Here.

Or below.

Actually, take note that the Events page is dynamic, which is to say, I will add to and subtract from it on a regular basis.

Monday, April 27, 2009

Bob Dylan, Bruce Davidson, Josef Koudelka


Ben Ratliff reviewed the new Bob Dylan album in today's New York Times. What I found interesting about the piece is the prominence afforded the photographers who shot the front and back covers: a third of the short review talks about how the images align or don't with the music. And there seems to be an assumption in the article that we all know who Bruce Davidson and Josef Koudelka are. I think few probably do, but it's nice that the reader is encouraged to think that s/he should know who they are.

Sunday, April 26, 2009

Danny Lyon in the New York Times


A very nice article on Danny Lyon in the New York Times today. Almost makes the famously cantankerous photographer feel warm and fuzzy.

Saturday, April 25, 2009

Photography-Related Events in April & May

(Call before you go anywhere, things change.)

Thursday, April 30, 6-8 pm
Opening reception and book signing
Sites of Impact: Meteorite Craters Around the World by Stan Gaz
ClampArt Gallery, 521-531 West 25th St., Ground Floor
646-230-0020
From Princeton Architectural Press: The eightyfive b&w photographs collected in Sites of Impact transcend the purely documentary. In addition to photographs of the craters and their surrounding landscapes, Gaz includes photographs of actual meteorites and of his own carefully crafted sculptures that recreate their often dynamic form and mimic their specific mineral content. Advance copies of the book are presently available only at the gallery.

Also at Clamp Art on April 30, 6-8 pm
Opening reception and book signing
Aids In Odessa by Andrea Diefenbach
From Hatje Cantz: In the spring of 2006, the German photographer Andrea Diefenbach (b. 1974) spent time with several HIV-positive Ukranian women and men as they went about their daily routines in the harbor city of Odessa. Ukraine has been among those countries most severely affected by the collapse of the Soviet Union. Recently Ukraine set an unhappy record for the highest rate of new infections in Europe.


Friday, May 1, 6:00 to 7:30 pm
Book signing
Not in Fashion by Mark Borthwick
ICP Museum Store, 1133 Ave of the Americas at 43rd Street
212-857-9725
From Rizzoli: This book showcases over 200 images from Borthwick’s best fashion editorials, celebrity portraits, and advertising work, as well as excerpts from his personal journals. The journal pages, consisting of Polaroids, sketches, and notes on shoots, reveal the workings of a photographer’s mind.
(Friday nights at ICP feature a DJ and complimentary wine and admission to the museum from 5:00 to 8:00 pm is by donation. You can also order signed books by calling 212-857-9725.)


Saturday, May 2, 6-8 pm

Opening reception and book signing
The Other Half of the Sky by Lili Almog
Andrea Meislin Gallery, 26 West 26th St., Suite 214
212-627-2552
From powerHouse: Over the past two years, Lili Almog has photographed minority women in the countryside, small cities, and villages of China. In her second monograph, The Other Half of the Sky, Almog examines these women at a time when the demands of rapid growth and a sweeping desire for modernity is encroaching upon the traditions and values that have sustained their cultures as intact microcosms in the larger picture of China for centuries.


Wednesday, May 6, 2009, 6:30 pm
Lecture
Melanie Bonajo
Aperture Gallery, 547 West 27th St.
212-505-5555
From Aperture: Photographer Melanie Bonajo will discuss how she works as an artist, performing and exhibiting her photographs in art institutions around the world. A solo show of her work will be on view at PPOW, New York, in May 2009. In addition to numerous exhibition catalogues, I Have a Room, a retrospective book of her work, was released in September 2008 (Capricious Publishing).


Thursday, May 7, 2009, 5:00 pm
Panel Discussion
Contemporary Portraiture with Doug DuBois and Richard Renaldi
Affordable Art Fair, 20 West 22nd St., Ste. 1512
212-255-2003
Admission: $20
From Aperture: Doug DuBois (All the Days and Nights, Aperture, 2009) and Richard Renaldi (Figure and Ground, Aperture, 2006; Fall River Boys, Charles Lane Press, 2009), will speak about their respective bodies of work and how they fit into the broader context of portraiture in contemporary photography.


