May 2012 Archives

May 31, 2012

 
Write your letter of support for Noorderlicht Photo Organization — today please!

The Dutch photography organization Noorderlicht is under risk of closure due to a major cutback of financial support from the national government, which will make it impossible to keep the organization running.

Noorderlicht is a platform, a gallery, festival, and publisher that hardly needs introduction. It is well known for its groundbreaking exhibitions and publications. Noorderlicht also organizes educational activities ranging from masterclasses for professional photographers to visual literacy courses for schoolchildren. With this wide variety of activities, they are well known within and outside the photographic community. Noorderlicht's programming is among the most intelligent and thought-provoking in the world today (in the opinion of Lens Culture).

There is a possibility the government decision will be reversed, and Noorderlicht is preparing a new application, to be sent to the Advisory Board on Culture of the Netherlands. To support this new application, they hope to present the Board, and the government, with national and international letters of support for Noorderlicht. They have asked all relevant institutions in the Netherlands to express their support, and we are asking you to write your own letter of support.

Would you be willing to write a letter on the letterhead of your organization and send a scan of it directly to marc@noorderlicht.com, and the original by mail to the Noorderlicht office?

We would like you to express in as few or as many words as you want what the value of Noorderlicht is to you and the photographic community.

As the new application is to be sent in within the next two weeks, they hope to receive your letter of support by email before 4 June, if possible. Should this be too tight, they would still like to receive your letter, before 18 June.

Email your scanned letter to: marc@noorderlicht.com

Send via post your original letter:

Noorderlicht
Akerkhof 12
9711 JB Groningen
The Netherlands

Throughout the years, Lens Culture has featured many projects that were initiated and created by Noorderlicht. You can see these in our archives: Metroplis — The City in the Urban Age, Land — Country Life in the Urban Age, Warzone, Human Conditions, Picturing Eastern Europe: an overview of photography — before and after Communism, and photobooks they co-published: Soul and Soul 1969-1999, and Cruel and Unusual.

You can also show your support via Facebook and Twitter, and by sharing this message with all of your colleagues. Thanks!

May 20, 2012

 
Winner: European Publishers Award for Photography 2012
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From The Garden © Alessandro Imbriaco. Image courtesy of Dewi Lewis Publishing.


Italian photographer Alessandro Imbriaco is the winner of The European Publishers Award for Photography 2012. The Award was established in 1994 and celebrated its 19th year in 2012. Previous winners have included Bruce Gilden, Simon Norfolk, Jeff Mermelstein, Paolo Pellegrin, Jacob Aue Sobol, Ambroise Tézenas, Klavdij Sluban and Davide Monteleone.

The competition requires the submission of a substantial, completed and unpublished photographic book project. The winning project is then published in book form simultaneously by five European publishers — and thus in five languages. For several past winners the Award book has been their first publication and has proved to be of significant benefit in the development of their careers. Additionally, in recent years the winning photographer has had their work exhibited during the following Rencontres d’Arles.


The other shortlisted photographers for the 2012 Award were:

• Luca Desienna – My dearest Javanese concubine
• Zoltán Jókay – Mrs Raab wants to go home
• Fernando Moleres – Behind Bars. Juveniles in Sierra Leone Prisons”
• Kosuke Okahara – Ibasyo
• Guillaume Simoneau – Love And War
• Kurt Tong – The Queen, the Chairman and I

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From The Garden © Alessandro Imbriaco. Image courtesy Dewi Lewis Publishing.


Over the last five years Alessandro Imbriaco has been photographing issues around the housing problems in Rome. This led him to explore the peripheral and hidden spaces of the city.

“The Garden” is one of those places. It is a small swamp under a flyover on the ring road circling the eastern outskirts of Rome – a failed nature reserve that ended up protecting other living creatures: Angela, a six-year-old child, was born here and grew up here with her parents Piero, from Sicily, and Luba, from Russia.

Alessandro Imbriaco was born in Salerno, Italy, in 1980. He currently lives in Rome and works on both editorial and personal photographic projects. He has already won several awards – the 2008 Canon Award for Young Photographers, World Press Photo 2010 Conteporary Issues 2nd prize stories, Premio Biennale Giovani Monza and Premio Pesaresi 2011. In 2011 he was selected for the World Press Photo Joop Swart Masterclass.

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From The Garden © Alessandro Imbriaco. Image courtesy Dewi Lewis Publishing.


The book will be published in Autumn 2012 by the five publishers

• Actes Sud (France)
• Blume (Spain)
• Dewi Lewis Publishing (UK)
• Kehrer Verlag (Germany)
• Peliti Associati (Italy)

May 19, 2012

 
Erasing Robert Frank with Photoshop: Is it art?

