zaterdag 24 mei 2008

Wally Elenbaas 1912 - 2008 Photography Graphic Design

The very versatile Rotterdam artist Wally Elenbaas (1912 - 2008) is first and foremost a graphic artist, or as he himself puts it: 'A really good printer!' Photography has played an important part in his work too; in the 1930s he joined the workers/writers collective 'Links Richten' ['eyes left' Piet Zwart, Paul Schuitema and typograph Dick Elffers] as a photographer. He and his late partner Esther Hartog (1905-1998) photographed themes reflecting their personal lives: each other, friends, journeys, still lifes and the nearby surroundings of Katendrecht. Published by Duo Duo Foundation/Publishers, the book 'De honderd gezichten van Esther Hartog' [the 100 faces of Esther Hartog], compiled by Wally Elenbaas himself. Lees meer ...

Wally Elenbaas 1912 - 2008 Photography Graphic Design

The very versatile Rotterdam artist Wally Elenbaas (1912 - 2008) is first and foremost a graphic artist, or as he himself puts it: 'A really good printer!' Photography has played an important part in his work too; in the 1930s he joined the workers/writers collective 'Links Richten' ['eyes left' Piet Zwart, Paul Schuitema and typograph Dick Elffers] as a photographer. He and his late partner Esther Hartog (1905-1998) photographed themes reflecting their personal lives: each other, friends, journeys, still lifes and the nearby surroundings of Katendrecht. Published by Duo Duo Foundation/Publishers, the book 'De honderd gezichten van Esther Hartog' [the 100 faces of Esther Hartog], compiled by Wally Elenbaas himself. Lees meer ...

Concerned Photographer Cornell Capa Photography

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Cornell Capa, visionary photographer, editor, and Founding Director of the International Center of Photography (ICP) died in New York on Friday, May 23, 2008. “The world has lost a great photographer and a great humanitarian; the world of photography has lost its greatest friend and champion,” said Willis E. Hartshorn, ICP Ehrenkranz Director. Read more ...
See for Robert Capa ...


Werner Bischof, Robert Capa, David Seymour, Andre Kertesz, Leonard Freed, and Dan Weiner.

vrijdag 23 mei 2008

Nine Tips for Photography Collectors

By Kris Wilton Published: May 22, 2008



Courtesy New York Photo Festival
Jan Banning, "Bolivia_Bureau 13"

NEW YORK—“The difference between someone who collects and someone who doesn’t collect,” says W.H. Hunt, cofounder of Chelsea’s Hasted Hunt gallery and a 35-year collector himself, “is committing. You like a picture, you’ve got the money, buy the damn thing. Commit.”

Hunt offered this tough-love call to action at a panel called “Collecting Photography: What’s Hot,” at the debut New York Photo Festival, which took place in Brooklyn’s Dumbo neighborhood May 14–18. Joining him were fellow gallerist Yancey Richardson, collector (and record exec) Kent Belden, and Patrick Amsellem, who is associate curator of photography at the Brooklyn Museum.

Like many of photo-world professionals and enthusiasts who attended the new festival, dedicated to “the future of contemporary photography,” these four talked about finding that perfect work — a work that compels you to collect — as a visceral, pulse-raising experience.

“Look at the hair on the back of your hand,” advises Hunt. “Listen to your heart. Commit.”

Here are some more tips from the panel to help you get started.

1. No Trust Fund? No Problem
You might not be a nouveau riche Russian billionaire or the heir to a family forture, but that doesn’t mean you can’t be a collector. “There are many areas of the market to collect in," says Richardson. "You can buy Struth and Gursky and be ready to spend a hundred thousand to half a million dollars, but you can also buy strong young artists for, say, $2,000 to $3,500.”

2. Let Dealers Help
“A lot of dealers are collectors at heart, so they share this excitement and enthusiasm for finding a piece that’s fabulous and wonderful and right for you,” says Richardson — even if that fabulous piece is in another gallery. “Part of the excitement of the photographic community is that a lot of sharing goes on.”

3. Be Sneaky
If you find a work that you love but can’t afford, look around a bit, advises Belden. You may be able to find a smaller version of it being offered somewhere else. Belden does most of his searching online, trying auction house, gallery, and artist Web sites.

4. Look in the Closet
If you go to an art fair, says Richardson, look in the closets. “I’ve found some of the best pieces for myself and my clients in the closets of the exhibition booths. They’re for sale, but they’re tucked away for one reason or another.”

4. Don’t Rely on Fairs
Go to art fairs to see a range of work, but go to exhibitions at galleries to learn about a particular artist’s range, says Richardson. “You’ll have a much better understanding of who that artist is.”

5. And While You’re There…
If you find an artist you like at a particular gallery, ask to see work by other artists it represents, since it could be that your taste overlaps with the gallerist’s. You can also browse through a gallery’s stable of artists online, though Richardson warns that there’s a good chance the images posted there are not necessarily the newest work.

