Tuesday, June 29, 2010

Emil Kozak

Danish photographer, Emil Kozak, now lives in Barcelona and uses the rich tapestry of a new environment to inspire and inform his images. He is also a talented graphic designer and his eye for color, form, and environment is evident in all his work....so is his enthusiasm for living. He's an extreme sports enthusiast, and creates designs for clients like Vans, Elelments, and Burton.

I hope that my work can remind us that imagination can defy gravity and bend time. It is our own responsibility to enjoy every second of the day. Nobody else can do that for us. Have fun, eat candy, do what you love, love what you do… We might get thrown off this spinning ball of iron and mantle tomorrow.

I'm featuring work from two series, Tidslommer, which means "timepockets" in Danish, and C-31 which explores a coastal highway south of Barcelona.

Images from Tidslommer


















Images from C-31












Monday, June 28, 2010

Picture of the Year International: Paul Hansen

I spent all Thursday at the Annenberg Space for Photography in Los Angeles, attending lectures and portfolio reviews hosted by the Photographer of the Year International Education & Awards Program. They provided an elegant lunch and riveting lectures by award winners, in particular Swedish photographer, husband, and father, Paul Hansen. Paul garnered the First Place Photographer of the Year: Newspaper Award. The Prison Photography blog has a wonderful interview with this incredible documentary photographer.

Paul Hansen is a photojournalist based in Stockholm, Sweden. As a staff photographer for the daily newspaper, Dagens Nyheter, Hensen's assignments and self-initiated projects take him all over the world. When covering events in Haiti, Bosnia, Afghanistan or back home in Sweden, there is always one common denominator that links his work together; empathy. His visual storytelling has, among a host of domestic and international prizes and honors, also awarded him the title "Photographer of the Year" in Sweden six times.

I'm sharing work from two of his many stories, Gaza, After the War and One Last Game. To see more, check the POYI website.

Images from Gaza, After the War
According to the Israeli army this is the main reason why "Operation Lead" started. The smugging tunnels under the border to Egypt was not only being used to transport food, but also weapons and rocket components for the Hamas. The organization used the rockets to bombard Israeli citizens across the border. This tunnel is 700 meters long and took nine months to build. The Israelis bomb the tunnels regularly.



Etaf Khader, has twelve children and making dinner takes her close to four hours on a makeshift stove next to her destroyed house. Rebuilding for the future is almost impossible. The Israeli authorities does not allow any building material such as timber and concrete to pass through the checkpoints surrounding Gaza. The isolation breeds desperation and cyclical eruptions of violence.



In Jabaliya on the outskirts of Gaza city the destruction is widespread. Everywhere there are destitute people living in tents next to the ruins of their former lives.



The car that Muhammad Haddad traveled in with his father, mother, sister and brother were shot at by the Israeli artillery. The explosion threw him ten meters from the car. Everybody else died. For his burns he is being treated at a makeshift hospital tent run by the organization "Doctors without borders" in Gaza city.



Njoud al Banna cannot communicate with her husband anymore. He is deaf and mute and they used sign language before. During an Israeli air attack they hid in the UN school in Gaza city when a bomb explosion paralyzed her one hand and destroyed the other. She is treated for her pain and physical injuries at the MSF centre in Gaza city.



Images from One Last Game
Since they were born sixty seven years ago the twin-brothers Erik and Lennart have shared everything; the hard life in institutions, apartments, and of course their great love for the sports club AIK. With mentally challenged parents, unable to take care of them, they have spent their entire life together at different childcare institutions around Sweden. Ever since they can remember their substitute family have been the camaraderie and love from the supporter in the sports club.



The doctors puts Lennart on medication against the cancer and he is confined to the hospital. Erik is at his side every day. He tries hard not to show his brother how worried he really is.



With help from escorting friends - and the hospital staff giving Lennart extra transfusions of blood beforehand - Lennart makes it to the final game in Gothenburg. Landing at the airport he turns to his brother, smiling broadly and reciting the seating arrangements waiting for them; "Place 40 and 41, row 3, the south stand." When the referee blows the final signal and their beloved team wins first place in the football league the fans, including the twins, go wild.



