Fargo’s Kary Janousek practices tintype photography

Fargo’s Kary Janousek practices tintype photography

Kary Janousek is a photographer based in Fargo, North Dakota. Her downtown studio is at the top of the Masonic Block building, and in a way, it’s a perfect place for what she does: Firstly, for all the natural light that streams through the many tall windows that line the building.

Secondly, because she does tintype and ambrotype photography. Her profession and the building where she operates her business both date back to the 1800s.

Tom Brosseau visited Kary’s studio to have his portrait taken, and see the tintype process in action. Listen above.

Photo: Tom Brosseau photographed by Kary Janousek / Old School Collodion.

This segment is from The Great American Folk Show, Episode 80. New episodes air Saturdays at 5pm on Prairie Public.

This segment is also a part of FM Arts, a special radio series of profiles, performances, and discussions with artists in the Fargo-Moorhead area. FM Arts is funded by The Arts Partnership, with support from the Cities of Fargo, Moorhead and West Fargo.

LCHD hosting amateur photography contest

LCHD hosting amateur photography contest

For the Tomahawk Leader

LINCOLN COUNTY – The Lincoln County Health Department (LCHD) is hosting a photo contest for amateur photographers.

LCHD said it is “seeking out the best parts of Lincoln County.”

“When you think of Lincoln County, what is your favorite part?” LCHD stated. “What makes Lincoln County healthy? When you brag about the county you live in – what do you picture?”

LCHD said photos should represent its “vision of a safe and thriving Lincoln County where everyone has the opportunity for optimal health and quality of life.”

“Please submit one or two sentences as to why your photo represents optimal health and quality of life,” LCHD stated.

Photos must be taken in Lincoln County and must be submitted as high-resolution JPEG files to [email protected] by Saturday, July 15.

No panoramic, digitally-enhanced or altered photos, and only one photo per person, will be accepted.

“Tall thin, photos from phones do not reproduce well for our use,” LCHD stated. “Please send photos that can be used as 4×6-inch or 8×10-inch prints.”

Each photo submitted must include where, when and why the photo was taken, as well as the photographer’s name, phone number, mailing address and email address.

Professional photographers and individuals who sell their photos are not eligible to enter the contest.

“By entering the contest, photographers are verifying that the image is their own and are agreeing to have their submitted photos used/copied/displayed (without fee or compensation) for the contest voting purposes in local publications, in articles relating to the contest, saved for any future use by LCHD, and on the Facebook page,” LCHD stated. “Photos that are picked will be contacted via email to sign a consent form for the use of your photograph.

LCHD said it reserves the right to reject any photo submitted that does not comply with the contest rules, is not properly labeled or is deemed inappropriate.

First-place winners will receive a 2024 Wisconsin State Park vehicle sticker. Second-place winners will receive a gift certificate valued up to $15.00.

For more information, email [email protected].

Raw and Refined: Inside a Renovated Brutalist Apartment in Rome

Raw and Refined: Inside a Renovated Brutalist Apartment in Rome

A Brutalist-inspired apartment in the suburbs of Rome in Tor de’ Cenci recently received a complete renovation by STUDIOTAMAT. Designed for a lawyer couple, the project consisted of renovating the 120-square-meter apartment, along with a coveted 40-square-meter terrace. The Casa Rude residence overlooks the Castelporziano Nature Reserve offering both wooded and sea views, an ideal locale after years of living in small apartments in the heart of the city. Now, their space is filled with natural light, original character, and modern conveniences.

“What guided us in the design was the desire to enhance the distinctive features of the unique terraced building, dating back to the 1980s, which houses the apartment. We wanted to restore fluidity to the spaces, encourage the opening, and the discovery of pre-existing materials and details, on which to set a new vision,” says STUDIOTAMAT co-founder Tommaso Amato.

interior view through dining room into brutalist kitchen

The main living area is designed much like a open plan loft with unfinished walls and the support structure’s exposed concrete visually connecting the spaces.

partial view of monotone kitchen

partial interior view of modern kitchen looking through island

Paired with the original Brutalist details are a variety of tones, textures, and materials that add up to a visually enticing space. The roughness of the terracotta tiles on the oval island and concrete pillars are juxtaposed with the smooth Patagonia marble countertops that connect the two.

partial interior view of modern kitchen with rounded island

angled interior view of modern dining room and kitchen with rounded island

A custom dining table with a Shou sugi treated wood top rests on a black base and a glossy red ceramic leg for a sleek look.

modern interior with view of big builtin wood storage cabinet

A large, multifunctional birch wood cube is built to hide the pantry, hold coats, provide storage, and house a TV.

angled modern interior with view of big built-in wood storage cabinet open

angled interior view of modern dining room and kitchen with rounded island

modern home office view with unique design held up but red circular disc

A wall of perforated bricks separates the living room and home office allowing natural light to pass through. A custom desk extends out from the built-in shelves and is held up by a circular red wheel, complementing the dining table’s leg a few feet away. The wheel allows the desk to roll along on a track to a new position.