May 8, 2009
Conversation with Ron Haviv, Franco Pagetti, Alberto Cairo and Christiane Amanpour
Doors open at 7 pm, Program begins at 8 pm
401 Projects, 401 West St.,
between Charles and West 10th St.s
Please RSVP by April 30 to com.was@icrc.org or 202-587-4618
This conversation with Haviv, Pagetti (both VII Photographers), Cairo (International Committee of the Red Cross-Afghanistan) and Amanpour (CNN Chief International Correspondent) is in conjunction with an exhibit opening at 401 called Our World At War. The show features "the work of world renowned war photographers" James Nachtwey, Christopher Morris, Franco Pagetti, Ron Haviv, and Antonin Kratochvil.
Cairo, by the way, had a book published of his experiences in Kabul. It was issued in Italy (2003) and then reprinted in French (2007). The photos are by Sebastiao Salgado and though I've not seen the book and don't know how many there are, the cover photo is nice.



Thursday, May 14 - Sunday, May 17
The New York Photo Festival
Lots of stuff going on


Friday, May 15, 6:00 to 7:30 pm
Book signing
Tim Walker Pictures by Tim Walker
ICP Museum Store, 1133 Ave of the Americas at 43rd Street
212-857-9725
From Te Neues: This book offers us a glimpse into the artistic process used by fashion photographer Tim Walker. Featuring sketches, contact-sheets, collages and Polaroids, this comprehensive overview of his work brings us deep inside his glamorous world of adventure. The over-sized format showcases some of the most imaginative and exuberant art being produced today.


Saturday, May 16, 1:00 pm
Book signing
Female Bodybuilders by Martin Schoeller
The Randall Scott Gallery, 111 Front St., Dumbo, Brooklyn
212-796-2190


Saturday, May 16, 7:00-10:00 pm

Opening reception and book signing
Edge of Vision: The Rise of Abstraction in Photography by Lyle Rexer
Aperture Gallery, 547 West 27th St.,
212-505-5555
From Aperture: From the beginning, abstraction has been intrinsic to photography, and its persistent popularity reveals much about the medium. The Edge of Vision: The Rise of Abstraction in Photography is the first book in English to document this phenomenon and to put it into historical context, while also examining the diverse approaches thriving within contemporary photography.


Tuesday, May 26, 2009
Artist's Talk and Book Signing
Sawdust Mountain by Eirik Johnson
Aperture Gallery, 547 West 27th St.,
212-505-5555
From Aperture: A culmination of four years photographing throughout Oregon, Washington, and Northern California, Sawdust Mountain focuses on the tenuous relationship between industries reliant upon natural resources and the communities they support. Sawdust Mountain records a region affected by historic economic complexities and, by extension, one aspect of our fraught relationship with the environment in the twenty-first century.


Friday, May 29, 6:00 to 7:30 pm
Book signing
Yard Sale Photographs by Adam Bartos
ICP Museum Store, 1133 Ave of the Americas at 43rd Street
212-857-9725
From Damiani: In turning his lens to the random constellations formed by rummaging and perusing, Bartos has struck gold with his still lifes of "chance meetings," the bizarre conjunctions of objects that occur at yard sales. Photographing at close range from an elevated vantage point, Bartos allows the viewer to connect the dots, supplying only the raw combinations of materials for our story-making.

