Monday, July 28, 2008

Hair Hats by Japanese Pop Artist Nagi Noda















all above images © 2005 Nagi Noda/Uchu-Country Co. Ltd.

I came across these Hair Hats images via Gawker (via omgowned) and haven't stopped regularly coming back to look at them. I wasn't going to post anything about it but then I noticed that neither Gawker or Omg OWNED didn't point out that these images were produced by Japanese Pop ArtistNagi Noda (wiki). Noda is well known for her videos that have become viral sensations like the Weird exercise routine by Mariko Takahash below.


YouTube - Poodle Exercise with Humans

These Hair Hats pictures, I just found out, were photographed at MILK Studios in New York by Kenneth Cappello.

Also, Nagi Noda has directed these other great clips:


YouTube - Coca Cola "What Goes Around Comes Around"

Scissor Sisters - She's My Man

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Wednesday, July 23, 2008

The meeting of medium and message.


Clifford Ross, HARMONIUM MOUNTAIN I, Archival Pigment Print 70 3/4 x 203" (framed quadriptych) 2008, Archival Pigment Print 42 3/4 x 93 7/8" (frame) 2008, Archival Pigment Print 26 1/4 x 54 3/4" (frame) 2008

Recently Jorg Colberg wrote a post in reference the use of various mediums and photography. Colberg argues intelligently that sometimes photographers confuse the format choice for actual content in photography. In his original post he argues:
Using a so-called toy camera, for example, doesn't automatically produce a great photo. A light leak or a soft lens might contribute to what makes a particularly photo good, but that doesn't mean that if you buy a Diana camera (which are now in production again and sold for way too much money - seriously, if you want one buy a vintage one on Ebay) you're guaranteed good photos.

The same is true for large-format cameras. There almost is a cult of large-format photography out there. It's true, large-format cameras can lead to very spectacular results, but using a large-format camera is no guarantee for that.

Or take vintage/alternative photography processes, many of which are notoriously hard to use. But as before, using a wet-plate collodion-type process (or whatever that might be called) does not guarantee good photographs.

The medium a photographer uses does not grantee quality artwork and this conversation reminded me of a lecture my professor of last semester, Philip Perkis (book) gave to the class. In the short lecture, Perkis, strongly urged the class to stick to a particular medium; that is find the medium that you like best and stay with it learn it inside out use it all the time. He even went so far to argue against the zoom lens. After Perkis's lecture I kept thinking about his arguments while I was looking at established artists in the New York galleries and museums and on the whole the majority of the shows the medium of the photographer what integral to their style.

Colberg brings up Gursky and an example of a photographer who:
produces equally large and involved images (please don't email me to start arguments about whether or not those are "Gigapixel" or "What-have-you-pixel"!), using Photoshop (or whatever else), but whose images are vastly more interesting. Seriously.

I think part of Gursky's strength flows from his evolutionary track. Andreas Gursky uses a large format 5x7 camera and has learn over the years what the world looks like through this particular view. Gursky found a format that suited him and committed to it.

A photographer does not have to work in the same format their whole life but Clifford Ross's scattershot approach lead to the flop of his most recent exhibition Mountain Redux. I really enjoyed his previous work for the Hurricanes and then the Mountain work with his new R1 Camera. Part of what I really enjoyed with Clifford Ross's R1 camera and the Mountain series is described by Peter Galassi in his introduction to Andreas Gurski's Book (MoMA 2001):
A small picture is illegible except from near at hand, but a large one may be viewed from a distance and then by degrees more closely. This range of regard is an old story for painting, but it became familiar to photography only recently. Many artists have treated it with indifference, making big pictures whose imagery, as we approach, simply dissolves into the unlovely industrial material of photographic paper. Some of Gursky's largest productions, sacrificing precision of detail to grandeur of effect, do suffer slightly at close range. Most of his pictures, however, offer a continuous reward from very far to reasonably near, as the macrocosm reveals its microcosmic structure.

Clifford Ross made a successful first crack at exploration this relationship that larger photograph can have with the viewer. But in moving from his R1 camera into remixing these images into "Harmoniums" through the use of 3d software and a lot of computer power I believe he is loosing the original qualities that I enjoyed in the original Mountain Series.

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Wednesday, July 16, 2008

Ultra Large Format (ULF) Color Photography (Clifford Ross's R1 vs. Graham Flint's GIGAPXL Camera vs. Alastair Thain's 9"x9")



I have been following Clifford Ross’s photography since 2005 when I read my first article about the R1 Camera he commissioned to build. The camera is based around an old World War 2 era arial film cartridge system that is still in circulation and Kodak still manufactures color film for it.