view down hallway of modern home with sliding screen door

A pivoting door visually separates the public areas from the sleeping area, which houses a main bedroom with ensuite bathroom, and a guest room.

side view of modern bedroom with peach bedding and sliding glass doors opening up to the bathroom

In the primary bedroom, sliding ribbed glass doors offer privacy to those in the bathroom while allowing light in.

side view of modern bedroom with peach bedding and sliding glass doors opening up to the bathroom

modern bedroom bathroom with cylindrical stone sink flanked by sliding glass doors hiding bathroom

side view of modern bedroom with peach bedding

partial view of modern bed with peach and green bedding

partial view behind sliding glass door into bathroom

view into modern bathroom with green marble on walls and round floating bathtub

angled view of bathroom sink

exterior view on apartment patio with seating areas and plants

The large terrace features an outdoor kitchen, seating areas, dining space, and outdoor shower, all of which benefit from sunset views.

exterior porch view with outdoor shower

two men standing behind one woman with white shirt

STUDIOTAMAT Photo: Flavia Rossi

Photography by Serena Eller Vainicher.

Caroline Williamson is Editor-in-Chief of Design Milk. She has a BFA in photography from SCAD and can usually be found searching for vintage wares, doing New York Times crossword puzzles in pen, or reworking playlists on Spotify.

Light painting 101: How to create illuminated art with a bottle house

Light painting 101: How to create illuminated art with a bottle house

I had a rare opportunity to light paint a house made of bottles. Here’s how I made the most of it. Best of all, you can use these light painting techniques for everything.

Light painting a bottle house, Rhyolite Nevada.

What is light painting?

Light painting is a term that is often used loosely to describe any addition of handheld light to a night photograph. Really, though, light painting is a technique that uses a handheld light source to illuminate a subject during a long exposure photo. You are quite literally painting the scene with light. Night photographers have used this technique for many decades.

Here, I had the opportunity to photograph a house made of over 50,000 bottles in a safe environment. I made the most of it.

Can I make it glow from within?

My first instinct was to shine the light from within the bottle house. I wanted the bottles to light up from within. I had been inside some bottle houses and structures in the Andean countryside of Ecuador, and I loved the way sunshine made the bottles glow.

Unfortunately, I could not do that for two reasons. One is that the inside walls were plastered. There would be no light shining through these bottles. And the second is that I didn’t have access to the interior of the house.

Shadows create depth, detail and interest

However, there were plenty of opportunities to create shadows. This can be used with almost any subject. Here’s how I went about light painting the porch of this amazing house.

Three steps to light painting the porch of the bottle house

Step one: Illuminating the back wall

The bottle house has a lot of amazing texture because it’s made of bottles. I skimmed a warm white light from the ProtoMachines against the wall, just glancing it off the surface. By doing this, I was able to pick up a lot of the detail from the uneven surface. I kept the back wall slightly darker than the rest of the house to add depth and keep the focus on the front of the porch.

Light painting a bottle house, Rhyolite Nevada.
Above: an example from farther back to give you an idea of what the house looks like. The main window to the front room is to the left, just out of frame.

Step two: Creating the shadows from the porch handrail

On camera right is a wooden porch handrail. Because the porch is wooden and takes up a lot of space in the composition, I thought it might be fun to create some shadow from the handrail. I stood to the right of the handrail and held the ProtoMachines light still for a short while so that the lines would be strong and well-defined.

Step three: Blue light from inside the house

The house still looked a little empty. I decided to shine a blue light from the inside of the room. I did this by walking over to the front window and shining a blue handheld light through that. This illuminated the entire room, coming out the side window and the door window in the back.

You are the director

When you light paint during night photography, you are making creative decisions. You decide what to illuminate and what to keep in shadow. You decide what angle, what sort of texture, what sort of feel, and what sort of colors you want in your photo. It is the most actively creative form of photography that I know. You are wandering around in the scene, determining the angles, colors and brightness. Every “brush stroke of light” builds the photo.

If you do this, you are one of a very small number of photographers who try. Far less stick with it. Hopefully, articles like this inspire you to keep doing it. I cannot possibly exaggerate how addicting, fun, and rewarding it is.

How can some of the techniques — including techniques creating shadow, depth and detail — help with light painting your subjects? How might you apply this toward abandoned automobiles, cactus, trees, mountains or people? What about other subjects that are not night photography?

July Events at the Lynden Sculpture Garden

July Events at the Lynden Sculpture Garden
The Lynden Sculpture Garden is located at 2145 West Brown Deer Road. Admission is free. All events listed below are free unless otherwise indicated. Memberships, which offer significant discounts on […]

Vergennes artist advocates for more access

Vergennes artist advocates for more access

Arts & Leisure

VERGENNES PAINTER KEILANI Lime, shown with some of her artwork, is an advocate for making art and art spaces more accessible to people with physical disabilities. She, unfortunately, deals with physical limitations brought on by a case of Classical Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome.

Independent photo/Steve James

Accessibility to public spaces and everyday items and activities is a privilege many able-bodied people take for granted. For people who live with disabilities, everyday life is made harder not only due to their disability but the lack of inclusion and accessibility for them. 

