Final sculpture in place, ‘We Stayed’ installation dedicated at The Archway
By Admin in Art World News
The city of Salisbury will be having several arts and crafts events in the Downtown plaza for father’s day.
Vanessa Junkin is the Marketing and outreach Manager for the Salisbury Arts and Cultural Department.
She tells us that this is a new event and will have several local businesses providing fun and creative workshops and activities for fathers.
Some of the businesses include “Our Family Rocks Shadow Box at Breathe Interiors for creative art pieces made out natural objects, along with board and brush who will host a make and take workshop to create your own fathers day themed family signs, and so much more.
“We are excited to bring all these businesses together to celebrate father’s day in a fun and unique way and there are lots of fun opportunities and different things families will be able to do.”
You can find more information on the father’s day event by going to http://downtownsby.com/.
By Admin in Printmaking
By Admin in Printmaking
By Admin in Photography
A photographer has filed a personal injury lawsuit after being seriously injured in a devastating helicopter crash to a wedding day photoshoot — which effectively ended her career.
Award-winning photographer Rachel Jordan, who specializes in remote photo shoots, was flying to a special location in a helicopter for a photoshoot with a newly-married couple moments after they exchanged vows on their wedding day on June 12, 2021.

Jordan and the newly-weds, Mahdi Zougub and Fay Elhanafy, were destined for a picturesque mountain spot in Canterbury, New Zealand to take pictures, with guests remaining behind ahead of the reception.
However, shortly after taking off, the Robinson Helicopter Company aircraft’s engine reportedly shut off in mid-air. Jordan and the bride passed out as the helicopter entered a rapid descent from a low altitude.
The aircraft plummeted and crashed onto a fairway at the Terrace Downs Golf Resort in rural Canterbury at 15:03.
All four people on board survived the crash but three, including Jordan and the newlyweds, were seriously injured and rushed by rescue helicopter to Christchurch Hospital.
The photographer was “left immobilized” and recovering in hospital for months after the crash. According to a Givealittle page set up for the photographer, Jordan suffered spinal fractures as well as five fractured ribs, lung laceration, a fractured sternum, a fractured arm, and fractured feet.
According to EIN News, Jordan and the newly-weds have now filed a personal injury lawsuit against Robinson Helicopter Company and several aircraft parts manufacturers for the devastating crash.
According to a complaint filed on June 8, Jordan suffered serious and permanent physical and psychological injuries as a result of the crash.
The injuries suffered from the crash have essentially put an end to Jordan’s successful career as a top professional wedding photographer in Northland New Zealand. Jordan and her husband’s company, Two Little Starfish, had become a household name in the New Zealand wedding industry
Government crash data from the National Transportation Safety Board allegedly shows that Robinson helicopters have been involved in more than 1,650 incidents and accidents since 1983. Of those, 411 were fatal.
“Unfortunately, protecting profit margins is often more important to manufacturers than protecting the people that fly their aircraft,” Timothy A. Loranger, who represents Jordan and the newlyweds in this case, says.
“Robinson helicopters must do more to identify and resolve safety issues that all too often injure or take the lives of pilots and passengers.”
Jordan previously said that she would have loved to photograph the couple’s anniversary/second wedding day and complete the photoshoot that never was.
“That is a completion for me. Getting to come back and photograph their day and do their photos in the mountains. That is like going full circle and completing what we started out to do,” Jordan tells RNZ in an interview in September 2021.
“I love taking photos and where there’s a will there’s a way like even if I’m in a wheelchair for many, many months to come I’ll still do photography.
“You know it’s not going to stop me doing what I love doing, but yeah, my goals are just to continue doing what I do.”
Image credits: All photos by Givealittle.
By Admin in Photography
By Admin in Art World News
Monday, June 12, 2023
Media Contact:
Elizabeth Gosney | CAS Marketing and Communications Manager | 405-744-7497 | egosney@okstate.edu
Soph Coe, an Oklahoma State University art history major, is the first to represent
OSU as a Princeton University Museum of Art intern this summer.
Coe will participate in group discussions, activities and independent projects during
their eight-week assignment at the university.

