Bucks County History: Native Artist Known as One of the Country’s Foremost Portraitists

Bucks County History: Native Artist Known as One of the Country’s Foremost Portraitists

Image via Wikipedia (Public Domain).

The artist painted several famous works, including the official portrait of Thomas Jefferson.

A painter from Bucks County has long been considered one of the most important artists in American history, creating several famous pieces. Staff writers at the Pennsylvania Center for the Book wrote about the artist.

Rembrandt Peale was born at the VanArtsdalen farm, located around the area of Richboro, in early 1778. The son of famed painter Charles Willson Peale, he was named after the Dutch painter Rembrandt Harmenszoon van Rijn.

His three brothers, Raphaelle, Rubens, and Titian, were also similarly named after legendary painters and taught in the craft by their father.

During his career, Rembrandt became known for his portraits of influential American figures, some of whom include DeWitt Clinton, Dr. David Hosack, Vice President John C. Calhoun, and Founding Fathers and Presidents George Washington and Thomas Jefferson, the latter of whom’s depiction by Peale is considered his official portrait.

Peale passed away in his house at Vine Street in Philadelphia in late 1860. The paintings he produced, along with the large collection of work by his father and siblings, has cemented the Peale family as artistic royalty in the United States and the world.

Read more about Peale and his works at the Pennsylvania Center for the Book.

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Photography workshop provides a deeper dive for young shutterbugs

Photography workshop provides a deeper dive for young shutterbugs

Russell Huffman (seated) shows the workshop participants different versions of an image, asking them which one they like better and why. From left, standing, are Julee Sullivan, Rose Sullivan, Becca Sullivan, Jason Malone, and Aurelia Mazan-Adkins.
Jay Ann Cox | El Defensor Chieftain photos

Last week, when the young patrons entered the Socorro library’s second floor meeting room, they were greeted by a table full of big cameras and even bigger lenses. The “digital photography workshop” was going to get serious really fast.

Or was it? El Defensor Chieftain photographer and assistant editor Russell Huffman began the workshop by putting an image up on the screen, and asking the participants, “Which of these cameras do you think made that photo?” They hemmed and hawed. Someone pointed to the largest, with battery pack and very long lens.

“Nope. I took that image with this.” And he picked up his iPhone. “You can make fantastic photos with just a cell phone.”

The purpose of the workshop was to familiarize the kids with some of the rules of photography, without getting hung up on the equipment. Using a cell phone meant that most of them had already taken hundreds of photos with Mom or Dad’s phone, or with their own.

Huffman said, “Let’s learn some rules and then you can break them!” He had their attention at that point.

At the Socorro Public Library photography workshop, Aurelia Mazan-Adkins, right, showed no fear in handling the big professional camera to experiment with different angles, lighting and orientation to take shots of instructor Russell Huffman.

After cell phone practice and some rules, second grader Aurelia Mazan-Adkins was thrilled when Huffman invited her to take photos with his large SLR. She was fearless in trying different angles while familiarizing herself with the viewfinder and shutter release. She took Huffman’s advice to take lots of frame seriously, snapping away while the others asked questions.

Teenager Becca Sullivan raised her hand when Huffman showed two similar images and asked the group, “which one do you like better?” Becca said she preferred the one with strong angles because it was “more dynamic.”  This was an opportunity to discuss line and composition.

Even as the workshop was winding down, the participants had many questions, and it was decided that another session would be in order sometime in the fall.

Photography tips

The following “rules” will help a novice take a snapchat and turn it into a keeper.

Shoot a lot of frames

With digital media, there is no need to take just one image. You can always delete all the extras, but it might take you 30 or 50 tries to get one fantastic image.

Rule of Odds

This easy trick for better composition is to tap into the brain’s urge to group things in pairs. If there is an “odd one out,” the human brain will take more time to process the image, making one area more dominant. This trick draws the eye to linger on the image and makes the brain work a little harder.