For an artist, not having the same physical abilities as most others can be rather limiting. Certain disabilities can place physical limitations on the time an artist can spend on their craft as well as on the methods they use to create their art. 

More than that, people with disabilities sometimes find that they have difficulty getting into venues where art is made or presented.

Keilani Lime, an artist in Vergennes, knows all too well about physical hurdles to making and accessing art. She is an accomplished painter and also has long dealt with a case of Classical Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome. EDS, as it is often known, is a connective tissue disorder characterized by skin hyperextensibility, abnormal wound healing, and joint hypermobility, according to the National Institutes of Health. 

“The type of EDS I have is Classical EDS,” Lime said. “I can’t hold a brush for a very long time. There are certain movements that are really hard.”

As a consumer of visual and performing arts, she is also very aware of the way art can be less accessible to people with disabilities, despite the fact that laws like the Americans with Disabilities Act, or ADA, encourage public venues to make themselves as open as possible to people with physical limitations.

In March, Lime gave a talk at Middlebury’s Ilsley Public Library about ableism in the arts, discussing the ways in which the lack of accessibility in the art world has made it difficult for her to pursue her passions while dealing with her EDS. 

“It was kind of an Ableism 101 focusing on what it looks like in the arts,” she said. “There aren’t tools made for people with disabilities … Many (places) are usually not ADA compliant at all.”

Lime said she used to frequent a comedy club as marketing director. Over the years she started to go to the club less and less due to her EDS progressing and making it painful for her to be as active as she once was. 

She has become an advocate, encouraging more accessibility in her community, not just for arts organization but for society in general. 

She is a part of several advocacy groups, including the Planned Parenthood of Northern New England Disability Community Advisory Board. She explained that the board works “to teach healthcare professionals about ableism and what it looks like in a clinic or healthcare office.”

Lime recounted how even health care professionals can seem insensitive to some aspects of the lives of people with disabilities. In her own experience, she said, many doctors have told her, “You’re too young to have all these problems.” 

Hearing these kinds of statements over and over again from healthcare professionals can become rather traumatic, she said. Her work on the Planned Parenthood board aims to increase empathy among healthcare professionals to provide more validating care to their patients. 

Lime also is a part of the Lake Champlain Chamber Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Committee; and most recently the Vermont Democratic Party Disability Caucus, a group that is still in the process of becoming formalized.

With the caucus, Lime has participated in many discussions pertaining to ADA standards and the accessibility of public spaces in Vermont. Earlier this month, she and the caucus met with State Rep. Elizabeth Burrows, D/P, Montpelier, who is a member of the House Discrimination Prevention Panel.

“She has brought a bunch of bills to the table,” Lime said. “One she thinks is going to go through is making our state parks more accessible.” 

Lime explained that if this bill is passed there will be planked ramps added to walking paths. 

“If we could have more places like that in our state it would just be amazing,” she said.

Lime pointed out that there are many buildings — including many art spaces — that were not built with accessibility in mind. 

“The lack of ADA accommodations in the arts venues (in Vermont) is astonishing,” she says.

She explains that adding such accessibility features to an existing building often is not in the budget when they are converted to be an arts venue. She said many disabled people are not affluent and are often left out of the conversation. 

Locally, the Vergennes Opera House is an arts space that is currently not the most accessible for all community members. The theater and stage are located on the second floor of the Main Street building, which not only hosts many performances sponsored by the volunteer-run Friends of the Vergennes Opera House (FVOH) but also many other public and private events.

In an effort to make the building and its arts space more accessible, the FVOH, which also keeps up the maintenance of the opera house, last year kicked off the “All Access Project.” 

The goal of this project is to make the opera house a more readily accessible space for everyone. Gerianne Smart, president of FVOH, says planning and promotion of the project started about a year ago and they “hope to break ground on the project next May.”

Though the All Access Project didn’t start until 2022, it has been a long time coming. Almost a decade in fact. Smart served as the board president from 1993-2001, took a break and returned in 2013. 

KEILANI LIME
Independent photo/Steve James

“The news got out that I got back involved (in 2013),” Smart recalled. “Maggie Quinn called me and said, ‘This is great, but, Gerianne, please get an elevator. We’re getting older and we can’t even get in the building to see shows.’”

For some people in the community who frequent the Opera House, it can be difficult to walk up the stairs in front of the building just to get inside, whether that be due to old age or disability or something else entirely. 

“The Vergennes opera house has been used for town meetings and other important conversations,” Smart said. “There are so many people who can’t get in there. They are shut out of the conversation. And it’s criminal. Even with Zoom now, it’s still ableist. It’s not a permanent solution.”

She explained how the All Access Project came to be. 

“We had several strategic plan meetings and every year it stays on the list,” Smart said. “We decided that now is the time. We decided to take this on and go for it.”

But the thinking went beyond giving access to audiences, and to include access to the actors, dancers and musician presenting the shows.

“The initial idea was an elevator so the public could get in there,” Smart said. “And then I sat up in middle of night about a year and a half ago and thought, if we’re saying this is an all access project, what about the stage, what about the performers. There’s no way to get them into the green room, onto the stage. And if you’re a performer you need access to both.”