King Assassination Photos Surface

Outside of room 306, Theatrice Bailey, the brother of the motel's owner,
sweeps blood from the balcony. By Henry Groskinsky/Time & Life Pictures



The LIFE website is always fun to peruse, but this is really something:

LIFE Presents: Never-Before-Published Photos From Memphis, April 4, 1968
On April 4, 1968, LIFE photographer Henry Groskinsky and writer Mike Silva, on assignment in Alabama, learned that Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., had been shot at the Lorraine Motel in Memphis. They raced to the scene and there, incredibly, had unfettered access to the hotel grounds, Dr. King's room, and the surrounding area. For reasons that have been lost in the intervening years, the photographs taken that night and the next day were never published. Until now.

Roger Ballen Interview

Bite, 2007 by Roger Ballen


American Photo has an interview with Roger Ballen in advance of the release of his new book, Boarding House (May 2009.) I love Outland but wasn't as impressed with Shadow Chamber. What I've seen of Boarding House is more interesting. The sets and backdrops have gotten very elaborate.

Photobook Auction Watch

Monday, April 27, at 10 am, Doyle New York will be hosting an auction of RARE BOOKS, AUTOGRAPHS & PHOTOGRAPHS. There are quite a few interesting photographs but of particular interest to me are the seven photobooks up for auction. As I wrote previously, if the economic downturn gets worse, prices should start dropping. I'm curious to see how these books will do, as a bellwether before the May 14 Swann Galleries auction of Photographic Literature and Fine Photographs.

These are the books:

AARONS, SLIM, A Wonderful Time: An intimate portrait of the good life. Harper and Row, [1974]. Estimate $300-400

BRASSAI, Paris de nuit. Editions "Arts et Metiers Graphiques," n.d. (1933). Missing one page. Estimate $300-500

CARTIER-BRESSON, HENRI. America in Passing. Little, Brown, 1991. + CARTIER-BRESSON, RATNA. Nos ombres en fete. N,p., 1990. One of 250 copies with a small original Cartier-Bresson photograph (taken in 1937) tipped-in at the end of the text. + And four other pamphlets. All six items are inscribed by Cartier-Bresson to Lincoln Kirstein. Estimate $400-600

DENBY, EDWIN. In Public, In Private. The Decker Press, 1948. Photographs by Rudy Burckhardt. Estimate $300-500

GOSSAGE, JOHN. Stadt des Schwarz. Berlin: Loosestrife Editions, 1987. One of 500 copies, signed and additionally inscribed. + Together with three other photobooks, including Snake Eyes by Terri Wiefenbach and John Gossage (Loosestrife Editions, 2002); In the Time of the Wall by John Gossage (Loosestrife Editions, 2004); and NY '71 by Daido Moriyama (PPP, 2002). Estimate $600-900

MAN RAY. Photographs by Man Ray, Paris, 1920-1934. James Thrall Soby, (1934). + Together with a copy of Formes nues. Paris: Forme, 1935. Publisher's metal spiral binding with a photographic cover by Man Ray. Estimate $1,500-2,500

STRAND, PAUL. The Mexican Portfolio. Da Capo Press, (1967). Second edition, one of 1000 copies signed by Paul Strand. Estimate $1,500-2,500

You can look at the catalog online or the real items can be viewed at Doyle New York Saturday and Sunday at 175 E. 87th St.

Garry Winogrand Family Snapshots

Last year, James Danzinger posted some photographs by Garry Winogrand on his blog, The Year in Pictures, which are a real treat. They look just like Winogrand photos, only they're of his kids, so they're basically family snapshots. If you click on them, most are big too, which is extra nice. Here.

Walker Evans in the New York Times

The New York Times of Friday, April 24, 2009, has an article in their Escapes section about following Walker Evans' path through the back roads of Alabama. It can be found online here.

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Events on Thursday, April 23, 2009, NYC


Access To Life (Left) Mali © Paolo Pellegrin/Magnum Photos; Russia © Alex Majoli/Magnum Photos

Book Signing with Magnum Photographers

On Wednesday (which is to say right now) there is a panel discussion about a project where eight photojournalists, all members of Magnum, document the transformative effect of antiretroviral treatment on the bodies, lives, and families of HIV infected people around the world.