The New York Times article puts it nicely:
The camera, called the R-1 (R for Ross), looks oddly rigged, like something out of Dr. Seuss, and almost like an antique viewfinder camera on legs. In fact, Mr. Ross pulls a cloth over his head and the back of his contraption when he takes a picture. But with this camera that he concocted out of 60-year-old camera parts, mirrors, a microscope and other items - none of them digital - Mr. Ross has taken photographs on 9-by-18-inch negatives that when slowly processed by hand and digitally scanned contain 100 times as much data as the average professional digital camera.

For example, in the mountain photographs that Mr. Ross took in Colorado - of Mount Sopris, near Carbondale - shingles on a barn appear in sharp focus 4,000 feet from the camera, as does a tree on a ridge four miles away.

You can get some sense as to what standing in front of a Clifford Ross print is like from a zoom feature on his website.


Clifford Ross, Mountain III, Chromogenic Color Print, 71.5"x130" (frame) 2005 and 53"x93" (frame) 2006


Clifford Ross, Mountain III (full size detail)

Not long after reading about Clifford Ross I stumbled upon the Gigapxl Project (wiki). Forming around the same time as Cilfford Ross; the Gigapxl Project was created by retired physicist Graham Flint. Using a surprisingly similar technique Flint’s Camera uses the same film format as the R1 Camera thus the two cameras have a vaguely similar tank like look. If you are interested in the technology of these types of cameras Gigapxl’s website has a geeked out technology section for your statistical pleasure. I am much more interested in the aesthetics of creating landscapes so dense with details then diving into technical differences.

WIRED has a good discription of looking at a Gigapxl image in a 2005 article, “Photographer Seeks Resolution:”
A photograph of a San Diego beach shows a paraglider swooping over bluffs. Zoom in on some tiny dots on the cliff, and a group of people with binoculars and telephoto lenses can be seen. Follow their gaze, and you’ll see naked sunbathers on the beach.

These cameras allow for a viewing interaction where the viewer’s distance far to near adds a layer of intensity usually only seen in large paintings. Now that these photographs can be produced in similar size and intensity the interaction with the picture becomes vastly different then when you look at a standard sized image.


Copyright 2006 Gigapxl Project, Mount St Helens National Volcanic Monument. Southwest Washington, Gigapxl 480-mm (normal) camera, f/19, 1/60s


Gigapxl Project, Mount St Helens National Volcanic Monument. Southwest Washington (full size detail)

When an image lush with detail such as the mountain images produced by Clifford Ross and the Gigapxl project the viewing experience becomes charged with interaction. Not only do your eyes dart across the image building the image in your minds eye but upon closer inspection since detail is maintained your eyes are flooded with information and leads to a more immersive viewing experience.


Alastair Thain, 560,000.00 Hours, London 2004

While I was writing this post I came upon another photographer using a home made camera largely based upon the same aural film cartages. I found Alastair Thain’s work via Flat-e: ICA: The Show episode seven. ICA: The Show is a British based video magazine. Although Thain’s Camera is quite similar to Ross’s and Gigapxl’s his images have more in common with Eggleston then with Adams.


Alastair Thain, I -10 Freeway 1989

I will certainly keep looking into these three artist’s development and what the will happen as the digital world collides into their film biased practice. Already they are going into new directions. Clifford Ross is experimenting with 3d manipulation which so far has underwhelmed me (at least in web form). And in August of last year Google started incorporating the Gigapxl photos into the 3d virtual environment of the Google Earth.

I also have to wonder what other artist would yield if they worked with these oversized cameras and really go to know them. Would a Andreas Gursky be improved is you could see more detail?

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Monday, May 19, 2008

all Festivaled out

So, the Festival is over I am exhausted but visually satisfied. I had tons of fun and I will write some more about the highlights next week. You can read the list of award winners here. Congratulations to all the winners and especially to Amy Stein for reppin' SVA in the Canon G9 winner's circle.

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Thursday, May 01, 2008

Tonight!!! William Greiner opening at Klompching Gallery, Brooklyn, NY


Loungers
Noac, 1995, Digital C-Type Print, Signed & Numbered Verso


I am exhausted, spent and still unfinished with my final projects for the School year but I have to go to this for a bit tonight. I'm looking forward to seeing the final images in printed form. So far, I have only viewed Greiner's work on his website and his blog.

