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Wednesday, May 22, 2013

Heather Evans Smith: The Heart and The Heavy

Portrait week continues...today's post written by Sarah Stankey.

Wade

The first time that I saw the photographs of Heather Evans Smith was when I first started working on Lenscratch and I was putting together one of the large group exhibitions that the site hosts. I immediately visited her website and loved what I saw. Heather's work is both technically and conceptually brilliant. This work is transportive and cinematic.

Heather is an award-winning fine art and conceptual portrait photographer based in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. Her work captures both the everyday and the whimsical, telling stories of women and struggle, reality and the surreal. Smith’s work has been featured in solo and joint exhibitions, magazines, literary journals and online publications. She conducts creativity workshops around the country. Recently, she was chosen as winner of Ron Howard’s Project Imaginat10n. In the fall of 2013 her winning image will be brought to life in a short film directed by Jamie Foxx.
A Soft Place To Land
The Heart and The Heavy
Life is full of stories – some deeply personal and specific, others universally relatable. My story is beautiful and complicated and bittersweet and hard. Life is just that way. So are photographs. The birth of my daughter was life-changing, but not in the way I expected. Though there has been no greater joy for me, the responsibility of another life has proven to be at times a heavy load. Thinking about this in a literal sense, I imagined a heavy home on my shoulders, yet held tightly with love – a burden and a joy, a challenge and a reprieve. This became the first image in the series The Heart and the Heavy. From there the stories evolved, just as my life has. The genesis of an image comes from moments of life, like a still from an old movie. Movement and pain and the simple joys of being alive are frozen in time – a study of fictional worlds based in reality. Compelled to shoot these stories, I am haunted for days and months until it is released in an image.  Telling someone’s tale in a world not quite like our own.
 The Unraveling 
 The Collector
Facade
 Flight
 The Heart and The Heavy
 A Beautiful Smothering
 A Slow Sink
 Moored
 Collide
 Rooted
 As The World Collapses Around Her
Domicile 

Tuesday, May 21, 2013

Nir Arieli: Inframen

When I first started looking at portrait photography for this week, I came across the work of Nir Arieli.   I approached him to be featured, but one question from him set me back, “Where did you come across my work?”  I had no clue.  It wasn’t until I revisited one of my static Tumblr blogs that I had realized that I had been admiring many of his photographs, unknowingly, for quite some time.  Hundreds of images were passing by me daily, yet Nir’s portraits seemed to stand out from the rest.  It was unfortunately the lack of credit to his work that prevented me from becoming familiar with his name.

In this particular body of work, Nir's editing technique reveals the beautiful subtleties that usually go unlooked.  These images are lush with contrast that enhances a super realistic way of seeing the human form.  His work also comments on the flaws that are found on even the most beautiful of men.     --Grant Gill

Nir Arieli launched his career as a military photographer for the Israeli magazine Bamachane, before receiving a scholarship to pursue a BFA at New York’s School of Visual Arts; he graduated with honors. Nir's photographic passion is within the portraiture and dance fields. He is an admirer of beauty and gentleness, these qualities are the heart of his work.

 Inframen
To be a dancer is to work your body to the breaking point. In my project "Inframen", I created a series of portraits using an infrared technique that reveals details that are under the subject's abused skin. I am taking the dancers out of their roles as performers and revealing personal intimate individuals. Through these subtle and surreal portraits, I aim to continue my studies of contemporary male dancers, peeling the physical shield and exposing fragile human beings - The scars show on their skin and in their eyes.

Monday, May 20, 2013

Patrizia Fusi


Patrizia Fusi and I met while I was a student at the Milwaukee Institute of Art and Design and she was a study abroad student from Rome, Italy. I had the opportunity to get to know her as her friend and student mentor. And I even had the great pleasure of visiting her in Rome last summer! Patrizia is a very talented artist and photographer. I am so happy to share some of her fashion work and fine art work today on Lenscratch!  -- Sarah Stankey

Patrizia Fusi is a both a fashion photographer and a fine art photographer. She was born in 1990 in Rome, Italy. She studied at a science high school and graduated college from the Instituto Europeo di Design (IED Roma) in June 2012. Patrizia's work has been published in Poutpourri Magazine, Impostor Magazine, Fashion E-zine and on Vogue.com.cn.












Phychometries
We know the world through our senses: sight, touch, taste, sound and smell. Everything has some sort of shape.

In every single moment, we increase our knowledge, storing up new things and concepts. But what's the shape of this process? How does the act of learning, thinking, feeling look like? What is its shape?

Everything could be reduced into lines. Religions use sacred geometries, symbols, psychedelia uses geometries too.

By studying the different uses of the geometry, I ended up with the idea that the abilities of our minds can be represented with the purest, most essential and perfect shapes: Geometries.
 These images are negative black and white silver prints over which I sewed and embroidered.





Sunday, May 19, 2013

Lenscratch Exhibition Opportunities

LENSCRATCH is creating exposure opportunities for photographers with group on-line exhibitions. Photographers will be allowed ONE entry per exhibition and ALL photographs will be published. I firmly believe in having occasional unjurored opportunities that allow for community and conversation. International submissions are welcome!

Submission Guidelines:
Image size: 72dpi at 1000px on the long side, save as a jpg.

Send name, title, location (where you captured the image), and link to your work (website or other). It makes it easier for us if you follow the example below EXACTLY.

Example:
Aline Smithson, The Red Rose, Los Angeles, CA http://www.alinesmithson.com

In the subject of your e-mail, type the name of the exhibition (example: CELL PHONE PHOTOGRAPHY) and e-mail to:
lenscratch2@gmail.com  (don't forget the "2")

If your images are sized incorrectly or the submission is incomplete, they will not be posted.

Submission Categories and Due Dates:

Due Date: May 19th
BACKYARD
Exhibition to run on May 31st, 2013
image by Aline Smithson


Due Date: June 9th
LENSCRATCH STUDENT COMPETITION
Exhibition to run on June 28th, 2013
image by Sarah Stankey

Open to all students: high school, BFA, MFA, Continuing Education
a scan of your student id will be required...for the 2012-2013 school year.


LENSCRATCH is awarding 1st, 2nd, 3rd place prizes and 2 honorable mentions: each winner will receive a focused post on their work and given world wide exposure. There are no fees involved, but guidelines must be followed correctly to be considered:

  1. Submit 10 images from one body of work--work that is shot with intention and has something to say.  Images need to be 72 dpi, 1000px on the long side, saved as jpgs.
  2. Submit a well written statement for the work
  3. Submit a written bio
  4. A scan of your student id
  5. Also include: age, name of school, if you are pursuing a degree, website (if you have one) and one sentence as to why you are a photographer.