Light My Life

April 18, 2008

Hendrik Kerstens

Filed under: Photo, Portrait

Hendrik Kerstens is one of those artists who have managed to develop a career seemingly concentrating on one subject throughout the years. In his case, the model has been his daughter Paula. How different is she as a subject because of being his daughter? Not very. Which is as powerful a revelation as any. After all, one would expect some closeness, some special insight. Nothing of the sort. What we get is a serious young lady, as serious now as she was on the pictures being only a few years old. A gaze that refuses to talk. Our only partner in dialogue seems to be the light that paints the face gently, yet at least on surface, without the love one would expect. We see all the Vermeers and other 17th-century Flemish painters participate in this creation, yet this, here, is darker, less inviting. It doesn’t pretend that something can come out of this encounter. Nothing more than a picture, a gaze, a world that is forever there, for us to admire, but not to discover.

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March 26, 2008

666photography - Pinup/Burlesque Photos

Filed under: Photo

666photography is an Austin, Texas based company that specializes in retro/vintage photography that utilizes hand-made props and costumes. For many years, we have been creating old-school theater style sets for our long list of happy customers. There is no concept that you can throw at 666 that we can’t create! Our approach to taking photos is that, for us, it is not enough to simply be able to take a good photo. We pride ourselves in being able to create an entire concept from beginning to end. Our props are handmade, our backdrops are handpainted, and if we can’t find the perfect costume, we make it! 666photography is lead by its photographer, Gayla. Gayla graduated from the University of Texas at Austin, with a BFA in photography. She not only takes all the photos, she also handmakes the costumes and accessories and the props, and is responsible for most of the styling in all photos. We also work with makeup artist Lisa Naeyaert, who is a genius. Recently, we have added an addition to our team, Steph, who assists Gayla with prop making duties. If you have been looking for a photographer who can take an idea, and realize it into a work of art, 666photography is the company for you. Please contact us for a list of rates and our availability. We are consistently booked 4 months in advance, so contact us so we can get you in our schedule!

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February 19, 2008

Evgen Bavcar - The Blind Photographer

Filed under: Photo

Benjamin Mayer-Foulkes article:

