wall space gallery | the flat file

September 30, 2010

Ryan Bush

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Ryan Bush

Composition 156

Composition 156

Composition 116

Composition 116

Composition 113

Composition 113

Composition 112

Composition 112

Composition 91

Composition 91

I am a fan of architecture. Of line and form. Ryan’s work is simple, clean, and elegant. Looking more like line drawings than photography, the tension, ebb and flow of seemingly taut wires look more like sheet music than structure. To me, they are best experienced in groups – four, six even twelve. Not telling stories, but allowing us to weave ourselves in and out of the connections. These images fall off the edges, telling us as much as whats happening outside the frame, as whats inside.

In his own words:

Overhead wires are everywhere in our modern world – electric wires, telephone wires, tram wires, and power lines. While they can seem like mundane, utilitarian eyesores, when I look at them I see hidden mysteries, music, and the divine, which this series of photographs attempts to reflect.

I am fascinated by the simple crossing of two lines, by the complex rhythms of repeated wires, and by the graceful, lyrical curves. I am drawn to the purity and simplicity of thin dark lines silhouetted against the white sky, and feel a mystical awe when I stand beneath the vast sweep of long-range power lines. In the course of working on this series in the past four years, I have come to appreciate the wires’ endless variety of rhythms, movements, and moods – sometimes simple and austere while at other times lyrical, forceful, or whimsical.

The wires feel like music to me. Their rhythms are like repeated notes, their intersections like instruments playing together, their mechanical contraptions and sitting birds dotting the lines like grace notes. Music comes to my mind unbidden, like Erik Satie’s Gymnopédie solo piano pieces, John Adam’s Dharma at Big Sur concerto for electric violin, and other pieces that I know from my years of playing flute in orchestras and of being a passionate devotee of classical music.

In addition to the musical themes, these photographs explore the notion of intersections, the contrast between order and chaos, and the tension between apparent spontaneity and careful underlying composition. The simple white backgrounds let the range of lines and rhythms take the forefront, like a solo piano alone on the stage. I leave the scale and spatial orientation ambiguous, to accentuate the feeling that the wires are in a world of their own. The photographs also have a spiritual component, exploring the sacred mysteries hidden in the mundane manmade wires.

Most of the photographs in this series are from the San Francisco bay area, near where I live, while a few are from travels to other cities, such as Zurich. The images are captured using a medium-format Hasselblad camera, then scanned digitally and printed at 20” x 20” as archival pigment prints. I use a textured paper and float the prints in the frames, creating an end result that resembles pen-and-ink drawings. By blurring the distinction between photographs and drawings, between physical objects in the world and imaginary compositions that exist only in the mind, the prints play with the boundaries between external and internal reality. After all, they are also portraits of my inner space.

Biography:

Ryan Bush received a Ph. D. in Linguistics from the University of California at Santa Cruz in 2000. His article “Coniunctio: Images of Union” will be published in the Jung Journal, Summer 2010. He is represented by Modernbook Gallery, in San Francisco, CA.

All images copyright Ryan Bush. Used with permission.

September 29, 2010

Beth Yarnelle Edwards

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Beth Yarnelle Edwards

Samantha

Samantha

Niki

Niki

Marisa

Marisa

John

John

Dyanne

Dyanne

Taking a meaningful portrait, in my opinion, is really difficult. That connection is so fleeting and as a photographer, connection to the subject is critical to the success in capturing that moment, that emotion. Beth Yarnelle Edwards has the ability to make the moment effortless and still insightful. We want to know who these people are, be a participant in their world. Her compositions, lighting and the intensity of the connection brings us back over and over, each image telling us a story. I found this work during my 2009 jurying of Critical Mass, and have been following her since.

In her own words:

Sometimes, I’m so interested in what’s going on with people in their homes that I want to know what’s in the closet or under the bed. In my photographs I aspire to tell the viewer not just about what can be seen, but also about things that are hidden and locked away…

Because I’m fascinated with people’s relationships between themselves, their personal spaces, and their possessions, I began a project in 1997 in Silicon Valley, where I was living at the time. Suburban Dreams led to exhibitions and publications in Europe, which in turn generated invitations to create new images in different countries. I now have series from France, Spain, Holland, Germany and Iceland. There are more than one hundred images in the international series.

