Friday, December 18, 2009

Tonight, Opening: Johanna Heldebro: To Come Within Reach of You


Johanna Heldebro, "Night Watch chapter 4 excerpt," 2009

2009 Fall Solo Show Artist
Johanna Heldebro Presents

To Come Within Reach of You
December 18, 7 to 10 p, Free Admission & Drinks

Johanna Heldebro presents images and video documenting the daily life of her father, who disappeared from her life two years prior. After searching his name on the internet, Heldebro travels to Stockholm, Sweden to obsessively follow him, creating a series that refigures comfortable notions of adult identity. Join us for this compelling body of work that is at time as coldly detached as it is uncomfortably personal.

Complimentary Bear Flag Wine & Colt 45. Music from DJ Tanner.

RSVP events@3rdward.com

On display through December 27.

More images from Johanna Heldebro's series:


Johanna Heldebro, "Finding My Way Inside chapter 2 excerpt," 2009


Johanna Heldebro, "Finding My Way Inside chapter 2 excerpt," 2009


Johanna Heldebro, "Autonomy chapter 5 excerpt," 2009

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Thursday, September 17, 2009

Dueling Lectures, September 17, 2009

There are at least 3 competing Lectures tonight. They are all battling for me to attend who will win...

In this corner, the Chairman of the MFA Photography, Video and Related Media at School of Visual Arts...


Burlington, VT, 1990, Pigment print. Copyright Charles H. Traub, Courtesy Gitterman Gallery

Charles Traub
The Camera Club of New York Lecture series.

Thursday, September 17th 7pm
The School of Visual Arts Amphitheatre
209 E. 23rd Street (2nd and 3rd avenues), 3rd Floor
(please bring photo ID)

Book signing and sale to follow the lecture.

Free to CCNY members, SVA students, faculty, and staff
General admission $10, $5 for other students with valid student ID

Charles Traub will be speaking about two of his projects: In the Still Life, his most recent book; and his forthcoming one, Still Life in America: Looking at US. He describes his work as such, ”Real world witness is my concern and for one such as me, the road and the street are the muse. Whether standing on the street corner or on the road trip, it is the great irony and humor inherent in the human condition. To record such is the great delight of my life.“

Mr. Traub is Chair of MFA Photography, Video and Related Media, School of Visual Arts in New York City, the largest independent college of art in the United States. He holds an MS from the Institute of Design at the Illinois Institute of Technology and a BA degree from the University of Illinois. He was formerly the director of the prestigious Light Gallery of New York. He is President of the Aaron Siskind Foundation for support of creative photography. He is one of the co founders of Here is New York, a Democracy of Photographs, which received the Brendan Gill Award of the Municipal Arts Society, Cornell Capa Infinity Award, and a Distinguished Service Award from the Children‘s Aid Society of New York. He has had numerous one-person exhibitions including Marcus Pfeifer Gallery, Van Straaten Gallery, Art Directors Guild of New York, Chicago Center for Contemporary Photography, the Art Institute of Chicago, The Light Gallery and the Hudson River Museum. His work is currently represented by the Tom Gitterman Gallery in New York. Mr. Traub has authored and edited many books including Beach, Italy Observed, and Angler‘s Album, and has had his work published in Connoisseur, Fortune, Newsweek, U.S. News and World Report, American Photographer, Popular Photography, Aperture, and Afterimage. He has received awards from the New York State Council on the Arts, Hendrecks Foundation, Illinois Art Council, Manda Foundation, Olympics Arts Organization Committee, and the Mary McDowell Center for Learning. His textbook In the Realm of Circuit was published by Prentice Hall in the spring of 2003. In the Still Life, a monograph of his recent color photography, was published in September 2004. He recently co-edited the book Education of a Photographer.


And in this corner...



Words Without Pictures presents

Confounding Expectations VI: Photography in Context

Thursday, September 17, 2009 7 pm

FREE Admission

Tishman Auditorium
66 West 12th Street, New York City

Seating is on a first-come, first-serve basis

This first event celebrates the launch of the innovative Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA) book project Words Without Pictures, which documents roughly one year of conversations about the most pressing issues shaping contemporary photography.

Moderator:

CHARLOTTE COTTON is the Curator and Head of the Wallis Annenberg Photography Department at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. Previously, she was the Curator of Photographs at the Victoria and Albert Museum (1992-2004). She is the author and editor of books, including Imperfect Beauty: the making of contemporary fashion photographs (2000), and The Photograph as Contemporary Art (2004). Charlotte will be returning to London later in the fall to take up a new position of creative director of the London space of the National Media Museum, which will open in 2012.

Panelists:

DENISE WOLFF is a photobook editor, known for her work with both contemporary and historic photography. She recently joined Aperture from Phaidon Press. Throughout her career, she has had the opportunity to work on many beautiful books with the world’s top photographers, including Mary Ellen Mark, Martin Parr, Eugene Richards, and Stephen Shore to name a few.

MATT KEEGAN is an artist based in Brooklyn, N.Y. His work has been exhibited at venues such as Altman Siegel Gallery, San Francisco; Midway Contemporary Art, Minneapolis; Anna Helwing Gallery, Los Angeles; D'Amelio Terras, New York; White Columns, New York; and Wallspace Gallery, New York in collaboration with Leslie Hewitt. He is co-founder and publisher of the annual publication North Drive Press.

ALEX KLEIN is an artist based in Los Angeles and the editor of Words Without Pictures. In Spring 2007, she co-organized with James Welling the conference Around Photography at the Hammer Museum. She is currently the Ralph M. Parsons Curatorial Fellow in the Wallis Annenberg Photography Department at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art and an adjunct faculty member at the USC Roski School of Fine Arts.

With special guests Fia Backstrom, Johanna Burton, Melissa Catanese, Sarah Charlesworth, Moyra Davey, Darius Himes, John Lehr, Miranda Lichtenstein, Arthur Ou, Ed Panar and Laurel Ptak.