Tomorrow there will be a book signing at Aperture which will include some of the following photographers: Jonas Bendiksen, Jim Goldberg, Alex Majoli, Steve McCurry, Paolo Pellegrin, Gilles Peress, Eli Reed, and Larry Towell.

Most likely not Gilles Peress who I'm told will not sign books anymore.

Thursday, April 23, 2009, 7:00 pm
Aperture Gallery
547 West 27th Street
212-505-5555




Andrew Bush Book Signing and Reception

Tomorrow, at Yossi Milo Gallery, an exhibit of Andrew Bush's series of photographs called Vector Portraits will be opening. A year ago, a book of these images called Drive was published by Yale University Press and I suppose that's the book they'll have on hand to be signed though he does have a couple of other books under his belt as well.

This is how the gallery describes the work in the show:

Begun in 1989, Andrew Bush’s series Vector Portraits was taken while the artist drove the city streets and freeways of Los Angeles. Either stopped in traffic or traveling at speeds of 20 to 70 miles per hour, the artist took portraits of other drivers using a medium-format roll-film camera and flash attached to the passenger side door of his car. Extended titles note particulars of speed, location or time with scientific precision while leaving other details unclear, such as “Man traveling southbound at 67 mph on U.S. Route 101 near Montecito, California, at 6:31 p.m. on or around Sunday, August 28, 1994”.

The photographs capture subjects in the ambiguous combination of private and public space created by a “private room on wheels.” The drivers are either alone in their vehicles lost in thought, or with passengers, revealing the dynamic between families, couples or friends. An examination of people and their cars in a city famous for its car culture, the series addresses personal privacy and challenges our definition of public space.

I suppose...

Thursday, April 23, 2009, 6:00–8:00 pm
Yossi Milo Gallery
525 West 25th Street
212-414-0370
info@yossimilo.com

No Caption Needed

The website No Caption Needed is one of the smarter blogs around on the subject of photography. This is how they describe themselves:

No Caption Needed is a book and a blog, each dedicated to discussion of the role that photojournalism and other visual practices play in a vital democratic society.

The site is written by two professors, not photography teachers but "Rhetoric and Public Culture" teachers. Robert Hariman teaches at Northwestern University, in the department of communication studies. John Louis Lucaites is professor of rhetoric and public culture, department of communication and culture and adjunct professor of American studies, Indiana University.

That said, they don't get too academic (because I know that's not too cool these days.) But they do explore issues of concern, speculation and interest to the practice and consumption of contemporary photography.

Check it out.

Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Robert Adams Wins Hasselblad Award

Adams at the ceremony in San Francisco. Photos by Daniel Cheek, Joshua Chuang and Lars Andersson


Alright, so this is a little old but it was news to me. Couldn't have gone to a better photographer though.

Robert Adams, U.S. Photographer, Wins $61,000 Hasselblad Award
By Niklas Magnusson

April 15 (Bloomberg) -- Robert Adams, the U.S. photographer known for his images of the American west, has won the 2009 Hasselblad Foundation International Award in Photography.

Adams, who is based in Astoria, Oregon, received the 500,000 kronor ($61,000) prize at a ceremony in San Francisco yesterday, the foundation -- which is based in Gothenburg, Sweden -- said in an e-mailed statement issued today. It described Adams as “one of the most important and influential photographers of the last 40 years.”

“During that time, he has worked almost exclusively in the American West, and, as photography has altered and fragmented, he has refined and reaffirmed its inherent language, adapting the legacies of 19th-century and modernist photography to his own very singular purpose,” the foundation said.


You can read the "chat" with Adams at the ceremony here.

Deborah Turbeville Signs Books

Deborah Turbeville has a book just published called Casa No Name and she'll be out and about NYC signing copies.

Wednesday, April 22, she'll be at Rizzoli Bookstore on 57th Street (between 5th & 6th Avenues) though I don't know the time. Call them at (800) 52-BOOKS or (212) 759-2424.