For my California project, I began with friends and neighbors, but quickly I found myself photographing households several degrees removed (i.e. relatives of a friend of a neighbor). Abroad, I’ve met my subjects in a variety of ways ranging from sign-up sheets at a museum to newspaper articles to contacts from local arts organizations. But as always, initial contacts have yielded new referrals.

I begin with a preview visit, during which I introduce myself and interview potential subjects, asking many open-ended questions about their lives and then listening carefully to the answers while observing everything I can. When a concept emerges which seems to resonate for them as well as for me, I suggest it for the image we’ll create together.

I seek out intersections of the mythic and mundane. As I attempt to reveal some basic truth about my subjects, I’m attracted to the peculiar or surprising. This can take many forms, ranging from humor to visual quirkiness to a sense of universality, or even the uncanny.

Biography:

Intrigued by the way people fashion living spaces to reflect or even establish their identity, San Francisco-based photographer Beth Yarnelle Edwards collaborates with her subjects to create scenes of domestic daily life. She has photographed extensively in Silicon Valley and has also worked by invitation in France, Spain, Holland, Germany and Iceland.

Edwards’ photographs have been exhibited and published extensively in the US and Europe with solo museum exhibitions at Château d’Eau in Toulouse, France and the Musée de la Photographie à Charleroi, Belgium. The winner of the Santa Fe Center for Photography Project Competition as well as the Ruttenberg and Gerbode Foundation awards, her work resides in numerous public collections, including the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, the Los Angeles Museum of Contemporary Art, and the Museum of Fine Arts in Houston. Edwards’ first monograph, Suburban Dreams, will be published in spring 2011, by Kehrer Verlag in Heidelberg, Germany.

Exhibition and other news:

Beth Yarnelle Edwards’ work is featured in Twenty at the Hereford Photography Festival in the UK, 29 October through 27 November; and If These Walls Could Talk at Polyester Gallery in Omaha (with Holly Andres and Dorothy O’Connor). The Iceland Series will be featured in a solo show at the Museum of Photography in Reykjavik, Iceland, June 23 – August 16, 2011.

All images copyright Beth Yarnelle Edwards. Used with permission.

September 28, 2010

Larry Louie

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Larry Louie

Kathmandu, Nepal 2010 #04
Kathmandu, Nepal 2010 #04

Kathmandu, Nepal 2010 #15
Kathmandu, Nepal 2010 #15

Kathmandu, Nepal 2010 #18
Kathmandu, Nepal 2010 #18

Kathmandu, Nepal 2010 #27
Kathmandu, Nepal 2010 #27

Kathmandu, Nepal 2010 #28
Kathmandu, Nepal 2010 #28

Larry Louie always covers compelling stories in a graphic and powerful way. I found his work in Critical Mass many years ago, and have been a fan ever since. His high contrast black and white work has depth, contrast and emotion. His color is vibrant, specific and representative of his subject, not just a study of color, it is color that has meaning. His work is emotional, and lets us all participate in cultures we know little about. I feel as if I am traveling with him, as a participant, not as an outsider. No matter what his subject, his focus draws us in, and we are there with him, understanding why these cultures are important, and what they tell us about ourselves.

His cause is global blindness. As an optometrist, Larry has been working with the organization, Seva Canada, highlighting the need for support for a global initiative to eliminate unnecessary and avoidable blindness. I am thrilled he has given me a new way to see.

In his own words:

Kathmandu, the cultural and political center of Nepal and home to almost one and a half million people, is quickly becoming the slum central of Nepal. Travelers to the area may find their attention captured less by the majestic Himalayan Range, than by the rapid deterioration of the valley at its foot. Once pristine rivers are now permeated with the stench of raw sewage; once clear mountain air is now filled with pollution that clogs sinuses and makes throats raw. New slum areas are spreading rapidly over the whole valley.

