A New Exhibition Reveals How Man Ray, the Enigmatic Surrealist Photographer, Bridged the Worlds of Art and Fashion

A New Exhibition Reveals How Man Ray, the Enigmatic Surrealist Photographer, Bridged the Worlds of Art and Fashion

Man Ray, the American artist and photographer who all but defined the early 20th-century Paris art scene, is associated with many things. He’s associated with Surrealism and Dada, and the likes of Marcel Duchamp and André Breton. He’s also associated with Lee Miller and Kiki de Montparnasse, as well as the couturiers Elsa Schiaparelli and Coco Chanel, for whom he took photographs beginning in the interbellum years, after moving from New York to Paris in 1921. As such, the celebrated shape-shifter bridged the worlds of art and fashion like no other.

Some of Man Ray’s best-known photographs include Noire et Blanche (1926), Lune sur le Visage (1930), and Le Violon d’Ingres (1924), the last of which nearly tripled the record for most expensive photo sold at auction when it netted $12.4 million at Christie’s in 2022.

Not only have Ray’s ingenious photographic techniques—stark shadowing, solarization, rayographs—been endlessly reproduced over the years, he’s also become a font of inspiration for fashion designers. His enigmatic style and humor have been reflected through the collections of Yves Saint Laurent, Martin Margiela, Dries van Noten, Celine, Lanvin, and Madeleine Vionnet, to name just a few. Many of them are Belgian names, which may not come as a surprise given the country’s history of avant-gardism.

In “Man Ray and Fashion” (through August 13) at MoMu, the fashion museum of Antwerp, the artist’s photographs are presented alongside fashion pieces they inspired, highlighting the pivotal influence of his work on contemporary fashion. Here’s a selection of images showcasing Man Ray’s inimitable style and enduring dialogue with the world of fashion.

imageLe Violon d’Ingres (1924) in the background. Photo: Stany Dederen. Courtesy of MoMu.” width=”1000″ height=”659″ srcset=”https://www.mecreates.com/story/news/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/3-Man-Ray-and-Fashion-MoMu-22-April-13-August-2023-_-c-MoMu-Antwerp-Image-credit-Stany-Dederen24.jpg 1000w, https://news.artnet.com/app/news-upload/2023/06/3-Man-Ray-and-Fashion-MoMu-22-April-13-August-2023-_-c-MoMu-Antwerp-Image-credit-Stany-Dederen24-300×198.jpg 300w, https://news.artnet.com/app/news-upload/2023/06/3-Man-Ray-and-Fashion-MoMu-22-April-13-August-2023-_-c-MoMu-Antwerp-Image-credit-Stany-Dederen24-50×33.jpg 50w” sizes=”(max-width: 1000px) 100vw, 1000px”>

Items from Yves Saint Laurent’s collection of 1965 with Man Ray’s photograph Le Violon d’Ingres (1924) in the background. Photo: Stany Dederen. Courtesy of MoMu.

Left: Celine, Spring–Summer 2012. Right: Man Ray, Lee Miller (1930). Photo: Stany Dederen. Courtesy of MoMu.

Left: Celine, Spring–Summer 2012. Right: Man Ray, Lee Miller (1930). Photo: Stany Dederen. Courtesy of MoMu.

imageLa Chevelure (1927). Courtesy of Fondazione Marconi, Milan © Man Ray 2015 Trust / Sabam Belgium 2023.” width=”1000″ height=”707″ srcset=”https://www.mecreates.com/story/news/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/Man-Ray-and-Fashion-Image-6-_-c-Man-Ray-2015-Trust-Sabam-Belgium-2023.jpg 1000w, https://news.artnet.com/app/news-upload/2023/06/Man-Ray-and-Fashion-Image-6-_-c-Man-Ray-2015-Trust-Sabam-Belgium-2023-300×212.jpg 300w, https://news.artnet.com/app/news-upload/2023/06/Man-Ray-and-Fashion-Image-6-_-c-Man-Ray-2015-Trust-Sabam-Belgium-2023-50×35.jpg 50w” sizes=”(max-width: 1000px) 100vw, 1000px”>

Left: Olivier Theyskens, Spring-Summer 1999 © MoMu. Photo: Julien Claessens & Thomas Deschamps. Right: Man Ray, La Chevelure (1927). Courtesy of Fondazione Marconi, Milan © Man Ray 2015 Trust / Sabam Belgium 2023.

imageRayographie “Kiki” (1922). © Man Ray 2015 Trust / Adagp, Paris, 2023 – Photo : Telimage / Adagp Images. Right: Dirk Van Saene, Autumn-Winter, 2008-09 © MoMu. Photo: Hugo Maertens.” width=”1000″ height=”707″ srcset=”https://www.mecreates.com/story/news/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/Man-Ray-and-Fashion-Image-4-_-c-Man-Ray-2015-Trust-Sabam-Belgium-2023.jpg 1000w, https://news.artnet.com/app/news-upload/2023/06/Man-Ray-and-Fashion-Image-4-_-c-Man-Ray-2015-Trust-Sabam-Belgium-2023-300×212.jpg 300w, https://news.artnet.com/app/news-upload/2023/06/Man-Ray-and-Fashion-Image-4-_-c-Man-Ray-2015-Trust-Sabam-Belgium-2023-50×35.jpg 50w” sizes=”(max-width: 1000px) 100vw, 1000px”>

Left: Man Ray, Rayographie “Kiki” (1922). © Man Ray 2015 Trust / Adagp, Paris, 2023 – Photo: Telimage / Adagp Images. Right: Dirk Van Saene, Autumn-Winter, 2008-09 © MoMu. Photo: Hugo Maertens.

Maison Martin Margiela collections from 1996 to 2009. Photo: Stany Dederen. Courtesy of MoMu.

Maison Martin Margiela collections from 1996 to 2009. Photo: Stany Dederen. Courtesy of MoMu.

imageMadame Toulgouat (ca. 1930) Librairie Diktats © Man Ray 2015 Trust / Sabam Belgium 2023.” width=”1000″ height=”733″ srcset=”https://www.mecreates.com/story/news/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/Man-Ray-and-Fashion-Image-3-_-c-Man-Ray-2015-Trust-Sabam-Belgium-2023.jpg 1000w, https://news.artnet.com/app/news-upload/2023/06/Man-Ray-and-Fashion-Image-3-_-c-Man-Ray-2015-Trust-Sabam-Belgium-2023-300×220.jpg 300w, https://news.artnet.com/app/news-upload/2023/06/Man-Ray-and-Fashion-Image-3-_-c-Man-Ray-2015-Trust-Sabam-Belgium-2023-50×37.jpg 50w, https://news.artnet.com/app/news-upload/2023/06/Man-Ray-and-Fashion-Image-3-_-c-Man-Ray-2015-Trust-Sabam-Belgium-2023-750×550.jpg 750w” sizes=”(max-width: 1000px) 100vw, 1000px”>

Left: Maison Martin Margiela, Spring-Summer 1990 © MoMu. Photo: Stany Dederen. Right: Man Ray, Madame Toulgouat (ca. 1930). Librairie Diktats © Man Ray 2015 Trust / Sabam Belgium 2023.