Rule of Thirds

With “Gridlines Enabled,” the phone photo app will show four lines, two across and two up and down. These lines divide the screen into thirds, or nine squares. A photographer does this in their mind too. The rule is to put the main subject not directly in the middle square. The eye and the brain are more drawn into or around the frame when the subject has been placed along the gridlines.

Try different angles

Pay attention to the lines formed by the subjects in your frame. If there are straight lines across or down, move the camera or your body and see if you can get a more interesting angle to the subject. Attention to line is one of the fundamentals of art.

Citeline Appoints Clinrol as Strategic Clinical Trial Partner Across APAC Region

Citeline Appoints Clinrol as Strategic Clinical Trial Partner Across APAC Region


Citeline Appoints Clinrol as Strategic Clinical Trial Partner Across APAC Region












News Home

Thursday, July 13, 2023 09:12 AM | GlobeNewswire via QuoteMedia

Citeline Appoints Clinrol as Strategic Clinical Trial Partner Across APAC Region

NEW YORK, July 13, 2023 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Citeline, a global leader in clinical trial intelligence, has announced a strategic partnership with Clinrol, a clinical trial recruitment company, to expand and enhance patient recruitment for upcoming clinical trials across the Asia-Pacific (APAC) region. Clinrol is currently recruiting research participants in Australia for clinical trials in diabetes, cancer, dermatitis and other therapeutic areas.

The partnership will combine Clinrol’s deep understanding of the Asia-Pacific clinical research and advertising landscape with Citeline’s comprehensive clinical trial intelligence platform to efficiently identify and engage with potential patients while preserving privacy. Clinrol’s long expertise in clinical trial recruitment and data-driven marketing will be used to create and implement targeted patient recruitment campaigns across multiple channels.

“Enrolling patients in clinical trials is a well-documented challenge. The difficulty of patient recruitment has been further intensified by the increasing complexity and requirements of protocols in recent studies. We are excited to appoint Clinrol as a strategic APAC partner and to further improve and expand our patient recruitment capabilities in the Asia Pacific region,” said Dave Laky, General Manager, Clinical & Regulatory at Citeline. “With their extensive experience in the Asia-Pacific market, we are thrilled to be working closely alongside the Clinrol team to innovate in this critical area for patients and pharma, ultimately accelerating the pace of clinical trials in the region and improving patient outcomes.”

Citeline’s suite of complementary pharmaceutical business intelligence tools and solutions is widely recognized as the most comprehensive and up-to-date resource for clinical trial information, with data covering over 50 therapeutic areas and more than 200 countries. By combining this data and Citeline Connect’s

Global Patient Recruitment Collective

with Clinrol’s expertise in marketing, the partnership aims to improve patient recruitment rates and ultimately reduce the time and cost associated with clinical trial recruitment.

“With our understanding of the APAC clinical research landscape coupled with data-driven marketing, we are confident that we can help accelerate the pace of clinical research and make a real difference in people’s lives,” said Arjun Bhat, Co-Founder and Chief Executive Officer of Clinrol. “Patient enrollment is one of the primary reasons a clinical trial fails, and at least 80% of pharmaceutical trials do not meet enrollment deadlines. Approximately $1 million AUD of losses is experienced each day a trial is delayed. We are thrilled to partner with Citeline to speed up the pace of recruitment and help bring life-changing therapies to patients in need.”

For more information on the Citeline Connect patient referral network, visit

https://pages.pharmaintelligence.informa.com/Partner-Connect-100-Sponsor

.


About Clinrol



Clinrol


was established in 2020, specializing in data-driven patient recruitment and management of clinical trials. Using state-of-the-art marketing strategies, technology and expertise, Clinrol more effectively finds, pre-screens, recruits and manages patients while maintaining strict ethical and privacy principles for clinical trials globally.


About Citeline

Citeline, a

Norstella

company, powers a full suite of complementary business intelligence offerings to meet the evolving needs of life science professionals to accelerate the connection of treatments to patients and patients to treatments. These patient-focused solutions and services deliver and analyze data used to drive clinical, commercial, and regulatory-related decisions and create real-world opportunities for growth.