With little or no access to housing, sanitation and clean water, many of the people displaced from their hillside villages, are congregating along the banks of the rivers. It is ironic that in Kathmandu, with the Himalayan Mountains on the horizon, that there is an insufficient amount of water supply in the area. Communities remain dry for many hours, if not days. Even in areas with water, the water quality is so poor that it must be boiled or filtered in order to make it drinkable. One of the main reasons for the poor water quality is the lack of waste disposal facilities, sanitation facilities, and water treatment plants. The two main rivers, the Bagmati and the Bishnumati, which pass through the city of Kathmandu, are absolutely filthy with raw sewage and garbage dumped by locals and municipalities. The sad thing is that these river areas are often the place where the new urban poor of Kathmandu find space to build their homes.

In the Underbelly of Kathmandu, we take a glimpse of the simmering crisis that is occurring throughout the Kathmandu Valley and the endurance of the people living there. Many of them had come to Kathmandu in search of jobs and a better future for their family.

Biography:

Larry Louie’s fascination with photography and travel developed at a very young age, with his first National Geographic magazine. Born in Hong Kong and raised in Edmonton, Canada, Larry was educated as a doctor of optometry and now splits his time between his practice and his art. As an optometrist Larry adjusts people’s visual perception. As a photographer, he seeks to adjust people’s view of the world.

Larry is awed by the ethnic and cultural diversity, the different languages, customs and beliefs he encounters in his travels. His photographs allow him to share with others the variety and beauty of the world he sees. Larry’s greatest interest lies far off the beaten path, where indigenous people pursue lives very different from his own, and distinct cultures face rapid change, even extinction. Larry also explores the challenges that arise where people’s lives are caught between the past and present, documenting the social issues of groups that modern society has touched but left behind. His photographs show the strength and perseverance that mark people the world over, revealing the light sometimes found in dark places. By documenting remote societies, he hopes to inspire others to take note of what is at stake.

Larry’s work to document the lives of people around the world has resulted in a vast archive of images. His work has received international recognition and awards including the IPA Lucie Award; National Geographic Photo Essay Award; and Humanitarian Documentary Grant with the World Photography Gala Award. His work has been exhibited worldwide from Canada to the U.S., and Europe and Asia and has been published in numerous magazines. As both an optometrist and a photographer, Larry is an avid supporter of SEVA, an international non-profit organization that has joined the VISION 2020 initiative aimed at eliminating preventable and avoidable blindness in the world by the year 2020.

Learn more about SEVA Canada at www.seva.ca

News from Larry:

Larry‘s photo at the blind school in Tanzania took third place in the United Nation’s Development Programmes Millennium Goals. It will be used to represent the UN’s goal to provide primary education for all children around the world, and will be on display in the UN building in New York and Tokyo.

September 27, 2010

New Directions 2011

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Haley Jane Samuelson

Haley Jane Samuelson - Butterflies.

We are so excited to announce our Juror for the Fifth Annual New Directions show coming up in January of 2011.

wall space will be teaming up with David Bram of Fraction Magazine to jury ND11. This years focus is portraiture. The show titled Moments of Being, is looking for new ways to talk about how we see each other, that moment of connection between photographer and subject.

In David’s words –

As photographers, we look for faces and expressions that tell stories. We look for character. We look for emotion.

We look for the hook, that moment of being that creates a compelling portrait. Like a modern physiognomy, a portrait tells a story equal parts subject and photographer in a single moment.

As the curator of this show, I will be looking for portraits that are edgy and daring. I want more than the traditional head shot. I want to see work that pushes the boundaries of what is normally called a portrait. (Please note: For this show, my interests are not in photo-journalistic photographs of the homeless, the needy, or third world subjects)

Photographs by Emmet Gowin and Sally Mann (for example) show a trust and a relationship between the photographer and the subject. There is a connection that is clear to the viewer; this is what I am looking for. I will also be looking for unique styles and interesting compositions. The images might be quiet, honest, sexually charged, or pure. These portraits, color or black and white, should convey a unique and powerful moment of life.