FALLEN PARADISE — William Greiner
May 1 — June 27

OPENING RECEPTION: May 1, 6pm — 8pm

This is the underbelly of pre-Katrina New Orleans. Greiner presents an image of a city that was already devastated, by neglect and abandonment, long before natural disaster struck. His imaging of New Orleans' urban vernacular is perceptively pictured through a carefully constructed use of color, form and content.

William Greiner's modus operandi is the American Color Tradition — the snapshot that isn't. Here, the familiar becomes unfamiliar. The seemingly objective actuality of the city, its banality, its ordinary everyday impression, is transformed into a vista of flush saturated palettes of color. Born, raised and (until Katrina) living and working in the city, New Orleans has always been an importnt source of inspiration for Greiner's work.

Here, a decade of looking and picturing his immediate environment, is brought together and displayed for the first time. Fallen Paradise is a celebration of apparent incidental imagery that is, of course, abound in formal devices — frame, vantage point, shape and line. Although there exists an autobiographical subtext, Greiner is most successful in compelling us to also look, not just at his city, but at the photograph itself. Whilst the importance of his subject does not disappear, these images function as photographic artifact — at once, they are observation and cultural object.

William Geiner lives and works in Baton Roughe, Louisiana.

KLOMPCHING GALLERY

111 Front Street, Suite 206
Brooklyn, NY 11201

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Friday, April 04, 2008

Peter Funch


"Communicating Community" from the series "Babel Tales" by Peter Funch 51 x 23 inches.

One of the many people I got to meat during last weeks Armory Show madness was photographer and gallery owner Peter Funch. I got to take a quick look at his prints at The Volta Show but I wanted to spend more time with them. Hopefully they will be up again in New York.

Peter is a cofounder o f V1 Gallery in Copenhagen, Denmark. Their website has a nice gallery of Peter's Babel Tales. Peter was also selected by Getty Images in their New Photographers 2007 collection of image makers.

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Friday, February 01, 2008

Selections announced for Humble Arts Foundation's "31 Under 31: Young Women in Art Photography"


Image by Sara Padgett Heathcott

Hot off the mass email today Humble Arts Foundation has announced the 31 selections out of over 1000 submissions for the upcoming show “31 Under 31: Young Women in Art Photography.” The exhibition opening reception on Saturday, March 1st at 3rd Ward in Brooklyn and the show will stay up for the month.

I went through the Exhibiting photographers and found as many websites as I could. They may be showing newer work then what they have on their websites but it was still nice to take a look at some new voices as well as the friends and fellow SVA Students and Alumni that made it in. If any of these websites are wrong please let me know and I will correct it.

Congratulations to all.

Alana Celii
Amy Elkins
Ahndraya Parlato
Allison Grant
Ashley Lefrak
Alejandra Laviada
Alex Van Clief
Catherine Maloney
Dina Kantor
Dru Donovan
Elaine Stocki
Hannah Whitaker
Helen Maurene Cooper
Jaimie Warren
Jessica Bruah
Jessica Roberts
Ka-Man Tse
Kate and Camilla
Kelly Kleinschrodt
Manya Fox
Marta Labad
Mary Mattingly
Molly Landreth
Nadine Rovner
Rachael Dunville
Reka Reisinger
Sara Padgett Heathcott
Sarah Small
Sarah Sudhoff
Tealia Ellis Ritter
Talia Chetrit

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Tuesday, January 29, 2008

Thinking about Art/Photography blogs


Alec Soth, Bonnie (with a photograph of an angel), Port Gibson, Mississippi 2000

Alec Soth’s departure to blogging has left a deafening silence in the Internet for me. From September 3rd, 2006 through September 30th, 2007, Alec provided a haven for not only reading about photography but a virtual hub to openly discuss and debate photography away from the Flickr and forum hounds. However, as I think about the mark he made in the community the silence has made me think about the roll of blogging in the photographic and art communities. These questions keep circling through my head:

  • What and how do blogs function in the long term?
  • What happens to his blog now that it is idly sitting on his server?
  • What is it now but an archive of artist’s thoughts over the course of a year? How refined is it? Would Alec change anything he wrote?
  • What does Alec think of his yearlong experiment? Is this it or will he ever return and blog/write again?
  • What would a blog from Jeff Wall (1980 or today) read like? Longer more theoretical posts? Would that work? Does Jeff Wall Google himself?
  • Is there a place for an October like blog? would the Art and Photography communities care?
  • Do long form and/or more theoretical essays have a place in the blog format?
  • How does blogging about photography affect your art work and your standing with in the art world? which follows What did Alec Soth get out of making his blog?