The lecture series is presented with generous support from the Kettering Family Foundation and the Henry Nias Foundation. The program is made possible in part by public funds from the New York State Council on the Arts and the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs.

More info at the New School website here


And lastly,

At the SVA Theatre

Dave Hickey: The God Ennui

Thursday, September 17, 7pm

Writer and educator Dave Hickey is the author of two highly regarded collections of critical essays, The Invisible Dragon: Four Essays on Beauty (Art Issues Press, 1993); Air Guitar: Essays on Art and Democracy (Art Issues Press, 1998) and the forthcoming Pagan America (Simon and Schuster, 2010). He was the recipient of a 2001 MacArthur Fellowship, and is currently Schaeffer Professor of Modern Letters at the University of Nevada Las Vegas. Presented by the MFA Art Criticism and Writing Department.

SVA Theatre, 333 West 23 Street
Free and open to the public


Who will win my attention? I don't even know yet!

Although afterwards I will surly be trying to attend this Blind Spot related event:



From SLRs to disposables to digital cameras to PDAs, the photographic image is more prolific than at any point since the medium'

Rizzoli International and Ken Miller invite you to join us in celebrating
the publication of

SHOOT
@
New Museum of Contemporary Art
Thursday September 17, 7-9pm

SHOOT is a collection of 'photography of the moment' by Stephen Shore, Nan
Goldin, Walter Pfeiffer, Boris Mikhailov, Wolfgang Tillmans, Juergen
Teller, Mark Borthwick, Ari Marcopoulos, Hiromix, Glynnis McDaris, Linus
Bill, Jason Nocito, Yurie Nagashima, Tim Barber, Peter Sutherland, JH
Engstrom, Dash Snow, Kenneth Cappello, Louise Enhorning, Michael
Schmelling, Nacho Alegre, Ola Rindal, Paul Schiek, Madi Ju, Jaimie Warren
and Thomas Jeppe.

"From SLRs to disposables to digital cameras to PDAs, the photographic
image is more prolific than at any point since the medium's inception.
Whether working in personal documentary, editorial, fine art or fashion,
the photographers in SHOOT share a democratic, emotionally intuitive
approach to picture-taking that reflects an era in which we increasingly
use ephemeral images to define our own lives."

SHOOT includes a foreword by legendary photographer Stephen Shore, in
addition to a critical essay by professor Penny Martin (of pioneering
fashion site SHOWstudio.com and the London College of Fashion) with a
historical overview by editor Ken Miller (Revisionaries; A Decade of Art in
Tokion).

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Thursday, July 16, 2009

And it's over...


© 2008 Bert Rodriguez. The End-A project installed during the Whitney Biannual. As someone passes through the opening doors of the elevator a motion sensor triggers an endless looping soundtrack. The soundtrack was designed by the artist created from sections of end theme music from films. As the artist sees newer movies, more music is added until his death when the soundtrack will become completed.

Well, It's the end of many things now for me. School is finished. The Thesis Exhibition is down. And Summer access to the School's Computer Lab and printers is also over because they are renovating many parts of the school. So, we are now officially locked out from using the lab like we did last year to work on summer projects.

For now like so many photographers in New York I will be using Print Space when I need to make a work print or scan some film. While it is surreal that School is finished - with the end of school brings the excitement of the challenges ahead. It's terrifying graduating now but at least the economy appears to be getting better. If I had graduated last year we would have been flying into the job market as the economy entered the worst collapse since the great depression. Hopefully, that is behind us and jobs will be coming back to all the working photographers and artists. And collectors will begin to buy more of the art that they enjoy. Go stock market go!

I'm really happy with how our Thesis Exhibition turned out. It was sad to bring home the work but the end also means new beginnings for me and the development of the series. Check out all the great blog love we got below. Thanks to all the bloggers who posted the information for the show or posted links to their favorite artists.

Press from the SVA MFA 2009 Thesis Exhibition
whats the jackanory ? - sva mfa show
Two Days Left for SVA MFA '09 Show | Gallery Hopper
ArtCat - Chelsea - SVA (West 26th) - MFA Photography, Video and Related Media Department presents Thesis Exhibition
Hey, Hot Shot! - SVA MFA 2009 Thesis Show
SVA (West 26th): MFA Photography, Video and Related Media Department presents Thesis Exhibition | .FILAS, n{e}ws
Recent MFA Shows' Selections. | digressions: a blog
Zoe Strauss: SVA MFA Photo Thesis Exhibition
wan.der.lust.ag.ra.phy
Schauraum 3 – thesis show at the FH Dortmund « Daniel on photography
SVA.MFA. « Prison Photography
ARTmostfierce: SVA 2009 MFA Thesis Exhibition
The Exposure Project: Jessica Bruah's No Lake This Summer
Tina Schula - Conscientious
Maureen Drennan - Conscientious
Carlos Alvarez Montero - Conscientious
i heart photograph: yiftach belsky
School of Visual Arts MFA Photography and Related Media Thesis Exhibition | Artis

As for this blog I hope to keep it up. I have been thinking about what it should morph into now that school is out. I will be experimenting with taking some of the papers I have written in school and turning them into long blog posts. If they work I will continue to write longer articles on art in this blog in the future. So, to recap, an end is sad but the beginning is terrifyingly exciting. To quote my favorite wordsmith:

"What is that feeling when you're driving away from people and they recede on the plain till you see their specks dispersing?--it's the too- huge world vaulting us, and it's good-by. But we lean forward to the next crazy venture beneath the skies." -Jack Kerouac

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Tuesday, June 16, 2009

Tonight, Opening of the MFA show.



Looking forward to seeing you at the show.

SVA MFA Photo Thesis Exhibition

Opening tonight, Tuesday, June 16, 2009
6:00 - 8:00 pm

Visual Arts Gallery
601 West 26th Street, 15th Floor
New York, NY

The show also continues through June 27th if you can't make it out tonight.

and you can always view the works in the show here:
http://mfaphoto.schoolofvisualarts.edu/thesis2009/index.php

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Monday, June 15, 2009

School of Visual Arts Thesis 2009 Exhibition and website


The Phantom Brigade,’ 20 x 37 inches, 2008

It's been a long road these past two years at SVA. Tomorrow brings the end of a chapter and the beginning of a new one. Tuesday night from 6 - 8 pm is the School of Visual Arts MFA Photography, Video, and Related Media thesis exhibition.