“I am going to be working for Allie Wolf, manager of Wholesale and Retail Operations
at the museum, to do a project for the museum store,” said Coe, who explained that
their main project will be researching the Princeton Museum’s art collections and
finding a regional artist to create a collection that represents the art found in
the museum.
“I feel extremely blessed to have received this opportunity and look forward to all
that I will learn while I am here,” Coe said.
Dr. Christina Cruz Gonzalez, an art history professor in the Department of Art, Graphic Design and Art History, outlined how prestigious and coveted Coe’s program is.
“Because of its collegiate location and link to the Ivy League institution, it is
a program that integrates both practical, curatorial components and rigorous academic
training,” Gonzalez said. “This is the kind of program that is a real game-changer
for every student contemplating a museum or curatorial career, but especially for
first-generation students and those belonging to groups that are unrepresented in
the museum profession and in the discipline or art history in general.”
With this being the first time OSU has had a graduate or undergraduate student accepted
into the program, Gonzalez emphasized the art department’s excitement surrounding
Coe’s achievement.
“It is a real coup for us to have Soph there for eight weeks,” Gonzalez said. “We
are thrilled for them and can’t wait to hear about their experience when they return.”
Story By:
Jessica Floss, CAS graduate assistant | jfloss@okstate.edu
By Admin in Photography
Images: Collier Schorr, Angel Zinovieff (Posing not hiding), 2022. © Collier Schorr, Courtesy 303 Gallery. Clifford Prince King, Conditions, 2018. © Clifford Prince King, Courtesy STARS Gallery, Los Angeles
Love Songs: Photography and Intimacy
On View: Now – September 11, 2023
Location: 79 Essex Street, New York, NY 10002
The International Center of Photography (ICP) explores love and desire through intimate images taken by lovers in a group exhibition this summer. On view from Now through September 11, 2023, Love Songs: Photography and Intimacy features over 250 works throughout ICP’s galleries, presenting photographic projects that read as personal stories by 16 international artists, including Nobuyoshi Araki, Ergin Çavuşoğlu, Motoyuki Daifu, Fouad Elkoury, Aikaterini Gegisian, Nan Goldin, René Groebli, Hervé Guibert, Sheree Hovsepian, Clifford Prince King, Leigh Ledare, Lin Zhipeng (No. 223), Sally Mann, RongRong&inri, Collier Schorr, and Karla Hiraldo Voleau.
Revealing private and powerful intimate relationships, Love Songs includes series dating from 1952 to 2022 by some of the leading and emerging photographers of our time that express complex, elusive, and contradictory entanglements. Taking us through personal, often unseen stories between different couples—from the first days of an affair through marriages, honeymoons, domestic bliss and the pain of separation, even to death and the last days shared between loves—the intimacies depicted by these artists are rarely seen in the history of photography and offer images of love that range from poetic, to romantic, to raw.
“This summer, ICP will turn over the entirety of our exhibition spaces to powerful, intergenerational stories of love in the exhibition Love Songs: Photography and Intimacy,” said David E. Little, Executive Director of ICP. “This major exhibition offers a unique viewpoint into how relationships are photographed and presents images of intimacy rarely represented in photographic history with such openness and directness. We look forward to welcoming audiences to explore and connect with Love Songs, which is an international collaboration with our friends at the Maison Européenne de la Photographie (MEP), Paris, and curator Sara Raza, who remixed the international show at ICP.”
Love Songs explores the history of photography through the lens of love, inspired in part by the canonical work of Nobuyoshi Araki and Nan Goldin. The exhibition features work from Araki’s landmark books Sentimental Journey (1971), a visual diary of his honeymoon with his wife, Yoko; and Winter Journey (1989-1990), which documents the final months of Yoko’s life until her death at age forty-two. Placing his own life at the center of the work, Araki blurs the lines between moments of intimacy and insignificance, as the love story transforms into a tragedy. A selection of raw, color-saturated, yet tender photographs from Goldin’s The Ballad of Sexual Dependency (1973-1986) are also included. Originally presented as a slideshow accompanied by a soundtrack of music by Nico, Maria Callas, and James Brown, Goldin recorded the spontaneous and unfiltered daily life of her friends, showing the vulnerability and sometimes brutality of romantic relationships.