Then, on Friday, April 24, from 6:00–7:30 pm she'll be at the ICP Museum Store (1133 Avenue of the Americas at 43rd Street). If you can't go and want a signed copy, you can call the store and they'll reserve one for you.

The Recession Hits Aperture

Aperture is in the process of laying off staff and cutting the number of books they publish. Here is the press release.

Realistically, we can expect this from all the other publishing houses. There will be fewer photobooks published over the next couple of years and the ones that are published, for the most part, will only be ones that are certain (by publishing standards) to be popular (and will probably be cheaply produced and priced.) As the recession drags on, or gets worse, more people will lose their jobs and will be forced to sell more things to get by. We can expect more stuff to end up on eBay, more books to appear at auction, more used books in the bookstores.

The lack of money, the fear of lacking money and the divesting of possessions will depress prices. That's the way these things go, economically.

What this means is that those books you've coveted for so long but couldn't afford will be within reach...assuming that your access to capital is secure and stays consistent and you don't get spooked by what's going on around you. You'll be able to pick up many bargains (by today's past-looking standards), fill in those gaps in the collection.

The only problem with snapping up everything within reach is that if this recession turns into a depression and hangs around, most everything you snap up will be relatively worthless for many years. Because, overall, there will be less money floating around. And we will therefore be a poorer country. Possibly, for a while.

But you know what, the books and the work they hold will intrinsically hold their value: the work will still be good, enjoyable to look at, interact with. And in the end, that's the only reason to buy art.

Taschen Book Sale



Taschen is having a book sale which unfortunately does not include many photography related books. It does however include many film related books, so, if that's of interest you can go here to see what and where they have them for sale.

Here are the photobooks that they've discounted:



And of course no collection is complete without these:


Ed Kashi at Leica Gallery

This coming Saturday, 25 April, 2009, from 2 to 4 pm, Ed Kashi will be signing books at the Leica Gallery.

PowerHouse has just published a new book of his work called Three in which Kashi juxtaposes three images as a triptych.

He has shot editorial and documentary photography for many years. Other books of his include:

No Surrender: The Protestants, Self-published, 1991

When the Borders Bleed: The Struggle Of The Kurds, Pantheon, 1992

Denied: The Crisis of America’s Uninsured, Talking Eyes Media, 2003

Aging in America: The Years Ahead, powerHouse Books, 2003

Curse Of The Black Gold: 50 Years of Oil in the Niger Delta, powerHouse Books, 2008

Larry Towell & Steve McCurry at Tishman

For those in New York (and I'm afraid that event-wise, this will be a New York-centric blog), Aperture has a panel discussion coming up tomorrow, Wednesday, April 22.

Photography in Context:
Access to Life - Photojournalism on AIDS

Wednesday, April 22, 7:00pm
Tishman Auditorium
66 West 12th Street
Admission free; no reserved seating

Some of the world’s leading photojournalists from Magnum Photos, including Steve McCurry and Larry Towell, discuss 25 years of photojournalism and the global AIDS crisis.

Follow Up to Taliban Ambush

The photo on the front page of the New York Times today is of the casket of the soldier killed in the ambush mentioned in the last post.

And on a related note: Tyler Hicks, the photographer caught in the ambush, would have been part of the news team whose international coverage from Afghanistan and Pakistan won the Times a Pulitzer yesterday.

Monday, April 20, 2009

Tyler Hicks Under Fire

We seem to have another Don McCullin in our midst.

If you don't see the New York Times (and I've been on vacation so I missed the first part), go to their website and check out this story: an element of First Battalion, 26th Infantry, in the Korangal Valley, Kunar Province, Afghanistan, lays an ambush for Taliban fighters. (Here.) Three days later, the Taliban ambush a platoon of 1/26 with C. J. Chivers and Tyler Hicks with them. (Here.) And there is a photo-slide show of Hicks work, under fire. (Here.) Beautiful landscape, horrific experience, great work.