I will be showing a set of five images from my series, Imaginary Wars. If you can't make it, I have updated my website with a set of six images and detail shots: here.

Be sure to check out the strong work from my collogues of the class of 2009 online as well:

http://mfaphoto.schoolofvisualarts.edu/thesis2009/index.php

Thesis Exhibition, June 12 — 27, 2009
Opening Reception: Tuesday, June 16, 6 — 8 pm

Visual Arts Gallery
601 West 26 Street, Suite 1502
Monday — Thursday 10 am — 6 pm
Friday 10 am — 5 pm
Saturday 10 am — 6 pm

Thesis Video Screening, Wednesday, June 17, 2009 7 — 10 pm
SVA Theatre 333 West 23 Street

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Thursday, May 14, 2009

Graduation! and tips on how to launch your careers...

Graduation is tomorrow. I can't believe it. what a whirl wind it has been. I will be posting more about the experience but for now I have a few links that see really useful for everyone graduating their MFA and entering the creative class. So, If your not going to date your art star professor then there are other avenues to finding your way.

Mrs. Deane has a nice post "susanne ludwig & how photographers launch their careers"

Blogger and gallerist Edward Winkleman of the Winkleman Gallery. Has an ongoing series of useful smart posts on Getting a Gallery
How to Do Your Homework, Part I
How to Do Your Homework, Part II
Baseline Issues for the "How to Get a Gallery" Question
Advice for Artists Seeking Gallery Representation
One More Time, With Feeling (seriously)

I'll update this post with more links as I come across them. Send me links if you have any suggestions.

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Wednesday, May 13, 2009

NYPHA'09 Nominations



I am happy to say I have been included it the large list of Nominations for the 2009 New York Photo Awards. I have been accepted into two categories, Advertising Series for my Microsoft I'm a PC work and Student Fine Art Series for a series of images on Beijing I made this past August. I'll update this page with an image from that series soon.

Last year I had fun going through the list of nominations and linking to their portfolio pages. This year I think there are way too many with almost 300 nominations! So, until I get an intern I'll let you google them this time.

If you going to be around this weekend let me know I would love to run into people at the festival. I am not sure how much of it I can make since I have a very busy weekend with Graduation on Friday! but you should check out the festival's schedule here.

from the Press Release:

NYPHA'09 Nominations
The Jury of the New York Photo Awards 2009 (NYPHA'09) is pleased to announce the following Nominees.

To be named a nominee of the New York Photo Awards 2009 means that one has been selected for the final round of judging, during which time only three finalists will be chosen (Winner and two Honorable Mentions). Considering the number of rounds that the Jury has already been through, being nominated is truly an award in and of itself. We are very proud of this year’s Nominees. It is clear that they represent the Future of Contemporary Photography, and we wish them continued success.

The Winners and Honorable Mentions will be announced (and their work presented) at the Gala Ceremony for the New York Photo Awards 2009 on Friday, May 15th at 8pm in the St. Ann’s Warehouse Auditorium. This is a special ticketed event, there are only 415 seats, and they are selling out fast. Last year, we packed the place to the gills, and still had another 200+ people flowing out to the streets. So, if you want a seat, you have to have a ticket. Festival passes and tickets can be purchased here.

Without much further ado, the Nominees for the New York Photo Awards 2009 are:

NEW YORK PHOTO AWARDS 2009

NOMINEES

Editorial Single Image

Larry Louie
Bob O’Connor
Christopher Wahl
Pierre Alivon
Michael Goermann
Niels Ahlmann Oleson
McKay Jaffe
Erik Swain
Felix Hug
Ed Kashi
Ryan Carter (5 images)
Marieke van der Velden (3 images)
Carol Allen Storey
Mike Callaghan
Christopher Petersen
Emily Shur (2 images)
Sarah Bones
Patrick de Warren
Thomas Leffeldt/Ekstra Bladet (3 images)
J Carrier (3 images)
Jens Honore
Marc Josse
Jenn Ackerman
Gleb Garanich
Jessica Rinaldi
Jonathan Ernst
Goran Tomosevic
Finbarr O’ Reilly
Nadav Kander (4 images)
Charles Ommanney
Mads Nissen
Elene Usdin
Stephen Mallon
Toby Smith

Editorial Series

Dirk-Jan Visser (2 series)
Dima Gavrysh
Ricardo Garcia
Albertina d’Urso (2 series)
Denis Rouvre
Gary Dwyer
Michael Goermann
Coco Amardell
Emilio Morenatti
David Guttenfelder
Oded Balilty
Jerome Delay
Lynsey Addario
Espen Rasmussen (2 series)
Ed Kashi (2 series)
Ryan Carter
Gerald Slota
Christian Als
Ethan James
Gabriele Stabile
Jagath Dheerasekara
Thomas Lekfeldt/Ekstra Bladet
Moises Saman
Matthieu Paley
Clemence de Limburg
Tim Gruber
Finbarr O’Reilly
Alex Majoli
Charles Ommanney
Shaul Schwarz
Tiana-Markova-Gold
Q. Sakamaki
Carol Guzy
Michael Corridore
T.J. Kirkpatrick

Fine Art Single Image

Amro Hamzawi
Christy Karpinski
John Offenbach (3 images)
Marco Munoz
Wai Yan Lam
Anthony M. Puopolo (2 images)
Ognian Gueorguiev
Robert Burton (2 images)
Steph Tout (2 images)
Romulo Bosch Sans
David Finnegan
Dana Matthews
Niobe Syme
Mara Catalan
Richard Sandler
Arsian Sukan
Mike Whelan
Claudio Uema
Finn O’Hara
Richard Pak
Andrew Maccoli
John Clang
Anna Moller
Lottie Davies (2 images)
Stephanie Diani
Marti Belcher
Erik Swain
Burkhard Schittny
Matthew Besinger
Elise Bruccoliere
Joel Redmen
D. Yee
Adam Makarenko
Lisa Wiseman
Carla van de Puttelaar
Sarah Sudhoff
Kathleen Wilke
Adriana Zehbrauskas
Doug Menuez
Davina Feinberg
Michelle Sank
Lucas Bori
Konrad Junkiewicz