Citeline’s global teams of analysts, journalists and consultants keep their fingers on the pulse of the pharmaceutical, biomedical and medtech industries, covering it all with expert insights: key diseases, clinical trials, drug R&D and approvals, market forecasts and more. For more information on one of the world’s most trusted health science partners, visit


Citeline


.

For more information about


Clinrol


and


Citeline


, please visit their respective websites.

Media Contact:

Clinrol

Ram Bhat | Chief Marketing Officer

+61 472 705 327 |


ram@clinrol.com

Citeline

Diffusion PR for Citeline



citeline@diffusionpr.com



(213) 318-4500

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Today we would like to share with you a collection of unique works by Ben Heine. This creator came up with an idea of how to take two separate genres of art he loves and combine them into one piece. The series “Pencil Vs Camera” features impressive images where photography and illustration merge.

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Senegal’s lone developer fights to revive photography with film

Senegal’s lone developer fights to revive photography with film

From a concrete jetty on Dakar’s sun-baked coastline, Senegalese photographer Amy Saar clicked the shutter of her vintage Pentax camera, capturing the light of the horizon on colour film purchased from the country’s only developer. “Dakar looks great with certain coloured films, because they really bring out the warm, vibrant colours,” Saar said, loading a fresh roll into the camera. “Film can be really great in Africa, because in general it’s sunny (and) very colourful.”

Saar is part of a growing resurgence of analogue photography enthusiasts in Senegal, nurtured by Le Sel studio in the capital’s Ouakam neighbourhood. Co-owners Kevin Aubert and Thiibaut Piel co-founded Senegal’s sole studio of its kind two years ago in Aubert’s apartment, with an ambitious goal to reignite the country’s passion for the craft through film sales and workshops.

After decades of dwindling interest, the global market for film cameras and equipment is expected to grow nearly 4% through 2029, according to a study published by Precision Reports in May. Limited access to film and darkroom spaces have hindered African photographers’ ability to participate in film’s global resurgence, despite the craft having played a significant role in the region’s post-colonial artistic history.

Le Sel’s mission is not just to develop film, Aubert said, but to educate photographers about the origins of the medium, and show that understanding the analogue process can enhance their digital expertise. “When they see the image they shot themselves appearing for the first time, it is always a treat.” Aubert said as he led a workshop. “It teaches us a lot about the image, the way to look at it, and the way to manage it.”

Aubert hopes to expand Le Sel into a larger space to house more workshops, exhibits, and even an in-house gallery. In the meantime, local photographers like Eva Diallo are already showing works developed there at some of Dakar’s most prestigious art houses. “The film process is much more conscious than digital or iPhone photos,” Diallo said during her solo exhibition at Dakar’s Gallerie Cecile Fakhoury. “It’s important to be aware during the time it takes, from the moment you take the image … and the moment you have it on paper.” (Writing by Cooper Inveen; Editing by Alison Williams)

(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

Ramie Ahmed on documenting his Black trans and queer chosen family in New York City

Ramie Ahmed on documenting his Black trans and queer chosen family in New York City

If you look, much can be found photographically of queer people in New York City. But is it enough, is it Black enough and who has been holding the camera? These are the questions that New Jersey born and raised Ramie Ahmed is answering within his practice as a “lens-based artist” documenting his Black trans and queer chosen family in the city. “I want to shed a light on the vast community, so that others can be inspired to live authentically”. And with such intention behind his work, he walks around with his camera held high – not by his hip waiting to get a secret shot – so that his subjects can be brought into the moment, looking straight down his lens.

Ramie’s process consists of more than a snap; he seeks to bring every person he documents into a moment of joy and safety. Capturing beauty, protest, couples holding hands, park-bench laughter and club nights, he is creating narratives outside of campaigns within genuine communities. And besides being inspired by Nan Goldin’s similar penchant for documenting the less visible, Ramie is simply driven by his friends. “They keep their heads high, carry themselves with grace despite the world we live in as LGBTQ+ people – and they look good doing it”.