Saturday, April 18, 2009

William Gedney's Archives

William Gedney, Untitled, 1966-67


If you'd like to see more of the photography of William Gedney, much of it can be viewed online. The physical archive resides at the Rare Book, Manuscript, and Special Collections at Duke University, but they have digitized a big chunk of it and mounted it on the Duke library's website. (The above image is really not indicative of his work, which is more often concerned with people and the social landscape of American life. The images below, from his book, are more in keeping with his concerns; the above just makes me smile.)

This is how the website describes the content:

William Gedney Photographs and Writings
The 50,000 item collection documents Gedney's work from the 1950s to 1989. Subjects include photographs of cross country road trips; rural New York; Manhattan; Brooklyn; rural Kentucky; Hippies in San Francisco; composers; gay rallies and demonstrations; St. Joseph’s School for the Deaf; India; England; Ireland; France; and, a large number of nocturnal pictures.

Included on the site are his book dummies which I always find interesting.




One of the nice things about this archive being available publicly is that the one book of his work, What Was True: The Photographs and Notebooks of William Gedney, has become quite expensive. Not sure how this came to pass, and, of course, there is a very wide range of prices, as seems to be true of the web. It may just be because the work is very good. If for no other reason though, it's worth picking up for Maria Friedlander's lovely foreword, a glimpse of not only Gedney's life but of the Friedlander's life in photography as well. (I mean worth picking up if found for a reasonable price.)



Harry Callahan Updates on PhotoEphemera



The latest post on PhotoEphemera features items related to Harry Callahan and it has been updated since it's initial posting.

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

Really Big Pictures

There is a site called Shorpy which sells prints of vintage images from the Library of Congress and other sources. The prints are a good deal, reasonably priced, and they're probably very well printed and suitable for framing and hanging on the wall.

What else is really nice about the site is that it has mounted hi-rez images of the photos that it sells. Thousands of photographs in fact, with some by Walker Evans, Ansel Adams, Lewis Hines, Dorothea Lange and other well-known photographers. Since it covers the 1850s to the 1950s, you can look at it as one of those "Way We Were" sort of projects with fascinating images from World War II, the Civil War and of course much that is non-war but doesn't fall into an easily defined historical category.

And if they keep adding 4 images a day, in about 8,587 years, they will have posted every image the Library has.

By the way, the Library of Congress is also a fantastic place to view hi-rez imagery.

PhotoShop Disasters

On the subject of the manipulation of photographic images, here is a website that you can get lost in for quite a while: PhotoShop Disasters. If all photo-doctoring was as ham-handed as these examples, we would not have to worry about the loss of faith in the veracity of photography.

Sorry, I forgot for a moment, we WANT people to question the veracity of photography (except in the newspapers.) (At least we won't have to worry about the newspapers anymore.)

Bill Jay

Bill Jay as seen by Burke Uzzle, 2002


Bill Jay has been involved with photography for many years as a writer, editor and photographer: He's the author of many books on the minutiae of photographic history; founder and editor of the short-lived magazine Album; essayist on the subjects of the why, where and how of being a photographer; and as a photographer himself, has compiled an impressive portfolio of images of photographers from the early 1960s to the present.

And a man after my own heart when it comes to what to do with the flotsam and jetsam of one's life. From the intro to his site:

"Looking up from my desk I see a long row of fat ring-binders containing hundreds of my published articles...several unpublished book manuscripts...a row of authored books...and scores of boxes containing thousands of photographs. This detritus of a life in photography has always posed storage problems and a sense of pointlessness if no one had access to it. However, I always harbored the fond hope that, one day, there would miraculously appear a means by which all this stuff could be freely available to anyone interested in the history and current practice of the medium. That day is now, thanks to the ubiquity of the worldwide web."

And sure enough you can find the entire run of Album in pdf form, hundreds of photogaphs, all his articles (again, in pdf form), his bibliography and more. It's a fantastic repository of not just the "detritus of a life in photography" but the evidence of a passionate and obsessive engagement with the medium. And to our benefit. Here 'tis.