Personal Letters (2000) marks the first chapter of the love story of RongRong&inri, the working name of two artists. The lovers embarked on an impassioned correspondence from September through November 2000, mailing each other photographs with promises of eternal love handwritten with ardor on the borders of the prints, expressing the intensity of their emotions and their desire to be together forever. Hervé Guibert met Thierry Jouno in 1976; his series Thierry (1976–1991) chronicles their passionate 15-year relationship. Guibert’s photographs of Jouno in hotel rooms during their travels are sensual portraits in which he reveres his lover’s nude body.
L’oeil de l’amour (The eye of love) (1952) by René Groebli is radically intimate, bringing the viewer inside the domestic and romantic space of a Paris honeymoon. Groebli chronicles lazy days in a hotel room with deep and loving closeness, as if he wished to remember every second of time spent together—his wife dressing and undressing, the unmade bed, a bottle of wine on a table, her hand holding a lit cigarette. Filled with joy, tenderness, and a tinge of melancholy, Motoyuki Daifu’s Lovesody (2008) candidly captures his experience of falling in love with a single mother of a two-year-old boy while she was pregnant with her second child. An unvarnished portrait of their daily lives, the photographs show their small, chaotic apartment cluttered with toys, piles of clothes, and half-eaten food, displaying the vulnerability and uncertainty of the moment.
Clifford Prince King’s 2019 works celebrate queer Black love and Black liberation, disrupting norms of culture, gender, identity, and race. His intimate color photographs, some staged, depict private spaces inspired by and drawn from real and imagined moments in his life and community. Lin Zhipeng (No. 223)’s Photographed Colors of Love (2005-2021) documents the defiant youth of China exploring their sexuality and freedom in the face of an authoritarian regime. His colorful and pattern-filled images feature his friends and lovers, and depict a generation trying to live authentically, free from taboos around gender, homosexuality and desire.
Collier Schorr’s Angel Z (2020-2021) is a collaborative project made with Angel Zinovieff, who writes: “When I look at you with the camera in your hand looking at me, there is a difference between that and what I see when the camera is not present. It is different because the camera is a third presence, a witness.” In Angel Z, the two artists work together to explore the traditions of the muse and author historically determined by male artists and use photography to explore intimacy, visibility, and performance. Sally Mann’s series Proud Flesh (2003–2009) documents her husband Larry’s late-onset muscular dystrophy, creating images of great vulnerability, frailty, tenderness, and mortality. In the 2008 image Hephaestus (titled for the Greek god of blacksmiths, Larry’s profession), marks on the image evoke scars, and other works have a feeling of forensic documents.
Aikaterini Gegisian’s 2019 series of photographic collages on paper and book titled Handbook of the Spontaneous Other include found pop culture materials from the 1960s and 1970s, such as adult magazines, travel journals, and National Geographic. Gegisian’s process of “de- collaging” rebels against and emancipates commodified and fetishized images. A 2021-2022 series of mixed-media assemblage works by Sheree Hovsepian evoke fragmented and abstract contours of the female body. Using her sister as her model and a stand-in for herself, Hovsepian plays with ideas of kinship, resemblance, self-love, eroticism, subjugation, and mythology of the female form.
Silent Glide (2008), a three-screen video installation by Ergin Çavuşoğlu, offers a fractured narrative about the imminent separation of a pair of lovers, set against the backdrop of the picturesque sea and industrial landscape of Hereke, Turkey. Çavuşoğlu explores the inner turmoil and the quest for meaning that leads to the couple’s breakup. Fouad Elkoury’s series On War and Love (2006) depicts the demise of an intergenerational romantic relationship, overlapping with the thirty-day period of war in Lebanon from July 13 to August 14, 2006. Featuring daily diary entries of photographic montages layered with handwritten notes, the work reveals the wounds of personal and political life.
For his 2010 project Double Bind, Leigh Ledare photographed his ex-wife in a country cabin, then asked her current partner to do the same, producing two sets of near-identical images. Ledare juxtaposes the photographs with a large collection of printed ephemera, exploring the psychology of how one “reads” images and comparing a broken marriage to a burgeoning love. In Another Love Story (2021), Karla Hiraldo Voleau restages photographs from a former relationship with a man known, in this context, only as X. After discovering that he had been leading a double life and living with another woman, Voleau cast a model to play the role of X and visited locations they had spent time together to reenact intimate moments from their relationship before the moment of betrayal.