From left: Garments by Dirk Van Saene, Jean-Charles de Castelbajac, Quinten Mestdagh, and Bernhard Willhelm. Photo: Stany Dederen. Courtesy of MoMu.

Left: Man Ray, Juliet (1945). Right: Jonathan Anderson for Loewe, Autumn–Winter 2022–23. Photo: Stany Dederen. Courtesy of MoMu.

imageNancy Cunard (1926). © Centre Pompidou, MNAM-CCI, dist. Rmn-Grand Palais / Man Ray 2015 Trust / Sabam Belgium 2023. Right: Dries Van Noten, Autumn-Winter 2008-09 © MoMu. Photo: Stany Dederen.” width=”1000″ height=”707″ srcset=”https://www.mecreates.com/story/news/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/Man-Ray-and-Fashion-Image-7-_-c-Man-Ray-2015-Trust-Sabam-Belgium-2023.jpg 1000w, https://news.artnet.com/app/news-upload/2023/06/Man-Ray-and-Fashion-Image-7-_-c-Man-Ray-2015-Trust-Sabam-Belgium-2023-300×212.jpg 300w, https://news.artnet.com/app/news-upload/2023/06/Man-Ray-and-Fashion-Image-7-_-c-Man-Ray-2015-Trust-Sabam-Belgium-2023-50×35.jpg 50w” sizes=”(max-width: 1000px) 100vw, 1000px”>

Left: Man Ray, Nancy Cunard (1926). © Centre Pompidou, MNAM-CCI, dist. Rmn-Grand Palais / Man Ray 2015 Trust / Sabam Belgium 2023. Right: Dries van Noten, Autumn-Winter 2008-09 © MoMu. Photo: Stany Dederen.

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Beyond Local: Edmonton collective brings authentic Indigenous arts to local markets

Beyond Local: Edmonton collective brings authentic Indigenous arts to local markets

EDMONTON – Sabrina Williams is grateful to both her grandmothers, whom she affectionately calls Kokum (Cree for grandmother). They not only taught her the beadwork and sewing that gives her a meaningful vocation, they instilled a love of tradition she passes along to her daughter today.

But the knowledge the Edmonton artisan learned didn’t come without a dark side, as her parents were residential school survivors who became disconnected from their people’s ways.

“My parents lost most of their Indigenous identities and traditions. They are now coming back to the red road of healing and reconnecting,” said Williams, whose roots are Cree, Tahltan and Tlingit. “I was so thankful they let me make such a beautiful connection with my kokums, who taught me what my parents lost.”

Sabrina and her daughter Shelby, 12, are members of the Indigenous Arts Market Collective (I.A.M. Collective), an Edmonton organization of First Nations, Métis and Inuit artists. Members not only offer locally made Indigenous art and handcrafted items, they embody a spirit of entrepreneurship while sharing their culture with the world.

“We started in 2018, to break down barriers that were preventing Indigenous artists from participating in Edmonton’s local markets,” said Lorrie Lawrence, I.A.M. executive director and a founding member.

“We want to get as many youths to work in these traditional arts as possible. The elders who carry on with these traditions, it’s important for us to make sure they’re heard by the youth.”

Williams was taught skills such as quilt making and ribbon skirts by her kokum at Muskeg Lake Cree Nation, and learned beadwork, sweetgrass weaving and traditional medicine from her kokum in northern Saskatchewan.

“She taught me since I was six. Thirty-three years later I’m still embracing my matriarchs, my kokums’ sacred knowledge. And I am proud I am able to teach my daughter,” said Williams about daughter Shelby, who got an eye for acrylic painting and drawing after learning beadwork at age eight.

“She created the design for our orange shirt which was inspired by her grandparents, who attended residential schools. She also created MMIW (Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women) artwork, which was unfortunately inspired by the murder of my younger sister.”

Williams and Shelby now make a range of items, from quilts and handbags to Cree regalia and cedar hats, along with soaps, lotions and medicine oils using sage, sweetgrass and red cedar.

Frances Whitford, a Métis artisan and I.A.M. director, learned to work with moosehide and fur watching her Métis grandmother in Anzac, south of Fort McMurray. She recalls her grandfather’s trapline as a source of materials that were turned into mukluks and jackets.

“In our culture, you’re mainly taught by watching. All the things my grandmother would do, tanning hides, beadwork, the trapline; was part of my everyday life,” said Whitford.

Her brother and cousin have now stepped into their grandfather’s shoes, supplying furs and hide for her Beadwork & Bannock business, which was inspired by the family’s desire to preserve their Métis heritage.

“I didn’t realize I was taught something very special to my culture. It wasn’t until my grandmother passed away, that I realized it would be lost,” said Whitford.

A member of the Tataskweyak Cree Nation of northern Manitoba, I.A.M. director James Fox recalls wanting to connect to his Cree heritage, so in 2017, he joined Indigenous craft classes at the Edmonton library. From there it was beading lessons at the Native Friendship Centre, and his current Cree-ations now range from rawhide rattles and fish scale art to caribou hair tufting and leather crafts.

“When I started doing beadwork I wanted to keep the traditions, but I always add a modern twist,” said Fox. 

Creations by members of the collective are available at the Downtown Farmers Market in Edmonton, and at Fort Edmonton Park in the summer.

 “It’s very important to us, promoting authentic Indigenous arts,” Whitford said. “The number of beautiful artists is amazing.”

For more, visit https://iamcollective.ca/

State of the Art Market: Old Is New Again and Neo Old Masters

State of the Art Market: Old Is New Again and Neo Old Masters

Sellers of fine artworks by European Old Masters have spent the past several years trying to enliven the genre for a new audience. Have their efforts begun to pay off? And how have those efforts correlated with developments in the market for Contemporary artwork, especially for Contemporary artwork that engages with styles, themes, and motifs in classical European art? 

We set out to contextualize auction data with strategic trends concerning Old Master works and Old Master-influenced artwork amid commercial galleries, art fairs, auction houses, and museums. Specifically, we investigated: 

  • Contemporizing the Old Masters – Campaigns to reframe European Old Masters alongside the art of our time become conspicuous in multiple sectors of the art market by the middle of the 2010s.
  • The Other Side of the Story: Living Artists Inspired by the Old Masters – A broader view of the art industry raises the possibility that restricting our view to only the actual European Old Masters may underestimate these classical artists’ impact on the recent art market.  

While the data and the anecdotal evidence cannot offer firm conclusions, we outline their complex relationships for readers to assess for themselves the layered interplay between the markets for European Old Masters and their successors from the mid-20th century to the present. 

