Monday, 27 February 2012

Photography 1966-2011 by Boris Mikhailov

Posted: 26 Feb 2012 07:51 PM PST
artwork: Ukrainian photographer Boris Mikhailov - Photo from his series 'Butterbrot' at the Berlinische Galerie in Berlin, Germany

BERLIN.- With a show of works by Boris Mikhailov, born in Ukraine in 1938, the Berlinische Galerie is acknowledging a major position in contemporary photography. Mikhailov establishes many links between documentation and conceptual art, and in so doing he has also made an important contribution to media theory in terms of the way we look at photography and the history of our responses to it. In the 1990s, “everyday” meant “existential”, “threatening”. When the Soviet Union collapsed, he turned his attention to the losers in this social transformation, taking portraits, displaying poverty and despair, and with that the consequences of the ruthless, repressive Soviet system. On view from 24 February until 28 May.

Sunday, 26 February 2012

Photography’s Angel Provocateur ‘Cindy Sherman’ at Museum of Modern Art

Posted: 25 Feb 2012 07:12 PM PST
artwork: Cindy Sherman - "Untitled #470" (2008) in a gallery of Ms. Sherman's society and clown portraits in the Museum of Modern Art's career survey.

New York City - There are several conclusions to be drawn from the Museum of Modern Art’s magnificent if somewhat flawed survey of Cindy Sherman’s brilliant career. But one of them is surely that reports of the death of the author have been greatly exaggerated. At many points throughout this dense, often exciting show, which opens on Sunday, we are confronted by an artist with an urgent, singularly personal vision, who for the past 35 years has consistently and provocatively turned photography against itself. She comes across here as an increasingly vehement avenging angel waging a kind of war with the camera, using it to expose what might be called both the tyranny and the inner lives of images, especially the images of women that bombard and shape all of us at every turn. Aided by ever-shifting arrays of costumes, wigs, makeup techniques, accessories, props and at times masks and prosthetic body parts, Ms. Sherman has aggressively role-played and stage-directed her way through, and in many ways laid waste to, a lexicon of mostly female stereotypes. 


artwork: A section of the untitled 2010 Cindy Sherman mural installed outside the Museum of Modern Art entrance. Photo by Richard PerryHer career started in the late 1970s with the small black-and-white “Untitled Film Stills,” quietly reverberant scenes from nonexistent movies. Inspiring almost reflexive story lines in viewers, their female protagonists identify variously as housewives, forlorn lovers, sex kittens, girl Fridays and tourists. From there she moved ever onward and outward, to color and to larger formats and a dizzying array of conventions — fashion, art history, centerfolds, pornography, portraiture, fairy tales and horror movies. We have followed, filling in the blanks, from one set of characters to the next.

Unfolding in discrete, chapter-like series, her work has proved to be as formally ambitious and inventive as it is psychically probing. Her photographs are inevitably skewed so that their seams show and their fictive, constructed nature is apparent; we are always in on the trick, alerted to their real-feigned nature. The rough, visible nonchalance with which they are assembled for the camera has expanded the boundaries of setup photography, incorporating aspects of painting, sculpture, film, installation, performance, collage and assemblage.

Ms. Sherman is often lauded for being a skilled, chameleonlike actress, and she is — an actress always teetering on the brink of being in a role, but never all the way in. She is also a consummate manipulator of space, scale, color and pattern textiles. And she is famous for working solo in her studio, without assistants. Part of the power of her images is their home-alone quality. We know that everything we see in a Sherman image she put there, deliberately, decisively.

This is a timely exhibition. At a moment when too much art is dependent for its effect on lengthy explanations offered by wordy museum labels or nattering art dealers, Ms. Sherman has pursued an adamantly visual art that allows for — coerces, really — rich, free rumination on the viewer’s part. Similarly, when younger artists are increasingly encouraged to make work that tackles the problems of the world, she demonstrates that these things can’t be easily calculated. It reminds us that art’s political and moral effects are convincing only when driven by deep, in many ways selfish, psychological needs.

Ms. Sherman, who was born in New Jersey in 1954 and grew up on Long Island, is one of the most important artists of her era. The Modern’s press statement rightly notes that her work remains “the unchallenged cornerstone of postmodern photography.”