The city is in chaos, and the streets in central Stockholm are crammed with celebrating people. Recognizing the teams biggest fans, the local police helps the frail twins through a back door to the party. Linnea, working for the sports club, gets wonderfully surprised by their unexpected appearance.



The days after game Lennarts illness takes a turn for the worse. He is taken by ambulance back to the cancer ward at the hospital. Erik does not leave his side.



Lennart quickly fades away and dies from his cancer a few days later. The game in Gothenburg became Lennart and Erik's last together. The funeral in Solna church is filled to capacity by his friends and family. The first to say goodbye is his twin brother Erik and sister Ingrid. From now on, the seat next to Erik will forever be empty.

Sunday, June 27, 2010

Send me work!



Looking for work for a 4th of July post that features your one favorite image of Americana or America (that you have taken)...I need images by June 30th 5pm, California time. Title and location, or just location and a link to your site would be great! E-mail to alinesmithson@yahoo.com sooner than later! All submissions will be published.

Entering Competitions: more lessons learned

I have had the fortunate opportunity to co-curate several terrific exhibitions in Los Angeles recently and will soon be juroring SELF-SEARCHING: The Art of Self-Portraiture for the Vermont Photo Place. I thought I'd share some insights from both sides of the submission experience.



1. When you are submitting to a competition and the entry calls for 3-5 images at one price, and more at an additional price, just submit the 3-5. If the juror doesn't like those initial images, they are probably not going to like the rest.

2. Try and submit images from the same body of work. In a recent show, those who had 2 images that related to each other, got two in the show. Those who sent a variety of images, got only one image. Jurors also like to see that you are exploring one idea in depth.

3. For this same reason, try submitting framed images that are the same size. If you keep your work consistently sized, you can swap out mats and frames and you can keep your framing costs down.

4. Be prepared. For another exhibition, I needed bios, statements, resumes, and image lists from all the participating photographers. I was shocked at how few had these pieces at the ready , and almost no one had branded themselves with a logo or an element that showed a sense of professionalism. For a number of photographers, I had to create these elements for them (because I believed in their work). I teach my students that when things come to you, it's more often than not, overnight...you've got to turn your images and your promotional materials around at a moment's notice.

5. Learn how to resize your jpgs correctly.

6. Follow instructions to the letter--this simple fact will cause for photographers to be eliminated.

7. If you are tightening the purse strings, try submitting to ezines, blogs, or magazines. It keeps your name in the public and there are usually only small fees (if any) involved and no shipping costs and more importantly, you will have something tangible to use to showcase your work. Here are some good sources to find publications ("Sites to Explore" on Lenscratch has many also):
http://www.art-support.com/magazines.htm
http://www.photolinks.com/Photography_Ezines.html

8. Take the time to thank the curator/gallery/ezine/magazine/ blogger for the opportunity you have been given. Emerging photographers forget how much time and effort go into these efforts, usually for small financial reward. This holds true for portfolio reviews too. When I reviewed for Review LA earlier this year, I handed each reviewee a guideline of how to handle a portfolio review and the #1 point was to thank the organization AND the reviewer for their time and energies. I was surprised at how few photographers followed through on this.

9. Contining on this idea, I've spoken to many photographers that will tell me 3-6 months after a review that they still haven't followed up with things. Life goes on and reviewers are busy people, and the enthusiasm they have for your work at the time will wane, especially when they see that you are not a follow-up kind of person. Imagine a gallerist who is interested in you and your work, and you don't follow up until much later--how does that reflect on your ability to create an exhibition and be someone they can depend on.

10. Remember if you miss a major competition, it will come around next year. Pace yourself and be realistic. You can't submit to everything or you'll go broke. It's not just the price of submission, but the cost of printing, framing, and shipping.

11. Do some research on the juror...look at the exhibitions they have created or the kind of work they showcase. If you think they would find your work of interest or if they are someone you want to expose your work to, then submit. Even if you don't get in the show, you will be on their radar. A couple of years ago, I didn't get into an exhibition. Months later I saw the juror at a portfolio review and I was gracious and friendly. He told me how badly he felt, and then hen a few months later, offered me a solo show. You never know.

