Archives For Photography

The Arnold Newman Prize for New Directions in Photographic Portraiture has been awarded to Ilona Szwarc for her series about American girls coupled with their look alike American Girl Dolls. Her work was highlighted on this blog back in 2013. Don’t miss her series on Rodeo Girls as it’s just as good.

Screen shot 2014-06-09 at 3.44.15 PM

Ilona Szwarc (American and Polish) is an artist based in New York City. 
Szwarc received a Bachelor of Fine Arts from School of Visual Arts in New York City. She has had solo exhibitions at Foley Gallery in New York City, Claude Samuel gallery in Paris and Maison de la Photographie in Lille, France. Her projects “American Girls” and “Rodeo Girls” have received worldwide recognition, having been highlighted in The New York Times, The Telegraph, MSNBC, Today.com and The Huffington Post among others.

Via her web site

 

 

 

Ilona Szwarc wins 2014 Arnold Newman Prize

Back in 1999 Hiroshi Sugimoto made a very large set of images depicting The Last Supper, which were photographs of wax models from a wax museum based on Di Vinci’s famous painting. (He did an entire series of portraits of wax models called Portraits and this work is from that series). This particular piece was in storage in a basement in New York when hurricane Sandy hit. The piece was severely damaged by the waters in the flooded basement. Instead of destroying the work Sugimoto has deemed it an act of God and is selling as such with a new title: The Last Supper: Acts of God now showing at the Fraenkel Gallery.

When god is your partner in making an artwork how can you go wrong in turning what is actually a destroyed work into an even more collectable piece? I will let you be the judge….

“I chose to interpret this as the invisible hand of God coming down to bring my monumental, but unfinished Last Supper to completion. Leonardo completed his Last Supper over five hundred years ago, and it has deteriorated beautifully. I can only be grateful to the storm for putting my work through a half-millennium’s worth of stresses in so short a time”. 

Hiroshi Sugimoto 

 

Hiroshi Sugimoto, The Last Supper: Acts of God, 1999/2012. © Hiroshi Sugimoto, courtesy Fraenkel Gallery, San Francisco

Hiroshi Sugimoto, The Last Supper: Acts of God, 1999/2012. © Hiroshi Sugimoto, courtesy Fraenkel Gallery, San Francisco

The Last Supper: Acts of God (detail), 1999/2012 © Hiroshi Sugimoto, courtesy Fraenkel Gallery,

The Last Supper: Acts of God (detail), 1999/2012 © Hiroshi Sugimoto, courtesy Fraenkel Gallery,

 

Hiroshi Sugimoto and The Last Supper.  All photos and quotes via the Fraenkel Gallery.

Looks like I was included in the prestigious American Photography 30 for my Light Projections.  This is my 5th award from American Photography (It was announced in April but I just found out about it!).  Congrats to all those chosen and the final winners selected for the book.

My work is here: http://www.ai-ap.com/slideshow/AP/30/#76

American Photo b

 

 Via http://www.ai-ap.com

 

Thomas Brummett is among the  American Photography 30 Winners!

Free and anonymous web site…. http://www.whopaysartists.com/  That tracks artists jobs and the money (or lack of) they make from them.

Making a living as an artist can be hard.

You never know how much to ask for. Discussions about money are taboo because we pretend that passion and creativity alone should pay the bills. Some of the best events have “no budget”, and sometimes only the worst events can make a career as an artist look painfully sustainable. Let’s help each other sort through some of the confusion, and develop an ongoing dialogue about how artists make money.

Screen shot 2014-06-06

via http://www.whopaysartists.com/

 

How Much Do Artists Make?

3 Days after winning the Prix Pictet for Lebensmittel, his monumental exploration of the food industry, Michael Schmidt has sadly passed away. Here was a man who spent a great deal of his time showing us how our food is now processed by giant agro-business and especially what a hollow and brutal corporate enterprise it is.

 

Ausstellug "Michael Schmidt. Lebensmittel"

Michael Schmidt in from of his work Lebensmittel (Food Stuff) via prixpictet.com

 

“It was with immense sadness that we learned of the death of Michael Schmidt on Saturday 24 May.  Three days previously Michael was awarded the fifth Prix Pictet for Lebensmittel, his monumental exploration of the food industry. This was the first major international award for a photographer described by the critic Michael Fried as ‘one of the most important artists of our time’. Luc Delahaye, the fourth laureate of the Prix Pictet and member of the Jury, paid tribute to Schmidt’s genius, remarking, ‘As a photographer, I’d like to say that Schmidt is doing the kind of work that helps us to keep faith in our profession’. Luc Delahaye’s appreciation of Michael Schmidt’s work can be read below.

“With Lebensmittel, Michael Schmidt shows us how people, animals and nature are exploited in the agro-business. Exploitation is a feature of capitalism and the photographs, in their brutality, only show the brutality of a situation, the absurdity of the fact and the alienation that it produces. They can be taken just as they are or as the illustration of the many other things that are going wrong in our society. They’re a dark tale about the modern world.

What’s important is that Schmidt does not accuse, he simply reveals, and the interpretation is left to the viewer. He can do so because he has confidence in the power of his medium and confidence in the intelligence of the viewer. His language is a language of precision and his tool is the most simple one: a small, 35 mm camera, and a few rolls of films. His pictures look simple at first glance, and their anti-sentimentality, their refusal of all the tricks of the usual seduction, their concision and their clarity give them great efficiency. They show what they show but they manage to retain an opacity, a mystery, and they become a support for our imagination.

Michael Schmidt shows us that this kind of photography is today more relevant than ever. At the end of our discussion yesterday a member of the jury said that this was probably one of the last time straight photography would be awarded or appreciated. He may be right but I hope he’s wrong. As a photographer, I’d like to say that Schmidt is doing the kind of work that help us to keep faith in our profession.”

via prixpictet.com

 

Michael Schmidt 1945 to 2014