She brought this up in a meeting last August and she said everyone was in agreement: “We need to figure this out.”

Not long after, they brought on Suzanne Rood, a pianist with a disability, to take part in the project. “We need her on the team,” Smart said. “Who are we to make up decisions on this as opposed to someone who deals with this every day.”

Rood’s contributions and advice on the project has been “invaluable” to its development, according to Smart. To fund the project, the group has applied for various grants including from Congress, the Vermont Arts Council, and more. They are also hoping to match their grant money with local funding.

“To get federal and state dollars you need to match it with private dollars. This summer we’re working on a raising local support,” Smart said.

If all goes according to plan, the project should be finished in fall of 2024.

Smart and the rest of the community are excited for the completion of the All Access Project. 

“We can’t wait for the town meeting of 2025,” she said. “I hope it’s jam packed, people coming on in there and it’s a real community feel like a town meeting should be.”

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A Photo Wander in Harlem | Magazine

A Photo Wander in Harlem | Magazine

Perhaps you’re asking, “What is a photo wander?” Essentially, it’s a walk during which photographers follow a route with the intention of making photographs. Just before the opening of MoMA’s New Photography 2023 exhibition, the photographer Akinbode Akinbiyi led a photo wander in Harlem. Akinbiyi, whose work is featured in the exhibition, is an accomplished artist based in Berlin. His work focuses mainly on street and documentary photography. The wander was an unofficial kick-off celebrating the exhibition. MoMA partnered with Souls in Focus, a local artist collective and agency of which I’m the general manager, to help plan and organize the wander. Souls in Focus is used to putting together these events: we’ve done it since founders Henry Danner, Sade Fasanya, and Natiah Jones started the collective nearly five years ago. These walks always begin with a location, and we chose Harlem.

A Photo Wander in Harlem, 2023. Photo: Sade Fasanya

A Photo Wander in Harlem, 2023. Photo: Sade Fasanya

Akinbode Akinbiyi. Photo: Anthony Artis

Akinbode Akinbiyi. Photo: Anthony Artis

The neighborhood has a storied history. It was home to the Harlem Renaissance and the headquarters of Malcolm X’s civil rights organization; James Baldwin walked these streets collecting stories that would find their way into his novels and essays. Neighborhood context is critical when organizing a photowalk: that includes respecting the locals and the history. Context also helps us choose where we stop on the way and how to approach people if we’d like to make their photographs.

Akinbiyi decided to call this photo walk a “photo wander” because he wanted it to feel less rigid and allow for discovery. It’s also a play on “wonder.”

At 71, Akinbiyi, or Bode, as he likes to be called, may walk a little slower than in years past, but he makes up for it with his enthusiasm and genuine interest in the wander’s participants, whose age and photography experience ranged from newbie to seasoned. About 25 photographers joined Bode and the Souls in Focus team in Harlem. It was Bode’s first time in New York City, and I got the sense he was on a mission to see and experience every single thing the city had to give. On Saturday, it was his turn to experience Harlem. In a conversation after the photo wander, Akinbiyi told me that he had a good feeling about coming to New York, with his expectations high, but said that “the way the wander evolved was even more beautiful.”

A Photo Wander in Harlem, 2023. Photo: Henry Danner

A Photo Wander in Harlem, 2023. Photo: Henry Danner

“I love watching other people photograph, because I always learn something, like what attracts them.”

Akinbode Akinbiyi

The group met at the Schomburg Center for African American Studies and made stops at the Abyssinian Baptist Church, the Apollo Theater, the Harriet Tubman Memorial, also known as Swing Low, and the Malcolm Shabazz Market. We chose each stop for its significance to Harlem’s history and current communities of color.

A Photo Wander in Harlem, 2023. Photo: LaLea Raymond

A Photo Wander in Harlem, 2023. Photo: LaLea Raymond

Unfortunately, we got to our first stop, the Abyssinian Baptist Church, just after the last service. But that didn’t stop the group from engaging with the building by making images of its architecture and snapping a few shots of the congregants who were still around. We had our own version of Sunday service: it happened outside the church—with cameras. Bode conversed with wanderers, took some photos, and also posed for portraits. He is an elder statesman within the photography community, but says that he is still learning: “I love watching other people photograph, because I always learn something, like what attracts them.” He appeared surprisingly comfortable in front of the camera. In my experience that’s not something you often see with seasoned photographers. They’d much rather be behind the lens.

This scene repeated itself at each stop, but along the way we ran into Harlem residents who were curious about the large group walking through their neighborhood. Initially, some were skeptical, but when they found out what we were doing and understood our mission, they stopped to pose and shared stories. It was important to Bode that participants respected and engaged with the community. This approach made for a much more pleasant experience for the photo wanderers, but most importantly, for the Harlemites. And it offered an opportunity to photograph the neighborhood and its residents as they are, in a less guarded and more authentic guise.