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"Le quatre juillet", originally by Robert Frank, then mostly eliminated using Photoshop.
From the self-published photobook "Less Américains" by © Mishka Henner, 2012.



Appropriation in the practice of making "new" art has been around for a long, long time — and often with very exciting results and a fair amount of controversy.

When I heard about this "remake" of Robert Frank's classic photobook, The Americans, I had a glimmer of hope that it would reveal some overlooked details in Frank's photographs, thereby increasing my appreciation even more.

At least the new title was funny, shifting the original French title, Les Américans, to a jokey mixture of English and French, Less Américains. The whole idea hinges on the removal of most of the details of every image from the classic book by erasing them with Photoshop.

But in the final analysis, it feels like a cheap gimmick and a publicity stunt. See more erased images, and read the review in Lens Culture.

May 17, 2012

 
Preview: Photomonth Krakow Poland

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Polia, from the Kids I series, 2000, and #2, from the Armygirls series, 2001 © Siergiej Bratkow.
Courtesy of Regina Gallery, London & Moscow.

The Krakow Photomonth festival is always a feast for the eyes and the intellect. This year (its 10th anniversary) is offering up a wonderful eclectic mix of young, old, traditional, anarchic and real-time digital interaction photography. Lots of associated events run throughout the month, too. See the preview, and read about some of the many highlights in Lens Culture.

 
Paris transsexuals in the 60s: photos by Christer Strömholm

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Jacky, place Blanche, 1961.
From the photobook "Les Amies de Place Blanche" © Christer Strömholm



Originally published in 1983, Les Amies de Place Blanche focuses on the transsexual community living around the Place Blanche district of Paris in the late 1950s and early 1960s. The book established Christer Strömholm’s reputation as one of the leading European photographers of the twentieth century.

The exquisite new version of the book includes the original essays by Strömholm and publisher Johan Ehrenberg as well as newly commissioned texts by Jacky and Nana, two of the women who feature in many photographs in the book. The introduction is by Hélène Hazera, a leading French journalist, actress, director, and television producer who is also a transsexual.

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Gina & Nana, place Blanche, 1963.
From the photobook "Les Amies de Place Blanche" © Christer Strömholm


See a high-resolution slideshow of these and more images, and read the book review with very touching and sensitive quotes from Strömholm, in the latest issue of Lens Culture.

Christer Strömholm's work from this series is featured in an exhibition at International Center for Photography in New York City from May 18 - September 2, 2012.

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Left: Soraya & Sonia, Hôtel Pierrots, 1962. Right: Cynthia, Hôtel Idéal, 1966.
From the photobook "Les Amies de Place Blanche" © Christer Strömholm

May 16, 2012

 
Video: Tom Waits narrates a brief history of John Baldessari

Now for something light, entertaining, educational and inspiring.

Thanks to Colleen Leonard (famous Canadian photographer and former Lens Culture assistant editor) for sharing this with us, via Hyperallergic.

May 14, 2012

 
Interrogations: terrifying real-life photographs from Ukraine

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From the photobook Interrogations © Donald Weber



This work stopped me cold the first time I saw it. It looked terrifyingly real, but how could it be? Are some of these people being forced to write confessions while loaded guns are pressed into their heads? It must have been staged. But soon I came to realize that these are indeed real photographs of real interrogations of suspected criminals in Ukraine.

Canadian photojournalist Donald Weber first went to Ukraine during the Orange Revolution of 2004, on assignment. Following that first trip, he soon returned, and spent the next six years in Russia and Ukraine trying to photograph contemporary life, and its hardships, as well as the vestiges of a still-powerful, hidden system.

Interrogations is the result of his personal quest to uncover the hidden meaning of private, unpleasant encounters with unrestricted Power. It is a simple, elegant book that sears itself into your memory.

See many more photographs, and read the compelling interview with Donald Weber, in Lens Culture.

May 13, 2012

 
Leica bets big on monochrome-only digital camera
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© Jacob Aue Sobol, from his series "Arrivals and Departures" made exclusively with the new Leica M Monochrom digital camera

In an age where black-and-white film and traditional photo paper and chemicals are disappearing from the marketplace, Leica Camera has launched a risky bet that high-quality black-and-white photography will continue to be in demand in the 21st century.

Their bet? A brand new digital camera that does not take color photos. The Leica M Monochrom camera is optimized to capture the fullest possible tonal range for smooth, rich, super-high-resolution black-and-white photography. I'm not a technical expert, but apparently by creating a sensor that ignores the typical RGB filters, each pixel of the new 18 megapixel camera records a subtle variation of black, white or grey only — a technique that is far superior to converting typical RGB color digital photos to black-and-white.