(Methodology – Morgan Stanley collaborated with Artnet News using the Artnet Price Database to survey the state of the global fine art auction market for European Old Masters since 2018, as illustrated in the charts herein. All price data is drawn from the Artnet Price Database and includes the buyer’s premium unless otherwise expressly noted. Artnet defines the “European Old Master” genre as follows: fine artworks created by European artists born between 1250 and 1820. Lots with an identified artist must carry a minimum estimate of $500, and lots with a modifier—such as “school of,” “circle of,” “follower of”—must carry a minimum estimate of $2,000. We then examined auction data for a selection of artists in the Contemporary (defined as artists born from 1945 through 1974) and Ultra-Contemporary (defined as artists born in 1975 or later) genres whose practices are visibly influenced by classical European art.) 

Contemporizing the Old Masters 

Art fairs juxtapose Contemporary and Old Master art  

Long regarded as the premier commercial fair for Old Master works, antiquities, and furniture, The European Fine Art Fair (TEFAF) has been working for years to expand its reach by deepening its focus on Modern and Contemporary artworks.1 In 2015, TEFAF experimented by staging a focused exhibition of eight Contemporary artworks amid its traditionally focused fair in Maastricht.2 The fair’s organizers returned to the concept in 2016, hosting a show of seven living artists exploring the theme of pain.3 TEFAF has since gone on to open a second annual fair in New York that leans heavily into mixing the classical mandate of its flagship fair in Maastricht with dozens of galleries focused on artists who lived and worked from the 19th century to the present.4 Before the announcement of its permanent closure in early 2023, the most recent editions of the Masterpiece London fair had moved in a similar direction, blending everything from dinosaur fossils and rare minerals to classical and Contemporary art.5 

Major commercial galleries have been making the classic-to-Contemporary connection, too 

In the fall of 2018, David Zwirner worked with Old Master dealer Nicholas Hall to stage “Endless Enigma: Eight Centuries of Fantastic Art,” a show that curated more than 90 works by artists spanning eras and genres; featured artists ranged from Hieronymous Bosch, Francisco de Goya, and Gustave Moreau to Francis Alÿs, Michaël Borremans, and Lisa Yuskavage, among others.6 In December 2022, as a part of Master Drawings New York, Sprüth Magers dedicated its Upper East Side space to exhibiting the work of living artist Karen Kilimnik alongside Renaissance paintings, works on paper, and sculptures dating from the 17th to 19th centuries.7 

European Old Master Paintings in auction houses’ Impressionist, Modern and Postwar & Contemporary evening sales 

It is noteworthy that, shortly after TEFAF began curating recent artwork into its classical mandate, the most expensive artwork ever sold at auction was not only an Old Master painting but rather an Old Master painting sold as a part of a Christie’s New York evening sale of Postwar and Contemporary art: Leonardo da Vinci’s Salvator Mundi, acquired for more than $450 million in November 2017.8 Intrigue around the whereabouts of the painting, which has not been seen in public since the Christie’s sale, has become a source of gossip in the art industry in succeeding years, sparking numerous news articles, books, and documentaries.

We found that the momentum to collapse genres has continued in recent and upcoming auctions. Similar to Christie’s placement of Salvator Mundi in a Postwar and Contemporary auction, Sotheby’s included Peter Paul Rubens’s Portrait of a Man as Mars in its May 16, 2023 Modern evening sale in New York, where the painting sold for a hammer price of $22.5 million against an estimate of $20 million to $30 million.9 

Earlier, in November 2019, Sotheby’s also engineered a collaboration between Italian Old Master dealer Fabrizio Moretti (of Galleria Moretti) and drummer Fabrizio Moretti of the Strokes, pairing the two for a three-day installation of Old Master works titled “Fabrizio Moretti x Fabrizio Moretti: In Passing.”10 The concept saw the art-dealing Moretti selecting 20 paintings and sculptures of the era displayed in a labyrinthine setup at Sotheby’s New York headquarters in advance of a live auction in December 2019. At Christie’s, recently refreshed marketing tactics have also included robust international pre-sale tours and no-reserve auctions to appeal to both established and emerging collectors alike, as in the case of the white glove sale of European Old Masters from the collection of J.E. Safra on January 25, 2023.11

A spotlight on European Old Master women artists at auction 

We found that in other instances, linking artists across eras has taken a more socially conscious direction by bringing attention to European Old Master artists who also happened to be women. The May 3, 2023 Old Master sale at the Vienna, Austria, headquarters of Dorotheum auction house included a grouping of works marketed as “Daughters of Art: Women Artists in the Era of Old Masters.”12 It included Fede Galizia, Artemisia Gentileschi, and Orsola Maddalena Caccia. The Galizia painting, titled Judith with the head of Holofernes (ca. 1610–15) and estimated at €200,000 to €300,000, more than doubled its estimate after fees, selling for a premium-inclusive €624,000.13  

Christie’s led its Old Masters Paintings and Sculptures auction in Paris on June 15 with La Nature
morte au vase d’albâtre (1783) by the late 18th-to-early-19th century French artist Anne Vallayer-Coster. It fetched a record-setting €2.58 million ($2.8 million) before fees after being estimated to sell for between €600,000 and €1,000,000. Also featured in the sale were four works by Enlightenment-era painter Angelica Kauffman. In our view, it is difficult to imagine a major auction house touting these long-overlooked women artists in an Old Master sale a decade ago, but the decision looks much less surprising within the context of the way that art sellers, collectors, institutions, and scholars have shifted their focus over the last several years.  

European Old Masters find new life in museums 

We found that works by artists from historically unheralded demographics also excited bidders without extra fanfare. Consider Juan de Pareja, the mixed-race, enslaved assistant to Diego Velázquez. In 2019, a work by Pareja, titled Dog With a Candle and Lilies (early 1660s), carried a high estimate of just $9,000 at Pandolfini Casa d’Aste in Florence but sold for more than 30 times that—selling for almost $271,000. In 2020, the painting was acquired by the Indianapolis Museum of Art at Newfields using part of a $20 million fund devoted to strengthening the institution’s holdings of work by BIPOC artists, an initiative begun in response to allegations by museum staff of a toxic, discriminatory work culture. 

Institutions, particularly in the U.S., have intensified their efforts to champion works by artists of color across eras since the inception of the Black Lives Matter movement and the protests following the 2020 death of George Floyd.14 Old Master dealer Robert Simon defined this as “a broad movement” of which “American museums are at the forefront.”15 

The trend has continued into the present at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. In April of 2023, the Met opened “Juan de Pareja, Afro-Hispanic Painter,” an exhibition linking Pareja’s practice to the 20th century Black American artists who launched the Harlem Renaissance.16 

Just how effective have these attempts to reframe and reinvigorate the European Old Master genre been in recent years? We begin below by considering full-year auction results. 

Source: Artnet Price Database and Artnet Analytics

2022 represented a five-year high in total sales in the genre, reaching $691.8 million worldwide, a 5.8 percent year-over-year increase in value. 