But she is also great, and arguably the first of her kind, in a more old-fashioned sense. She may be the first woman in modern art history whose career conforms in its broad outlines to those of figures like Pablo Picasso, Jasper Johns or Bruce Nauman: an innately precocious, innovative, prolific, influential artist who has enjoyed widespread acclaim — and market success — virtually since she first appeared, in the early 1980s, and who has never rested on her laurels, but has persisted, decade after decade, with interesting, surprising work.

artwork: Cindy Sherman - Untitled, 2010 - Cindy seated, and a figure clad in a nude suit complete with a felt merkin wielding a plastic sword.  -  Photo courtesy of Sprüth Magers

Basically, the Modern blinked. Ms. Sherman’s body of work could have easily handled the entire sixth floor, like the recent De Kooning retrospective or Richard Serra’s in 2007, instead of just two-thirds. Or it should have been given additional space elsewhere in the museum, like the recent surveys of work by Martin Kippenberger, Gabriel Orozco and Martin Puryear. Failing that, better use should have been made of the allotted space.

It is easy to grasp the challenge that the quality, quantity and variety of Ms. Sherman’s art presented the show’s able organizers, Eva Respini, associate curator, and Lucy Gallun, curatorial assistant in the department of photography. The notion of laying out her career series by series might have seemed, on paper, too predictable. But the treatment here pulls its punches.

Her big corrosive clown images from 2002-04, with their bright, digitally manipulated abstract backgrounds, should have blazed forth from their own space rather than been divided among three thematic galleries. I could have used many more examples of the fashion photographs, which despite being commercial work, are among some of Ms. Sherman’s most aggressive, opulently sardonic efforts. Here nearly 30 years of projects are represented by a mere 11 images, and none of them shows her incorporating masks or prostheses, one of many examples of cross-fertilization between series that might have been stressed. And the show lingers too long over her popular but uneven history portraits, in which she cobbled together riotously false approximations of old master paintings by Raphael, Rembrandt, Caravaggio and Ingres.

The most recent works at the Modern are murals of immense images that break out of the photographic frame and portray the artist without makeup in often ill-fitting costumes. Here Ms. Sherman unabashedly plays on her own aging — as she does in a more lacquered way in the society portraits — but she also evokes the play-acting little girl that she once was while making it feel like new territory.

If this show does not go all out for Ms. Sherman, it is still a gift, one that reminds us, when we especially need reminding, what it takes to be a great artist. Although not one of her images qualifies, exactly, as a self-portrait, the Modern’s show is above all an inspiring portrait of the artist ceaselessly at work, striving never to repeat herself, always trying to go deeper and further in one direction or another. Her self — remorseless, generous, imaginative and shrewd — is everywhere.

“Cindy Sherman” will be on view through June 11 at the Museum of Modern Art; (212) 708-9400, www.moma.org.

Claude Cahun's Surrealist Photographs

Posted: 25 Feb 2012 09:52 PM PST
artwork: Claude Cahun - "Confessions void, Plate I" (left) and "Confessions void, Plate 3" (right) , 1929-1930 Gelatin silver print (photomontage) - Each 40 x 25 cm. Private collection. On view at the Art Institute of Chicago in "Entre Nous: The Art of Claude Cahun" Feb. 25th until Jun. 3rd.

Chicago, Illinois.- The Art Institute of Chicago is proud to present "Entre Nous: The Art of Claude Cahun", on view at the museum from February 25th through June 3rd. Born Lucy Schwob to a family of French intellectuals and writers, Claude Cahun (who adopted the pseudonym at age 22) is best known for the staged self-portraiture, photomontages, and prose texts she made principally between 1920 and 1940. Rediscovered in the late 1980s, her work has not only expanded our understanding of the Surrealist era but also serves as an important touchstone to later feminist explorations of gender and identity politics. In her self-portraits, which she began creating around 1913, Cahun dismantled and questioned pre-existing notions of self and sexuality. Posing in costumes and elaborate make-up, Cahun appears masked as various personae: man or woman, hero or doll, both powerful and vulnerable. Almost a century after their making, these innovative photographs and assemblages remain remarkably relevant in their treatment of gender, performance, and identity.