If you wish to submit, here are the important dates for the show.

Open Submission period - 1 October 2010 – 20 November 2010

Artists notified – 13 December 2010

Prints due to wall space gallery – 2 January 2011

Wall space | Santa Barbara exhibition – 4 January – 30 January 2011

artist reception with David Bram – 12 January, 2011 6-8pm.

wall space | Seattle exhibition – 1 February – 26 February 2011

for more information, please contact the gallery or log onto our information page on our website.

All entries are considered as submissions to wall space gallery, as well as to Fraction Magazine for potential representation and exhibitions.

We look forward to seeing your work.

Rania Matar

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Rania Matar

Becca, 19, Boston 2009
Becca, 19, Boston 2009

I like doing regular things like hanging out with friends, watching movies, reading, etc. I am what you would call a girly girl. I LOVE hair makeup, clothes and boys. Sometimes I want to be treated like an adult and others like a 6 year old. — Becca

Shannon 21, Boston 2010
Shannon 21, Boston 2010

Danielle 20, Boston 2010
Danielle 20, Boston 2010

Jess 19, Boston 2010
Jess 19, Boston 2010

Siena 17, Brookline 2009
Siena 17, Brookline 2009

When I was thinking about my picture what was running through my head was how the models on my wall are the people I strive to look like whether I do subconsciously or not. And then I started asking myself why and how we define beauty, what is beautiful? And where am I on the scale of beauty in relation to the pictures on my wall? Am I good enough? — Siena

Emma 18, Brookline 2008
Emma 18, Brookline 2008

Lizzie 17, Cornwall NY 2010
Lizzie 17, Cornwall NY 2010

Brittany 19, Boston 2010
Brittany 19, Boston 2010

Rocio 17, Dorcester MA 2010
Rocio 17, Dorcester MA 2010

I am 17 and I am pregnant with a baby boy. My parents were very upset initially but now they are being very supportive. My mom still has a very hard time touching my tummy. My boyfriend and I broke up but we are friends and he still wants to be part of the baby’s life. — Rocio

Emma 19, Boston 2009
Emma 19, Boston 2009

I have had the pleasure of meeting Rania at portfolio events in Houston and Portland, and you can find evidence of her successful images in numerous awards and shows across the country. Her effervescent personality shines through our conversations, really engaging me to open up and talk about anything. She allows me to be comfortable and not on guard. I think that is the secret to her compelling images. With her connection with her subjects, in this case teenage girls, she is able to communicate on their level. In this series on the ever awkward uncomfortable world of teens, Rania gives them a place to shine, to be an individual without fear.

While this work could be considered introspective, full of emotional connection to who we were at that unfortunate age, I find it a celebration of personality and individuality.

In her own words:

As a mother of a teenage daughter I watch with awe her passage from girlhood into adulthood, with all the complications that it entails. As I am observing her and her girlfriends, I became fascinated with the transformation taking place, with the adult personality shaping up and with an insecurity and a self-consciousness that are now replacing the carefree world those girls had live in so far. I started photographing them in group situations, and quickly realized that they were so aware of each other’s presence, and that their being in a group affected very much whom they were portraying to the world. I also realized that under an air of self-assurance, those young women were often very fragile, self-conscious and confused. While their bodies were developing fast into women’s bodies, they were still on many levels young girls who suddenly thought they had to behave like adults.

From there, emerged the idea of photographing each girl alone. I originally let the girls choose the place of their choice and was slowly welcomed into their bedrooms, an area that is theirs, that they can fully control, decorate, trash and be themselves in, within an outside world that is often intimidating. I spent time with each girl, so she was comfortable with me and was able to let down her guards, free of any preconception of what she would like to portray consciously. I was fascinated to discover a person on the cusp on becoming an adult, but desperately holding on to the child she just barely left behind, a person on the edge between two worlds, trying to come to terms with this transitional time in her life and adjust to the person she is becoming. Posters of rock stars, political leaders or top models were often displayed above a bed still covered with stuffed animals; mirrors were always an important part of the room, a reflection of the girls’ image to the outside world.