The exhibition is organized in collaboration with the Maison Européenne de la Photographie (MEP), Paris, based upon an original idea by Simon Baker, and was curated at MEP by Frédérique Dolivet and Pascal Hoël. The exhibition includes 118 works on loan from the MEP’s collection. The New York presentation of Love Songs is organized by curator and writer Sara Raza, who remixed the show to feature new work. The English-language catalogue for the exhibition is published by ICP and DAP.
“I’ve recut and reordered the original visual playlist of the Love Songs exhibition to include bodies of work by artists whose subversive photographic and filmic practices rely on the montage technique of interweaving art and ideas of our time,” said curator Sara Raza. “These works offer a window into the themes of aftermath, contradiction, collision, desire, distortion, and reality.”
About the Curator
Sara Raza is an award-winning curator and writer specializing in global art and visual cultures from a post-colonial, post-Soviet perspective. She is the author of Punk Orientalism: The Art of Rebellion (Black Dog Press, London 2022). Raza has curated for the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum (New York), Mathaf: Modern Arab Art Museum (Doha, Qatar), and the 55th Venice Biennale, among others. Formerly, she was the Guggenheim UBS MAP Curator for the Middle East and North Africa at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, and Curator of Public Programs at Tate Modern, London. Sara holds a BA and an MA, both from Goldsmiths College, University of London, and pursued studies towards her PhD at the Royal College of Art, London. She lives and works in New York City, where she teaches at the School of Visual Arts and New York University.
Publication
Accompanying the exhibition is a new catalogue co-published by ICP/D.A.P., featuring major photographic series on view in the exhibition, as well as a foreword by David Little; text by Simon Baker and Sara Raza; and contributions by Frédérique Dolivet, Pascal Höel, Laurie Hurwitz, and Clothilde Morette. Advance copies of Love Songs are available at the ICP Shop, with wide release in late June 2023. (ISBN 9781636811178, U.S. $49.95 / CDN $71.95. Hbk, 7.5 x 10.75 in. / 208 pgs / 64 color / 130 b&w.)
Exhibition Access
ICP is open every day except Tuesday from 11 AM to 7 PM, and until 9 PM on Thursdays. Admission: $18 for adults; $14 for seniors (62 and over), military, and visitors with disabilities (caregivers are free); $12 for students (with valid ID); $3 for SNAP/EBT card holders; free for ICP members, ICP students, and all visitors 14 years and under. Admission is by suggested donation on Thursdays from 6 to 9 PM. Tickets can be reserved online at icp.org/tickets. Visitors are asked to arrive during the 30-minute window of their timed ticket to help ensure a safe flow in the lobby. For more information, read ICP’s updated Visitor Information and Accessibility guidelines and policies.
Exhibition Support
Exhibitions support has been generously provided by the ICP Exhibitions Committee, Gagosian, Bonhams, and Etant donnés Contemporary Art, a program of Villa Albertine. Exhibitions at ICP are supported, in part, by public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council and by the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New York State Legislature.
About the International Center of Photography
The International Center of Photography (ICP) is the world’s leading institution dedicated to photography and visual culture. Cornell Capa founded ICP in 1974 to champion “concerned photography”—socially and politically minded images that can educate and change the world. Through exhibitions, education programs, community outreach, and public programs, ICP offers an open forum for dialogue about the power of the image. Since its inception, ICP has presented more than 700 exhibitions, provided thousands of classes, and hosted a wide variety of public programs. ICP launched its new integrated center on Manhattan’s Lower East Side in January 2020. Located at 79 Essex Street, ICP is the cultural anchor of Essex Crossing, one of the most highly anticipated and expansive mixed-use developments in New York City. ICP pays respect to the original stewards of this land, the Lenape people, and other Indigenous communities. Visit icp.org to learn more about the museum and its programs.
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The Desert Foothills Land Trust (DFLT) is proud to announce a special presentation event featuring acclaimed botanical photographer Jimmy Fike on Saturday, Oct. 12 at 6:30 p.m. at the Sanderson