In a Celebration of Biodiversity, Vibrant Marine Creatures Swim Across Casa Adams’ Porcelain Platters

In a Celebration of Biodiversity, Vibrant Marine Creatures Swim Across Casa Adams’ Porcelain Platters

All images © Casa Adams, shared with permission

Vivid patterns and the myriad shapes of marine denizens inspire an ongoing series of porcelain platters by Araceli Adams. Working under the studio name Casa Adams, the Sydney-based artist paints colorful crustaceans, mollusks, and fish, highlighting different features in a celebration of biological variety. “Each piece has the species name written on the back, with the hope that it might spark a conversation about our beautiful biodiversity over a meal,” she says, “The plates are made to be used every day.”

When enrolled in ceramics classes around ten years ago at Greenwich House Pottery in New York City, Adams fell in love with porcelain. “I had always loved drawing and painting, so being able to do so on a functional medium such as a plate just seemed perfect,” she says. Her interest in Australian sea life developed when she met her husband. “He grew up in Lake Macquarie, (on) Australia’s largest saltwater lake, and each time we visited his parents, we went fishing, crabbing, and really made the most of being so close to the water. My curiosity to learn more about our underwater species just continued to grow since then.”

In her classes, Adams teaches students to work with underglazes and about the species they paint. She recently partnered with Dr. Yi-Kai Tea, an ichthyologist and taxonomist, to learn about fish he named and then portray them on porcelain. “What I am trying to convey with my ceramics is to make pieces that reflect the sheer beauty of our marine biodiversity—in Australia and across the globe—so they elicit wonder, spark curiosity to learn more, and ultimately nudge towards supporting conservation efforts.”

Find more on Casa Adams’ website, where upcoming classes and available pieces are listed in the shop, and follow updates on Instagram.

 

Porcelain platters decorated with fish, crabs, and coral.

A porcelain platter decorated with a lobster.

Four porcelain platers decorated with fish, photographed on a patterned background.

A selection of porcelain plates and platters with sea creatures, photographed on a gingham table cloth.

Twelve porcelain plates decorated with crabs.  A selection of porcelain plates decorated with sea creatures, photographed with shells and coral collected around them.

A porcelain platter decorated with a lobster.

An array of porcelain platters decorated with sea creatures, displayed on a wall above a stove.

A selection of platters decorated with fish, organized on a table and photographed from above.

Do stories and artists like this matter to you? Become a Colossal Member today and support independent arts publishing for as little as $5 per month. The article In a Celebration of Biodiversity, Vibrant Marine Creatures Swim Across Casa Adams’ Porcelain Platters appeared first on Colossal.

Ephemeral but Unforgettable: Korean Experimental Art Is Having a Star Turn

Ephemeral but Unforgettable: Korean Experimental Art Is Having a Star Turn
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A Guggenheim exhibition shines a light on a remarkable but lesser-known art scene in South Korea that thrived in the tumult of the 1960s and 1970s.

The 1960s and 1970s were tumultuous in South Korea, with a military dictatorship pushing breakneck economic growth and suppressing civil rights. In the midst of this upheaval, young artists pursued radical projects.

Rejecting the expressive abstract painting in vogue in the 1950s, they embraced performance, video and photography, and favored unusual materials (neon, barbed wire, cigarettes). They had been born during the Japanese occupation and lived through the Korean War; some looked to the past, taking inspiration from Korean folk forms. They forged collectives, holding shows, translating art texts from abroad (travel was restricted) and staging performances along rivers and in theaters. Kim Kulim recorded snippets of daily life in a fast-changing Seoul in his frenetic film “The Meaning of 1/24 Second” (1969). Their genre-defying efforts have come to be categorized as “silheom misul,” experimental art.

“It was a period of, I would say, true transformation,” Kyung An, an associate curator at the Guggenheim Museum in New York, said in an interview, and “artists were trying to negotiate their place within that world.” Her exhibition “Only the Young: Experimental Art in Korea, 1960s-1970s,” opening at the Guggenheim on Friday, shows the potent responses that more than 40 made during a fraught time. (Organized with Kang Soojung, a senior curator at Seoul’s National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art, Korea, or MMCA, the show travels to the Hammer Museum in Los Angeles on Feb. 11.)

Highways, skyscrapers and jam-packed streets: Kim Kulim’s thrilling short film “The Meaning of 1/24 Second” (1969) captures Seoul in the midst of rapid change.via Kim Kulim, photo: Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York

“There was really no market,” An said, “and that’s why a lot of the works did not survive.” Some were later remade. Others endure only in photographs or as memories. A black-and-white image shows the trailblazing Jung Kangja, clad in underwear in a music hall in 1968, as people attached transparent balloons to her body, then popped them. Jung, who died in 2017, was one of the few women prominent in the scene. “I think the still-conservative values and expectations placed on women’s role in society must have made it difficult for many,” An said.