The marks of a successful photo wander are sore feet, great photos, and even better memories. Shortly after the wander, we looked at the participants’ work and heard how much they enjoyed the thoughtfulness of the event and conversations with each other. Organizing events like these makes the day seem like a blur, but as I look back on the resulting photographs and videos, I’m grateful for the art and fellowship.

A Photo Wander in Harlem, 2023. Photo: LaLea Raymond

A Photo Wander in Harlem, 2023. Photo: LaLea Raymond

Africa Style: With Freedom Came Fashion Flair

Africa Style: With Freedom Came Fashion Flair
image

Clothing can be transformative. This exhibition at the Brooklyn Museum transports visitors to the historical moment when nearly an entire continent shed its colonialist attire and stepped onto the world stage.

Many years ago, I worked as a salesperson at Hugo Boss in the Beverly Center in Los Angeles. I sold the range of things the store carried: luggage, accessories, underwear, clothing. But what I most relished selling was men’s suits, because a good suit is often transformative. A man would come into the store looking forgettable and then, after donning a well-cut two-button, single-breasted navy suit with a peak lapel, he would look accomplished, adept. Walking into the new “Africa Fashion” exhibition at the Brooklyn Museum, I felt that I was witnessing something wondrous, something more surprising than just an individual’s restyling. I was transported to the historical epoch when almost the entire continent was shedding its colonialist rule and the associated attire and stepping onto the world stage transformed.

Marking this wholesale change at the very outset is a wall featuring a timeline of text and documentary photography that details the consequential moments of Africa’s 20th-century liberation struggles. Video monitors offer film footage of key ceremonies, such as the 1957 formation of the Republic of Ghana. On an adjacent wall are the flags of all 54 countries in Africa, their insignia and heraldry explained. The exhibition seems quite intentionally based in the history of independence movements; Christine Checinska, the curator who led the team that organized the original exhibition at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London affirmed this, saying that for her it was crucial for viewers to understand that the clothing has “a political dimension.”

In the exhibition catalog Checinska writes that Tunisia and Morocco liberated themselves from the control of France in 1956 and then a year later Ghana freed itself from Britain. Then, in 1960, 17 African countries shook off colonial rule, to embed that time in the historical record as the “Year of Africa.” “The radical social and political reordering that took place sparked a cultural renaissance throughout the continent,” Checinska writes. “Fashion, music and the visual arts drew on formerly marginalized traditions, creating innovative forms that looked toward future self-rule.”

I think it must be acknowledged that self-governance has not always produced astute political leadership, or policies that benefited the majority of citizens, yet some countries once hobbled by colonial rule have learned to stand on their own.

Installation view of “Africa Fashion” at the Brooklyn Museum. From left: Bull Doff, a fashion label in Dakar, Senegal, dress and collar; right: The Trench (coat, mask and crinoline embroidered with hands and sequins, by Artsi Ifrach for Maison ArtC, Morocco.Seph Rodney

This revival and re-emergence of cultural practices and forms indigenous to native Africans takes on an expanded role in the Brooklyn version of “Africa Fashion,” according to its organizers Ernestine White-Mifetu, the museum’s curator of Africa art, and Annissa Malvoisin, a postdoctoral fellow here. It now includes 300 objects — of which about 130 are garments, textiles and jewelry, and more than 50 works from the museum’s collections. The curators of this show have added more documentary footage of the four large festivals on the continent in the ’60s and ’70s: the First World Festival of Black Arts (FESMAN) in Dakar in 1966; Zaire 74 in Kinshasa, 1974; the Pan-African Cultural Festival in Algeria (PANAF) in 1969; and the second World Black and African Festival of the Arts (FESTAC) in 1977 in Lagos.

A timeline of countries’ Independence movements introduces the “Africa Fashion” exhibit at the Brooklyn Museum. Elias Williams for The New York Times

Here, too, is a makeshift library with classic books examining that history and its legacy. There were framed and mural-size photos of FESTAC activities by Marilyn Nance, author of “Last Day in Lagos,” who by chance was visiting when I walked in. I was looking at a suite of four images, which included Stevie Wonder performing in a bright white suit with bell bottom trousers, in stark contrast to women in elaborately wrapped dresses of Kente cloth and men in tribal outfits that include decorative leg bands. Nance, a Brooklyn native, told me that about 200 Black Americans from New York, including her, traveled to Lagos, knowing it was going to be a hugely important event.

I could hear one of the other ways in which this iteration differs from the V & A show. Music followed me as I moved from gallery to gallery. Malvoisin explained that they carefully chose a playlist — accessible via a QR code — that echoes the hot songs for each epoch represented in the gallery space: Chaabi, Arab Pop, Hip-Hop, Afrobeat, Highlife, Jazz, Kora, and more genres. (Only a small selection is heard in the show, so use the link.) There is a theme of exuberance that threads through the music which matches the clothing and accessories on display.