Fine Art Series

Eliot Ross
Sabrina Jung
Lydia Panas
Horst Josch
Odette England (2 series)
Natasha Bedu
Sarah Wilmer
Shi Xiofan
Kevin Miyazaki
Ingrid Baars
Julia Fullerton-Batten
Jessica Kaufman
Chiara Goia
J Bennett Fitts
Daniel Traub
Eric Percher
Patricia Martin
Justin James King
Francesco Bittichesu
Damion Berger
Brad Moore
Juliane Elrich
Louis Ingalls Sturges
Greg Miller
Alexander Gronsky

Advertising Single

Linda Jansen
Sanjay Kotahari (2 images)
Lorenzo Vitturi
Bryce Pincham
Raul Krebs (2 images)
Adam Hinton
Kai-Uwe Gundlach
Dominik Sklarzyk
Lauren Greenfield
Fedrick Clement
Emir Haveric
Marcel Christ

Advertising Series

John Offenbach
Harlan Erskine
Mark Janssen
Julia Fullerton-Batten
John Clang
Raul Krebs
Giullyani
Adam Hinton
John Midgley
Nadav Kander (2 series)
Lauren Greenfield
Morad Bouchakour
Doug Menuez

Photo Book

Benjamin Antony Monn
Michael Limbert
Marc McAndrews
Ernesto bazan
Lisa Pram
Michael Grecco
Lynn Saville
Gino Sullivan
Fran Forman
Dana Lixenberg
Danelle manthey
Martine Fougeron
Julia Fullerton-Batten
Michal Chelbin (2 books)
Joni Sternbach
Jane Hilton
Jona Frank
Naomi Harris
Ellen Rennard
Adam Hinton
Simon Brown
Alexandra Avakian
Shen Wei
Charlotte Oestervang
Matthew Sallee
Scarlett Coten
Rob Hornstra
Priya Kambil
Eric McNatt
Herman van den Boom
Doug DuBois
Alexandra Lier
Emrie Foster
Nina Berman
Brooke Mayo
Jorge Albarracin
Simon Roberts
Darcy Padilla
Glenn Lockitch
Andrew Borowiec
Ghada Khunji
Otto Snoek
Barbara Crane
Tiny Vices (Kenneth Cappello, Allan Macintyre, Jason Nocito, Robin Schwartz and Jamie Warren)
Hank Willis Thomas
Jacqueline Hassink
Joshua Lutz
Henry Horenstein

Student Editorial Single

Andy Spyra
Alberto Lizaralde (2 images)
Connie Zhou
Jamie Hopper
Erica Fahr Campbell
Manuel Gil
Andrea Star Reese (5 images)
Aki Takematsu
Helga Traxler
Peter Ash Lee
Ben Franke
Sean Rizzotti
Kitra Cahana
Ed Ou

Student Social Documentary Essay

Andy Spyra
Alberto Lizaralde
Ryan Gauvin
Erik Shirai
Carl Kiilsgaard
Isadora Kosofsky
Andrea Star Reese
Natan Dvir
Luca Tommasini
Edith Wagner
Ani Kington
Taylor Weldman
Daniel Schumann
Andre Hermann
Evgenia Arbugaeva
Nina Flauaus
Mikko Takkunen
Rafaela Persson
Ed Ou
Ilana Panich-Linsman


Student Fine Art Single

Emily Burke
Ward Roberts
Lora Jude Dewolfe
Frederic Gosselin
Dorothee Smith
Dina Gold
Marikei Lahana
Todd McVey
Mark Fernandes
Laure Amanou (3 images)
Jaime Permuth
Jun Ahn
Mark Kasumovic
Natan Dvir (2 images)
Marton Perlaki (2 iimages)
James Thomson & Hannah Huddy
Willemine Pernette
Bridget Collins
Takaki Oishi
Tyler Brown
Fellsia Tandiono

Student Fine Art Series

Amy Burchenal
Elliot Wilcox
Ward Roberts
Harlan Erskine
Thomas Lobenwein
Fabiano Busdraghi
Ivonne Thein
Tara Cronin
Grant Willing
Aislinn Leggett
Tammy Mercure
Wayne Liu
Laure Amanou
Liang-Pin Tsao
Pedro Lopez
Yijun Liao

Student Photo Book

Robin Maddock
Wassily Zittel
Wayne Liu
Patrik Budenz
Johanna Heldebro
Louise Ingalls Sturges
Alinka Echeverria
Felix Kindermann
Kristoffer Axen
Vanessa Bahmani
Adam Lau



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Wednesday, May 06, 2009

Winners announced for the LINHOF YOUNG PHOTOGRAPHER AWARD '09


©2008-2009 Harlan Erskine. From the series "Imaginary Wars," The Phantom Brigade 20 x 37 inches.

I am happy to announce that my School of Visual Arts thesis project has been awarded 3rd place in the Linhof Young Photographer Award '09. The above image is a sample of what will be shown at the June thesis show for the at the School of Visual Arts Gallery on 26th Street in New York. I will be posting more images in the next few weeks and I'll post the upcoming School of Visual Arts thesis website so you can browse the rest of the class of 2009. Take a look at the Linhof Award's Press Release below.


LINHOF YOUNG PHOTOGRAPHER AWARD 09

On April 24, 2009 the jury met in in the headquarters of Linhof Präzisions-Systemtechnik / Munich for selecting the winners. 468 participants from 39 countries had sent more than 3.500 images. The ratio of female to male photographers was almost exactly 1 : 2.