I am expanding this project to include girls from different cultures and backgrounds including the 2 worlds I am most familiar with: the United States and the Middle East. Being with those young women in the privacy of their world gave me a unique peak into their private lives and their real selves. I thank them all for their trust and their willingness to share their private space and their private self with me.

Biography:

Born and raised in Lebanon, Rania Matar moved to the U.S. in 1984. Originally trained as an architect at the American University of Beirut and Cornell University, she worked as an architect before studying photography at New England School of Photography, and at the Maine Photographic Workshops in Mexico with Magnum photographer, Constantine Manos. She currently works full-time as a photographer, and teaches photography to teenage girls in Lebanon’s refugee camps with the assistance of non-governmental organizations, and to teenage refugees in Boston with the assistance of Children’s Hospital.

Matar’s work focuses mainly on women and women’s issues. Her previous work has focused on women and children in the Middle East, and her projects – which examine the Palestinian refugee camps, the recent spread of the veil and its meanings, the aftermath of war, and the Christians of the Middle East – intend to give a voice to people who have been forgotten or misunderstood. In Boston, where she lives, she photographs her four children at all stages of their lives, and is currently working on a new body of work, “A Girl and her Room,” photographing teenage girls from different backgrounds.

Her work has won several awards, has been featured in numerous publications, and exhibited widely in the U.S. and internationally.

This series is currently on exhibit in two galleries. In Boston, you can see it at Gallery Kayafas, 450 Harrison Avenue #37, (612) 482-0411, through October 16, 2010. In Chicago, you can see it at Schneider Gallery Contemporary Photography, 230 West Superior St., (312) 988-4033, through October 30.

All images copyright by Rania Matar. Used with permission.

September 26, 2010

N. W. Gibbons

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N. W. Gibbons

Nereid Arch

Muskrat Cove

Muskrat Cove

Beneath 233rd Street

Beneath 233rd Street

Allerton Grove

Allerton Grove

Erie Canal

Erie Canal

I am a fan of a great Ambrotype. The lumious golden glow and the rich blacks can convey stunning stories. N.W. Gibbons has crafted a beautiful series on the Rivers of New York, and I can’t stop looking at them.

His work is available for a great cause next week at Photographic Center Northwest. PhotoLust is PCNW’s annual fundraiser to support their tremendous and ambitious programming. I have been a student as well as a speaker and supporter of the Center. The auction slate as a whole is a well curated, with lots of photographic treats to take home.

N.W. Gibbon’s work is affordable now, with his talent, it won’t be soon.

In his own words:

Years ago in my NYC commuter days, I traveled the MetroNorth line along the Bronx River about a million times. It looked pretty desperate in those days (early 1980s). I was interested in this strip of nature, slammed between a busy parkway and the rail lines, hanging on by a thread.

Several decades later, I got to meet the river in a better state. Better meaning getting the feet into the mud, listening to birdsong, checking out a mature forest, a gracious meadow — all still slammed in by a parkway and a rail line.

The Bronx River is a part of my “Rivers Project”. This is an exploration of a number of short rivers in southeastern New York and southwestern Connecticut. Each river starts in sylvan beauty (a relative term, but natural enough for these parts) and ends at (usually grimy) Long Island Sound — but with immense pockets of beauty and grace that reward those who take the time to search. I’ve been searching. I’ve also been rewarded.

This artistic journey documents these rivers using a 19th century photographic process, the Tintype. Why the old stuff? Incredible detail and superb tonal reproduction. Each image is as unique as the moment it is taken, and there will never be another one like it. This is the real ‘painting with light’.

These Bronx River images are survey photographs. Each day on this survey is a logistical and artistic challenge to me. I’m really excited about the Bronx River images because they combine the hard urban cityscape with a surprisingly natural canvas. It has made great images. Many views are large diptychs and triptychs because I want to bring you into these natural spaces and a single plate is not big enough.