As the 1970s progressed, the atmosphere became more tense. Martial law was imposed. The length of skirts was regulated. Artists were surveilled, detained and beaten. They kept going. Some are making art to this day, and were able to attend when “Only the Young” ran at the MMCA earlier this year. This summer, I met four of the artists, with interpreters, to discuss their lives and the show.

Lee Kun-Yong’s art charts the possibilities of the body — and the forces that constrain it. In “Logic of Place” (1975/2018), he cycles his fingers through various configurations, showing how much can be done with only what is near at hand.via Lee Kun-Yong

As the government clamped down on avant-garde art in the mid-1970s, Lee Kun-Yong received a notice stating that the National Museum of Modern Art (now the MMCA) could no longer show his performance-based art. Furious, he lit it on fire before his fellow artists. “It was a mistake burning that letter,” Lee said, sitting in his studio within a warehouse complex just outside Seoul. Today, it would be an important artifact.

The day before our meeting, Lee had been at the MMCA to enact one of his trademark pieces, the deliciously titled “Snail’s Gallop,” which he first performed in 1979. In a sitting squat, he glided white chalk back and forth across rubber as he ambled forward, his bare feet erasing parts of his marks. It was an astonishing display of dexterity for anyone, but especially for an 81-year-old.

Born in North Korea, Lee came to Seoul with his family in 1945. A teenager after the Korean War, he attended lectures at foreign cultural centers. Ludwig Wittgenstein entranced him, and he painted a portrait of the philosopher, hanging it in his room. (“Jesus looks a bit different,” he recalls his mother saying.) In his late 20s, Lee co-founded a group called Space and Time (ST). In one memorable work, in 1971, he displayed a whole tree, uprooted during a highway-construction program, at a museum. Performing at an art festival in the city of Daegu in 1979, he placed his personal possessions and clothes on the ground, and laid face down — “a self-inflicted strip search,” as the art historian Joan Kee put it.

Lee Kun-Yong at his studio in Goyang, just outside Seoul. His art is “about communicating with things that are close to us,” he said.Jean Chung for The New York Times

Lee has spent his life charting the possibilities and limitations of the body, often making drawings and paintings via simple actions. Standing with his back or side to a canvas or piece of wood, he reaches as far as he can with a brush and makes marks. Canvases with traces of his movements fill his studio. They are vibrant and alive, yet he is modest about his practice. “My art is not special,” he said. “It’s not unique. It’s about communicating with things that are close to us. So, if the audience looks into it deeply, we’ll be able to find things that relate to us both.”

Sung Neung Kyung at his home in Seoul, surrounded by photos of himself in various guises. An indefatigable experimenter, he has addressed in his art press censorship and societal conventions of all kinds.Jean Chung for The New York Times

In the mid-1970s, “my slogan for myself — my motto, if you will — was to be truthful and honest in the face of history,” Sung Neung Kyung said at the Lehmann Maupin gallery in Seoul. After finishing his mandatory military service in 1973, he joined the ST group, and the following year enacted one of the era’s defining artworks.

For a week, Sung hung each day’s Dong-a Ilbo newspaper on a gallery wall, removed the articles with a razor blade, and placed them in a box. He left only the ads. “The question that I wanted to ask was: What is the underlying hidden meaning found in these clippings, in these newspapers, that are subject to so much editorial pressure and editorial censorship?” he said. Months later, in a bizarre case of life imitating art, President Park Chung Hee’s administration pressured companies to pull their ads from that paper, which printed blank spaces in protest, with messages of support from the public.

Sung, 79, exudes mischief and equanimity, but he admitted to being frightened while making this piece. Entering the venue with his razor blade, he recalled, “I would look around to see if there were any strange men wearing sunglasses nearby.” One day, a journalist showed up and asked for an interview, which he declined, hoping to avoid notoriety.

That was successful. Sung has often operated under the radar, always experimenting, poking at power and convention. “Art is easy and life is hard,” he once wrote. His diverse endeavors have included making notations atop news photos to highlight how they shape the truth, and performing while dressed in outrageous outfits, like a bathing suit and shower cap. “I’ve always kind of kept off the main track,” he said. No longer.

Traditional crafts transform into avant-garde art in Seung-taek Lee’s practice. His “Untitled (Sprout)” (1963/2018) piece — shown here at the Guggenheim exhibition — consists of six unusually shaped onggi, earthenware used for fermentation.via Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation; photo by Ariel Ione Williams

Beguiling artworks and objects fill every inch of Seung-taek Lee’s home near Hongik University in Seoul, where he studied in the 1950s. There are hourglass-shaped stones tied with rope, tree branches, impish self-portraits and clumps of hair. “Around this area, there was a wig factory,” Lee said, “and one day they threw out all this hair.”