The Linhof company and the jury were surprized by the big number of international participants of the competiton despite of tough restrictions relating to the age and the theme. The theme was "HUMAN CITYSCAPES" and the photographic realization should comprise the urban environment "City" showing contrasts or unity of citizens and architecture.

The jury had a hard job. Quite often excellent images were submitted but missing the conceptional work. Some photographers submitted individual images but did not follow the concept for their whole series whereas the judging always referred to the total entry.

The entries from 39 countries also revealed rational preferences for contents and aesthetics. Most of the entries originated from Germany. These 169 participants often referred to the theme fairly strictly combined with conceptional architectural photography - at high quality standard. Entries from China (81) can be described as more formal experimental. Many-sided but also individually were the works of the English (31) and American (21) participants.

The jury has evaluated the image series for a position reflecting the changing impression of human beings in relation to his environment.

Members of the jury were:

Thomas Weski (Associate Director, Haus der Kunst Munich, Curator of photography)

Professor Peter Bialobrzeski (High School for Arts/Bremen, Photographer)

Brigitte Nusser (Collectioner of photographs)

Anna Wondrak (Historian for Arts)

Barbara Wolff (Photographer). All three living in Munich.

The first prize, a Linhof Camera equipment to the value of 10.000 Euro goes to the 28 years old Russian photographer Alexander Gronsky (link 1, link 2) living in Talin/Estonia. His series "The Edges" is about exploring the boundaries of Moscow city. In almost surrealistic scenes he shows people and animals disintegrated from the city and put in the abstract plane of the snow.

The second prize, a Linhof Camera equipment to the value of 3000 Euro goes to the team Philipp Diettrich and Matthias Keller (High School for Design/Karlsruhe and High School for Arts/Bremen) for their work "Kolonia Megawatt" dealing with the Polish border city Bogatynia. The series shows the transformation of the town and the people. Destruction, re-building and the strongly dominant power plant create a peculiar cosmos visible in the series of images.

The third prize, Linhof Camera accessories to the value of 1000 Euro goes to Harlan Erskine, New York (School of Visual Arts/New York). His series "Imaginary Wars" show games of his childhood in New York with imaginary foes lurking around the corners. Children play games in which they imagine themselves in adult roles that they may not fully grasp. In the images the photographer stretches his memories into an apocalyptic world.

The Linhof Prazisions Systemtechnik being the organizer of this competition says many thanks again to all participants. The company plans to issue such a contest bi-annually with new topics thus establishing this competition as an important international photographer award.

The winning images will be posted soon on Linhof's web site. For further information see: www.linhof.de

____

note: If you know of any better links for the first and second place artists please send them to me and I will update this post.

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Friday, April 24, 2009

i heart photograph, too



i heart photograph, too.


Black Sun 0006, c-print on diasec in wood frame, 48" x 64"

Thanks to for the posting my Black Sun Project. I have been reading i heart photograph for a while now maybe I'll run into you durring the NYPF this year, I see you'll be doing another panel on the state of the blog.

i heart photograph: harlan erskine

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Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Shen Wei at Randall Scott Gallery this Thursday

I keep forgetting to post this but when I came across the viewfinders series and watched Shen Wei's webisode I remembered he has a show up now. I'm sorry I missed the opening but I am going to try to get out to DUMBO right before the end.



From the press release:

Randall Scott Gallery
is pleased to present the opening of our new gallery in DUMBO Brooklyn
this Thursday, April 2nd


Shen Wei
Almost Naked


Shen Wei, Joey, 2005 from the series Almost Naked

April 2nd-May 2nd
opening reception for the artist
April 2nd 6pm-8pm
RSG in Brooklyn
Please join us for the Gallery opening reception on April 2nd, 6-8pm.

An afterparty will be held at reBar at 147 Front Street, at 9pm.
cash bar, good friends

our new location:
Randall Scott Gallery
111 Front Street #204
Brooklyn, NY 11201

DUMBO
www.randallscottgallery.com
info@randallscottgallery.com
Hours:
11am-6pm Wed-Sat
DUMBO First Thursdays 11am-8:30pm

Location:
Located on the corner of Front and Washington Streets
in-between the bridges

Trains:
F (York St)
A C (High St)

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Saturday, March 14, 2009

Does "The Minnesota Declaration" also apply to still images production?



In this video clip (found via Screenlabs) filmmaker Werner Herzog sits down and discusses his idea of ecstatic truth and the The Minnesota Declaration with Henry Rollins. The key part of the interview begins 1 minute into it when they begin a discussion:

Henry Rollins: Lets talk about your documentary film making, which to me is I've never seen anything like your documentaries. Can you explain the idea of “ecstatic truth”?

Werner Herzog: I think at the moment there is a major tectonic shift going on. We have virtual reality, in the Internet we have reality TV we have got digital effects, we got Photoshop we got everything is pointing towards a redefinition of reality. We have to start seeing and working and explaining and articulating reality in movies in a different way.

Cinema Verité was the answer of the 60s. Today is something else out there and I've always said sure reality has to be seen in a new way but its that is not so much the interesting part of it the interesting side of it is where is truth in all this? Cinema Verité is the accountant's truth. As I keep saying I have insulted many with that but I've always been after what I call an ecstatic truth, an ecstasy of truth.

HR: And so you would say that with all the new technology truth has not changed but now that there's different methods to get to it they should be employed to reach that–that ecstatic truth?

WH: And facts will not create truth. Facts create norms but they do not create an illumination.

HR: Do you think people who are seeking to make documentaries today are somehow limiting themselves by going back to the ideas of cinema Verité and limiting themselves by those confines?

WH: They will find there way themselves but there has to be a major shift in dealing with reality. Its as simple as that and in my documentaries they are always very close to feature films and I often stage and rehearse and repeat like in a feature film. And the feature films that I've made have some sort of a common border line with documentaries anyway when you look at Fitzcarraldo it's a film where I hoisted a steamboat over a mountain a couple of hundred tons heavy. And I keep saying that this is my best documentary.