Thursday, 23 February 2012

Metropolitan Museum hosts Photographs by Samoan Multimedia Artist ~ Shigeyuki Kihara

Posted: 22 Feb 2012 06:11 PM PST
artwork: Fa'a Fafine: In a Manner of a Woman, Triptych 1, Fa'a Fafine: In a Manner of a Woman series - Chromogenic print on 'Fujicolor Professional Paper', 2004-2005, Overall: 60 x 80 cm. - Courtesy of artist Shigeyuki Kihara and photographer Sean Coyle 
NEW YORK CITY - Sixteen photographs by contemporary artist Shigeyuki Kihara (b. 1975, Samoa) are on view at The Metropolitan Museum of Art. This marks the first presentation of Samoan contemporary art at the Museum. Shigeyuki Kihara: Living Photographs explores themes of Pacific culture, identity, colonialism, indigenous spirituality, stereotypes, gender roles, and consumerism. Works on view include a hauntingly beautiful picture from the artist’s 2004 Vavau series called Taema ma Tilafaiga: Goddess of Tatau, depicting Samoan goddesses chanting about the art of tattooing, as well as a highly praised work titled Fa’a fafine: In a Manner of a Woman, Triptych 1-3, a sequence of photographs, in which the artist re-create and addresses a Samoan portrait genre, in which women were posed as reclining “South Seas Belles.” All works on view were printed this year by the artist in Auckland, New Zealand, except two from the Metropolitan’s own collection. 

UK's Longest Running Photography Festival Celebrates 20 Years

Posted: 22 Feb 2012 06:18 PM PST
artwork: Simon Norfolk retrospective on display in Hereford Museum and Art Gallery and will be curated by photographer Paul Seawright.
HEREFORDSHIRE.- 2010 marks the 20th anniversary of Hereford Photography Festival. The longest running annual photography festival in the UK, Hereford Photography Festival has presented a broad range of international photography since 1990. This year, the Festival builds on its strong history of showing work by groundbreaking and leading photographers such as Martin Parr, Rankin and Wang Qingsong, with a major retrospective, new commissions, a series of exhibitions and more. Starting on Friday 29th October with a launch weekend of exhibitions, talks, workshops and a conference, this year’s festival will be bigger than ever and encompass the city and local area. Entry to all exhibitions is free. 

David LaChapelle's "Earth Laughs In Flowers"

Posted: 23 Feb 2012 12:21 AM PST
artwork:  David LaChapelle - "America" (left) and "Concerning the Soul" (right), 2011 - Chromogenic Prints - Courtesy Fred Torres Collaborations, New York. On view in "Earth Laughs In Flowers" from February 23rd through March 24th.

New York City.- From February 23rd through March 24th, Fred Torres Collaborations will present "Earth Laughs In Flowers", an important new series of ten large-scale photographs by David LaChapelle. First shown at the Kestnergesellschaft Museum in Hannover, Fred Torres Collaborations will exhibit the entire series for the first time in the United States. On the occasion of this exhibition, Fred Torres Collaborations (FTC) announces that it now represents David LaChapelle in New York. FTC has managed LaChapelle’s fine art career since 2005. In "Earth Laughs In Flowers" David LaChapelle appropriates the traditional Baroque still life painting in order to explore contemporary vanity, vice, the transience of earthly possessions and, ultimately, the fragility of humanity. Expectations of the still life are satisfied through the inclusion of symbolic objects such as fruit, flowers and skulls, but also upended by the insertion of everyday items such as cell phones, cigarette butts, balloons, Barbies, and a Starbuck’s iced coffee cup. 

Wednesday, 22 February 2012

Unconventional New Display at the National Portrait Gallery in London

Posted: 21 Feb 2012 07:23 PM PST
artwork: French photographer Camille Silvy, at the National Portrait Gallery. In 1859 he moved from France to London and set up one of the largest, most important photographic studios in the capital.

