December 20, 2010
October 24, 2010
September 1, 2010
An image of Ozone Park from my project on Queens has been selected by judges Stephen Shore and Harvey Stein for inclusion in the annual group photography exhibition at Garrison Art Center. The show will open this Friday, September 3, with a reception from 6 - 8 pm. The varying work should be interesting.
The exhibition will run through September 26, in the Balter and Gillette Galleries. Garrison Art Center is located at 23 Depot Square on Garrison's Landing in Garrison, NY. Gallery Hours are Tuesday through Sunday from 10 am to 5 pm. For more information please call 845-424-3960 or visit www.garrisonartcenter.org
August 25, 2010
August 20, 2010
August 18, 2010
August 5, 2010
August 4, 2010
I have an image in Humble Arts Foundation's, Group Show 36. Check it out along with the work of many fine photographers.
© Louise Sturges
© Sean Ellingson
August 3, 2010
I can't even explain how much I love postcards. So needless to say how great it was to open my mailbox and see this today! Such a nice surprise, especially since the only other things I got were a bill and a casino rewards flyer addressed to the previous tenant. Despite the recent NYC heat, it would be pretty nice to be there right now!
July 30, 2010
June 30, 2010
Klea McKenna
Photos © Klea McKenna
June 22, 2010
InOrbit NY
Some of my Queens images are featured on InOrbit New York today. It is a great new site edited by James Turnley and Bryan Formhals featuring photography and other things about NYC. Be sure to check it out.
June 16, 2010
June 8, 2010
This Thursday
Will Steacy's show, Down These Mean Streets opens this Thursday at Michael Mazzeo Gallery. I have been a fan of his work, especially this project for a while now. This should be a great show - not to be missed.
Also, be sure to check out Summer Staged over at Foley Gallery (at their brand new location at 548 W. 28th, 2nd floor), which is also opening. Artists in the show include Tribble & Mancenido, Steven B. Smith, Amy Stein, and several others.
May 14, 2010
The 6th Boro
From their website:
The 6th Boro is an upcoming exhibition showcasing 9 photographer’s contrasting views of New York City. Despite its solid façade, the city is an amorphously perceived environment. It’s natives, it’s transplants, and those who simply come to visit as tourists have disparagingly different perceptions of it. They therefore experience what could conceptually be considered entirely different cities: the spectacle, the ideal, and the “truth”. The 6th Boro presents artists who, through their photography, convey alternate perceptions of the city which the viewer might be unfamiliar with.
Submissions are being accepted (for free!) until June 14th.
See more info on their website.
May 11, 2010
NYPH 2010
© Marcel Gahler
New York Photo Festival starts on Thursday! My schedule has been quite busy as of late, but I am hoping to make it to a lot of the events.
While browsing the participating artists, Marcel Gahler's work caught my eye. His work is part of the Use Me, Abuse Me exhibition curated by Erik Kessels, at Smack Mellon. Overall the festival looks like it will prove to be better than the last.
Also up during the festival is Full Frame, a group exhibition of work by Pratt Institute's graduating photography seniors. This year's class is much larger than mine was and the show includes a lot of great work. So be sure to stop by!
Full Frame: An Exhibition of Photographs by the Pratt Senior Class
111 Front Street, Suite 461
DUMBO, Brooklyn, NY
through May 15th
Gallery Hours:
Wednesday - Friday: 2pm - 6pm
Saturday-Sunday: 12 - 6pm
© Natasha Otrakji
April 21, 2010
Hey, Hot Shot!
Have A Nice Day, 85th St., Hollis, Queens, 2008
I have been shooting Queens for almost three years now and since my most recent project is finally at a stage where I feel comfortable showing it to people and more tightly edited than it was in the past - I decided it was time try to make it a little more visible. While there are signs it is getting better, the current economy sometimes dissuades me from submitting work to competitions - that and the fact that I don't exactly have a lot of cash anyway, to spend on this sort of thing. However, since I really like what they are doing over there at Jen Bekman Gallery with 20x200 and other means of helping emerging photographers reach more people, I chose to enter this round of Hey, Hot Shot! And much to my surprise, there was a nice little write up of my work on their blog today!
Take a look at their post here
April 6, 2010
The iPad was finally released this past Saturday (April 3) and I can gladly say my website is in fact fully functional on the newest Apple product. My images actually look pretty darn good on the thing too - but I still have to ask myself, is an iPad really necessary? I know that I will not be getting one any time soon, nor feel the need to own one. However, after being bombarded with posts from several different websites asking, "Is your website iPad ready?", I had to check it out...Not that I would have put making my site operational on it at the top of my to-do list.
April 5, 2010
Off Topic
I am very excited to hear that one of my favorite hometown bands, The Ponys, who seemed to have disappeared after their 2007 album, "Turn The Lights Out", are releasing some new material. Their new EP "Deathbed + 4" will be out later this month in digital format and May 25th on vinyl. They will even be playing some shows!