All this was sparked by a recient post from Christian Patterson who is feeling burnt out on the whole blog thing. We’ll see what happens with his blog as the months roll on it doesn’t seem like he has thrown in the towel yet.

As for me, I feel like I never really put enough effort into this. Therefore, this next year I hope to be more vigilant with this blog thing, give it a real show, run it through its paces, and then evaluate it. Maybe a medium of journals and magazines can better discuss photography but maybe there is a place for this as well—despite some recent dwindling numbers?

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Monday, January 28, 2008

Tonight: Screening and Talk with Filmmaker Jem Cohen

I first came upon filmmaker Jem Cohen (wiki) (Video Data Bank) in a 2002 show at EYEBEAM. He was showing Chain, a new three channel piece shot in 16mm film, with a fantastic soundtrack by Godspeed You Black Emperor. The film washes the viewer with images in a Koyaanisqatsi (wiki) style and I remember his film being the highlight of that show so It will be interesting to see him talk tonight.

The Change You Want To See Gallery
Monday, January 28th, 7:30pm, free
84 Havemeyer Street, at Metropolitan Ave
Williamsburg, Brooklyn 11211

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Saturday, November 17, 2007

Whitney Biennial 2008


Bert Rodriguez,
As Long As I Can Love You,” pink neon mounted on plexiglas 20" x 22 1/2" x 2 1/2"
“Size of heart determined by bending a neon tube whose length is exactly my height”


Congratulations have to go out to Adler Guerrier and Bert Rodriguez for their inclusion into the 2008 Whitney Biennial.

There is a New York Times article here.

Its interesting some people are calling this “easy nihilist crap” and the show is not even up yet.

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Sunday, September 30, 2007

Jen Stark in this Month's WIRED

Jen Stark's Paper Sculptures Explore Fractals, Wormholes, and Dead Bodies

Check out this month's WIRED, there is an article on Jen Stark's paper sculptures with pictures by me.


"Coriolis Effect"


"Piece of an Infinite Whole" (detail)

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Saturday, September 01, 2007

Olafur Eliasson laser cut book

Olafur Eliasson (wiki) recently designed a amazing looking laser-cut paper sculpture art book.
(via Origami Tessellations blog) Its also interesting to note this post mentions who the manufacturer was for the book - Kremo Visionen in Papier.I couldn't read much from their website but if I am right in my assumptions then I would love to see what a Kremo vs Jen Stark Co-Lab would look like.

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Monday, May 28, 2007

Daniel Eatock

When I first started designing my website I wanted a very simple design that would be ultra straight forward and easy to get to the work while not being too showy or flashy. I ended up going with what I thought would be most logical-a menu of chapters on the left with a simple drag out menu that I found online for free and the portfolio on the right. About 6 months after I had launched the website I came across Daniel Eatock and his philosophy of web design was essentially what I has made but even simpler.

Recently Daniel Eatock teamed up with some developers and turned the philosophy of simple web design into a simple web program called indexhibit. It looks so good I may convert my website into that system just because it might be easier to upload images. For more info please read the history of the project notice I am listed in the "Early User List" area and that the software was introduced on 12.03.07 and no thats not the future he is just using the europe date format DD.MM.YY (I always like that formate better because it goes from small to large) Anyway, there is also a good and very funnyvideo lecture posted at the Walker Art Center where he used to work.

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Wednesday, May 09, 2007

Free Gilbert & George artwork from The Guardian (UK)


© Gilbert and George.



From now until Thursday May 10th The Guardian (a UK Newspaper) is offering a free download of the Gilbert and George piece pictured above. There is a full article about the piece on The Guardian's web site here. Also, there is a bunch of videos about the art duo on the Tate website.

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Friday, May 04, 2007

New Andreas Gursky work


© Andreas Gursky.



Looks like Andreas Gursky is getting talked a lot about lately. He is showing his new work and I can't wait to see it up close. Here is a nice pdf of his work. I found a good article and exhibition images in a Wallpaper Portfolio. Here is a good blog post with nice detail shots of the new images.

Also check out a haus der kunst translated page
via jm Colberg

If you happen to be in London tonight looks like there is a show up for another few days in London at Sprueth Magers London Gallery and also at White Cube.

He opened a show in New York yesterday. Anyone go? if you did how was it? I need to get up there soon. If you didn't go the show is at:

Matthew Marks
522 West 22nd Street
New York

Andreas Gursky
May 4-June 30, 2007

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Friday, April 20, 2007

Zoe Strauss: Works-in-Progress Slide show



Last October I was lucky enough to find myself in Philadelphia at the same time as one of Zoe Strauss's Works-in-Progress Slide shows. I have been meaning to post the images I took while I was there for some time so here they finally are.


