Wednesday, March 31, 2010

Liz Lantz

The old adage about shooting what you know rings very true with Liz Lantz's work. After completing her BFA in photography at Columbia College in Chicago, Liz moved to San Diego to "nurture her passion for surfing". And now she combines her passion for photography and her passion for surfing in the series, Sirens. Her work avoids the iconic action surf shots, but instead explores the life of women who are drawn to the sea and captures moments that reflect the routines and the rituals of a surfer's world.

Sirens grew from a desire to understand a culture that I desperately wanted to be a part of as a land-locked surfer, riding the waves of Lake Michigan. When I moved to San Diego, it was both exciting and intimidating to see beaches full of people who shared my love for surfing. Popular surf media painted a picture of male-dominated world and I was surprised to see many other women in the water. In response to my own surf experiences, I set out to learn about these women and a side of surfing that is rarely exposed.

Despite working full-time jobs, going to school, and/or having a family, I discovered a community of women who make time to surf daily, regardless of conditions, and are fearless against waves twice their size. They incorporate surfing into as many aspects of their lives as possible: through creating a serene surf shack to call home, winning surf competitions to earn a living, or starting their own surf school.


























Tuesday, March 30, 2010

Yoichi Nagata

I met Japanese photographer, Yoichi Nagata, at Review Santa Fe last year. After the event, Yoichi returned to Japan and created the Yokohama Photo Festival, in January of this year. The festival included portfolio reviews, workshops, exhibitions, and lectures. Up until now, much of the fine art photography community and gallery scene in Japan has been filtered through camera manufacturers (Nikon and Cannon have galleries), but Yoichi is interested in showcasing the creative and personal side of photography.

Besides his desire to celebrate and expose fine art photography in Japan, Yoichi is a talented image maker in his own right. I am featuring images from Yoichi's two series, Star of the Stars and SkyEarth/The Last Paradise.

Yoichi has been photographing Japanese clubgoers for the last three years--a body of work that is featured this month in the German publication, fotoMagazin. The images feel like air-brushed paintings that heighten the comic book feeling of the subjects. He has photographed over 500 clubgoers with more to come.

From Western fetish styles such as bondage, S/M, and rubber that entered Japan mostly in the 1990s to homegrown looks such as Gothic, Gothic Lolita, sweet Lolita, maid, cyberpunk, yamanba, and angeler, nightlife fashions in this far-off corner of the world called Tokyo present a strange jumble of East and West, past and future.

Images from Star of the Stars


Perhaps these partyers can be considered modern-day versions of basara or kabukimono, social rebels in Japan’s medieval and early modern periods who were known for their daring, outlandish dress and behavior. Often as not, such nonconformists come into being at times of social turmoil or the end of an epoch.



But these basara of today are by no means rough or aggressive; on the contrary, they go around nicely complimenting one another’s fashions. After all, the virtue of amity has been ingrained in the Japanese psyche ever since the seventh-century statesman Prince Shotoku instructed people to value harmony and avoid contentiousness.
Thus the clubgoers, too, do not judge one another’s ideas, but instead respect differences and work on refining the details of their looks toward expressing an even deeper profundity of spirit.















When I first saw the photographs taken by the Apollo astronauts in the photo book Full Moon by Michael Light, I was stunned that the moon shows virtually the same monochromatic landscape regardless of whether the images use color or black-and-white film. The only things that show color are those that the astronauts brought with them from the Earth. I then imagined, what if people who were born and brought up on the moon traveled the opposite route as the Apollo astronauts and landed on Earth? What would they sense?

First of all, they would probably be amazed by the abundant colors seen on the ground at their feet. Unlike the ground of the moon, which is gray or almost colorless, the Earth is flooded with colors such as white and beige beaches, green landscapes overgrown with grass, or carpets of colorful flowers.


Images from SkyEarth


And there is the presence of the air and wind, factors that continuously change the appearance of the sea and ground. When God takes a gentle breath over the Tuvalu sea, the surface changes instantly. The waters flow moment by moment from one shimmering gemlike form into another. These gems are ephemeral treasures that can be possessed by no one, not for all the riches in the world.



On the moon, by contrast, astronaut Buzz Aldrin's bootprint still lies on the atmosphereless surface exactly as when Aldrin photographed it, there on the fine sand as if frozen from millions of years ago.

Overhead, the sky is an awesome blue, and white clouds drift by in ever-changing shapes as if they were dancing, a sight that would be unimaginable on the moon.




On Earth, you never see the same landscape twice. Each is an encounter that occurs only once in a lifetime. The essence of Earth’s beauty lies in its mutability, transience, and unstoppable succession of evolution and change. That we all must eventually die and fade away—that is precisely what lends life on Earth its joy.




The act of photographing the sea and sky of Tuvalu, where the energies of the land and heavens join magnificently together in momentary flashes of bliss, equals nothing less than gathering up some of the sparkling fragments of this happiness.



Tuvalu is the islands known to be the first country in the world to sink from the effects of global warming.

