Archive for the 'Photographers' Category

Szarkowski on (motion) film

Saturday, July 21st, 2007

Yo, if this is your first time stopping by you should think about subscribing to my shit. It's the best on the web fo'rils.RSS feed. Thanks for visiting!

szarkowski.jpg

I’m not entirely sure how I came across this but the Checkerboard Film Foundation has been making documentaries about artists, composers and writers for 30 years. They produced a documentary on John Szarkowski in 1998. There is also another film called Szarkowski on Eugene Atget and one called Szarkowski on Szarkowski. They’re all available for sale on DVD for the bargain price of $45. I searched Google Video and YouTube for all or part of these guys to no avail. Please let me know if you’ve seen any of them, I emailed and asked if there was a student rate.

Read more: John Szarkowski

Christian Patterson in Making Room

Saturday, July 21st, 2007

patterson.jpg
© Christian Patterson

I’m a big fan of Christian’s work and was thrilled to see some of his new work alongside his interview in Making Room. Christian talks in some depth about his ongoing project “Out There,” an exploration of the landscape connected with a series of murders committed by a Nebraska teenager in the 1950s.

When I started following my map, I found things that I never imagined I would find nearly fifty years after the murders took place. There are very few things that remain, and they are very hard to find, but I found some very interesting things that will show up in the photographs. My research and imagination are helping me to fill in the blanks.

I had sort of assumed that “Out There” was sort of just what it sounded like - I had no idea that Christian had plotted out a very specific course based on the route the killer and his girlfriend took while on the lamb. I can’t really overstate power this concept lends to what are already incredibly rich images - one in particular reminds me of a famous Robert Frost poem. I’m sure you know the one.

An Update

Tuesday, July 17th, 2007

814893035_5c0ffa4111.jpg
© Greg Wasserstrom

Perhaps you’ve noticed the silence emanating from my particular corner of the internet. This isn’t meant to be a complaint, but this is turning out to be something of stagnant summer for me. I’m here in D.C. finishing the last class for my BA and while I have been shooting like crazy, the film has been collecting in a B&H box under my desk for more than two months due to lack of funds. But! I sent the box off yesterday and I am looking forward to the results. Snapshot stuff, mostly.

I’ve also been working on a zine which is sort of a new thing for me. I’ll make it available through Etsy as soon as it’s ready - it’s about sex, I think.

There’s plenty of exciting news about the the fall, though: The Must Warn Others kick off show has been slated for October 13 and should have a book to accompany it. In addition to yours truly, the show will include Greg Lutze, Bryan Schutmaat, Ian Whitmore, Jerad Knudson, Christina Mei Lutze and Leif Anderson.

I am also going to have the opportunity to travel through Europe for a hefty chunk of time (to be determined). A seperate post on this will follow.

So, that’s the deal on this end. I hate it when I don’t post, so I’ll try and be better about it. Alec and Joerg and Shane have it so well covered sometimes, and who can say things better than they can?

John Szarkowski

Tuesday, July 10th, 2007

380.jpg

The blog has been silent for a couple of weeks now because I’ve been doing some traveling and thinking about what exactly I’m going to do with myself when college ends in exactly 34 days. Usually, that’s the kind of thing I would post about here, but I’d like for this blog to become less about my own personal trajectory and more about my growing relationship with imagery. Yeah, only I don’t know what that means and so I haven’t really written anything down. I was in a diner outside of Gettysburg, PA on Sunday when I read that John Szarkowski, the luminary MoMa curator of photography, had passed away at 81 years old.

I don’t mean to be melodramatic. I obviously didn’t know this man personally as many of my friends out in the photosphere who have written about him in the past few days did. I never even got the opportunity to attend a lecture of his, though I did send my mother when he spoke at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston last summer while I was here in D.C. (she sent me signed copies of his wonderful books). I can say though, that I have as I have pieced my ad hoc photo education together over the course of the past three years or so, Szarkowski’s writing has been central to my development as a photographer. Now he belongs to the history books, like Steichen and Stieglitz, Evans and Cartier-Bresson and so many other canonical figures who’s presence in the art world is no longer tangible.

Please pardon me if my history is skewed or off in some way here, but it seems to me that no single person since perhaps Alfred Steiglitz had the kind of influence on photography that Szarkowski has had. From his perch at the Museum of Modern Art, he put on show after show of perception-altering from work from the artists who shaped the way photographs were made in the second half of the 20th century. It seems to me that Edward Steichen’s 1955 Family of Man pretty much summed up the way our society viewed photography: illustrative documents of the human condition, Life Magazine style. More than any other single individual, he turned photography from mere document to social mirror, most notable with photographers Diane Arbus, Gary Winogrand, Lee Friedlander and William Eggleston.

Just as important as Szarkowski’s eyes are his words. From the essay he wrote in William Eggleston’s Guide, the catalog of that photographer’s 1972 MoMA show Color Photographs, to the interview Szarkowski gave last summer to Art in America, his insight into what about certain photographs resonates with us is why is invaluable and every word of it is to be treasured.

Maybe reverence of this kind is silly to bestow of any individual. We’re all just people, after all. But had Edward Steichen chosen someone else to fill his shoes at the Modern, I think we can all be certain that contemporary photography would look quite different than it does today.