© 2006 Harlan Erskine. All rights reserved.



© 2006 Harlan Erskine. All rights reserved.



© 2006 Harlan Erskine. All rights reserved.



© 2006 Harlan Erskine. All rights reserved.



© 2006 Harlan Erskine. All rights reserved.



© 2006 Harlan Erskine. All rights reserved.



© 2006 Harlan Erskine. All rights reserved.


The whole slide show was a really nice experience. Zoe Strauss has a recap of the slide show I went to on her blog. After the show, Zoe told everyone to take the pictures off the wall and keep them at no extra charge. There were also signed laser prints (?) for sale for $5 or $10 and an assortment of postcards. The whole experience was the opposite of many art show at a traditional gallery there was no pretense and inaccessibility of the $100,000 9-foot print. All of that was striped away and what I got in return was very satisfying.

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Friday, April 13, 2007

THEME magazine, PROFILE Jaie Hwang



Last November, I shot a portrait of Jiae Hwang for THEME magazine Issue 8, Winter 2007 Transplants. I have been meaning to post the tear sheet and put it on my portfolio site (along with a bigger update) for sometime. Below is the much delayed tear sheet. Also, the Profile is on their website with a different choice for the portrait. I will repost the a larger picture out side of the tear sheet on my web site soon.




© 2006 Harlan Erskine. All rights reserved.

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Monday, February 05, 2007

Jen Stark - constructed paper sculptures

A few months ago I photographed a bunch of art works for Jen Stark's Portfolio. They were easy to photograph because every angle offered interesting posibilities and compositions. Take a peek at her portfolio and if your in Miami she has a piece in a group show at Locust Projects.

  "Detail: Assorted Explosion" 8"x 8"   hand-cut stack of construction paper   2006 

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Swoon Mural - Lower East Side - YouTube Video


Nice video of a Swoon piece that she maintains in LES.

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Monday, November 06, 2006

Tod Papageorge in BOMB

There is a nice interview with Tod Papageorge in BOMB this month. I wasn't too familar with his work only of his leadership role at Yale's Photography program. I look forward to checking out his book. Its also always interesting to see another photographer's view on something so close to your own experience, in this case, Central Park.



© Tod Papageorge, Central Park, 1990, from Passing Through Eden, 6 X 7 CM camera.

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Monday, September 18, 2006

Bansky, Bansky, Bansky


I never thought I would say this but I wish I lived in LA this past week. Because Banksy's "Barely Legal" show in LA looks like it was an instant classic. The show is the culmination of a busy few months of this prolific artist. In the past month alone he has cleverly completed several artistic performances that continue to impress. First he punked Paris Hilton, and in such a way that the HMV store representive seemed to admit he enjoyed it. Then he cleverly inserted a blow up Guantanamo Bay detainee into a ride at Disneyland and while he set up a warehouse show in LA. I wish I could be there but I guess the pictures will have to keep me interested for now (video here, and of the Elephant in the room here, and here, and pictures of the show here, here and here. Now, I just hope someone brings the show to Miami during Art Basel Miami Beach to liven up the party.

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Sunday, March 05, 2006

Cloud City by Friends With You - Art Basel Miami Beach 2006

Yes, believe it or not I haven't finished posting about Basel. I wanted to post more while it was going on but work and art sometimes don't mix. Below is my documentation of The Cloud City by Miami Collective Friends With You that was showing from December 1, 2005 until January 29, 2006 at the Museum Of Contemporary Art Miami at the Goldman Warehouse
I hope they het a chance to product this show in a more permanent way. So, kids (of any age) can come an play in the Cloud City another day.

Links:
New York Times Article
Mami Chan & Norman Bambi (PonPoko)



© 2005 Harlan Erskine. All rights reserved.



© 2005 Harlan Erskine. All rights reserved.



© 2005 Harlan Erskine. All rights reserved.



© 2005 Harlan Erskine. All rights reserved.



© 2005 Harlan Erskine. All rights reserved.



© 2005 Harlan Erskine. All rights reserved.



© 2005 Harlan Erskine. All rights reserved.



© 2005 Harlan Erskine. All rights reserved.



© 2005 Harlan Erskine. All rights reserved.



© 2005 Harlan Erskine. All rights reserved.



© 2005 Harlan Erskine. All rights reserved.

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