A visitor views paintings and album covers including some work by Lemi Ghariokwu, a Nigerian painter, illustrator and designer renowned for original album cover images of Fela Kuti, the Afrobeat legend.Elias Williams for The New York Times
A wedding ensemble by the Ghanaian designer Kofi Ansah in “Africa Fashion” at the Brooklyn Museum.Elias Williams for The New York Times

It has to be said: This show is exquisitely beautiful, with textiles, accessories and clothing that are surprising and curious. Hardly an inch of this show is expected or cliché. The history lesson continues into the garment displays with vitrines featuring images of key midcentury designers: Kofi Ansah from Ghana, Chris Seydou from Mali, and Shade Thomas-Fahm from Nigeria. (Thomas-Fahm has a spectacular gold robe accentuated with black squares and dark yellow chevrons. No one who wears this can go about their business without notice.)

Visitors near the “Adornment” section featuring jewelry throughout Africa. Center: LaFalaise Dion, “The Amazon,” 2019, Abidjan, Côte d’Ivoire; cowrie shell, beads, nylon. Cowrie shells were once a form of currency in West Africa, as well as a symbol of fertility and womanhood.Elias Williams for The New York Times

Beyond these displays is a monitor offering current runway shows where the innovative spirit of that time and place in Africa shines through even in collections that are seemingly drawn on European sources. There are too many designers to relate all the astonishing work here but it is worth mentioning the Kenyan designer Ami Doshi Shah, in the Adornment section, who has devised a gold and green metal choker with a long tail of leather or cloth that falls down the wearer’s back, in his Salt of the Earth collection.

In a nearby vitrine, Inzuki, a young Rwandan brand, presents a woven-basket collar necklace comprising interlocking bands of aquamarine, deep orange, hot pink and more, clearly drawn from traditional basket design. Here, the everyday is repurposed as the extravagant. This section is augmented by items in the Brooklyn Museum’s collection, including gold rings from Pharaonic dynasties and early 20th-century beadwork from southern Africa.

The show doesn’t fetishize but also doesn’t avoid talking about process. There is a set of mannequins showing three stages of a dress, from cut paper pattern to toile mockup to the finished garment, by Katungulu Mwendwa, whose Katush line is designed in her home studio in Nairobi, Kenya. Artsi Ifrah, who last year won the Fashion Trust Arabia evening wear prize and is based in Morocco, makes sumptuous clothing that is all about maximalist layering, patterning, draping and material. The South African designer Lukhanyo Mdingi makes matching jackets and joggers for people of indeterminate gender out of felted mohair, wool and acrylic, with scarves that double as body shawls.

Malick Sidibé, “Nuit de Noël (Happy Club),” 1972/2011, youth culture incarnate, a couple dances in Bamako, Mali. From “Africa Fashion” at the Brooklyn Museum.Estate of Malick Sidibe; via Brooklyn Museum

Mixed in with lavish design is street photography by artists such as Sarah Waiswa, Trevor Stuurman and Stephen Tayo, who show what the people on the street are wearing and how their outfits are no less imaginative and daring than the better-resourced fashion here. There is studio photography by the artists of legerdemain, such as the Malians Seydou Keïta and Malick Sidibé. What would it have been like to embark on a career documenting this exploratory and upstart beauty at the start of a brand-new country? It must have been exhilarating. And all of this greeted me before I even got to the great rotunda hall that ends the show.

In this gallery about 40 mannequins are outfitted with a mesmerizing array of work by contemporary designers throughout the diaspora, such as Eilaf Osman, Papa Oppong, Brother Vellies and its founder Aurora James, Christopher John Rogers, and Studio One Eighty Nine in the section that means to show how Africa has a global footprint. According to Marisa Guthrie, writing for Women’s Wear Daily: “The contributions of African-born designers is already obvious in the fashion industry, but the exhibit is arguably the first comprehensive recognition of that legacy.”

Masquerade handwoven Alicia skirt, of recycled cotton, 2018, by Studio One Eighty Nine, an African brand founded by Rosario Dawson and Abrima Erwiah.Elias Williams for The New York Times
“Look 39, Ready-to-Wear, Spring 2021” by the American fashion designer Christopher John Rogers.Elias Williams for The New York Times
From left: IAMISIGO, jacket, dress and shoes ‘Chasing Evil’ collection; Doreen Mashika, ensemble, bodice, detatched sleeves and khanga skirt, Mikono collection ensemble; Doreen Mashika, Amani Dress; Lisa Folawiyo, Jossa top and trousers; Lisa Folawiyo, Irin dress; Lisa Folawiyo, classic robe, leggings and top.Elias Williams for The New York Times

The show is, in the words of the V & A’s Checinska, “inspired by the theater of fashion with its narrative potential: the crafting and performance of identities through props.” This potential is what drew me to fashion, the idea that I might present myself in a distinguished way, that I could embody an elegance that had previously eluded me. But with this exhibition the stakes are much higher than a mere rendition of individual identity. What unites the fashion talents represented in Brooklyn (and in London) is a clear need to exercise a political and aesthetic agency that go hand in hand.

Agency means almost nothing unless it is expressed. To have agency is to act in the world under one’s own imaginative and intellectual capacities. I never truly had that working as a salesperson for someone else’s brand, someone else’s notion of appropriate design.