Why would a blind man want to wear transparent eyeglasses? Why would he wish to walk the streets of Paris dressed in the same black hat, cape and red scarf worn by Aristide Bruant as depicted by Toulouse-Lautrec? Why would he want to risk speaking on a radio program about paintings which he has never actually seen? And why would he desire to take photographs? The name of this man is Evgen Bavcar ("E-oo-gen Ba-oo-char"), he is an art photographer and he is completely blind. Born in 1946 in a small Slovenian town near Venice, he lost both eyes before he was twelve in two consecutive accidents. Four years later, he lay his hands on a camera for the first time, to take a snapshot of the girl with whom he was in love: as he recalls, The pleasure I felt then resulted from my having robbed and fixed on a film something that did not belong to me, I secretly discovered I could possess something that I could not see. Bavcar studied History at the University of Ljubljana, and Philosophy at the Sorbonne. Having settled in Paris he embarked on an academic career, and intensified his photographic activities. In 1988 he was named Official Photographer of the City of Light’s Photography Month. Since then his work has been widely exhibited, particularly in Europe. Walter Aue, the acclaimed Berlin poet, considers that after Niepce, Fox Talbot and Daguerre, Bavcar is "the fourth inventor of photography". Bavcar’s work addresses the relations between vision, blindness and invisibility: My task is the reunion of the visible and the invisible worlds, photography allows me to pervert the established method of perception amongst those who see and those who don’t. He carves out most of his images from the dark of night with the help of portable lights, the better to control all visual parameters: Each photo I create must be perfectly ordered in my head before I shoot. I hold the camera to my mouth in order to photograph those I speak to. Autofocus helps me, but I can manage on my own: it is simple, my hands measure the distance and the rest is achieved by the desire for images that inhabits me. Although he requires assistance to produce his icons (traditionally, icons are representations of the invisible) he is no mere intellectual author, for he concerns himself even with the simplest technical details. Whilst shooting, the philosopher-photographer favors the guidance of children, and he likes to review his results on the basis of various verbal descriptions. He explains: I feel very close to those who don’t consider photography as a ‘slice’ of reality, but rather as a conceptual structure, a synthetic form of pictorial language, even a suprematist image like Malevich’s black square. The direction I have taken is closer to a photographer like Man Ray, than to forms like reportage, which is like shooting an arrow towards a fixed moment. Very much in the vein of contemporary art, his production ceaselessly interrogates its own conditions of possibility and is oriented by what he calls the "Third Eye": the source and ruin of all acts of vision and blindness, the radically invisible element in which the difference between light and darkness first takes place. If Western civilization as a whole can be understood as a furious epic in which three forces, the Eye (epitomized by Plato, Descartes and Hegel), the Shadow (associated with Democritus, Calvin or Rousseau) and the Abyss (addressed by Eckhart, Nietzsche and Wittgenstein), continually wage battle with one another, then the originality of Bavcar’s project is its suggestion that, far from remaining simply opposed to the Shadow and identical to itself, the Eye is the Abyss. Yet Bavcar is not, as the media would have it, "the only blind photographer in the world". Paco Grande and Flo Fox, based in New York, are both legally blind and are well-recognized photographers: Fox is known for her urban scenes, Grande for his images of Andy Warhol and Jessica Lange. Other completely blind photographers are active today in Latin America, Asia and Central Europe: Toun Ishii devotes himself exclusively to Mount Fuji in Japan, Gerardo Nigenda has a growing documentary production on the life of the blind in Mexico, and Daniela Hornickova has sown the seeds for future blind photographers by introducing the camera to the blind children of the Jaroslav Jesek boarding school in Prague. The blind by birth are also able to relate to photography and produce significant images: I know of one whose interest in photography derives from his fascination with the capacity of the image to condense large amounts of information. There must be many more blind photographers active today, and surely the history of photography will yet surprise us with lucid tales of darkrooms and blind men. As the most accomplished blind photographer yet, Bavcar’s images not only compose a personal oeuvre, they also inaugurate an entire genre. His creative act is in itself a work of art. He is a walking and talking trope: "sham" or "blunder" at first, spectacular "paradox" second, the very idea of a blind photographer finally reveals itself as mere redundancy. For blindness is the necessary condition for any photographic inclination: if the seeing are disquieted by the work of the blind photographer this is simply because he enacts a return of their own repressed blindness. This is perhaps why blind photographers were omitted from Michel Frizot’s admirable New History of Photography (1994): their inclusion proved unnecessary seeing that their desire is paradigmatic of the desire of all photographers in general. The production of the blind photographer demonstrates, as insist Freud and Lacan, that the capacities of physical sight and libidinal gaze are quite distinct, that physical and symbolic blindness can in no way be equated, and that the visible and the visual are not to be confused. What are the consequences of such a demonstration? If physical sight is one thing and the desire for images is quite another, then what is surprising is not that a blind man should take photographs, but rather our very surprise at this fact. Such a surprise makes evident that symbolic blindness, in particular that which afflicts those who see, affects the blind more than their sheer physical condition: "insensible", "indiscriminating", "biased", "misjudging", "ignorant", "unwise", "obstinate", "impassive" and "dead drunk" are frequent synonyms for "blindness", even though they bear no direct relation to ocular incapacity. Since the visible and the visual are quite distinct, there is no reason for the blind not to produce images, photographic or non-photographic. In particular since they already consume them. Where they exist, institutes for the blind can, and should, promote the practice of photography and other visual arts for educational, artistic and therapeutic reasons—and for strategic ones too: the creation of images renders the blind more "visible" to the seeing, a consideration of no small importance in the symbolic struggle faced by no less than 1% of the world’s population. Conversely, schools of photography, cinema, fine arts and design would be well-advised to establish forms of collaboration with the blind in order make the visual field more intelligible for those who see. In its illusory limitlessness, the experience of vision is structurally idiotic: the seeing are profoundly blind to their own blindness, and interaction with the physically blind is the natural antidote for this chronic condition. Few experiences are as visually enlightening as the description or composition of pictures for, and with, a blind person. Freud proposes that blindness is a symbolic substitute for castration. He also suggests that castration is the determining factor in subjective formation and the civilizing process as a whole. If so, the nature of all cultural formations in general can be gauged on the basis of the relation they maintain with blindness and the invisible. The breadth and depth of the aesthetic, critical, educational, psychoanalytical, philosophical, anthropological, historical and political issues mobilized by Bavcar’s work suggests that this indeed is the case. The question then is not what can be said about blindness from the various locations of culture, but rather what blindness has to say about such locations. So Bavcar’s transparent eyeglasses, and his Bruant-like garments, evince his participation in the visual world from which a standard imaginary of the visible tends to exclude him. The usual dark glasses worn by the blind reinforce the identification of their physical blindness with the ruthless clichés of symbolic "blindness"; instead, the spectacles worn by Bavcar cast him in the light of the "intellectual". Not only does his clothing testify to his access to the Tolouse-Lautrec print that remains beyond his sight, it also makes clear that he can sound-out, to the point of humoring them, the glances of the seeing. As for his discussions of paintings and photographic activity, they are but extensions of the inherent sensual and conceptual knowledge that the blind have of the visual world, if only in the negative. Perhaps the most elegant of all of Bavcar’s gestures of displacement of the traditional attributes of "blindness" is the small mirror which he wears on his lapel at all times: he knows well that the seeing, women in particular, demand in turn to be seen, and since he cannot offer them the specular look to which they are accustomed, he wears this looking glass into which they are able to peep now and then, and feel reassured. It is only natural for ZoneZero to be the first site on the web to host an official exhibition by Evgen Bavcar. The main questions posed by the transition from analog to digital photography can be considered in relation to blindness. Whilst analog photography tends to think of itself as not being blind, digital photography knows itself to be blind and operates accordingly. Whilst analog photography equates the visual and the visible, digital photography presupposes their distinction. Whilst the referents of analog photography appear to be ocular, digital photography demonstrates that pictorial referents are not merely the objects of sight, but essentially the objects of the gaze. In sum, blind photography is digital photography avant la lettre. Just like digital photography, blind photography is not the simple invention of a new type of picture, but rather the rediscovery of the classical photographic image.