Compared to the other four most recent full years on record, however, auctions of European Old Masters in 2022 did not constitute a peak in lots sold, lots offered, or sell-through rate. All three metrics peaked in 2021, and 2022’s results in each were only slightly above their counterparts in 2019. Evidence suggests that the 2021 surge in these statistics resulted from a surplus of works held back from auction during the pandemic-restricted 2020 sales slate finally coming to market in the first full year of recovery. (Lots sold, lots offered, and sell-through rate also peaked in 2021 in the Impressionist and Modern and Postwar and Contemporary genres, according to the Artnet Price Database and Artnet Analytics.) 

Source: Artnet Price Database and Artnet Analytics

The biggest difference in 2022 came in the top price bracket: $229.2 million worth of European Old Master works sold for more than $10 million each. That total was nearly $100 million more than the previous high in 2021, when buyers paid $129.8 million for such trophy lots.  

The top three lots by sale price in the genre were all by Sandro Botticelli, together totaling more than $186 million. The leader was Portrait of a Young Man Holding a Roundel, which brought in nearly $92.2 million at Sotheby’s Master Paintings and Sculptures Part I evening sale in January. Following it were the artist’s Madonna of the Magnificat, sold for about $48.5 million in the evening auction of the late Microsoft cofounder Paul G. Allen, and Man of Sorrows, sold for $45.4 million in the same Sotheby’s auction as the top lot. 

Source: Artnet Price Database and Artnet Analytics

From the perspective of regional markets, the U.S. led the global auction trade in European Old Master sales in 2022. American houses brought $296.1 million worth of sales in the genre, the highest total achieved by any regional market since 2018. The U.K., the U.S.’s only competition for the top-selling regional market over the past five years, brought less than half that amount in 2022 ($141.9 million). One major determining factor was the regional split on top-selling lots. Of the 15 priciest European Old Master works sold at auction in 2022, seven were offered in the U.S. (including the top four), versus six in the U.K., none of which were higher than seventh by value—the priciest was a Rembrandt self-portrait from 1632 that brought £14.5 million. 

The other major regional market story of last year was France, which generated $139.7 million worth of European Old Master sales, up nearly 82 percent by value year over year. Powering the surge were the fifth- and sixth-highest-priced lots in the genre in 2022: a Chardin still life of strawberries that fetched €24.4 million in an auction of Old Master and 19th Century works at Artcurial, and a rediscovered Michelangelo drawing, dubbed A nude man (after Masaccio) and two figures behind him, that was offered in a rare single-lot evening sale at Christie’s Paris and was bought for almost €23.2 million. 

With the full-year auction results as a reference point, it is worth asking whether focusing on only the most recent quarter in the auction market (relative to the equivalent period in previous years) creates a different sense of the European Old Master market. 

Examining Recency and Seasonality

Source: Artnet Price Database and Artnet Analytics

Overall, we see a similar pattern in first quarter auction results for European Old Masters since 2018 as in full-year results for European Old Masters since 2018. The number of lots sold and lots offered, as well as the sell-through rate, all stayed roughly within the same historical bounds during the first quarter of each of the past six years, yet total sales peaked in the most recent period on record. 

Total sales in Q1 of 2023 reached $211.3 million, an increase of more than $21 million (roughly 11 percent by value) from the previous pinnacle in the first quarter of 2021. However, it’s worth noting that from 2016 to 2022 Christie’s held only drawings sales of Old Masters in New York during Q1, shifting auctions of Old Master paintings to its more broadly themed ‘Classic Week’ during the second quarters of this period, and only returning to a schedule aligned with Sotheby’s January European Old Masters sales in Q1 of 2023. Comparative analysis on a quarterly basis may therefore not tell the whole or most nuanced tale. 

Is the uptick in total sales, then, a new trend reflecting a renewed interest in European Old Masters, or is the intergenerational wealth transfer uncovering trophy works of art not seen or available in decades? 

The Other Side of the Story: Living Artists Inspired by the Old Masters 

Contemporary artists earn fame for their Contemporary takes on the European Old Masters in the mid-2000s  

British artist Glenn Brown received his first solo gallery exhibition in 1995, at Karsten Schubert in London, but he began exhibiting with Gagosian in 2004, the same year that he was the subject of a solo exhibition at London’s Serpentine Gallery.17 His work first appeared at auction in 2000, yet it was not until 2005 when his auction lots collectively generated more than $1 million in a single year. (The actual sales total was roughly $1.8 million.) He has brought more than $1 million in annual auction sales 13 times since 2005, including an apex of nearly $15.9 million in 2013. In the fall of 2022, Brown also opened a private museum in London that curates his own works alongside those of some of his favorite historical artists.18

American artist John Currin charted a similar path. He was the subject of a steady string of solo exhibitions in galleries starting in 1989, and also joined Gagosian, in 2006.19 His works were already an auction fixture by 2000, but bidders pushed his lots into the seven figures for the first time in 2004, when his work brought more than $2.5 million under the hammer. He too has achieved more than $1 million at auction in 12 more of the succeeding years, with his auction market peaking by value at $14.4 million in 2013. 

Neither Brown nor Currin was the first Contemporary artist to reinterpret the European Old Masters, but we found that even one of their forebears needed to wait until the 21st century to incite high-level demand at auction. Total annual auction sales of works by Black American artist Barkley L. Hendricks (1945–2017) took until 2017 to cross into the seven figures; lots by the artist brought nearly $2.6 million that year, and even more in each of the three following years, including a peak of almost $9.4 million in 2020. A single portrait by Hendricks of his fellow artist Stanley Whitney sold for $6.1 million against estimates of $5 million to $7 million in Christie’s evening auction of works from the estate of Gerald Fineberg on May 17, 2023, setting a new artist auction record. 

Ultra-Contemporary artists in dialogue with European Old Masters

We found that, coincidentally or not, the market has also gravitated toward a younger generations of artists putting their own visual spin on European Old Masters in more recent years. Kehinde Wiley was selected by President Barack Obama in October 2017 to paint his official portrait for the National Portrait Gallery, a commission that brought Wiley’s use of Old Master motifs to depict Black subjects to a new level of public awareness; attendance at the National Portrait Gallery increased by more than 300 percent when the work went on view in 2018 (along with Contemporary artist Amy Sherald’s portrait of First Lady Michelle Obama).20 While Wiley’s work first appeared at auction in 2005, it took until 2018—the same year that the Obama portrait was unveiled—for the artist to surpass $1 million in annual auction sales. However, he has done so in every full year since. 

Even fresher to the market is Salman Toor (b. 1983), who received stellar reviews for his first institutional solo exhibition at the Whitney Museum of American Art from November 2020 through April 2021. New York Times critic Roberta Smith saw references to François Boucher, Jean-Honoré Fragonard, and Jean-Antoine Watteau.21 Toor’s auction debut was in 2020, and his works have never brought less than $2 million at auction in any year since; five lots by Toor made more than $1.4 million in just the first quarter of 2023. 