LONDON.-
 Opening this weekend, 'Only Connect' is an unconventional new display at the National Portrait Gallery presenting a web of portraits connecting sitters across three centuries. Comprising paintings, sculpture, photographs, engravings, drawings, miniatures and works in other media from the National Portrait Gallery’s holdings, the display uses musical connections to explore new ways of looking at the Collection

Sunday, 19 February 2012

Rarely seen photographs on view at drkrm Gallery in Los Angeles

Posted: 17 Feb 2012 06:31 PM PST
artwork: Ansel Adams - "The Pup" in Venice, CA., c.1940 - This nostalgic image from the archives of The Los Angeles Public Library.

LOS ANGELES, CA.- drkrm presents Ansel Adams Los Angeles, rarely seen photographs that reveal the lost landscape and lifestyle of a prewar Los Angeles. These nostalgic images from the archives of The Los Angeles Public Library Ansel Adams Collection, represent Ansel Adams as a photojournalist on assignment for Fortune Magazine in 1940. Ansel Adams Los Angeles, and other rare photographs, will be on display from February 18th through March 17th. In 1940 Los Angeles had a population of 1.5 million. The cost of gas was 10 cents and a new car was $700. The U.S. began rearming for World War II and the prestigious Ansel Adams was commissioned by Fortune Magazine to photograph a series of images for an article covering the aviation industry in the Los Angeles area. For the project, Adams took over 200 black & white photographs showing everyday life, businesses, street scenes and a variety of other subjects. But when the article, City of the Angels, appeared in the March 1941 issue, only a few of the images were included.
 

The Museum Folkwang to Show Works From its Photographic Collection

Posted: 17 Feb 2012 07:47 PM PST
artwork: Hellen van Meene - "Untitled #83", 2000 - Photograph - Collection of the Museum Folkswang, Essen. © Hellen van Meene. On view in "Man and His Objects : The Photographic Collection" on view at the museum from February 25th until April 29th.

Essen, Germany.- The Museum Folkswang is pleased to present "Man and His Objects : The Photographic Collection" on view at the museum from February 25th through April 29th. There is doubtless no other field of photographic practice as fascinating as the depiction of people. In them our history can be read at many levels: In individuals and types, we recognize social conventions and body language, we discover a bygone world of living beings and rituals and make guesses about the identity of the depicted and the individuality of the photographer when confronted with the stagings of various role plays. The exhibition "Man and His Objects" is not limited the portrait-makers’ ways of depiction since the 19th century. It also confronts those photographed with their world of objects, as witness to their everyday experience and as representative of human productivity. 

Rolling Stones ~ Unpublished Photos by Peter Webb on View at Snap Galleries

Posted: 18 Feb 2012 08:22 PM PST
artwork: Rolling Stones ~ Unpublished Photos by Peter Webb on View at Snap Galleries in London

LONDON.-
 Itʼs a story that would give any photographer sleepless nights. A classic photo-session for one of the biggest bands on the planet, The Rolling Stones, for the cover of one of their most critically acclaimed albums, "Sticky Fingers". Disaster then strikes, as British photographer Peter Webbʼs negatives go missing soon after the 1971 shoot. Then, out of nowhere, they are discovered again after almost 40 years. Detailed scanning of the negatives reveals a collection of previously unpublished photographs of The Rolling Stones, group shots and solo portraits, in black and white and colour. Many of these are now to be shown together in a gallery exhibition for the first time at Snap Galleries space in central London, some in sizes up to 6 ft. wide. 

Albright-Knox Art Gallery shows Full Color Depression: First Kodachromes

Posted: 18 Feb 2012 08:31 PM PST
artwork: Photo by John Vachon - Dr. Schreiber of San Augustine giving a typhoid inoculation at a rural school, San Augustine County, Texas, 1943. From the works Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs Division, FSA-OWI

BUFFALO, N.Y.- Organized by Bruce Jackson (SUNY Distinguished Professor and UB James Agee Professor of American Culture), with Albright-Knox Curator for the Collection Holly E. Hughes, this exhibition will feature a selection of rarely seen color photographs from the Library of Congress’ Farm Security Administration (FSA) photography collection. The black-and-white photographs taken by the FSA’s team—composed of Walker Evans (American, 1903–1975), Dorothea Lange (American, 1895–1965), Ben Shahn (American, 1898–1969), Russell Lee (American, 1903–1986), and others, under the leadership of Roy Emerson Stryker—include some of the most recognizable images of American cities, towns, and countryside during the Great Depression. The team began documenting America in 1935 and ultimately took at least 175,000 black-and-white images, as well as some color images using a film called Kodachrome. 