One of my students didn't make the cut for Critical Mass, yet was still contacted by a gallery that loved her work and she was offered a show.

12. Learn how to write about your work. As a blogger, I need some insight into your work, so I can write about it. Photographers often feel that the images should speak for themselves. Honestly, some do and some don't. Even a few sentences is a big help.

13. There is something to be learned from rejection. Take a look at the realized exhibition and try to understand why the juror made those choices, and where your work stands in comparision.

14. Support your community. Many of these calls for entries keep galleries and organizations afloat...you don't have to submit to everything, but consider who you want to support.

15. Good luck...remember Luck is preparation meeting opportunity.

Saturday, June 26, 2010

Jane Fulton Alt

Jane Fulton Alt is someone who is a proactive and concerned photographer. She is thoughtful, aware, and willing to take action. Her work reflects a broad curiosity, and a talent for making things happen. Her newest work, Crude Awakening, brings the BP Gulf disaster closer to home and makes us realize that the time to make environmental changes is now.

Living on the shores of Lake Michigan, I am acutely aware of the disastrous toll the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico has taken on all forms of life, especially as our beaches opened to the 2010 swimming season. This environmental, social and economic catastrophe highlights a much larger problem that has inflicted untold suffering as we exploit the earth’s resources worldwide.

We are all responsible for leading lives that create demand for unsustainable energy. We are also all responsible for the solution and we must work together to protect the balance of life.

Images from Crude Awakening


The work is conceptual in nature as I live on the shores of Lake Michigan and the images were all taken here. Its conception took form the day before the much anticipated beaches opened for the 2010 swimming season. It was impossible to ignore what was happening to the shore lines in the Gulf of Mexico as our beaches opened to pristine conditions.



I initially thought no one would voluntarily want oil poured on them so tried to simulate it in photoshop. It was a disaster and I figured my project was dead.



Then I went to a BP protest in Chicago on June 11th and asked someone there if they would consider modeling with oil . I was shocked when the answer was yes. We quickly came up with other substances that might substitute for the oil. As I asked around, many people said they would be happy to help out. When on location and photographing, many people asked to be included in the project. The concern for our environment and saftey is widely shared.



















I just received a letter from a writer friend who is in Europe for the year, John Bell.
He writes:

As we travel around Europe, mostly by train, we see hundreds of windmills. Denmark has installed them in the sea. The Netherlands and other coastal countries) are developing energy sources from waves and tides. Germany has developed a major industry in solar cells for home and business. I'm a bit more ambivalent about so much nuclear power, but here it doesn't seem to be built by whoever submitted the lowest bid. Berlin has few traffic problems because so many people bike and take public transportation. Besides, it seems that every other car is a SmartCar. In Amsterdam almost everyone bikes, and the tram system is wonderful. Madrid has the cleanest and most efficient Metro I've seen, and it only cost riders 1 Euro per trip.

I guess what I'm sharing is that Europe seems to have awakened far ahead of us.

Start writing your congressmen!

Friday, June 25, 2010

Brad Wilson

Looking at participants of Review Santa Fe, a juried photography portfolio review hosted by Center, giving tremendous support and exposure to emerging and established photographers.

Santa Fe photographer, Brad Wilson, has a background in studio art and photography. The breath of his artistic studies informs his varied and masterful work--his projects are fully realized and explore a wide variety of ideas and ways to present work. I'm presenting images from two bodies of work, Relics and The Glass Wall.

Relics: This series is an exploration of found objects. I am frequently drawn to subjects that are isolated in their environments, like these dried fish I discovered washed up along the remote shores of the Salton Sea. I decided to take them even further out of context so that I could show them as almost pure form, illustrative of the stark beauty of death.

Images from Relics











The Glass Wall: This series began as an experiment with water, light, and the human form. Ultimately, it evolved into a personal examination of the more mysterious and psychologically complex levels of beauty.

Images from Glass Wall