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February 6, 2008

Chema Madoz

Filed under: Photo

Jose Maria Rodriguez Madoz (born 1958) better known as Chema Madoz is a Spanish photographer, best known for his black and white surrealist photographs. Chema Madoz studied Art History at Universidad Complutense de Madrid between 1980 and 1983. It is here that he was first exposed to the study of photography and imaging. In an interview published in 2001, Chema explains that he currently uses a Hasselblad camera to take his photos. The book, Chema Madoz: Objetos 1990–1999 was presumably shot entirely with this camera, rather than the 6×6 Mamiya he has used previously.

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January 23, 2008

Tim Flach - Equus Project

Filed under: Photo

Part of an on-going photographic project commissioned by book publishers, PQ Publishing, Equus, features rare and beautiful horses from the four-corners of the globe. From some of the most highly prized Arabians from the Royal Yards of the UAE to the classical beauty of the Lusitano and from pure-bred Icelandic horses in their glacial habitat to 1,000s of Mustangs racing across the plains of Utah. The horses are captured from the air, from the sea, from underwater and from under the ground, and provide an amazing and unique insight into the physical dynamics and spirit of the horse quite different from anything seen before. Tim Flach is a graduate of St. Martins School of Art where he studied Photography & Painted Structures. Having spent the last twenty years as a highly successful advertising photographer (clients include Adidas, Cirque du Soleil, Jaguar and Sony), Tim has more recently been focusing on his own personal work. He has mainly become renown for his highly stylized animal portraits, which are far removed from traditional wildlife photography’s images of animals observed in their natural habitat. With this new project, Tim has turned his creative attention to horses, aiming to capture the emotion that horses evoke in us, rather than to simply take a photograph of a horse. Tim brings his subjects into such close focus that the viewer begins to read the gestures and body language as we would a human being. His photographs evoke pathos, humour and an unmistakably intimate human empathy. Tim’s work has been featured in publications such as Creative Review and Stern Magazine, and he has also received many international photography awards including the Association of Photography and British Design & Art Direction Awards. His work has been widely exhibited in the UK, US and Far East and Tim has also lectured extensively around the world.

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December 19, 2007

David Maisel’s Terminal Mirage

Filed under: Photo

David Maisel was born in New York City in 1961. He received his BA from Princeton University, and his MFA from California College of the Arts, in addition to study at Harvard’s Graduate School of Design. He has been the recipient of an Individual Artist’s Grant from the National Endowment for the Arts, and will be a Visiting Scholar at the Getty Research Institute in Los Angeles in Fall 2007. Maisel lives and works in the San Francisco area, where he has been based since 1993.

Maisel’s practice has focused primarily on environmentally impacted sites, in a multi-chaptered series called "Black Maps". His large-scaled photographs show the physical impact on the land from industrial efforts such as mining, logging, water reclamation, and military testing. Because these sites are often remote and inaccessible, Maisel frequently works from an aerial perspective, thereby permitting images and photographic evidence that would be otherwise unattainable.