Reeling in the Years

Reeling in the Years

In many ways, a building is the lead character in this story. 

The building in question is no mere building, of course, but more an artifact with an actual aura — both a historic marker and a living relic without which Eugene would not quite be Eugene.

Located on 13th Avenue between Mill and Ferry streets, within spitting distance of the University of Oregon campus, the Wilcox Building is home to the former Bijou Art Cinemas, now redubbed and revitalized as the Art House.

Its name is bluntly fitting: every small-to-medium, liberal-minded college town worth its salt does — or at least should — have an “art house,” a quirky independent theater that serves up a heady dose of foreign, cult, old, new and otherwise hip and artsy films.

Architecturally speaking, the place is an anomaly up here in brutalist Niketown: An unlikely example of the Spanish Colonial Revival style, with its white stucco walls, vaulted ceilings, cathedral windows and inner courtyard, the building looks like a transplant from the NorCal gold rush — say, from Mission San Juan Batista, where Alfred Hitchcock filmed the final scenes of his 1958 masterpiece Vertigo.

The reference is fitting, because Vertigo — remastered, cleaned up and splashed huge on a big new screen — is exactly the kind of gem the Art House might feature during a Hitchcock retrospective.

When the Bijou suddenly closed its doors in March 2021, smack in the middle of the pandemic (which, obviously, hit movie theaters particularly hard), a chill went through Eugene’s population of devout cinephiles. The theater had been the area’s hub of independent, auteur and foreign films since 1981, from British historical dramas and Scandinavian bummers to cult hits, offbeat documentaries and grindhouse classics, and everything in-between.

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The Art House’s Ed Schiessl and Louise Thomas in the theater’s courtyard hallway, which is wallpapered with archival Bijou flyers. Photo by Todd Cooper.

“The Bijou closing was big news,” says Ed Schiessl, the managing director of the newly minted Art House. “Everybody knows it shut down, but they don’t know it reopened.”

Schiessl has history with the place, to say the least. One of his first jobs in high school was as a projectionist and night manager of the Bijou, in 1998; from there he became a co-owner in 2010, then expanded to open the Broadway Metro downtown in 2013, which he still manages; then split off from the Bijou in 2016; and in August 2022, Schiessl took the leap of reopening the moribund Bijou as the Art House.

One of his first goals was to revamp the aging and sometimes creaky features of the moviehouse, including replacing the cramped seating as well as installing new projection and sound systems in both theaters. “We’re upgraded and we’re comfortable,” Schiessl says.

For anyone who frequented the old Bijou, the updates are welcome and often stunning, traipsing a delicate balance between honoring the history of the place and giving it a modern yet retro-cool updating — including the pomo-vintage movie posters by local outfit Blunt Graffix adorning the walls of Auditorium 1, the Art House’s main theater.

“Like a lot of community members, we didn’t want to see such a meaningful cultural institution slip away,” says Schiessl, who honored the Bijou’s heritage by incorporating the theater’s beloved late cat, Boo, into the Art House logo. “Having invested so much of our lives into the Bijou, it really felt like our responsibility as its former stewards to step in and save it, again.”

Louise Thomas is the Art House’s promotional director. Like Schiessl, she has a long association with the theater, having been instrumental in the running of the original Bijou; in fact, she was already there, working behind the scenes (as it were) when Schiessl was brought aboard as a teenager.

Perhaps the foremost historian of the building and the theater’s storied existence, Thomas also says she felt a strong sense of duty in making sure the place survived as a cultural entity. “Since its shutdown during the quarantine,” she says, “those of us who have long been associated with the Bijou have been beset by questions about its ultimate disposition. Certainly this suggests that there is a Bijou-shaped hole in Eugene’s cultural landscape.”

Thomas explains that the building’s owner, Jan Rush, reached out last year in order to let her and Schiessl know that the previous owners had terminated their lease, and that she, Rush, was insistent and supportive of efforts to keep the theater going.