John Szarkowski’s obituary from the New York Times [Link]

An appreciation of Szarkowsky, also from the Times, penned by Verlyn Klinkenborg. [Link]

Szarkowski stories on Alec’s blog. [Link]

Shane Lavalette’s appreciation of Szarkowsky. [Link]

More NYC

Tuesday, June 26th, 2007

It would be a lie to say that I wasn’t thrilled to meet so many of the people I admire in New York over the weekend. I would recount the whole thing blow by blow but my good friend Shane Lavalette has already beaten me to the punch. He has been far more thorough is his recounting of Friday night than I ever could be. I will say though that among the folks I got a chance to hang out with were Jen Bekman, Eric William CarrolJoerg Colberg, Amy Elkins, Shane Lavalette, Christian Patterson, Richard Renaldi (guy’s got serious muscles, by the way), Amy Stein, Alec Soth, Brian Ulrich, Zoe Strauss and Shen Wei. All the photographers and bloggers from all over the country in New York for the same bunch of events made this one of the most exciting weekends I’ve had in a long time.

It’s hard to have any regrets about a weekend like this one, but I do wish I had been able to talk more with Christian Patterson, Richard Renaldi and Joerg Colberg. I also didn’t even get a chance to say hello to Edward Winkleman, Lesley Martin, Paddy Johnson and Martin Parr. Even so though, I can’t say that I have any real complaints. I was amazed that everyone I met was so incredibly nice - it was practically like being with family. I also want to say that Amy Stein is just about the sweetest person on earth.

I also got to spend a good chunk of my weekend apartment hunting in various Brooklyn neighborhoods. It’s still just a little too early to really get serious since I’m not moving until mid-August, but it was really helpful to get a feel for how much you get for your money in the various places. And since I have no money (checking account: $133.60, savings account: $43.60) it looks like Bushwick is my best bet. Luckily, it seems like it’s a terrific neighborhood. It’s a quick shot to Williamsburg and into Manhattan an I particularly like the Puerto Rican flags that fly over many of the blocks I wandered down - it will be like living inside a Winogrand photograph. My friend Emily and her boyfriend Ian were kind enough to let me crash with them for a night at their place in Bushwick and I had a great time.

Now I’m back in D.C., and it’s time to run to the grocery store to get stuff for dinner. Then, I’m going to hit the books. Tomorrow is my last day of Biology.

Another submission

Sunday, June 17th, 2007

I’m on a JPG Mag tear right now and I just submitted my prized interview with Joerg. They gave me this bit of code:

So, you know, check it out and vote and stuff.

Wednesday, June 13th, 2007

blackwhitegray.jpg
© Francisco Scavullo

I just picked up a ticket to see Black White and Gray: A Portrait of Robert Mapplethorpe and Sam Wagstaff at Silverdocs on Saturday. I don’t know all that much about Wagstaff, but obviously I’ve had quite a bit of exposure to Mapplethorpe. Just from reading the description of this film, I learned that their roommate in the early 1970s was Patti Smith. This flick’s gonna be sweet, I’ll write about it after.

Dog Days

Tuesday, June 5th, 2007

41nsmo-t9ol_aa240_.jpg I just learned from Muse-ings that Alec Soth’s Dog Days: Bogota is being published. Not only is this my favorite of Alec’s projects, but it’s the only one I will have the opportunity to own now that both Sleeping by the Mississippi and Niagra have both gone out of print. I have already pre-ordered a copy of Dog Days on Amazon because I learned the heard way that it’s important to get your hands on one of these books as soon as humanly possibly. I ordered a copy of Niagra from Amazon before they stopped publishing it, but I guess the demand for it was so high they weren’t able to ship it to me before new ones were made. I then got a message from them saying I was hosed, there are none left.

But not with Dog Days, oh no sir. You can take that to the bank.

Tiny Vices London

Tuesday, May 29th, 2007

tinyvices_london_invite.jpg

GWB Operative Josh just sent me this dispatch from London:

Former Vice Magazine Photo Editor and Tiny Vices proprietor Tim Barber opened a new exhibition at the Gallery Soho in London tonight. Because I love my friend Greg a great deal, I flew out to see it (don’t worry, he promised he’d pay me back for the ticket). The exhibition is set over two floors in London’s Covent Garden neighborhood, not in Soho as the name of the Gallery suggests. Despite this semantic disturbance, the show is pretty interesting. The first floor is about what you’d expect at something curated by Tim Barber: lots of bright, punchy shots of young people in varying levels of nakedness, plus a few drawings and a badass picture of a van on fire.

The second floor, though, is where the action is. The uncredited photo series appears to have been taken almost entirely in Germany onboard subways or on their platforms. The photos are arranged either alone or in groups of two or three, in neat rows contrasting the scrapbook feel of the first floor. This ordered style gives the impression that the entire scene is visible from within one train car, and what a scene it is. A few large, central figures — mostly locked in embrace with a loved one — capture the attention of the people in the images around them. A covetous feeling exists within the exhibition, as though everyone in the smaller images wants to be the people in the bigger ones. Or maybe I just wanted another one of the free canapes.

There you have it, sounds like a great time. Thanks, Josh; I feel like I was there. And your check is in the mail.

Bea Fremderman

Wednesday, May 23rd, 2007

ste4hx6k.jpg
© Bea Fremderman

There was an item about Bea on Style Press the other day, and looking at the photographs on her site, I realized that she’s one of my favorite Flickr contacts. Maybe I’ll get tired of this brand of diaristic stuff, but right now it certainly doesn’t feel like it. Bea’s images are particularly interesting to me because at 19, her images seem more sincere than some of the people who are known in the art world for similar work.