Old vs. Neo Female Masters 

Canadian-born artist Anna Weyant has had a meteoric rise: from a solo show at downtown New York gallery 56 Henry in fall 2019, to a solo show at the Los Angeles headquarters of blue-chip international allery Blum and Poe in spring 2021, to becoming the youngest artist then on the roster of Gagosian prior to her solo exhibition at one of the mega-gallery’s Chelsea spaces in the fall of 2022.22 Nineteen auction lots by Weyant together made almost $9.7 million in 2022, after the first two of her works to reach the auction block sold for a combined $65,220 the previous year. 

Pretty Little Thing, a 2019 painting by 31-year-old Flora Yukhnovich (and only her third work to ever come to auction), rocketed 14 times over its $80,000 high estimate to sell for $1.2 million at a Phillips Contemporary art day sale in June 2021.23 Her abstracted, Rococo-inspired style has been described as looking “a bit like if Fragonard and Soutine had a child (and then sent that child to the Museum of Ice Cream or Disney World).”24 In January 2021, she joined London’s Victoria Miro gallery, one of the most highly regarded international dealerships.25 Through the first quarter of 2023, 36 of her works had collectively generated more than $24.8 million at auction since 2021. 

Ewa Juszkiewicz “confronts the stereotypical perception of a woman’s beauty in classical European painting,” according to the artist’s website.26 Although she has yet to be the subject of a solo exhibition by a U.S., British, or western European gallery as of May 2023, her work has been included in group shows at blue-chip international dealers including Almine Rech and Gagosian (both in 2019), as well as at major international art fairs such as Frieze New York (2017 and 2018) and regional fairs such as Milan’s Artissima (2018) and Spain’s Arco Madrid (2019).27 Juszkiewicz’s auction sales totaled nearly $3.2 million in 2021, the year her work debuted under the hammer—then nearly doubled that volume the following year, achieving more than $6.3 million from the auction of 21 works in 2022. 

Below we compare these results to the auction performance of actual European women artists from the Old Master era. Do the results bear out an interest in gender equity, and does the market reflect a recalibration of the art historical canon?  

Source: Artnet Price Database and Artnet Analytics

For works by European Old Master women, there does seem to have been a post-Covid bump in lots sold when comparing first quarter auction results from the past six years (from 11 each in 2018 and 2019, to between 14 and 17 each in 2021–2023), keeping in mind the shifting auction schedule, but also an uptick in sell-through rate (from under 60 percent each in 2018 and 2019, to between 75 percent and 82 percent in 2021–2023).   

However, little substantial growth has emerged in either the number of lots offered from such women artists or their total auction sales in the first quarter over this period. The 24 lots offered in Q1 of 2022 and the 22 lots offered in Q1 of 2023 are only slightly more than the 21 lots offered in Q1 of 2018. Total auction sales of works by European Old Master women in the first quarter peaked in 2019, at nearly $11.8 million. Only the $9.4 million worth of such sales in Q1 of 2022 approached that figure recently, while the first quarter totals in 2023 (less than $2.2 million) and 2021 (less than $2.4 million) both underperformed the equivalent total in 2018 ($2.6 million). 

Source: Artnet Price Database and Artnet Analytics

Q1 of 2023 did not represent an apex in any price bracket for works by European Old Master women, which is not surprising based on the total sales figures, the first quarter auction schedule at Christie’s in New York notwithstanding. No works at all sold for between $1 million and $10 million during the first three months of this year—only the second time, along with 2020, that this has happened in the past six years. The first quarter of 2019 marked the high point in the sample for both total sales of works priced between $1 million and $10 million ($9.6 million in aggregate) and of works priced between $100,000 and $1 million ($2.1 million in aggregate).  

Perhaps surprising is that only six European Old Master women have sold more than $1 million worth of artwork in aggregate at auction during the first quarters of the past six years. The leader by value is Elisabeth Louise Vigée Le Brun, who totaled more than $8.1 million through the sale of 14 works during the sample period. Artemisia Gentileschi ranks second, having brought more than $6.9 million through the sale of five lots. Italian artist Fede Galizia rounds out the top three after selling just two works for a grand total of almost $4.5 million. The other three women to cross the seven-figure mark from the Old Master genre are France’s Anne Vallayer-Coster ($3.1 million), the Dutch artist Rachel Ruysch (nearly $2.6 million), and Louise Moillon ($1.8 million). 

Source: Artnet Price Database and Artnet Analytics

The U.S. has far and away been the leader in sales of works by European Old Master women over the first quarter in the past six years, notably, despite the absence of Old Master painting sales being held Q1 2018-2022 at Christie’s in New York. American auction houses have sold between $1.2 million and $11.5 million worth of such works in the first quarter of every year since 2018. The only other regional market to sell more than $295,000 worth of such lots in the first quarter of any of the last six years is France, which posted just under $2.4 million in 2022. Only six other regional markets sold any lots at all by European Old Master women during the sample period. 

Of the 15 most expensive works by such artists to sell at auction in the first quarter of any year since 2018, 14 were sold in New York. The lone exception is Louise Moillon’s Nature morte à la coupe de fraises, panier de cerises, branche de groseilles à maquereaux (1631), which brought nearly €1.7 million at French auction house Aguttes in March 2022.  

And yet, several living female artists under age 40 who incorporate Old Master themes already outsold most actual European Old Master women in the first quarter of 2023. Juszkiewicz ($1.8 million) and Yukhnovich ($1.7 million) outperformed all but the top six European Old Master women in the first three months of this year. Weyant ($767,000) outsold all but the top seven such historical artists.

It is possible the narrow supply of works by female Old Masters is partly responsible for this disparity in a genre largely reliant on re/discovery or re/attribution. But are collectors bidding up works by young women artists influenced by their classical forebears to fill a void left by historical circumstance, or is the energy around these Ultra-Contemporary artists being funneled back onto the few examples of works by women in the Old Master era? Based on our analysis, the path is uncertain. Data and anecdote provide no definitive answers to date but do offer plenty of food for thought. 

Artnet Price Database: Artnet Price Database: From Michelangelo drawings to Warhol paintings, Le Corbusier chairs to Banksy prints, you will find over 14 million color-illustrated art auction records dating back to 1985. Artnet covers more than 1,800 auction houses and 385,000 artists, and every lot is vetted by Artnet’s team of multilingual specialists. Whether you are appraising a collection, researching an artist’s market history, or pricing an artwork for sale, the Price Database provides assistance to determine the value of art. 

Disclosures: This material was published June 2023 and has been prepared for informational purposes only. Charts and graphs were published by ArtNet News in the Artnet Intelligence Report Spring 2022. The information and data in the material has been obtained from sources outside of Morgan Stanley Smith Barney LLC (“Morgan Stanley”). Morgan Stanley makes no representations or guarantees as to the accuracy or completeness of the information or data from sources outside of Morgan Stanley. 

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Retired combat photographer Larry Atherton’s work showcased in Jackson

Retired combat photographer Larry Atherton’s work showcased in Jackson

JACKSON, Tenn. — A local photographers’ work is honored in the Hub City.