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Folk singer-songwriter Jamie Drake performing at the Art House. Photo by Nicole Surber.

“She clearly understood how important the Bijou is to the community,” Thomas says of Rush, “and that the original Bijou folks from the ‘80s and ‘90s possess the authentic heart, soul and vision to sustain what makes that space unique while adapting to modern tech and market conditions.”

As the saying goes, where there’s a will there’s a way, but the way can be twisty, precipitous and fraught with obstacles. In the case of the Art House, those obstacles are significant, if not outright Sisyphean, which both Schiessl and Thomas acknowledge. Not only is there the notorious and industry-wide shrinkage of moviegoing audiences thanks to the pandemic and its slow, halting recovery, but there have been tectonic changes in the economics and distribution within the movie industry itself — everything from the advent of streaming services to the mainstream marketing of independent movies to big cineplexes, and beyond.

Add to this the local and sometimes parochial confusion about the demise and current state of the old Bijou, and the Art House — despite the brains, passion and legacy behind its revitalization — can be fighting a sort of tabula rasa situation, inventing itself anew against a slew of entrenched expectations. In short, news of the theater’s death has been greatly exaggerated, and in fact the current crew is doing everything it can to bring the moviehouse thriving into this strange new world.

“While the timing is not ideal… attendance for indie theaters has only rebounded to about 60 percent of what it was pre-pandemic… there was never any question about whether we needed to step up and rescue the theater,” Thomas says.

“Things are getting better, but slowly,” says Schiessl, who points out that the Broadway Metro itself survived the downturn with a series of emergency grants and loans as well as “side hustles” like home delivery, Blu-ray rentals and private screenings during the pandemic shutdown. “It’s going to take a long time to really see what the permanent fallout on indie theaters is post-pandemic, but for now we can see that there’s very little audience support for the kind of indie and art-house programming that historically sustained theaters like the Bijou.”

As with many businesses rocked by the economic and social disruptions of the coronavirus, the team behind the Art House has been forced to pivot, and is still in the process of doing so. While maintaining a traditional line-up of indie, repertory and foreign films, along with some first-run hits, Schiessl landed upon the idea of funding dedicated film series — sort of mini film fests — through Kickstarter campaigns. Already the Art House has featured career retrospectives from David Lynch and the Italian master Federico Fellini.

“In both cases,” Schiesslsays, “supporters pledged enough tickets to fund out-of-pocket costs of the series up front. The crowdfunding model has been an inspiration in many ways. It acts not only as a positive feedback loop for our programming, but also as a community builder… It’s a unique opportunity, in that we can float some unusual ideas and know if the community is on board without taking a huge financial risk.”

Such community engagement, Schiessl says, is crucial not only in getting people back to the movies but in positioning the space itself as a cultural hub, which is a big part of his focus. On that front, the Art House has already hosted live music in its larger auditorium. The idea is to foster a sense that the theater is something of an artistic hub, where folks can see anything  from concerts and live broadcast of the National Theater and Met Opera, to art exhibitions on screen and literary readings.

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The Warpaint video for “Stevie” featuring band member Emily Kokal,
was shot in Art House’s auditorium one by theater manager Ed Schiessl.

“At this moment,” Schiessl says, “I’m pretty focused on keeping a lively film schedule and ramping up live music and community events. But on a long enough timeline, I’d like to make this a place where cinephiles and other artists and aesthetes come for an espresso or a beer, even when they’re not seeing a show.”

In this regard, the building itself, preserved but improved, is perhaps its own best advertisement and incentive to explore new possibilities. “The Wilcox building is a really unique and beautiful venue,” Thomas says, “but it’s always had a lot of unrealized potential. It’s our intention to invite the community back into a reinvented space with a much broader scope of opportunities and events than have been possible before.

“Things were in rough shape when we took possession of the space last winter,” she continues, “but after several months of cleaning and repairs, it’s never felt more inviting.”

Eugene Art House is at 492 E 13th Avenue. For further information and events, visit EugeneArtHouse.com.