No one knows exactly how many frames they shot in color, but only 1,615 survive. Until recently, most of these images had not been seen since they were initially processed by Kodak’s lab in Rochester well over half a century ago. Kodachrome, the most stable fine-grain color film ever made, was introduced as 16mm movie film in 1935. During the following three years it became available in canisters for 35mm cameras and in sheets for medium- and large-format cameras. By late 1939, the processing was as good as the film, and some of Stryker’s FSA photographers began experimenting with it. They continued their work after the FSA project was absorbed by the Office of War Information (OWI) in 1942, through its dissolution in 1944. All of the project’s surviving color images are now available as high-resolution scans from the Library of Congress.

artwork: Photo by Russell Lee.- Jack Whinery and his family, homesteaders, Pie Town, New Mexico,1940. Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs Division, FSA-OWI

For this exhibition, Jackson, a photographer himself, has selected, printed, and, in some instances, restored a representative group of images; some of the prints required more than a thousand separate corrections. Jackson's selections range from the first tentative explorations of Marion Post Wolcott (American, 1910–1990)—who used the film in the same way she used monochrome film—to the more complex color work of Lee and Jack Delano (American, 1914–1997)—who were beginning to understand that color photography was different than monochrome—and the hyped advertising-style propaganda images of Alfred T. Palmer (American, 1906–1993) from the early years of World War II. 

Color photography would not find a firm base in the art world until the exhibition of works by William Eggleston (American, born 1939) at The Museum of Modern Art in 1976, but, as the images in this exhibition demonstrate, the path was marked decades before by Roy Stryker’s FSA team. Their assignment was to document what America looked like during and at the end of the Great Depression; in the process, they discovered new ways the camera lens could see and represent the world. 

artwork: Photo by Jack Delano - Sharecroppers chop cotton on rented land near White Plains, in Greene County, Georgia, 1941.- Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs Division

This exhibition is organized by Bruce Jackson, SUNY Distinguished Professor and James Agee Professor of American Culture, University at Buffalo, and Curator for the Collection Holly E. Hughes. It is presented in cooperation with The Humanities Institute, University at Buffalo, and the Prints and Photographs Division, Library of Congress.

Sunday, 12 February 2012

New book "Francesca Woodman, The Roman Years ~ Between Flesh & Film"

Posted: 11 Feb 2012 07:53 PM PST
artwork: Francesca Woodman - "Milanese Retrospective" - From a new book that reveals the intimate side of a great photographer, taking us on a journey through the labyrinth of words and images that illuminate Francesca Woodman’s universe.

ROME.- This superb volume takes a new look at the life and work of Francesca Woodman through a fresh analysis of the photographs and writings from her Roman sojourn. A precocious artist and a figure caught between two cultures –American and Italian– Francesca Woodman reached the acme of her artistic parable in Rome, where she fully defined her aesthetic and stylistic sensibilities. Drawing from extensive research, the author analyzes the relationship of Woodman’s work to Surrealism , as well as the artist’s use of the body as its own artistic language, and her interest in metamorphosis and the post-mortem, questioning the finality of death and thus also of critical readings that define Woodman’s work by the tragic nature of her own death. Readers will come to know her photographs intimately, drawn into the intensely personal conversations which echo through her images. 

The Sammlung Verbund in Vienna Presents Cindy Sherman's Early Works

Posted: 11 Feb 2012 11:56 PM PST
artwork: Cindy Sherman - "Untitled", 1975 - 11 black-and-white cutout photographs from the film 'Doll Clothes', mounted on board - 43.2 x 51.4 cm. © Cindy Sherman - Courtesy Sammlung Verbund, Vienna. -  On view in "That's Me - That's Not Me: Early Works by Cindy Sherman" until May 16th.