Retired combat photographer Larry Atherton showcased his photography at Tennessee Industrial Printing during their business hours on Friday.

Atherthon served three years in the Marine Corp as a combat photographer capturing his surroundings during the Vietnam War.

TIPS was able to hand out printed copies of the Declaration of Independence, Constitution of the United States, and printed copies of the eagle poster to guests who visited the exhibition.

“I learned my photography by listening to other people, watching other people, getting photography magazines, Life Magazine, looking at their work [and] trying to learn what I was looking for,” Atherton said.

He says he also won a few awards along the way.

TIPS was honored to help showcase Atherton’s photos and to view the unique history of that time period.

For more news in the Jackson area, click here.

Artist residency program launches in Northwoods

Artist residency program launches in Northwoods

For the past month or so, the New York-based artist Brad Kahlhamer has been making art in a cabin studio in Minnesota’s Northwoods. 

Just before, he had been traveling through Europe, exhibiting his work at shows in Paris and Cordoba. Then, he came to Park Rapids, Minn., the north central Minnesota town surrounded by lakes at the Mississippi headwaters.

“One of the reasons I wanted to do this residency in the first place was to fish the incredible waters that you have,” says Kahlhamer, pointing to the studio wall tacked with a large piece of painted canvas: watery pools of color form the shape of a bird over blue shapes. “This eagle is in a sort of vertiginous state over a series of lakes, a chain of lakes.”

Kahlhamer, whose work resides in museum collections around the world, and Waverly Bergwin, a fellow New York artist and Kahlhamer’s apprentice, are the first artists in residence of the Nemeth Art Center, which has been in operation for more than 40 years. The residency program culminates with the opening of an exhibition July 1, which will feature the artwork they created at the cabin. 

MPR’s budget year ends on Friday and we are behind target. Your gift today makes a difference! For every donation made to MPR through Friday, we will plant a seedling in Minnesota state forests in partnership with the Future Forest Fund. Grow a more connected and sustainable Minnesota today!

Artist Aaron Spangler is the vice chair of the center’s board and curates exhibitions with the new director Mark Weiler. They say the residency was created to help bring great contemporary art and artists to a rural area, essentially the center’s mission. 

A person stands in a gallery doorway

Aaron Spangler poses for a photo in the main gallery space at the Nemeth Art Center in Park Rapids, Minn. on Monday.

Ben Hovland | MPR News

“I just want to show work that is relevant to an international and regional narrative that’s going on in visual arts, in the visual language,” Spangler says.

He grew up in Park Rapids; his mother was one of the folks that started the center in the seventies, still in its original location in the 19th-century Hubbard County Courthouse. “We’re also trying to get school kids involved in meeting the artists,” he adds, “Like me when I was growing up, I think about, what did I want? My audience is me when I was 16.” 

The Nemeth Art Center has long exhibited the work of many internationally renowned contemporary regional artists; up until last week, it was Poa Houa Her’s “Attention Series,” a collection of photographic portraits of Hmong-American veterans.  

A painting hangs on a wall in a gallery

A piece from Pao Houa Her’s “Attention Series” is seen in a recent exhibition at the Nemeth Art Center in Park Rapids, Minn. on Monday.

Ben Hovland | MPR News

It has also been fostering an artist exchange, helping send regional artists to exhibit elsewhere, such as the current “Cross Country” show at the Carolyn Glasoe Bailey Foundation’s Ojai Institute in California, featuring artists Julie Buffalohead, Bruce Engebretson, Christopher Harrison and Melba Price. (Carolyn Glasco Bailey, who died in 2015, was formerly a Minneapolis gallerist and collector).

And the residency has been sort of unofficially happening for years, Spangler says, with artists and writers coming to stay and work at the cabin that is on the same remote woodsy property where he lives with his wife, Amy Thielen, the famed chef and tv personality behind “The New Midwestern Table.”

As of June, the residency became official under the Nemeth Art Center umbrella, complete with artist stipends to support a monthlong residency.  

Kahlhamer was an easy first choice for the residency program because Spangler has known him for years, since they were both artists living in New York. They even played together for a few years in a band in Brooklyn.

Although based in New York, and part time in Arizona, Kahlhamer has roots in the Midwest (he grew up in Wisconsin), and frequently shows his work in the Twin Cities, where his art is in the collections of Walker Art Center and the Minneapolis Institute of Art, and he is represented by the Minneapolis Bockley Gallery. Kahlhamer is known for art — prints, sculpture, painting and more — that explores, often playfully, his Native and white identity.  

Spangler says he hopes the residency gives artists the space and time to try new things with zero pressure to produce anything commodifiable.

“Part of what we want to do is: We’re a place where you can really experiment with new work,” Spangler says. 

In the cabin studio, Kahlhamer points to empty beer cans Bergwin is painting with plant life. 

“So, over the period of this residency, we’ve acquired or amassed a number of cans of which, you know, we physically have drank out of,” Kahlhamer says. “And then we’ll paint them. In a way, we’re kind of rebranding various things we pulled out of Park Rapids stores. Obviously, inspired by the local fauna.” 

Kahlhamer tours the other pieces they are developing: small sculptures, a totem painting, a dream catcher, oil portraits of folks from the recent White Earth Nation powwow and a reimagined La-Z-Boy type chair he found onsite. 

Art hangs on a wall

Art pieces for Brad Kahlhamer’s upcoming Nemeth Art Center residency show hang on the wall in a studio near Park Rapids, Minn. on Monday.

Ben Hovland | MPR News

“Part of being in a residency that that has a lot of freedom is I can go through various things laying around,” Kahlhamer says. “I have a habit of improvising a lot of work, especially the sculptural work.”

Bergwin is a sculptor and writer who has been working with Kahlhamer for nine years as an apprentice, assistant and collaborator. Bergwin has also been creating their own sculpture series of “weird fairy tale swords and daggers” using wire and organic plant matter, including wildflowers and dead beetles found on site.

A person cradles a sculpture

Artist Waverly Bergwin holds a large sword sculpture named “Heartsease, the Lilith’s Rib” in the Nemeth Art Center residency studio.

Ben Hovland | MPR News

“One day I’ll go off on a cool quest or something,” Bergwin says, laughing. Bergwin and Kahlhamer have done other residencies, but those felt more like summer camp, they say. 

“We’re trying to complete the body of work here to take it to show at Nemeth,” Bergwin adds. “We have tasks, we have goals, there’s a direction with everything.” 

Mark Weiler, who became the center’s director in April, is helping move the artwork from the cabin studio to the center in town. He says just having the artists hanging around the area, having exchanges with the community, is important.

“When you bring someone like Brad Kahlhamer to work in the woods, he’s riding his bike to the general store every day, and he’s meeting the shop owners, and he’s naturally meeting people that are coming through to get gas or donuts or whatever,” Weiler says. “There’s a direct influence on that community, just from him being there and having that presence.” 