Technical Details: Tintypes were shot using two 11×14” view cameras: a 19th century Korona View and a contemporary R.H. Phillips. The lens used is a 16 1/2” Goerz Dagor. Exposures were made at f/22 and f/32 at times ranging from 5 seconds to several minutes. The photographic emulsion is a bromide/iodide suspension in collodion that is sensitized in Silver Nitrate, developed in an iron salt solution, fixed with potassium cyanide and finished with a coating of Sandarac varnish.

Biography:

N. W. Gibbons is a fine photographic artist who has been a life long resident of Westport, Connecticut. Mr. Gibbons has worked in large format non-digital photographic media since the mid-1970’s, and most recently has produced work using a number of different 19th century photo processes. Mr. Gibbons creates very large tintypes and ambrotypes, both as single images and in diptych and triptych formats.

Tintypes and ambrotypes are direct positive images on metal or glass respectively. Popular in this country from roughly 1865 through 1880, this style of photography is collectively known as “wet plate” due to the fact that exposed plates must be developed before their sensitized surface dries out. Each image is a unique “edition of one” as there is no negative from which to make duplicate prints. Wet plate images are noted for their extremely fine grain images with a long tonal scale.

Mr. Gibbons works in 11 x 14” and 18 x 22” formats. He favors cityscapes and landscapes in lower Fairfield County and nearby New York State, most recently working on an extended project documenting the surprising natural beauty of the Bronx River. Past bodies of work include the bridges of the Merritt Parkway and the former industrial mills of Bridgeport, Connecticut. Mr. Gibbons’ work is in numerous private and public collections, including the Yale Art Gallery, the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, and the Library of Congress.

When not making wet plate images, Mr. Gibbons is a full-time Fire Inspector for the Westport Fire Department. He is also an Associate Fellow of Branford College at Yale University.

All images copyright N.W. Gibbons. Used with permission.

September 25, 2010

Sue Bednarz

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Sue Bednarz

Shearing Tools by Sue Bednarz
Shearing Tools

Room for More by Sue Bednarz
Room for More

Ranch Yard by Sue Bednarz
Ranch Yard

Lambing by Sue Bednarz
Lambing

1904 Shepherds Stone Johny by Sue Bednarz
1904 Shepherds Stone Johny

Sue’s series, the Prairie Shepard, is beautiful, reflective and in many ways a romantic vision of life in the agricultural midwest. I fell in love with it during Critical Mass last year and just now find myself revisiting the work after pre-jurying CM10. I spent a number of years in the west, in Utah and Wyoming, and this work sends me soaring back to the wide open skies, tall grass and stillness of the high desert prairie. Prairie Shepard shows us this beautiful way of life, of the strength of the land, the hard labor of maintaining the herd and the grace and beauty of the surroundings.

In her own words:

Life as a shepherd on the short grass prairie of western South Dakota consists of working alone from sun up to sun down caring for sheep, growing feed crops, and scouting for predators. Extreme cold, blizzards, and hailstorms can quickly diminish the flock. Shepherds rarely have days off and travel away from the sheep is extremely uncommon.

Each year, my partner and I visit his family ranch in South Dakota where his youngest brother is the shepherd documented in this series. As a knitter and handspinner, my interest in sheep and wool provided additional motivation to document ranch life.

The Prairie Shepherd images were captured during these visits and other trips timed to coincide with shearing and lambing. Photo sessions were combined with helping the shepherd move, load, or feed sheep. Sessions were often short, as the shepherd was very short-handed and needed help.

This series records a way of life that is commonplace to the shepherd, but unknown to the rest of us. While documenting this difficult and vanishing lifestyle, the series also captures the stark beauty of the short grass prairie and the nobility of the shepherd and his sheep. Images of historic homesteading and sheepherding artifacts are included to provide a connection between the past and the present. The Prairie Shepherd series is printed in black and white using a selective focus technique that conveys the ethereal nature of the South Dakota prairie.

Biography:

Sue Bednarz was born in 1957 in Portland, Oregon. She developed her love of geology and photography while exploring the rivers and forests surrounding her family’s summer home in the Cascade Mountains. After obtaining a M.S. degree in Engineering Geology and while raising her three children, she began to work professionally as an industrial photographer in conjunction with her employment as a geologist. Her documentary photographs of underground construction projects have been published in numerous trade magazines.