6. Do Not Fear the Gallerina
Those chic, bespectacled young aesthetes behind the desk at the gallery may not be the most welcoming, but they’re there to help. “I know people find galleries intimidating,” says Richardson, “but we’re always trying not to be.” She suggests the following approach: “If you’re interested in something, walk up to the gallerina at the desk and say you’d like some help, or point to something on the wall and say, ‘Who is that, can you tell me about that?’ In many galleries, someone will happily get up and talk to you about the artist.”

7. Stop By in the Summer
“Summertime’s a great time to look at photographs,” says Hunt, “because many galleries will do a summer show that features talent that the gallery’s trying on to see the response. The price point is pitched a little lower, because you get a different kind of traffic in summer. And I think dealers behave a little differently.”

8. Give a Little, Get a Little
Charity auctions can be a great place to find bargains, says Richardson. Galleries are unlikely to offer up their very best gems, but “often a lot of very good pieces are donated. It’s also a great way to get exposed to a lot of work.” Hunt adds that it’s also “a great way to see a mix of photographs that may otherwise never be seen together.”

9. Be a Joiner
If you can afford it, join the support group for patrons of the photography department of your local museum, suggests Richardson. “Curators and directors will talk with you about work they’ve seen that they think is important. They’ll take you through the art fairs and help you understand what you’re looking at.”

donderdag 22 mei 2008

Hot New Players by Martin Parr & Review Empty Bottles Wassink Lundgren Photography


Martin Parr New Typographies


From the unlikely sounding Tarantino-meets-Disney venues Smack Mellon and Dumbo Arts Center, Magnum photographer and curator of New Typologies Martin Parr lays out his stall for the Future of Photography. In employing the word ‘typology’, Parr is evoking a tradition in which the best-known exponents are Bernd and Hilda Becher. “Yes, it’s been around for a long time, but people are using it to great effect at the moment,” says Parr. “Photographing something over and over again can bring an extra level of rigour to certain subject matters. It’s not new, but no-one has isolated it as a specific trend.”

Donovan Wylie

Indeed Parr used the strategy for his own recent book Parking Spaces. The use of the related concept of repetition is an enduring theme for Magnum photographers and was celebrated in a magazine venture called M2, published by the Paris bureau and Steidl in 2005. Parr’s Magnum colleague Donovan Wylie has recently employed a typological study for his latest photographs of The Maze Prison. Wylie has of course photographed The Maze before – it was this body of work that secured his reputation – but this time he is photographing its demolition. In fact, he was still photographing the work up until just a few weeks ago.

Most of the other photographers selected by Parr are less well known, but they’re “hot new players”, not least the vibrant young Dutch photographers known collectively as WassinkLundgren. The duo won the Arles book prize last year for their project Empty Bottles, in which they photograph Beijing and Shanghai residents picking up bottles from the streets in order to recycle them. Viewers can also expect to see a series of those magical spaces, photographers’ darkrooms, a diminishing space captured for posterity by Michel Campeau.

WassinkLundgren - Empty Bottles see for the Review by 5B4 ...


Parr wasn’t especially keen to extol the respective artistic merit of his exhibitees, who include Jeffrey Milstein, Sarah Pickering, Ananké Asseff, Jan Banning and Jan Kempenaers, preferring to keep his comments “tight and efficient” and also, presumably, to let the work speak for itself. We do know, though, that he believes that the form of the photographic series brings “order to the chaos of the modern world we live in.” Just back from the opening of his own mega-show Parrworld in Munich – which he described as “very complex”- Parr seemed keen to throw himself into the New York experience, perhaps looking to bring some order to his self-made chaos. And of course to champion the work of photography’s rising stars. As Parr says, “It’s very important for old farts like me to have some fresh young competition.”

Martin Parr was speaking with Max Houghton Read more ...

Video: WassinkLundgren at NYPH


woensdag 21 mei 2008

Dutch Eyes Hellen van Meene A Coversation Photography

A Conversation with Portraitist Hellen Van Meene by Joerg Colberg May 2008

Portraiture might be the most challenging photographic endeavor. It is a complex interaction between the photographer's intent, the subject's preconceptions and ideas, and the viewer's background. So how do photographers manage to make great portraits?

I have long been a fan of Dutch photographer Hellen van Meene. Her portraits of adolescents possess an extremely quiet and forceful beauty. I've often wondered how she manages to create work that is so beautiful, while always avoiding the trap of producing mere clichés. Deciding to approach Hellen to talk to her about her images, I was particularly happy to not only get a glimpse of her ideas about her work, but to also to see some of her very new photos that have not yet been seen publicly. Read more ...


Dutch Eyes Hellen van Meene A Coversation Photography

A Conversation with Portraitist Hellen Van Meene by Joerg Colberg May 2008

Portraiture might be the most challenging photographic endeavor. It is a complex interaction between the photographer's intent, the subject's preconceptions and ideas, and the viewer's background. So how do photographers manage to make great portraits?

I have long been a fan of Dutch photographer Hellen van Meene. Her portraits of adolescents possess an extremely quiet and forceful beauty. I've often wondered how she manages to create work that is so beautiful, while always avoiding the trap of producing mere clichés. Deciding to approach Hellen to talk to her about her images, I was particularly happy to not only get a glimpse of her ideas about her work, but to also to see some of her very new photos that have not yet been seen publicly. Read more ...