Three seated people pose for a photo

Artists Waverly Bergwin (from left), Brad Kahlhamer and Nemeth Art Center curator Aaron Spangler pose for a photo in a studio near Park Rapids, Minn. on Monday.

Ben Hovland | MPR News

He says the Nemeth Art Center wants to create a “cultural nexus” in a rural area. “There’s such a concentration of really talented world-class creatives in a small place, that it kind of lends itself to that,” says Weiler who comes to Park Rapids from Fargo, N.D., where he ran the Ecce Gallery. 

“The key is that there’s an approachability to it in Park Rapids,” Weiler says. “Artists and creatives, people in general, chefs — they’re doing things at a very high level, but not something that’s fancy and makes you kind of shy around or embarrassed. Because people are wearing sandals at the opening. It’s not the Metropolitan or something like that … it’s upscale but not uptight.”

The artist residency exhibition has an opening reception 4 to 6 p.m. Saturday, July 1, and runs through Oct. 1. In the spring of 2023, the Nemeth Art Center will welcome their next artist in residency, Madeleine Bialke.

Opinion: I opened a film lab in the age of digital photography to bring film to a new generation

Opinion: I opened a film lab in the age of digital photography to bring film to a new generation

Cowan is the owner of Safelight Labs. He lives in San Diego.

I am constantly surprised how many times someone will say to me, “They still make film for that camera?” when I am out and about in public with one of my cameras. I understand that comment because we live in a society that is dominated by technology. Just in the last 25 years, technology has grown by leaps and bounds. I have watched as cameras have evolved and are now able to do things I never thought possible: facial recognition technology, the lightning fast autofocus systems, a million possible settings inside the camera. This has sped up everything from wedding photography and commercial photography to family photos and everything in between. Everything is moving so fast. But is it moving too fast?

As a 41-year-old, I was one of the last generations to grow up in a darkroom in my high school lab. Digital cameras existed, but they weren’t affordable and available on the mass market like they are today. Kids today have only known life with Google, high speed internet access and cellphones that completely blow the original digital cameras out of the water.

I think what appeals to this younger generation is the idea of anticipation. You take a photo on film while you’re with your friends hanging out, getting coffee, on vacation, but you don’t get that instant feedback. You have to wait to get photos developed. But when you do get them back from labs like the one I own, you get a chance to relive that moment. You’ve captured a moment in time that you might have forgotten about entirely. And it’s special.

That feeling brings me the most joy because that’s what I’ve been able to experience for the last 25 years, and now a new generation gets to experience that.

My relationship with photography all started because of my mother. She was the photographer in the family, always capturing photos of my sister and I growing up in Northern California; going to the beach, Disneyland, Yosemite, skiing with family, anniversaries, etc. The physical photos we had printed out all got placed in photo albums. I loved sitting down and flipping through them, getting a chance to relive each and every one of those moments. We can try and do the same thing now with our phones or computers, scrolling through countless photos, but there is something special and magical about the dedicated photo album.

With our phones and digital cameras, we can snap away and accumulate 3,000 photos in a matter of seconds. Why, though? I don’t want that many images of the same thing. I want one, and I want it to count. When I know I have only 36 photos, I’m going to try and make each and every shot count.

Rob Cowan photo

(Rob Cowan)

I am extremely grateful to be in the industry I am in. One of my biggest joys is helping people find their first camera and starting them on their film journey. There are so many options out there, and to be honest, the internet is an extremely overwhelming place sometimes to do research, especially about cameras.

A question I constantly get asked is, “What is the best camera?” I love this question because there is no answer to it. There is only my opinion. What works best for me might not work best for you. And there is a beauty in that. The person wielding the camera makes all the difference. I use this analogy a lot with customers: If you hand a $25,000 camera to someone who has no idea how to work it and does not understand lighting, composition, ISO, shutter speed, aperture or depth of field, chances are they’re not going to provide you with an award-winning photo. But if you put a cheap camera into the hands of someone who knows what they’re doing, chances are they’re going to give you something that will be worth viewing. Cameras are just tools. And through the lens, it can unlock new worlds someone never thought even existed. Photography is truly magical.

Rob Cowan photo

(Rob Cowan)

We have lots of big plans for Camera Exposure and Safelight Labs in North Park. Without my business partner, Caitie Boreliz, we wouldn’t be able to do any of them. This summer, we are going to start construction on a new photography studio, a DIY development lab and a community darkroom, providing the San Diego photography community with a place to learn, grow and create.

We love this community and we love how ever-changing it is.

SPECTRUM PARTNERS WITH OVATION TV TO SUPPORT PARK PLAYHOUSE/PLAYHOUSE STAGE COMPANY WITH $10,000 STAND FOR THE ARTS AWARD

SPECTRUM PARTNERS WITH OVATION TV TO SUPPORT PARK PLAYHOUSE/PLAYHOUSE STAGE COMPANY WITH $10,000 STAND FOR THE ARTS AWARD

Award to Support Arts Education Programs

COHOES, N.Y., June 30, 2023 /PRNewswire/ — At Park Playhouse/Playhouse Stage Company’s 35th anniversary gala, Spectrum presented a $10,000 award as part of the Stand for the Arts Awards initiative in partnership with Ovation TV. The initiative aims to recognize local arts, cultural, and educational organizations in the community. Since its inception in 2017, Ovation TV and Spectrum have awarded a total of $600,000 in 60 awards, providing support towards arts education. 

“Our partnership with Ovation TV will enable these organizations to continue to serve as vital arts and cultural resources in their communities – which complements our focus on investing in and strengthening the towns and cities we serve,” said Adam Falk, Senior Vice President, State Government Affairs for Charter Communications, Inc., which operates the Spectrum brand of Internet, TV, Mobile and Voice services. “We congratulate this year’s Stand For The Arts honoree Park Playhouse/Playhouse Stage Company for its commitment to supporting the Capital Region artists and expanding access to high-quality arts education, exhibits, concerts and performances.”

Park Playhouse/Playhouse Stage Company will use its 2022-2023 Stand For The Arts funding to support the agency’s mission of providing the highest quality arts education programs to everyone in the Capital Region of New York. Playhouse Stage Company produces free theatre in an outdoor setting at Park Playhouse, mounting high quality, affordable productions at the historic Cohoes Music Hall.

“Making the arts accessible to all Capital Region residents and guests, without exception, is at the heart of what Playhouse Stage Company does. Our free, outdoor productions at Albany’s Park Playhouse allow tens of thousands of guests to enjoy a live performing arts event each summer, bringing our diverse community together to experience the magic of theatre. Our organization is thrilled and humbled to be recognized for our accessible programming with The Stand for the Arts Award this season,” said Owen Smith, Producing Artistic Director, Playhouse Stage Company. “Ovation TV and Spectrum bring the arts into people’s homes every day through their televised programming, and it is an honor to receive this award from organizations that share our goal of connecting all Americans to the performing arts without exclusion.” 