Sue Bednarz’s fine art photography is inspired by her background in geology and experience as a knitter and handspinner. Both her industrial and fine art photography depict the aesthetic aspects of non-traditional subjects through the use of creative lighting, composition, and perspective. Her documentary style relies heavily on storytelling and creating human connection to inform and engage the viewer.

All Images Copyright by Sue Bednarz. Used with permission.

September 24, 2010

Haley Jane Samuelson

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Haley Jane Samuelson

yawn-scream
yawn-scream

window
window

twist
twist

shower
shower

record player
record player

misted window
misted window

mirror
mirror

laundry sack
laundry sack

kitchen
kitchen

curtain
curtain

butterflies
butterflies

brown shirt
brown shirt

birdcage
birdcage

bedroom
bedroom

bathtub
bathtub

I found Haley’s work in CM09 and was struck by its intensity. I was attracted to Haley’s series of Lovers, and Other Lovers, which captured so much emotion, positive and negative. The series we have featured here, Another Room, is a self portrait, yet it hits emotions we all have felt. Wonder. Confusion. Anticipation. Longing. It’s all there. Her use of light is moody and theatrical, illustrating the illusion of her self creation. Another Room leads us outside of ourselves, allowing us to life vicariously through another, like a voyeur.

I look forward to her next series of exploration and discovery, for her as well as for me.

In her own words:

I am both the casualty and consequence of many dichotomies. I remain whole, and yet I am simultaneously divided, torn between the very things that bind me: Between the reality of adulthood and the image of it; between my need to grow roots and the want to travel; the desire for independence and the longing for another; the diverse and suasive avenues of the heart; the meaning of transience; the sporadic despondency and the search for inspiration. The photographs from ANOTHER ROOM work to summon and convene these opposites and relocate my personal experience to some place between multiple and varied psychological states.

Performative in essence, the work is concerned with how the individual is able to reconcile the external and internal forces that cause us to function in different, often contradictory, roles. While narrative based, the highly personalized iconography combined with the subjects subtle and often strange interaction with their environment, and the surreal lighting contribute to the sense that the unfolding narrative is not about the specific event depicted in the image. The work is rather about a contemporary state of existence, and my own internalized dramas as being played out within each room. In this way the figure’s relationship with the space becomes the main subject matter of the work, and allows each image to explore how the self is defined when isolated.

Moreover ANOTHER ROOM attempts to reconcile the forces that inform our identities and moves toward a renewed interest in beauty, aesthetics and personal symbolism. Indeed, the work aims to consider, in depth, the neurosis of a single individual and within that invites the viewer to reflect on their own private relationship with their external and internal worlds.

Biography:

Haley Jane Samuelson was born in Denver, Colorado. At the age of thirteen, her family relocated to Amsterdam, The Netherlands. It was there she first fell in love with photography. She received in B.F.A. in photography and digital media from the Ringling School of Art and Design in Sarasota, Florida. In 2008 she completed her M.F.A at Parsons the New School for Design. She is currently represented by HousProjects Gallery in New York City, where she had her first solo show in June 2009, entitled “Another Room.” Her work has been published in several international magazines including Zoom Magazine, Oxford American and Photo France.

All images Copyright by Haley Jane Samuelson. Used with permission.

September 23, 2010

Jade Doskow

Jade Doskow


Chicago 1893 World’s Fair, “The Columbian Exposition,” Site of Manufacture Liberal Arts Building,
Grand Peristyle, and Agriculture Building, View 2, 2009


New Orleans 1884 World’s Fair, “World Cotton Centennial,” Audubon Park, 2008


Philadelphia 1876 World’s Fair, “Centennial Exposition,” Fair Toilet Buildings, 2008


New York 1964 World’s Fair, “Peace Through Understanding,” New York State Pavilion, 2008


Brussels 1958 World’s Fair, “A World View: A New Humanism,” Atomium at Night, 2008

