All posts tagged Photography

Portraits, Past and Present

There is an art exhibition in Baltimore that spans two museums.

At the Contemporary Museum, the show is Dawoud Bey: Class Pictures, a collection of color photo portraits. Dawoud Bey took “The Class Pictures” of students in public and private high school students in cities across the country. They’re real portraits though, with personality. These are not the cheesy backdrop photos we all lined up to have taken in high school. The portraits depict students from all over the country, and from many walks of life. In sum, these portraits of individuals offer a portrait of their world.

At the Walters Museum, the other part of the show is called Portraits Re/Examined. This show was curated, in part, by high school students. They worked with artist Dawoud Bey to select portraits from the Walters collection to show alongside 10 of Bey’s similarly evocative portraits. The students were asked to address the question of race and class in portraiture. Some striking comparisons have developed between the older historic drawings, paintings, and portrait miniatures from the Walters’ collection and the contemporary photographs of ordinary people.

The student-curators also will create auxiliary components for the exhibition, including a blog, Facebook page, podcast series, and cell phone audio tour.

Both exhibitions run from December 13, 2008 until February 16, 2009.

Sarah Newman Photography

Deterioration, a photo by sarah newman

Sarah Newman Photography is an artist website, allowing an audience to discover new and innovative fine art photography. Sarah Newman and Dylan Kinnett launched the website publicly in the spring of 2006.

Sarah Newman and Dylan Kinnett designed this photography website together: the color scheme, logo/branding, and interface design, as well as HTML/CSS development. The photography is all Sarah, and selected from various collections of photographs developed during her life’s work.

Sarah Newman’s photographic work spans various subjects and media. Her roots are in traditional 35-millimeter black and white photography, but her exploration of the medium includes medium and large format, color, digital, and non-silver processes including platinum, gum-dichromate, and Van Dyke. Sarah Newman also creates photo-installations, in which she combines three-dimensional spaces with traditionally two-dimensional photographic images. Sarah’s interest in wide-ranging visual ideas and subject matter explains the extensive variety in her portfolio.

Frosting Painting Photography by Sarah Newman Of particular interest are Sarah’s “Frosting Paintings”. The Frosting Paintings are a series of photographs of paintings made with cake frosting. This series, explores the line that distinguishes painting from photography by creating a new process that falls into neither one medium nor the other. Sarah paints clear plastic acetate, using six different colors of translucent frosting-gel. Then, she back-lights the paintings by placing the acetate on a light-table, and photographs the paintings with the light passing through them. The colors you see are true to the appearance of the back-lit paintings. The images—which are neither purely photographic nor purely painterly, but instead a (perhaps corrupt) hybrid of the two—create new and ambiguous spaces that invite individual interpretation.

The salient feature of the SarahNewmanPhotography.com website is its simplicity — the main idea is the photography, and the photography speaks for itself. The result is an immediate, accessible, and usable introduction to Sarah’s stunning photographs.

Alice in Wonderland

Alice in Wonderland
My friend Trisha has posted a new set of photographs. After the invaluable moral assistance she offered to me in the middle of the other night, I thought I’d try to get some Karma back by publicizing her lovely photographs. This set depicts Alice In Wonderland.

Pin Ups

Umbrella Pin Up

My Friend Trisha has completed a new set of photography. She calls it “pin up” photography and describes it with adjectives like “artfaggy” and “sec-say-ness”

Trisha Bowyer, photography

still life with a head by Trisha Bowyer

Trisha Bowyer is a friend of mine, and a damn fine phtographer, too. Trisha has published an online portfolio of photographs by Trisha Bowyer.

Thoreau’s Walden: A Journey in Photographs

Night at Walden Pond

3 Quarks Daily brought to my attention a stunning new collection of photographs: “Thoreau’s Walden: A Journey in Photographs” They were taken at Walden Pond, which was where Henry David Thoreau composed his famous book “Walden”.

The full article is Miller’s Walden, published in Harvard University Gazette.

It seems strange to me, for some reason, to think of Thoreau as a Harvard graduate. Perhaps I would rather think of the more humble aspects of the author. Furthermore, I would like to be able to identify with Thoreau, but I never went to Harvard.