Is Cinema Verité the equivalent to documentary photography in still image making? I'm starting to think the answer is yes.

Herzog argues for an ecstatic truth for cinema. So far, only some of Jeff Wall's work, maybe the new Stan Douglas' images and possibly Taryn Simon and Paul Graham. They all seem to be approaching an ecstatic truth in photography because of how they approach the documentary image by utilizing the tools of fictional image production.

Anyone have any other artists they can think of?

I am trying to work in this way for my thesis project in school. I hope to be approaching this illusive ecstatic truth as closely as I can. Either way, that moving away from a "photographie verité," which seems to be one of the most popular forms of image making, would be good for the art of contemporary image making. I believe there can be an ecstatic truth in art where art provides a greater illumination than just straight facts or ambiguous images of the world.


Thanks to Ruba Katrib and her curated show now up at Dumbo Arts Center - Jannicke Laker and Julika Rudelius, Ecstatic Truth for pointing me in the direction of the The Minnesota Declaration and the Herzog's idea of ecstatic truth.

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Wednesday, March 11, 2009

RODCHENKO art school


natalia ulianova, from the series "receipts"

Last semester during my class with Lyle Rexer we had an interesting guest lecture from Vladimir Kupriyanov a Russian Photographer and Lecturer at RODCHENKO art school. Although we we following along through a translator the lecture let us hear a first hand account of Russian photo history from an active participant. The RODCHENKO art school is only a few years old but it seems that it is still one of the few artistic focuses photography schools in contemporary Russia.

I have been wanting to link to the site he showed us for some time.I had forgotten about it until yesterday when I was looking through it again and found natalia ulianova. I find it interesting how much it reminds me of the early work of Brian Ulrich.

Check out Vladimir Kupriyanov's work here:
short bio, CV and some work at Moscow House of Photography > Vladimir Kupriyanov, About the eightieth [1980-1989]

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Sunday, January 25, 2009

Make Me a Real Man


nice clip on Current tv from by filmmaker Stuart Kershaw.
from the pod info:
What makes a man? How do we come of age in the 21st century? In a world where you can still be a boy at thirty, One young-ish filmmaker sets out on a belated quest for manhood.

With a little internet digging I noticed this history of this quote. Originally written by Wilhelm Stekel who was then quoted in J. D. Salinger's The Catcher in the Rye as saying, "The mark of the immature man is that he wants to die nobly for a cause, while the mark of the mature man is that he wants to live humbly for one" (p.188). This quote is also used in the anime Ghost in the Shell.

I also enjoy the pod's discussion of the roll of war, the warrior and how the military can act as a coming of age. As these topics relate to my final project in school and I am still working them out for myself. Holden Caulfield's musings of what the world means are not that far off from this film maker's. As society moves further away from Caulfield's era will we develop new rites of passage into maturity? Or are these very rites passe and the sequence itself flawed?

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Monday, January 05, 2009

on to the next...


Douglas Gordon, 24 hour psycho back and forth and to and fro, 2008. Video installation with two screens and two video projections, 24-hour loop, Courtesy the artist. Installation view, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, 2008.
© The Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation, New York. Photo: Kristopher McKay.
January 6, 10 a.m. - January 7, 10 a.m. Rotunda Floor, Free


So, here we are, 2009 space monkeys and flying cars and all. Its an exciting yet anxious year for me - finishing school and re-entering the working world at a time when people are suggesting our economy is tanking more then it ever has in my lifetime. So what do we do? celebrate? turn off the TV try to read the news a little less and hope Obama can jump start this economy with a full on Keynesian / New New Deal Plan.

On the bright side - there are no lines for bread and institutions like The Guggenheim are still very much alive and kicking out interesting events like the tomorrows-

from the Press Release:
24-Hour Program on the Concept of Time
Tuesday, January 6, 6 p.m. through Wednesday, January 7, 6 p.m.
Download a PDF of the 24-Hour schedule.

On the occasion of the exhibition theanyspacewhatever, the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum will present a 24-hour event concentrating on the concept of time in its myriad philosophical, psychological, biological, sociological, poetic, aesthetic, and economic manifestations. Constituting a multi-disciplinary approach to the subject, the program will bring together artists, architects, scientists, philosophers, historians, engineers, filmmakers, musicians, and other cultural producers.
...
Also on view:
Douglas Gordon
24 hour psycho back and forth and to and fro
January 6, 10 a.m.-January 7, 10 a.m.
Rotunda Floor, Free

Serpentine Gallery Marathon Archive
New Media Theatre
Tuesday, January 6, 6 p.m. through Wednesday, January 7, 6 p.m.
Download a PDF of video descriptions.

I am really looking forward to this event but I am not sure when to go. anyone else going or have suggestions? I am really interested who will be staying up for the 4:30 - 5 am presentation by curator Hans Ulrich Obrist, maybe it will be me?

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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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Tuesday, May 13, 2008

New York Photo Awards, 2008 Nominees



Over the next, few days leading up to the festival on the 14th I hope to complete this compilation of portfolio websites for yours and my photographic surfing pleasure. If you have any comments of portfolio suggestions, requests for additions and or removals please email or comment in this post’s comment section.