And indeed, Leica camera enthusiasts from all corners of the globe (including many, many high-profile professional photographers) flew in to Berlin last week and cheered loudly as they got the first look at Leica’s latest release — “the world’s first digital camera exclusively for full-frame, 35 mm black-and-white photography.”

Lens Culture was honored to be invited to this special event, and to meet the enthusiastic international crowd at C|O Berlin photography gallery in Berlin. Award-winning Magnum photographer, Jacob Aue Sobol, was one of the experts who got to test-drive the new camera before its public release. Sixty of his stunning new digital photos were on display during the event. We're including three of those images here. And be sure to look for a great video interview with Sobol in Lens Culture in our next issue.

For more details on the new camera, check the Leica website.

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© Jacob Aue Sobol, from his series "Arrivals and Departures" made exclusively with the new Leica M Monochrom digital camera

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© Jacob Aue Sobol, from his series "Arrivals and Departures" made exclusively with the new Leica M Monochrom digital camera

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Photographers from all over the world crowd around the new camera unveiled by Leica last week at the C|O Berlin photography gallery

May 10, 2012

 
Doubt is arguably the origin of rebellion against darkness.

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© Max de Esteban, from Elegy I: Vertige, "Elegies of Manumission"


Photographer/philosopher Max de Esteban creates stunning, old-world-type portraits, and groups them by philosophical themes. Above: "Doubt is arguably the origin of rebellion against darkness." (excerpt from long, eloquent essay).

See, and read more in the new photobook review in Lens Culture.

 
Photobook: C Photo: Posed / Unposed

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Book spread from the photobook "C Photo: Posed/Unposed"
Left: Untitled, 2010. © Hester Scheurwater Right: Untitled, 2010. © Hester Scheurwater:
From Both Sides of the Mirror.



The volume C Photo: Posed/Unposed outlines the field of tension between the entirely spontaneous and unposed on one hand, and the striving for a perfect pose on the other, depicting a variety of approaches from photojournalism or amateur snapshots to advertising, portraiture and fashion photography. See more images, from many photographers, in Lens Culture.


Photographers published are Rico Scagliola & Michael Meier, Jacques Henri Lartigue, Thomas Struth, Pawel Juszczuk, Federico Patellani, Edward Quinn, Hester Scheurwater, Garry Winogrand, Guy Bourdin, Jules Spinatsch, Ghislain Dussart, Slim Aarons.

May 9, 2012

 
Photobook review: You Look At Me Like an Emergency

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Flood Tide, Self Portrait.
Mangrove Bay, Bermuda, 2005
© Cig Harvey, from "You Look At Me Like An Emergency"


Cig Harvey is a photographer driven by conceptual work that vibrates with super-saturated color and careful premeditated composition. See more images, and read the review, in the latest issue of Lens Culture.

May 8, 2012

 
All-new issue of Lens Culture online now — global photography & photobook reviews

As we enter our 9th year of Lens Culture, we’re releasing our largest issue to date. And more will be added in the coming days and weeks.

Discover great photography and new photobooks touching on an incredibly diverse variety of themes, styles and cultures. Included in this issue, so far:

• On the foggy fringes of explosive growth in China
• A photo diary of a manic road trip around Iceland
• Re-enactment of a real serial murder by teenage Americans
• Centuries of imperialism and war in Afghanistan
• Modern day street photography in Paris
• Steaming mountains of garbage recycled in Phnom Penh
• Dying traditions in Transylvania
• Academic research about Francesca Woodman in Rome
• Grappling with Obsessive Compulsive Disorder
• Extended family-based organized crime in London
• Overstepping the boundaries of appropriation
• A (photo) graphic novel with no linear narrative
• Celebration of supersaturated color and personal whimsy
• Duane Michals photographs Magritte
• Photographic philosophical musings on personal identity post 9/11
• An overview of contemporary Iranian photography
• A reprint of a classic book about sexual identity in 1950s’ Paris
• History of Kodak Girl advertising campaigns
• Up-close photographs of criminal interrogations in the Ukraine

We hope you enjoy this new issue. Be sure to tell all of your friends, too, okay?


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May 1, 2012

 
Multimedia: Jim Goldberg's out-of-print book Raised by Wolves




A short film about Jim Goldberg's book 'Raised by Wolves'. Seeing that the book has been out of print and hard to find, the studio decided to try and share this amazing work by making a movie about it/with it. Combining footage and audio from Jim's archive, along with new video made specifically for this project, we hope it tells Dave & Echo's story in a new and exciting way. Edited & animated by Brandon Tauszik - brandontauszik.com

Suitably creepy, and probably NSFW. Discovered via Wired's Raw File Blog.