Self-identity emerged through street fashion. From left, Sarah Waiswa, “Photograph at Thrift Social, Anette Kiru”; Waiswa’s “Photograph at Thrift Social”; Trevor Stuurman, “Mama Panther,” 2017; Lakin Ogunbanwo,“Untitled IV,” 2019; Lakin Ogunbanwo, “I See It, Do You?,” 2012Elias Williams for The New York Times

At the end of the show, considering this, I walked back for a closer look at Waiswa’s photos of people on the street attending a “thrift social,” where clothes and music are exchanged. In one portrait, a woman has her hair pulled back in two coiled braids and sported a bandeau top made up of two fastened leather belts. At her midriff is a thin orange belt fastened with a gold panther buckle. In an adjacent photo three young men wear an eclectic mix of patterns and beaded jewelry. One has red-and-white striped overalls; another combines trousers with umber flowers with a red jacket. The third matched horizontal stripes with vertical stripes. When I was working in fashion retail, it never occurred to me that I could be this daring, this individual in my personal style.

That spirit of industrious innovation using whatever is at hand, and the relentless optimism in what the future might hold, are evident throughout the exhibition. What “Africa Fashion” understands deeply is that it has always been important not merely to be well dressed, but to be able to dress yourself well.

Africa Fashion

Through Oct. 22 at the Brooklyn Museum, 200 Eastern Parkway, Brooklyn, New York; brooklynmuseum.org.

Exquisite Paintings by Lee Me Kyeoung Are an Ode to the Quaint Corner Stores of South Korea

Exquisite Paintings by Lee Me Kyeoung Are an Ode to the Quaint Corner Stores of South Korea

All images © Lee Me Kyeoung, shared with permission

City dwellers know that convenience stores have a culture unto themselves, and although franchises continue to dominate and overtake businesses, small, independently run shops have undeniable charm. For the past several years, artist Lee Me Kyeoung (previously) has been adding to her ongoing series of paintings that celebrate the idiosyncrasies and appeal of tiny South Korean corner stores, which are increasingly facing closure.

On view throughout July at Gallery Imazoo in Gangnam, Me Kyeoung’s latest works are an ode to these disappearing locales. Enveloped by lush cherry blossoms or persimmon trees, the shops are well-stocked with dense shelves, crates of goods, and advertisements pasted in the windows. Bicycles, benches, and the occasional folding chair stand outside the entrances. Delicately rendered in pen and acrylic, the paintings depict architectural and organizational variances that make each spot unique, while honoring the cultural ubiquities of these spaces.

Me Kyeoung has a robust archive of the quaint shops, which you can find on Instagram.

 

A cherry blossom tree stands out front of a small corner store with a bicycle in the street

A cherry blossom tree stands out front of a small corner store

Trees and bushes like the perimeter of a convenience store with a table and vending machine out front

A white sign hangs from a white roof of a convenience store with a vending machine and wood bench at the entrance

A yellow tree towers above a tiny convenience store with yellow seating out front

Trees and bushes envelop a small convenience store with blue sign and yellow seating out front

A persimmon tree stands out front of a small corner store with a folding chair near the entrance

An autumn tree stands in front of a small convenience store with blue roof and pots out front

Do stories and artists like this matter to you? Become a Colossal Member today and support independent arts publishing for as little as $5 per month. The article Exquisite Paintings by Lee Me Kyeoung Are an Ode to the Quaint Corner Stores of South Korea appeared first on Colossal.

Love and Loss Through the Photographer’s Lens

Love and Loss Through the Photographer’s Lens
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“Love Songs: Photography and Intimacy” at ICP reveals the camera’s limitations as well as strengths when it comes to depicting romance.

In the thought-provoking exhibition, “Love Songs: Photography and Intimacy,” at the International Center of Photography, two series of photographs by Nobuyoshi Araki face off on opposite walls.

In the first, “Sentimental Journey,” from 1971, Araki charts his honeymoon with Yoko Aoki, his young wife. The sequence includes shots of her undressed, and one image shows her in orgasm. But the most intimate portraits, with Aoki fully clothed, expose her interior life. In the most poignant, she is sitting in a train compartment and looking off to the side, with an air of resignation and foreboding. I thought of the last line of Henry James’s “The Bostonians,” where the newly betrothed heroine weeps tears and the narrator remarks, “It was to be feared that … these were not the last she was destined to shed.”

The Araki marriage, however, seems to have been happy. The tears to be shed were his. In 1994, Aoki died of ovarian cancer, an illness Araki chronicled in “Winter Journey,” from the hospital room all the way to the coffin and the household shrine constructed in her memory. The prints are time-stamped, as if each station of the journey was impressed on his soul. The couple’s beloved cat patrols in many of the pictures, and magnolia flowers are featured in others. The pet and the blooms conjure up the spirit of the departed wife.

Love and loss. The ditty that played in my head as I walked through “Love Songs” is the one that begins, “You don’t know what love is … until you’ve loved a love you had to lose.” There are 16 artists in the show, which has been adapted by the independent curator Sara Raza from an exhibition at the Maison Européenne de la Photographie (M.E.P.) in Paris. Many of the photographers are charting the end of a love affair. As songwriters have recognized, the pain of a breakup is more emotionally penetrating than the joy of a happy romance. But what can be readily conveyed in music is elusive in photography, where the subjects too easily become performers, and the desired feeling of intimacy turns theatrical.