2008 Nominees





Multimedia Photo / Audio
Ed Kashi
Jessica Dimmock
Vincent Baillais

Multimedia Video / Audio
Anthony Fuller
Brenda Ann Kennealy
Christine Gatti
Marcus Bleasdale
Michele Borzoni
Patrick Brown
Shannon Ghannam

Advertising - Series
Chase Jarvis
Flynn Larsen
John Offenbach
Marilyn Minter
Marlene Marino
Matt Hoyle or is it this guy
Matt Hoyle
Nigel Parry
Raul Krebs
Shi Xiaofan
Simone Lewis

Advertising - Single
Carol Friedman
David Harriman
Dominik Sklarzyk
Jason Bell
Jill Greenberg
Joel Redman
Minori Murakami
Paul Elledge

Editorial - Series
Alex Tehrani
Balazs Gardi
Benny Snyder
Brent Stirton
Christopher Morris
Danny Wilcox Frazier
Donald Weber
Ed Kashi
Elliott Erwitt
Espen Rasmussen
Jan Banning
Marcin Łobaczewski
Marlene Marino
Michele Borzoni
Moises Saman
Myriam Abdelaziz
Nigel Parry
Paolo Pellegrin
Paula Bronstein
Sally Peterson
Tivadar Domaniczky
Yuri Kozyrev

Editorial - Single
Alana Cundy
Benjamin Rusnak
Benny Snyder
Bob Bovin
Chenoa Maxwell
David Black
Deirdre Brennan
Ed Kashi
Filippo Mutani
Francesco Tonelli
Igor Stevanovic
Larry Louie
Lyle Owerko
Maciej Nabrdalik
Marc Yankus
Marcin Łobaczewski
Sarah Bones
Tanit Sakakini

Personal work /
fine art - Series

Aaron Hobson
Adam Bell
Andres Gonzalez
Anthony Blasko
Bill Armstrong
Borkur Sigthorsson
Christian Patterson
Edgar Martins
Erica Mcdonald
Greg Merhar
Gregg LeFevre
Harold Glit
Kyoko Hamada
Lamia Maria Abillama
Leslie Sokolow
Loretta Rae Keith
Mark W. Mann
Martine Fougeron
Michael Corridore
Santiago Mostyn
Will Steacy

Personal work/
fine art - Single

Andrea Sohler
Cesar Lechowick
Filippo Mutani
Gabriela Herman
Jessica Todd Harper
Juliana Beasley
Marc Yankus
Matthew Weston
Melanie Einzig
Noah Greenberg
Paulo Roberto
Rob Hann
Shannon Fagan
Sian Kennedy
Sinisa Vlajkovic
Tanit Sakakini
Ugnius Gelguda
Willamain Somma

Photography Book
Amy Stein
Anders Birch
Ashley Gilbertson
Christoph Bangert
Christian Marclay
Danny Wilcox Frazier
Edmund Clark
Jessica Dimmock
Jessica Todd Harper
Jill Greenberg
Jim Reed
Joan Villaplana
Johnny Miller
KayLynn Deveney
Lisa M. Robinson
Martine Fougeron
Matthew Monteith
Michael Cogliantry
Naho Kubota
Paolo Pellegrin
Pierre Crocquet
Romain Blanquart
Student Categories

Student Editorial - Series
Christina Clusiau
Jesse Slotterback
Monique Jaques
Steph Plourde-Simard
Tobias Kruse
Tzu Cheng Liu

Student Editorial - Single
Alexander Gilfillan
Joannie Lafrenière
Kevin Kunishi
Laurent Peter
Markus Linderoth
Paul Patrick Borhaug
Tiana Markova-Gold
Toni Greaves

Student
Personal work/
fine art - Series

Adam Rose
Anna Skladmann
Annie Thornton
Brett Bell
Bruno Quinquet
Christina Clusiau
Christina Tisi-Kramer
Daniel Holfeld
Jason Reblando
Katarina Wos
Kelly Heck
Laura Glabman
Lisa Cook
Rick Odell
Satomi Shirai
Sheila Griffin
Tobias Kruse
Veilhan Clemence
Yanwu YUAN

Student
Personal work/
fine art - Single

Alana Celii
Andy Tew
Becky Holladay
Douglas Emery
Emily Burke
Harlan Erskine
Jasper Sanidad
Jill Cole
John Sloan
Josephine Friedrich
Kelci McIntosh
Lara Wechsler
Lisa Albert
Maki Ueno
Michael Ott
Rhea Karam
Rhian Walters
Ruthie Shapiro
Steve Coleman
Tzvetana Tchakarova

Student Photography Book
Bryan Lear
Collin LaFleche
Emily Burke
Tiana Markova-Gold

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2008 New York Photo Award Nominee


Harlan Erskine, “Guest Bedroom. Vero Beach, Florida” © 2007

The image above was my submission to the Student Personal work / fine art - Single category that is now a nominated work.

From the events Press Release:





FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:

The New York Photo Festival is pleased to announce the

Nominees for the
New York Photo Awards

View the Nominees at 
www.newyorkphotoawards.com

Friday, May 16, 2008
Awards Begin at 8pm

St. Ann’s Warehouse, Brooklyn

After Party Begins at 9:30pm
The powerHouse Arena, Brooklyn

Sponsored by PhotoShelter Inc.
Music by DJ Disco Wiz
Drinks Courtesy of Stella Artois


The nominees for New York Photo Awards have just been announced! View the list at www.newyorkphotoawards.com

The New York Photo Festival invites you to celebrate the work of the Winners and Honorable Mentions of the inaugural New York Photo Awards. The New York Photo Awards Ceremony will take place on Friday, May 16 at 8pm
Selected works of the Winners and Honorable Mentions will be presented
on the big screen before a packed audience of industry luminaries.
Sixteen major awards will be publicly presented to the Award Winners,
and thirty-two artists will receive Honorable Mention certificates.

One Award and two Honorable Mention certificates will be presented in each of the following categories: Editorial (series/single), Personal Work/ Unpublished/ Fine Art (series/single), Advertising (series/single), Books, Multimedia (photo/audio and video/audio), and in each of the Student categories: Editorial (series/single), Personal Work/ Unpublished/ Fine Art (series/single), Books, and Multimedia (photo/audio and video/audio). Each category winner will also receive a Canon PowerShot G9 Digital Camera, courtesy of Canon USA.