More info, tour dates, and a listen here.
Article on their disappearance here.
March 31, 2010
March 20, 2010
Updated
March 18, 2010
February 25, 2010
February 24, 2010
Oh, Illinois
Main Street, Chadwick, Illinois 2006 © Dave Jordano
When I checked my email today, I was greeted with my subscription from Culturehall. The current feature, Inside Out, curated by Tema Stauffer includes Juliana Beasley, Wayne Liu, Heather Musto, and Dave Jordano. While I have seen his photos before, I was struck by Jordano’s work this morning. I am pretty sure it has to do with the fact that I am originally from Chicago and his project, Prarieland, focuses on rural Illinois. While I lived in the city itself, I have traveled the roads and highways of rural Illinois quite a bit – as a child with my parents, road trips with friends, and photographing as an adult. Not that upstate New York can’t provide me with nature and give me a break from the always hectic city - Jordano’s images made me a bit homesick. Rural America often tends to have a similar feel, but there is just something about the Midwest that cannot be replicated, for me at least.
This also sparked a lot of thought about photography and things I have been reading over the past couple of weeks. Recently there has been a lot of discussion (on blogs and in person) on similar photographs/projects, etc. A good read on this topic is over on Conscientious, Jorg Colberg’s blog. I actually have no problem what-so-ever with similar work (within reason). There is obviously a line that should not be crossed, which to me is common sense – but I don’t really want to talk about copyright infringement and people copying other people’s work and so on. Instead, I have been thinking about various artists doing projects on similar, if not the same places, in similar styles, etc. I have heard people say, “Does the world really need another Stephen Shore?” or so and so place has already been covered by so and so photographer. But does this really matter? In my opinion, a different artist usually brings something new to the work and it is not the same as Shore’s or Sternfeld’s or whoever, because it is shot today, not in 1970 - whatever. Heck, I have been shooting Queens since I moved to New York a number of years ago only to find out a year and a half into shooting, that Queens College commissioned photography greats, Joel Sternfeld and Frank Gohlke to shoot the borough. Does this bother me? No. Did I ever think I would be the only one to shoot Queens? No. However, I feel the work is different enough, because I am seeing the landscape in a totally different way, as a newcomer, resident – culture shock from moving here from Chicago, etc. etc. At any rate, I think that it is somewhat selfish to limit the things/places we photograph (not that people do... and again, within reason) because there is a greater audience out there other than the photo/art world (that sees things completely differently and has way more exposure to different artists and work than the average person). What is overkill to one person is loved by another. But we already knew this.
Anyway, I don't usually write this much and I am rambling at this point, so I will stop. I hope all that makes sense. Until next time...
February 15, 2010
February 1, 2010
© Bryan Lear
© Carl Wooley
Amherst, Massachusetts, Thanksgiving, 2008
I found the first two images while meandering around the Internet. I do not know either of the two photographers, but their work definitely deserves a look. I love that the images are all basically of the same thing, yet different, and it's interesting that each of us saw something compelling in what is otherwise just a generic grass island. The last image is a rough scan from a side project I have been working on rather slowly. Only time will tell where it will go.
January 29, 2010
"Similar houses of a 'cookie cutter' suburban Queens neighborhood in New York City."
1935 LIFE Magazine
via Gothamist
January 17, 2010
Kodak Film Grant Recipients Announced
A while back I posted about the Too Much Chocolate / Kodak film grant. While the aforementioned busyness prevented me from making the deadline to enter the competition, it looks like the recipients (which were announced earlier this month) are a great group of artists and will make great use of the grant. The work of two photographers particularly caught my eye, possibly because I am a sucker for seeing images of places I have never been through the eyes and lenses of someone else.
Anna Beeke of Brooklyn, documents Amsterdam, NY.
"Anna’s project, Amsterdam, New York, is a photographic document of a town in decline, and the life that continues there. It is part topography, part emotional response, and part “portrait of a town” in the classic sense of the photo essay. Much of the project is about physical spaces, occupied and unoccupied: Beeke explores the contrast between Amsterdam’s living and dead spaces, how its residents relate to the physical space of the city, and how their lives are informed by the landscape in which they carry out their daily rituals."
© Anna Beeke
Susan Worsham's, (of Richmond, VA) project, By the Grace of God, "is a series about Worsham’s home, the South, that takes her beyond her backyard, following a southern road, and documents places and characters that she uncovers."
© Susan Worsham
I am excited to see more images from both of these women.
And then there is also Murray Ballard's (of Brighton UK) look at cryonics, which is a fascinating subject in and of itself.
© Murray Ballard
The complete list of recipients as well as more info on the whole thing can be found on the Too Much Chocolate website, or more specifically, here. Be sure to check it out!