I came to a similar conclusion recently: that my accumulation of ephemera from the history of photography was nothing but a Collyer brothers pile of useless trash unless it was somehow shared with others. (Then, hopefully, it will be seen as an "academic project" available for "research" to further our understanding of the medium.) So I have started mounting the material accumulation of some 30 years of collecting photography-related items.

The latest post is on Harry Callahan and can be found here.

Thursday, April 9, 2009

The Big Picture Strikes Again

(Left: REUTERS/Giampiero Sposito; Right: REUTERS/Max Rossi)

The last two posts from The Boston Globe's "The Big Picture: News Stories in Photographs" are very good. The most recent is photographs from the site of the L'Aquila earthquake.



The photo on the right is what volcanic ash looks like magnified: tiny rocks.
(Left:
Bryan Mulder; Right: Pavel Izbekov, Jill Shipman / AVO/UAF-GI)


And the post before that is on the Mount Redout volcano eruptions in Alaska.

I love this stuff.

Sunday, April 5, 2009

Malick Sidibe, Alec Soth, and Fashion Photography


Today's New York Times Sunday Magazine (April 5, 2009) has one the most fun fashion spreads I've seen in a long time. Shot by the Malian photographer Malick Sidibe, it is, as the dek states, "a riot of checks, stripes, patterns and polka dots." Most likely it's a good thing that the spread is in b&w because it would probably be overwhelmingly psychedelic in color.

The other interesting thing about the fashion depicted is that it feels organic. Most Vogue, Harper's, etc. fashion spreads feel as if someone imposed a look onto the models; I often feel as if such a look would exist only on the pages of a magazine. Despite the fact that the clothes and accessories are Christian Lacroix, Missoni, Miu Miu and Armani, the look feels as if it walked in off the street. And given the similarity between these images and what Sidibe has done in the past, that is likely the case. Regardless, the images are fantastic.

You can see the images here but they look even better at the size the magazine prints.


The same issue features a nice portrait and some mundane scene-setters by Alec Soth. The subject is Michelle Obama's cousin, Capers Funnye, who is chief rabbi of one of the largest black synagogues in in the U.S.

One of the most banal and least interesting covers they've done in a long time.

Saturday, April 4, 2009

Errata Editions & Eugene Atget, Walker Evans, Chris Killip & Sophie Ristelhueber

There are photography-related books that are just impossible to find and if found, command a price that is out of reach for most people. So, to actually see the work, one has to go to a museum or library that has a copy of the book or be content with seeing parts of it reproduced in other contexts.

Errata Editions is trying to rectify this by presenting rare, out of print, and generally unavailable photobooks not as a facsimile but as an object in a book. In other words, the original book is reproduced on the page as a photo of an open book. By showing the whole book, spread by spread, cover to cover, endpapers, blank pages and the rest, it at least gives one a feeling for the original and a look at the work.

The first four volumes are in bookstores now.


Atget's Photographe de Paris, 1930, is number one in the series. The Errata edition features an English translation of the Pierre Mac-Orlan introduction (which was in French in the 1930 American edition) and an essay by David Campany, an English photography scholar.

The second is Walker Evans' American Photographs, originally published by the Museum of Modern Art, New York, in 1938. The original afterword by Lincoln Kirstein is presented in text form with an essay by John Hill, the executor of the Evans estate.

Sophie Ristelhueber's small and relatively unknown book, Fait, which alternates aerial views of the Kuwaiti dessert after the first Gulf war with images of the detritus the war left behind is the third. There is a new essay by Marc Mayer.

And finally, the last in the series is Chris Killip's In Flagrante, an intimate, and ultimately devastating, look at the effect of industrial decline on the people and landscape of Northeastern England. As with the others, the original accompanying essay is reprinted, in this case by John Berger and Sylvia Grant. There is an additional essay by Gerry Badger (who did the History of the PhotoBook books with Martin Parr.)