Located in the St. Ann’s Theater, designed to accommodate 500 persons, the ceremony will feature guest speakers, a/v projections of winning works, presentation of the awards and subsequent acceptance speeches. Award Presenters include: Tim Barber (tinyvices.com and New York Photo Festival curator), Michelle Bogre (Parsons New School for Design), David Friend (Vanity Fair), photographer Lauren Greenfield, Bill Hunt (Hasted Hunt Gallery), Meagan Keane (PhotoShelter), Charlie Melcher (Melcher Media), Alison Morley  (International Center of Photography), Jules Naudet (Hachette Filipacchi), Evan Nisselson (Digital Railroad), Jody Quon (New York magazine), David Schonauer (American Photo), Mary Virginia Swanson (Marketing Consultant and Educator), Lauren Wendle (PDN), and the festival founders and co-chairmen, Frank Evers of VII Photo Agency and Daniel Power of powerHouse Books.

The New York Photo Awards After Party will be located at The powerHouse Arena and will begin at 9:30pm. Classic soul tunes courtesy of the legendary DJ Disco Wiz. Drinks will be served.

Admission to the Awards Ceremony and After-Party is included in the Evening Programming ticket.

About the New York Photo Awards:
A new international, annual competition launched during the New York Photo Festival, the New York Photo Awards, will honor talented photographers from all over the world whose exceptional work breaks new grounds visually, intellectually and aesthetically. The Awards will give those visual artists the opportunity to reach key decision makers in the photographic community and the editorial, fine art and fashion worlds.

All Award Winners and Honorable Mentions will enjoy unprecedented visibility for their work. In addition to the New York Photo Awards ceremony, their work will be showcased on the New York Photo Awards and New York Photo Festival websites, and published in leading photo magazines. These artists are also automatically eligible for inclusion in a beautifully produced New York Photo Awards Annual by powerHouse Books. The Annual will be published in November 2008.

Jury:
The Chairwoman of the jury is Elisabeth Biondi (The New Yorker). The members of the jury are: Bill Hunt (Hasted Hunt Gallery), Jody Quon (New York magazine), Benjamin Trigano (M + B Gallery), and Charlie Melcher (Melcher Media) from the New York Photo Festival Advisory Board, photographer Lauren Greenfield, Tim Barber (of tinyvices.com, and New York Photo Festival curator), and the festival's founders and co-chairmen: Frank Evers of VII Photo Agency and Daniel Power of powerHouse Books.

A separate set of jurors from the multimedia industry will judge submissions in the Multimedia category, including the Snorri Bros. (famed Sprint commercial directors), Bjarke Myrthu (Magnum In Motion), Meredith Birkett (MSNBC) and Greg Clayman (MTV), as well as Lauren Greenfield, Frank Evers, and Daniel Power.

As part of PhotoShelter Inc.’s sponsorship of the event, the PhotoShelter Personal Archive will be used to store each photographer’s images, distribute galleries to jury members, support the process of filtering and the ultimate selection of winning images.  The Personal Archive is PhotoShelter’s solution that allows photographers to archive, organize, distribute and sell their images online with powerfull tools including slideshows, lightboxes, ecommerce capabilities, and website customization.

DJ Disco Wiz, (born Luis Cedeño), is credited with being the first Latino DJ in Hip-Hop music. Wiz teamed up with Casanova Fly (Grandmaster Caz), to form the Mighty Force crew in the mid-70s in the Bronx. Wiz is also credited for being the first DJ to create a "mixed plate" in 1977 (hip-hop’s first mixed dub recording) when he and Caz combined sound bites, special effects and paused beats. The creator of The Hip-Hop Meets Spoken Wordz Series, a hip-hop and poetry performance series that gives a voice to up and coming Latino talent in New York City, Wiz has performed as a poet at the Apollo Theater and the landmark Nuyorican Poets Cafe. A major contributor to the Experience Music Project in Seattle, Washington, Wiz is also a board member of the Universal Federation for the Preservation of Hip Hop Culture, chaired by Afrika Bambaataa of the Universal Zulu Nation. At present time Wiz is co-authoring his memoirs with Simon
& Schuster author Ivan Sanchez. The book is titled, It’s Just Begun: The Epic Journey of DJ Disco Wiz, Hip-Hop’s First Latino DJ.


For more information, please contact Sara Rosen, Publicity Director
New York Photo Festival, 37 Main Street, Brooklyn, NY 11201
Tel: 212-604-9074 x105, Fax: 212-366-5247


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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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Monday, December 17, 2007

Miami Basel to Brooklyn and then straight into finals...

I have been meaning to write about Art Basel Miami Beach 2008 here since I got back on Monday but I have been neck deep in finals so that will have to wait until Wednesday. I will however post a interesting interview I just happened upon (see above).

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Friday, October 05, 2007

your tripod looks like a small arms missile launcher


at-7 launcher on tripod.


a tripod with telescope camera mount.


Ok, fine I understand I am in NY and this is a 9-11 world and all but what a drag, I was just out in Midtown working on a project and the Police ended my night of shooting early. I have heard that there was some photo permit they were requiring now but I though that law didn't go through. I guess not, they are "redrafting" the rules they made. So, for now I need to fill out one of these. and now I waisted the night because I only go too locations shot. I hope this permit dosn't turn into a long drawn out process I it is relatively easy then I am fine with the red tape.

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Tuesday, August 28, 2007

Day one

I am a bit in a daze right now. Having left a job I lived at for nearly four years, zoomed up to New York at break-neck speed ( I have the Georgia Speeding ticket to prove that) I feel like I am still going back to work next week and this is all a odd vacation with excessive packing. We drive my MINI up from the Magic City up 95 where we stopped at South of the Border and the Williamsburg, VA and made great time buzzing along until DC traffic brought us to a halt and delayed us several hours. Now, I am settled in the Upper West living out of a suitcase for a few days until move in on the 1st.

Despite my current state of disorientation from relocating the first day was great. We all filed in at about 10 am with awkward silences, questioning glances and timid introductions (why didn't I film that I have no idea). Later in the day you could already feel the walls melting as introductions were made and work was shared. It was great to see some of their work and how diverse it all is. I wish we could have stayed a bit longer so we could have seen everyone's book but time ran out for quick fire crit. I am looking forward to see what people shoot and even what I shoot. I couldn't help to think that all around the country there were probably other incoming MFA students doing almost the same thing–I wonder if they felt the same?

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