Vienna.- The Sammlung Verbund is proud to present "That's Me - That's Not Me: Early Works by Cindy Sherman" in the vertical gallery at the collection's headquarters through May 16th. Cindy Sherman began studying painting in 1972, at the age of eighteen, at the State University of New York, Buffalo. In 1975, she changed her major from painting to photography. She graduated in 1976 and left Buffalo the following year to move to New York City. Contrary to previous assumptions, the famous "Untitled Film Stills" (1977-1980) were not Sherman’s first works. In fact, during the time from 1975 to 1977 in Buffalo, she produced an extensive body of early work that would become the foundation for her future oeuvre. Sherman developed her understanding of the contemporary art movements of the era at Hallwalls, an exhibition center run by the artists themselves, which was founded in November 1974 by Sherman’s then boyfriend Robert Longo and Charles Clough.

Thursday, 9 February 2012

Grand Rapids Art Museum shows Richard Avedon ~ ' Larger Than Life '

Posted: 08 Feb 2012 05:15 PM PST
artwork: Richard Avedon (1923-2004) - Ingrid Bolting, Coat by Dior, Paris, January 1970 - Gelatin silver print ©2008 The Richard Avedon Foundation - Courtesy The Richard Avedon Foundation
GRAND RAPIDS, MI.- The Grand Rapids Art Museum (GRAM), presents the work of Richard Avedon in an exclusive exhibition by one of the most important American photographers of the modern era. Richard Avedon: Larger Than Life traces the artist’s dynamic career from the postwar years of the late 1940s in Europe to the early 21st century. Avedon set new precedents in fashion and portrait photography with his innovative approach to the medium. He also established a reputation as one of the greatest camera portraitists of our time.
artwork: Richard Avedon - Bob Dylan, Musician, Central Park, NY 1965 -  © 2008 The Richard Avedon Foundation.
Richard Avedon: Larger Than Life is organized by the Grand Rapids Art Museum and the Center for Creative Photography for an exclusive presentation at the Grand Rapids Art Museum through January 4, 2009. The exhibition includes over 80 photographs drawn from the collection of the Center for Creative Photography in Tucson, Arizona, which houses the Richard Avedon Archive. A  Membership Drive launched with a Special Guest Speaker attending the Members Exhibition Preview on October 2, 2008: Nigel Barker, renowned photographer and judge on the hit television show America’s Next Top Model, was Guest Speaker for the Exhibition Preview.
After World War II, Avedon began taking photographs of street performers in Italy while doing freelance fashion photography for Harper’s Bazaar, where he subsequently served as chief photographer until 1966. During his years at Harper’s, Avedon created a new kind of fashion photography that transformed models from posed mannequins into actresses. He set his models in the city streets, bistros, and urban landmarks of Paris. In the studio, he required them to move and leap like dancers. The 1957 film Funny Face, starring Audrey Hepburn, cast Fred Astaire as fashion photographer, Dick Avery, a character based on Avedon, who consulted on the film and designed the opening titles.
In 1966 Avedon left Harper’s for Vogue and shifted his focus to portraiture, which he had begun in the late 1950s. Through the rest of his life, Avedon created powerfully engaging and unsparing portraits of actors, artists, writers, politicians, and intellectuals. His portraits are distinguished by their minimalist style. Posed in front of a sheer white background, the subject looks squarely into the camera. Avedon considered portrait photography a collaborative process. He admired his subjects and captured them in revealing moments as they paused in conversation with him. Avedon’s subjects were often larger than life personalities. His photographs of President Gerald Ford, Rose Kennedy, The Beatles, and Louis Armstrong are portraits that document the 20th century. The famous and familiar people that he photographed were distinctly un-glamorized, yet their images are monumental in presence. His subjects also included sitters such as the Napalm victims he photographed on his 1971 visit to Vietnam. Avedon’s series In the American West, 1979–84, included drifters, miners, field hands, and working people from the western United States. However anonymous these subjects were, they have the same psychological presence and dignity as Avedon’s portraits of the powerful and celebrated.
artwork: Richard Avedon - Provo, Utah 1980 - © 2008 The Richard Avedon Foundation.
Richard Avedon died suddenly in 2004 from a brain hemorrhage while shooting in San Antonio, Texas, for The New Yorker magazine. His project was titled On Democracy, befitting an American photographer who defined the stylish optimism of postwar modernism and immortalized the forthright faces of people who, in their time, were larger than life.
For the past two decades Nigel Barker has been taking the world of fashion by storm. He began his career as a model working for top designers and photographers and collaborating with the industry’s elite. As his love for fashion grew, so did his desire to create beautiful images as a photographer.
In 1996, Nigel opened his photo studio in Manhattan’s hip Meat Packing District. His photography career took off, with his work appearing in such publications as GQ, Interview, Paper, Lucky, Seventeen, (t)here, Cover, Zink!, Razor Red and People. Nigel raises the bar with every project by leading with an infectious enthusiasm and ceaseless dedication for capturing the essence of his subjects. This success has led him to create advertising campaigns for brands such as Beefeater Gin, Sean John, Leviev Jewelry, Pierre Cardin, Pamella Roland, Nicole Miller, OP, Ted Baker, Land's End, Lexus and Frederick's of Hollywood.
Coming full circle, Nigel has once again stepped in front of the lens, as a judge and photographer in the hit television show, “America’s Next Top Model.” With 10 seasons under his belt, Nigel has redefined the photography industry by giving it new meaning to the millions around the world who tune in each week to see and hear his take on beauty and fashion.
Nigel’s celebrity has enabled him to bring new dimensions to all his projects, including his work with several charities. Nigel is partnered with the Make-A-Wish Foundation and has shot groundbreaking ad campaigns for the foundation and regularly grants wishes. He also shoots and promotes charitable projects for Edeyo, Do Something and The Humane Society of the United States. Nigel Barker lives in New York City with his wife, Cristen, and their son Jack.
Visit Grand Rapids Art Museum (GRAM) at : www.artmuseumgr.org/