Maisel’s photographs, multi-media projects, and public installations have been exhibited internationally, and are included in many permanent collections, such as the Metropolitan Museum of Art; the Los Angeles County Museum of Art; the Brooklyn Museum of Art; the Santa Barbara Museum of Art; and the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, among others. His work has been the subject of two monographs: The Lake Project (Nazraeli Press, 2004), and Oblivion (Nazraeli Press, 2006). A third monograph, Library of Dust, will be published by Chronicle Books in Fall 2008.

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November 29, 2007

Michal Chelbin - Strangely Familiar

Filed under: Photo

The images in this series are an attempt to capture human stories in everyday life, those that exist in the space between the odd and the ordinary. My images are almost always of people and they usually take the form of portraits. Most of the people I photograph have something in common; they are not the mainstream, and many of them are small town performers (For example, they could be dwarfs in a theatre play, ball room dancers or young contortionists). I try to photograph my subjects dislocated from their performing environment and set in casual settings, off stage: at home, on the street or in a park. Some of them with their costumes and others wear everyday cloths. I try to create a seemingly private moment, one where they are not performing or on stage. The main themes in my work are not social or topical, but private and mythical; I search for people who have a legendary quality in them; a mix between odd and ordinary. My images are vehicles to address universal themes: family issues, ideas of normality, puberty with its all incumbent pains and distractions, the desire for fame. An example of this is the adolescent girls I photograph, many of them are on the verge of sexual consciousness. They are in this difficult age, torn between innocence and experience.While their bodies might be still that of a child, their gaze sometimes imply differently. I try to create an informal scene, in which they directly confront the viewer. I feel they and their stories represent with most clarity the theme that interests me the most and which is the twilight zone between reality and fantasy. My aim is to record a scene where there is a mixture of direct information and enigmas and in which there are visual contrasts between young and old, large and small, normal and abnormal. My playground lies between the private and the public, between fiction and documentary. For me, the image is just the tip of the iceberg; it’s the gate to a story waiting to be told and which I try to depict in an appealing yet troubling way. This story is about a life full of contradictions on the battle ground between fantasy and reality. Many viewers tell me that the world discovered in my images is strange. If they find it strange, it is only because the world is indeed a strange place. I just try to show that.

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November 6, 2007

Fun with clouds

Filed under: Photo

What is a cloud

 A cloud is a visible mass of condensed droplets or frozen crystals suspended in the atmosphere above the surface of the Earth or another planetary body. The branch of meteorology in which clouds are studied is nephology…

Clouds can be funny

The color of a cloud tells much about what is going on inside the cloud. Clouds form when relatively warm air containing water vapor is lighter than its surrounding air and this causes it to rise. As it rises it cools and the vapor condenses out of the air as micro-droplets. These tiny particles of water are relatively densely packed, and sunlight cannot penetrate far into the cloud before it is reflected out, giving a cloud its characteristic white color.

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October 26, 2007

Lara Jade Photography

Filed under: Photo

I’m eighteen and currently live with my boyfriend in the Midlands. I’ve always been interested in art but I’ve had a passion for photography since I was thirteen. Recently I just finished my diploma courses, studying photography at Sutton Coldfield College, and I’m going on to study a degree in photography at university later this year. My work has been featured in a range of magazines and e-zines and I’ve worked with a variety of clients including bands, actors and children. I am always trying to find ways of taking my work to the next level. Currently I use a Canon 350D with the Canon 50mm f/1.8 lens, but I also use the Canon 60mm f/2.8 & 18-55mm lens. Lighting is usually natural but sometimes use my Interfit lighting kit.

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October 6, 2007

Joe Nicora

Filed under: Photo

I decided to start my adventure in photography in March of 2004. My first weapon of choice was the Olympus D560Z, a wonderful point and shoot digital camera that my wife got me for my birthday. The little camera sparked my imagination and after a year of experimentation, the spark became a flame. Three years later and I am now armed with a Canon 30D and a host of lenses covering all focal lengths.

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September 21, 2007

Mark Seliger Musicians

Filed under: Photo

Mark Seliger is an editorial photographer who was born and raised in Amarillo, Texas. He currently lives and works in New York City, and is under contract to Conde Nast Publications, where he has shot numerous covers for GQ and Vanity Fair. Prior to this, Mark was the Chief Photographer for Rolling Stone, where he shot over 100 covers. Current editorial clients include Vanity Fair, GQ, Vogue Hommes, Interview and British ELLE.