All four of the volumes include a short bio and a photo of the photographer, a short essay by Jeffrey Ladd, one of the publishers, on the history of the original book and a bibliography with reproductions of the covers of other books by the photographer. The scans and the separations were made by Robert Hennessey, an expert on the reproduction of photographs in print, so the plates are as faithful to the original as it is possible to get. They look good and feel good and it is clear that a great deal of time and thought went into the design and production.

The question arises: Why not print a facsimile edition or even a new edition? Some of the reviewers on Amazon were very upset by the format and appear to have expected a new edition. My understanding is that these are not meant to be collectibles but research and education tools. Not exactly textbooks but relatively cheap and readily available to show those interested in photography what these iconic examples of photographic literature are all about.

Anecdotally, I have heard that Killip considers In Flagrante an artifact of its time and does not want it reprinted. So, if one can't afford the original, this is the only option.

In a sense, all of these books are artifacts of their time in one way or another. The plates in Atget's Photographe de Paris were printed individually by the collotype process so they have a particular look that might be difficult to replicate. Further, each plate was attached to a linen strip that was then bound into the book. In effect, it is 96 original prints bound together as a book. It would be very expensive to reproduce that. And to produce a new edition would still most likely have a price tag of US$100 or so. The Errata editions can be had for one quarter that price.

It can be argued too, that one would not want to produce a facsimile version of American Photographs for the simple reason that the original dust jacket was a dull grey with only text on it. It would be a tough sell these days; too dreary. That said, American Photographs has been reprinted thrice and I hear is about to be re-issued again by the Museum of Modern Art. But none of them (I've not seen the soon to be new one) are facsimiles; they all feature a photograph on the cover which is the way one has to sell it these days.

I think the Errata Editions' Books on Books is a great series. I once had a fantasy of collecting every photography book that was ever published. Besides the fact that Martin Parr got there ahead of me, I ran up against the problem of how to finance such a venture. It's very unlikely I'll be acquiring copies of some of these in this lifetime and I'm happy with these. And since I didn't get very close to my fantasy, I'm hoping that the series will continue and I'll not only get a chance to see books I've only heard about and but I'll also discover some gems I hadn't heard about.

Photo Essays of an Art Nature

There is some wonderful photography on Flak Photo, which also runs photo essays though of an art nature. Here how the site describes itself:

Flak Photo is a photography website featuring distinctive work from an international community of contributors that promotes interesting visual approaches to seeing the world and celebrates the art of exhibiting quality photography online. The site is produced by Andy Adams and features work from new photo essays, book projects and gallery exhibitions from established and emerging photographers. Flak Photo is updated frequently, attentively edited and open to submissions from the general public.

Photojournalistic Photo Essays

Launching a surveillance drone at a remote Marine base
in Farah Province of southwest Afghanistan.
Photo by John Moore/Getty Images


The Boston Globe has a site called The Big Picture that runs photojournalistic essays on topics in the news. What's particularly gratifying about it is that they mount the photos large so you can actually examine them.

Recent posts include picture stories on the Red River flooding, G20 protests, an undersea volcanic eruption that is spectacular, and recent work out of Afghanistan which is very good.

Thursday, April 2, 2009

Spirit Photography


For those who believe in ghosts and the ability of photography to record them, About.com has a post titled "Best Ghost Photos Ever Taken." Includes interesting background as well.

Helen Levitt


I'm very fond of Helen Levitt's work and saddened at the news of her death. For anyone who might have missed this news, the New York Times had a good obit. And here is an interview with her in photoEye's magazine.

Exceptional Photojournalism


Anyone who has gone to Perpignan, France, for the photojournalism festival, Visa Pour L'Image, probably knows Louie Palu's work. He's been selected to show there five times. I wasn't familiar with his photography till I stumbled on his website. It is very good photojournalism, much of it from Afghanistan. His portraits of U.S. Marines are stunning. Link.