Masters of Photography Sale Including 275 Items at artnet Auctions

Posted: 08 Feb 2012 05:43 PM PST
artwork: Ruth Orkin - "An American Girl in Florence, Italy", 1951, printed later. Gelatin silver print, signed on recto and verso. Estimate: $16,000 - $20,000.
NEW YORK, NY.- artnet Auctions offers continuous online auctions of fine art, prints and photographs. Starting April 15, artnet Auctions will present 275 exquisite photographs by artists from Berenice Abbott to James Van Der Zee in a special sale that ends April 29th. Leading the sale is an extraordinary group of photographs by f/64, a group of seven San Francisco artists known for their modernist images of natural forms and found objects. The magnificent gelatin silver print Dunes, Oceano 31SO, 1971 is one of 20 works by Edward Weston offered in this section (estimate: $25,000-$30,000). Other works by the f/64 include Two Callas, 1925, one of five floral prints by Imogen Cunningham (estimate: $2,000-$3,000) and Mandenhall Glacier, c.1935 by Brett Weston (estimate: $7,500-$8,500).

Saturday, 4 February 2012

Photographic Work of John Reiff Williams

Posted: 04 Feb 2012 01:20 AM PST
artwork: John Reiff Williams - "Winter Beach 1 v.03", 2005 - Archival pigment print - Courtesy Thomas Paul Fine Art, Los Angeles. On view in "The Edge of Collapse" from February 4th until March 17th.

Los Angeles, California. - Thomas Paul Fine Art proudly presents "John Reiff Williams: The Edge of Collapse", on view at the gallery from February 4th through March 17th. The gallery will debut fifty-four photographs by Williams which challenge our understanding of what the photographic medium is and what it is not. Williams’ work presents us with photographic observations of humanity that covey a visceral emotional resonance to the viewer. Focusing on social settings such as La Jolla Beach or Hollywood Boulevard, and Mexico City, Williams’ work explores the shifting perspectives occurring in-between the frozen moments photography was created to capture. Through his unique use of digital exploration, mutations and interpretations, Williams reveals the motion, activity and chaos that we all experience in our ever accelerating world.