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Technorati Profile

September 14, 2007

Still Life by Martin Klimas

Filed under: Photo

Martin Klimas destroys a lot of clay to make his art. Combining the silence of Eadweard Muybridge’s horse pictures with the association-rich composition of a still life, Klimas breaks recognizable objects so they become something else, and stops us just at the moment of transformation. Klimas was born in 1971 in Singen, Germany.

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September 4, 2007

Wang Fuchun’s “Chinese on the train” exhibition

Filed under: Photo

Wang Fuchun is a freelance photographer. He moved to Beijing from Harbin in 2002. He has photographed the following topics, "Chinese On The Train" , "People of Northeastern China", "Northeast Tiger" and "Chinese Stream Locomotive." He has been declared a winner at the 17th China Photographic Art Exhibition and a winner of the 3rd Gold Statue for Chinese photography, as well as awarded as an acknowledged Chinese photographer, an excellent member of noble personality, and for his professional knowledge competency by the Chinese Photographers’ Association.   

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August 28, 2007

Wu Shao Ying’s photographs

Filed under: Photo

In October 2006, FotoFest International, China Hewlett Packard and a team of Chinese photographers and businessmen collaborated to create an international portfolio review program for Chinese photographers. Modeled on FotoFest’s portfolio review program in Houston, TX, the Meeting Place FotoFest Beijing was an unprecedented event in China.

Wu Shao Ying is one of 278 contemporary Chinese photographers and 35 influential professionals from the professional and art photography world in Europe, North America, China and Australia.

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August 26, 2007

Dou Art Photography

Filed under: Photo, Digital Art

II was born in Moscow on 19th of August 1983.

My mother was a painter, and I was spending a lot of time among the artists, though I was not particulary interested in their activities.

I felt an urge for arts and creation some time ago, when I was working as a designer, which pushed me to study seriously the design. That’s how I "bumped into" photography, and I had an idea to combine it with design.

Creation brings me an enormous pleasure, I became conscious of the fact that photography is something I always wanted to do. I am stubborn, ambitious and optimistic by nature, I like being different, and my work, I hope, reflects these features of my character.

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August 21, 2007

Studio Utopia

Filed under: Photo, Painting, Digital Art

"I’ve always had a fascination for the psychological aspects of life, the reason behind every deed, the definition of the truth. In my work as much as in private life I constantly analyse the boarder between: subjective and objective; individual and collective; illusion and reality."
Agnieszka Dellfina

"Being an artist for me is, to walk along the razor sharp shore line between the sea of annihilation and the inner landscape of hope, to float in the gap between the awareness of our souls and the indifference of our TV screens, to survive the no–man’s land, where art pendulates between the cruel madness of reality and the beauty and serenity of our dreams.
Thomas Dellacroix

Thomas Dellacroix (Stockholm, Sweden, 1953 - )
Agnieszka Dellfina (Warsaw, Poland, 1974 - )

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Statictically Speaking (from the Give Peace a Chance or Have a Nice War Series)

Photograph. Limited Edition (5)

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Give Peace a Chance (from the Give Peace a Chance or Have a Nice War Series)

Photograph. Photomontage. Limited Edition (5)

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Fetish Dream (from the Art Noir Series)

Photograph. Limited Edition (25)

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Arizona - Pearl Harbour

Graphic Print. Silkscreen

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Via Cruxus

Painting. Collage and Mixed Media on Canvas

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The Dollar Madonna

Painting. Collage and Mixed Media on Canvas

August 11, 2007

The blind photographers collective.

Filed under: Photo

Seeing with Photography Collective is a group of photographers based in New York City who are visually impaired, sighted and totally blind. Coming from diverse backgrounds and life experiences, we share an awareness of sight loss, along with the determination to dialogue and integrate our images into a more universal context. Sighted assistants focus and compose the view camera’s frame directed by the blind artist. Then, in a darkened room, we leave the camera’s shutter open as we slowly paint our sitter with a small flashlight …human scaled exposures, lasting many minutes, rather than the instant shutter click we typically hear. Luminous distortions, blurred or glowing forms result from the technique, not digital altering. The nature of our visual limitations can provoke any viewer or perceiver of these portraits…Is less, more? What is seeing? What does one choose to see?

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August 1, 2007

Hope and Fear

Filed under: Art, Photo

Philip Toledano’s "Hope and Fear" photographic series.

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