Monday, March 29, 2010

Laurie Lambrecht

New York photographer, Laurie Lambrecht, has a new exhibition, In Roy Lichtenstein's Studio, opening at the Corden Potts Gallery in San Francisco on March 20 and running through May 22. The opening is on Saturday, April 17th. In addition this exhibition, the work is being showcased at the Bank of America Center Lobby, at 700 Louisiana Street, in Houston, through June 1st.

Laurie's images perfectly encapsulate the artist and his inspirations, by creating layered photographs that are as dynamic as the work they capture.



Walking into Roy Lichtenstein's New York studio in the spring of 1990 I entered the artist's visual world. Towering shelves of art books lining one side of the office led to a workspace where a tall "Brushstroke" chair stood. On the studio walls were large, nearly finished paintings, one boldly referencing Picasso. On expansive tables his resource and reference materials were readily accessible: elegant Italian sketchbooks juxtaposed with simple composition notebooks containing clippings from comic books and advertisements. Jars of paint, cans of assorted brushes, boxes of colored pencils, sheets of striped and dotted papers were all within sight. There were endless layers of things to visually captivate me, and to capture Roy the renowned Pop artist at work.



With my camera I observed what Roy saw... the newspaper ad of the "Beach Ball Girl," for instance. I let his signature graphic components--the stripes, dots and bands of solid colors--suggest the compositions. The texture of Roy's paintings in all states of completion, the presence of Roy, my awareness of his stature in our cultural history--all this inspired me.



His innovative transformation of public culture into groundbreaking art pushed me to focus my lens on imagery that would express the experience of his particular genius.















Sunday, March 28, 2010

Camera Club of New York Call for Entry

The Camera Club of New York is having their annual National Photography Competition...for those of you who have yet to penetrate the New York market, this is one way to get a NYC credit on your resume. The juror is James Casebere, who just happens to have the following pieces in the Whitney Biennial.

Landscape with Houses (Dutchess County, NY) #1

Landscape with houses (Dutchess County, NY) #2


Since the 1980s, James Casebere’s photographs have transported viewers into ambiguous, evocative, and surreal environments. Casebere’s process involves constructing tabletop models out of modest materials, such as Styrofoam, plaster, and cardboard. He then dramatically lights these constructions and carefully positions his camera to manipulate the com¬position and the mood of the resulting photograph. Devoid of human figures, the constructions invite viewers to project into and inhabit the space.

For Landscape with Houses (Dutchess County, NY) #1 and Landscape with Houses (Dutchess County, NY) #2, Casebere constructed his grandest, most detailed model to date—an American subdivision based on one in Dutchess County, New York. The fabricated community is a hybrid development of the sort hit hard by the foreclosure epidemic of the past few years.




The deadline for the competition is April 19, 2010

The Camera Club of New York (CCNY) is pleased to announce an open call for applications for its Annual National Photography Competition. Photographers and photo–based artists working in any genre are eligible to apply. Applicants are encouraged to submit a cohesive body of work.

Selected applicants will be featured in an exhibition at the CCNY gallery in the summer of 2010 and also on our website. The first place selection will receive a $500.00 cash award.

For more information or to download an entry form, go here.

The International Photographer Index

photo-eye has compiled an incredible new resource by creating The Photographer Website Project. Not only can you explore the work of thousands of fellow fine art photographers, you can get a sense of websites that work and some that don't. If I can add my two cents on that subject as I peruse hundreds if not thousands of sites a year, if the images take too long to load, I'm on to the next person...and where's the color, where's the fun and creativity?



iPi — The International Photographer Index at photoeye.com is a visual index of important fine-art and documentary photographers from throughout the world.

It is our mission to become the most focused and useful index and search engine for discovering and exploring fine-art and documentary photography. Unlike all general search engines on the web where pertinent information is buried amidst the less relevant, the iPi search tool focuses only on the art and documentary community of photographers and their work, making it the ideal tool for a discerning audience of curators, gallery directors, publishers, editors, researchers, collectors and all other lovers of art and documentary photography.

The Photography Website Project's mission is to index all significant websites by internationally renowned and emerging art and documentary photographers.


To give you an idea of the lay-out, here are a couple of random pages:


Saturday, March 27, 2010

Jim McHugh

In January, when I was strolling through the aisles of the Los Angeles Art Show, I came across Jim McHugh's work and thought, If I ever leave Los Angeles, I'd love some of these images to remind me of it's essence. And then I thought, I wouldn't mind having them even if I stay. Jim has captured the best of Los Angeles: it's architecture, its glamour, its noir-ness in large scale edible images that showcase a by-gone era of significant architectural gestures.

Jim's new exhibition, Let's Get Lost, opens at the Timothy Yarger Gallery in Beverly HIlls on May 27 and runs through June 30th.

Equally known for his portraiture, McHugh has published several books of artists portraits, including “The Art of Light and Space” by Abbeville Press and “California Painters: New Work” by Chronicle Press. His cubist portrait of David Hockney is the cover of Hockney’s book “That’s the Way I See It “ and is also included in the permanent collection of the National Portrait Gallery in London. McHugh won The International Photography Awards’ First Prize for Fine Art Photography 2007 for his images from London titled “South Bank.” In 2008 the George Eastman House honored McHugh for his Architectural imagery of Los Angeles by awarding him Best of Show at the Lucie Awards in New York.