Scrolling through photos on Instagram or Facebook, you get the sense that the people smiling joyously with their arms around each other are actors. Or rather, that they have embarked on these relationships mainly to advertise them: They are impersonating themselves. Karla Hiraldo Voleau tackles the theme of simulated intimacy in “Another Love Story,” 2022. Arranged month by month, the pictures chronicle the artist’s discovery that her lover has continued a relationship that he had told her was over. The installation includes transcripts of phone calls between Hiraldo Voleau and the other woman, who was also kept in the dark.

Karla Hiraldo Voleau, from the series “Another Love Story,” 2022.Karla Hiraldo Voleau

Underscoring the unreliability both of lovers and of social media posts about love affairs, Hiraldo Voleau displays pictures she took of her ex-boyfriend where his face is not discernible and mixes them with photos made after the breakup, restaging old scenes with a hired look-alike. Tellingly, I could see no difference between the shots in which she is with her real lover and those with the man pretending to be him; in all these pictures, the subjects are acting for the camera.

Leigh Ledare in “Double Bind,” 2010, sought to show how a lover projects upon the beloved by photographing his ex-wife, five years after their divorce, in an isolated cabin in upstate New York. She had recently remarried. Two months later, Ledare persuaded her to visit the same dwelling with her new husband, Adam Fedderly, also a photographer, who portrayed her with his own camera. Ledare displays their photographs together, identifying the authorship by the color of the frames. In montages, he intermingled the photos with magazine cutouts, adding three vitrines brimming with more glossy clippings. It’s an ingenious setup that once again illustrates the inherent ambiguity of photography. I could not distinguish between the visions of the two men.

Leigh Ledare, from the series “Double Bind,” 2010.Leigh Ledare

Intimacy is difficult to capture in a photo. I didn’t glean much from the posed portraits, many of them nude, that Collier Schorr made of her close collaborator, Angel Zinovieff. Nor was I so interested in the artsy shots that Lin Zhipeng took of his young male lovers. But I paused in wistful fascination before the sequence of photos by Hervé Guibert of his boyfriend, Thierry Jouno, both of them young, taken in the late ’70s and ’80s. There are nude images of Jouno, some X-rated. But the most intimate were a portrait of Jouno laying his head on a desk while cigarette smoke rises above, another of him grimacing as he looks in a mirror, and, in three posed pictures taken from different distances in a rustic room, Jouno standing, heartbreakingly handsome and obviously adored, his naked body concealed by gauzy veils. Surely some of my interest came from the knowledge that both Jouno, who directed an institute for the blind, and Guibert, who was a gifted writer as well as a photographer, would die of AIDS in their mid-30s.

Hervé Guibert, “Sienne,” 1979.Christine Guibert, via Les Douches la Galerie, Paris

The shadow of mortality also falls on “Proud Flesh,” 2003-09, by Sally Mann, her photographs of her husband, Larry, who suffers from late-onset muscular dystrophy. She made them with the 19th-century wet-plate collodion process. Back when it was the state of the art, photographers expertly overcame the pitfalls of the technique, but Mann embraces the flaws. Like her naked husband, many of the pictures are blemished and distressed. The darkness and blurring created by this archaic process add to the elegiac mood.

Sally Mann, “Speak, Memory,” 2008.Sally Mann, via Gagosian

Ergin Cavusoglu’s “Silent Glide,” 2008, and Fouad Elkoury’s “On War and Love,” 2006, both set a romantic breakup against a landscape of decay or strife. In Cavusoglu’s staged three-channel video, a writer ends an affair with his married publisher, who is visiting him in Hereke, a Turkish seaside town once known for its production of silk rugs but dependent now, in addition to carpet manufacture, on shipping and a cement factory. Cavusoglu devotes as much attention to the degradation of the town as he does to the collapse of the affair.

Fouad Elkoury, July 30, from the series “On War and Love,” 2006.Fouad Elkoury

Similarly, in “On War and Love,” 2006, Elkoury chronicles in a diary format the dissolution of his relationship with a younger woman, a parting that coincides with a war in Lebanon in the summer of 2006. The photos are interspersed with texts, documenting the Israeli air and naval assault on Beirut and Elkoury’s emotional turmoil in Istanbul, where he travels from Lebanon in a futile attempt to persuade his lover to stay with him. Instead of resonating with each other, however, the two stories, when juxtaposed, distanced me from each of them.

“Love Songs” left me wondering if the theatricality of posing and the ambiguity of still images undercut the capacity of photography to document intimacy. Various art forms afford different advantages and limitations. Novels are best at describing the complex charms and vicissitudes of love, which is why so many of these artists resort to texts along with images. “Love Songs” is as much about what photography can’t do as about what it can.


Love Songs: Photography and Intimacy

Through Sept. 11, International Center of Photography, 79 Essex Street, Lower East Side, Manhattan, icp.org.