“Park Playhouse has helped make the arts accessible to each of our residents in Albany’s crown jewel, Washington Park, for the last 35 years,” said Albany Mayor Kathy Sheehan. “This award of $10,000 from Ovation TV and Spectrum will help support these efforts and help ensure Park Playhouse can continue to enrich the lives of the thousands of visitors for years to come.”

Park Playhouse/Playhouse Stage Company is one of 10 organizations receiving support in Spectrum markets across the country. Select arts organizations are awarded $10,000 Stand For The Arts contributions based on the following criteria: support of creatives and artists via community-driven programming; as advocates for equity and access to the arts; and for providing accessible spaces for creative expression.

“As a longtime supporter of the arts and arts education, I’m proud to celebrate this award from a partnership that continues to deliver critical support for the arts across our communities,” said Congressman Paul Tonko. “Access to the performing arts helps build self-confidence and communication skills, and I’m thrilled that this donation will allow Park Playhouse to continue its mission of making the arts accessible to all who visit and call our Capital Region home. My thanks to Spectrum and Ovation TV for their commitment to the arts and to families across our region.”

“Free Park Playhouse musicals in Washington Park and shows at the historic Cohoes Musical Hall are fun, must-see summertime activities, whether you live in Albany County or if you’re just visiting. Beyond that, the Playhouse Stage Company is a tremendous contributor to the culture and vibrancy of the Capital Region, and has been for the last 35 years,” said Albany County Executive Daniel P. McCoy. “I want to thank Spectrum and Ovation TV for this generous contribution to this organization that will allow them to continue providing quality arts education programs to our community.”

“We are pleased to continue our work with Spectrum as we enter a sixth year of our Stand For The Arts initiative partnership,” stated Sol Doten, Senior Vice President, Content Distribution and Partner Marketing for Ovation TV. “It remains our priority to champion community-driven arts organizations as they support artists and creatives on a local level.”

More information about Stand For The Arts and the Stand For The Arts Awards is available at:  www.standforthearts.com.

About Spectrum
Spectrum is a suite of advanced communications services offered by Charter Communications, Inc. (NASDAQ:CHTR), a leading broadband connectivity company and cable operator serving more than 32 million customers in 41 states. Over an advanced communications network, the company offers a full range of state-of-the-art residential and business services including Spectrum Internet®, TV, Mobile and Voice.

For small and medium-sized companies, Spectrum Business® delivers the same suite of broadband products and services coupled with special features and applications to enhance productivity, while for larger businesses and government entities, Spectrum Enterprise provides highly customized, fiber-based solutions. Spectrum Reach® delivers tailored advertising and production for the modern media landscape. The company also distributes award-winning news coverage and sports programming to its customers through Spectrum Networks. More information about Charter can be found at corporate.charter.com.

About OVATION TV America’s Premier Arts Network
As an independent television, production, and digital media company, OVATION TV has an unparalleled commitment to the arts, culture, and captivating entertainment. Showcasing a lineup of critically acclaimed premium dramas, specials, documentaries, and iconic films, OVATION TV salutes innovative storytelling with popular programming that includes Inside the Actors Studio, Murdoch Mysteries, Frankie Drake Mysteries, Arts Engines, The Fall, Midsomer Murders, The Art Of, Celebrity Conversations, and The Sound of New York. Ovation also powers JOURNY, the dedicated streaming service where art, culture, and travel intersect. The company has provided more than $15M in contributions and in-kind support to arts institutions and arts education. Its signature advocacy platform, STAND FOR THE ARTS, includes a coalition of over 150 arts organizations, cultural institutions, and arts leaders throughout the country raising awareness about art’s positive impact, protecting access for everyone, and encouraging action on behalf of the arts. OVATION TV is available on major providers via cable, satellite and telco systems including Comcast Cable/Xfinity, DIRECTV, Charter/Spectrum, Verizon FiOS, as well as on demand.  You can follow OVATION TV on Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, Instagram, OvationTV.com, and through our App,OVATION NOW.

SOURCE Ovation

Photographer Praised For Not Forcing Girls to Smile in ‘Powerful’ Pictures

Photographer Praised For Not Forcing Girls to Smile in ‘Powerful’ Pictures

Photographer tells girls not to smile

A photographer has been praised online for not forcing young girls to smile when they are having their picture taken.

Photographer Brooke Light, who is based in Charlotte, North Carolina shared one of the main rules she follows when shooting girls: if they do not want to smile, then they do not have to.

@bdlighted never underestimate the power of a photoshoot for your kids confidence #moodymini #kidsphotographer #childrensphotography #portraitphotographer #confidenceboost #kidsconfidence #familyphotoshootideas #familyphotoshoots #studiophotography #blackandwhitephoto #girlpower #girlempowerment #donttellmetosmile #momsofgirls #girlmom #greenscreen ♬ Little Girl Gone

In a viral TikTok video posted last month, Light is seen holding up her camera alongside the caption: “When your photo shoots allow girls to show up, take up space, and not smile if they don’t want to.”

Light then goes on to reveal the portraits taken during her photo shoots — beginning off with a black-and-white image of a girl adjusting her hair.

Light then goes on to show other photos she has taken of girls. Some have their heads and bodies slightly turned away from the camera but all of them are opting not to smile in the picture.

In a caption accompanying the clip, Light explains the benefits of not forcing girls to smile when having their pictures taken: “Never underestimate the power of a photo shoot for your kids’ confidence.”

‘Powerful and Authentic’

The clip has amassed over one million views on TikTok, with social media users praising Light’s attitude. Viewers applauded Light for allowing these girls to be their confident, strong, and authentic selves in her photography.

“I’m tearing up because asking a girl [to] smile has too many connotations with it. These pictures are beautiful,” a TikTok user writes.

Another viewer comments: “I love how they are not trying to be anything ‘extra’ just their own raw and savage selves.”

@bdlighted these mom’s got me blushing in my DMs 🫣📸 I’ve never had my creativity or my photography validated so much in my life. thank you for the outpouring of love on these photos this week. it’s meant more than you can ever know. #boymom #boymoms #moodymini #familyphotoshoots #familyphotoshootideas #portraitphotographer #studiophotography #kidsphotographer #kidsconfidence #childrensphotography #greenscreen ♬ Area Codes – Kaliii

Following the positive feedback from viewers, Light posted a further TikTok video in which she revealed that she doesn’t make boys smile for photos either as part of her ethos of “no forced smiles, fancy clothes, or kiddie poses.”

A 2019 study found that 98% of women surveyed had been told to smile at least once in their life, and 15% said it continues to be a weekly experience.

Many of these comments happened in the workplace. Nearly 37% of women were last told to “smile more” at their jobs. However, 25% said it happened in public and 21% said it took place while they were at home.

By their own admission, women find these requests demeaning and offensive — with one expert saying that a woman’s smile can be as much a signal of joy as a sign of submission.

More of Light’s work can be seen on his Instagram, TikTok, and website.


Image credits: Header photo via TikTok/@bdlighted.