I love, no really, I love architecture. And I also love a great fair. Country, City or World. Doesn’t matter. The excitement of what could be, whether its the latest deep fried food, newest version of the shamwow, or dream of a better world. The World’s Fair was and is our Utopian view of the future, of who we could be and where we were going. Think about the Chicago World’s Fair – first to have the Ferris Wheel, electricity and Juicy Fruit gum and Cream of Wheat. Things we take for granted.  Jade’s work takes those dreams and shows us what has become of them. While this should be depressing, I find it really fascinating. I think we all have discarded dreams, and these buildings seem to highlight how we care for those dreams once they have past. Jade’s work has no pretense and without specific intent showcases these structures, letting us live our past dreams and think of new ones. I can’t wait to see more.

In her own words:

My current body of work is an examination of how the sites and structures of world’s fairs — conceived and built for a temporary, specific purpose — interact in today’s unforeseen environment. Some of the most important architects of the 19th and 20th century were commissioned to construct fair pavilions: dazzling, unusual structures incorporating the most cutting-edge materials and engineering prowess possible at the time.

Tragically, these extraordinary structures are often immediately demolished, reappropriated for far less grand ambitions, or simply neglected. There is a seeming arbitrariness to what survives. In Philadelphia, two of the four remnants from 1876 are fair toilet buildings. In Paris, there are national icons such as the Eiffel Tower, the Grand Palais, and the Palais de Tokyo. In Flushing Meadows Park, New York, Philip Johnson’s New York State Pavilion of 1964 sits in sad decrepitude, its stocky concrete support columns chipped and covered in ivy. I became entranced with the fantastical buildings overgrown with weeds, often neglected and ill-fitting among the sleek, modern high-rises looming around them. I use time of year and day — as well as a lush or stark color palette — to further convey the atmosphere of these sometimes-ghostly sites.

To date, I have photographed 18 fair sites, including Paris, Brussels, Seville, Barcelona, Spokane, New York, New Orleans, San Diego, Philadelphia, Chicago, Buffalo, and Knoxville, and future plans include shoots in Asia, Australia, South America, and others in America and Europe. It’s a big project because it’s a big subject: World’s fairs were unique, spectacular cultural events from which one can glean worldviews that came into and out of vogue, the rise of industrialism, the rise of modernism, architectural trends and progress, and the hopes and dreams of each era. Ultimately I hope to create an archive of every past site, and in my pictures allude to the complicated goals and dreams of these magnificent events.

Biography:

Jade Doskow lives and works in Red Hook, Brooklyn with her husband. Doskow earned her MFA at the School of Visual Arts, New York, in 2008. She has been the recipient of numerous honors, including the Herbert C. Rubin Award for Visual Arts, and was a 2009 finalist in the international Photolucida Critical Mass competition. Her work has been featured in ACurator.com, Photo District News, Visual Arts Journal, and the Morning News. Doskow teaches architectural photographny at both the School of Visual Arts and the International Center of Photography in New York. 2010 exhibitions included Urban Utopia at 32 Greene Street in New Yorkm, Photolucida at the Pacific Northwest Photo Center in Seattle, One Hour Photo at the Katzen Museum in Washington DC, and the Heart Haiti Benefit at the Aperture Foundation.

All images copyright Jade Doskow. Used with permission.

September 13, 2010

Call for Entries: Clarence John Laughlin Award

Filed under: call for entries — Tags: , , — The Flat File @ 3:07 pm

The Clarence John Laughlin Award was created by the New Orleans Photo Alliance to support the work of photographers who use the medium as a means of creative expression. The award grants one $5000 prize annually to a fine art photographer who is creating or has completed a significant body of photographic work. John Wood, Editor of 21st Editions, is the inaugural juror.

This new award is open to emerging and established photographers who reside in the U.S. The online application process requires a portfolio of 10-20 photographs, a written statement, a bio or CV, and a $25 application fee. The application deadline is September 15, 2010. Only one recipient will be selected to receive the $5,000 award.

The guidelines are here, and the application is here.

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