Lee, 91, has spent his life creating art from unexpected and discarded materials. Starting out, he thought, “I have to do something that no one else has done,” he said. “Maybe I can find a form in our own cultural heritage.” He stacked earthenware used for fermentation into sculptures and, taking inspiration from Godret stones (weights used in weaving), he chiseled crevices in stones, wrapping them with rope to create the illusion that the rocks are being squeezed. He worked outdoors, letting the wind move through long streams of fabric, and in one of his well-known projects, set his canvases ablaze on the Han River — “serious illegal behavior,” he said.

Seung-taek Lee at his home studio in Seoul with a sculpture — wire wrapped around a chiseled rock — inspired by Godret stones, which are used in traditional Korean weaving.Jean Chung for The New York Times

These were not lucrative ventures. Growing up in the Communist North, however, Lee had learned to make large-scale sculptures (of Kim Il-sung and Joseph Stalin), and after the Korean War, he fulfilled commissions in the South for very different subjects, including Gen. Douglas MacArthur. He also made portraits for soldiers, and in 1967 found himself on a military base near the DMZ, where he spotted an enormous mass of human hair, shorn from new recruits. With permission from the authorities, he rearranged that hair into an astonishing installation, placing it in bags or in rows — an abstract, anonymous group portrait.

Lee himself had been a soldier with the South, having fled the North after fighting began. During our interview, he showed where he had been shot in the knee, at age 20. “I hope that I opened new windows for generations to come — not only my own generation,” he said. His goal has been to show “that art can be something very different.”

Lee Kang-So last weekend in one of his studio buildings in Anseong, South Korea, with a taxidermy chicken. Passing a market in the 1970s, seeing deer bones and hens, he wondered, “Can this be art?”Jean Chung for The New York Times

At 80, Lee Kang-So lives in an expansive compound in Anseong, about 90 minutes south of Seoul, where he has various studios devoted to sculptures, installations and the minimal paintings that have made him a giant. But 50 years ago, he was still finding his way as he sat in a tavern in Daegu, his hometown, drinking makgeolli (a rice wine) with a friend. It was afternoon, the room was empty, but as he looked at the burns and scuffs left on the tables by cigarettes and pots, he felt he could hear the people who had been there. He pondered the transient nature of life and how he and his friend were experiencing the same room differently. “It was really a special moment,” he said.

For six days in 1973, Lee Kang-So offered Korean rice wine and snacks to all comers at Myongdong Gallery in Seoul, a fleeting work that he titled “Disappearance — Bar in the Gallery.” via National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art, Korea

Lee bought the chairs and tables from the restaurant, and when he was offered a show at the Myongdong Gallery in Seoul in 1973, he hauled the furniture into the venue and served makgeolli for six days. His idea was that, rather than expressing something, he could give people “a forum to experience something together.” Friends and local residents came by for this fleeting participatory project, which had a political valence during martial law, when large gatherings were suspect. “After a week, the white-cube space smelled like a bar,” he said, “so they had to do a huge cleaning job.” He titled the piece “Disappearance — Bar in the Gallery.” Sadly (but, in some sense, fittingly), a caretaker later burned the furniture, mistaking it for junk.

Other elements of daily life seeped into his art. Passing through a market one day in the mid-1970s, Lee saw “an old lady selling deer bone,” used in traditional medicine, “and then, right behind her, they were slaughtering hens,” he said. “I was thinking, Can this be art?” He incorporated deer bones into an installation and made a kind of random drawing by placing a chicken near a floor covered with white chalk, which left footprints as it strolled about.

It was a heady time, but after experimenting with outré mediums, Lee would turn to age-old materials, like paint and canvas, as he moved forward. These pictures are airy, loose and spectral, often just a few black calligraphic marks floating across white fields. They suggest ideas or images in transitional states — here and not here, coming into being just as they fade away.

Only the Young: Experimental Art in Korea, 1960s-1970s

Sept. 1.-Jan. 7, 2024 at the Guggenheim Museum, 1071 Fifth Avenue, Manhattan; (212) 423-3500; guggenheim.org.

An Austin Apartment That Reflects Its Film Producer Owner

An Austin Apartment That Reflects Its Film Producer Owner

44 East Avenue is a minimal apartment located in Austin, Texas, designed by Austin- and London-based interior design studio Stelly Selway. The 1,221-square-foot unit comprises two bedrooms, two bathrooms, and an outdoor patio. The space serves as both a functional residence and a sanctuary for its owner, a female film producer in her thirties.

The design team maximized impact through deliberate choices in color, texture, and storage solutions. Built-in cabinetry and shelving provided practical utility while adhering to the apartment’s coherent visual narrative. Adding a handmade touch, Stelly Selway designed custom maple plywood shelving units. Here, the designers made the conscious choice to leave the wood’s edge stack exposed, showcasing its unrefined material quality.

“We ended this project sitting at a 100-year-old dining table with our client eating jelly beans from a vintage Japanese tea seat. She was sitting on top of the table laughing while she showed us her collection of fashion designs from the different films she’s worked on, and told us stories about the people who wore them. The most memorable thing was how the space allowed her to express herself freely and be a source of inspiration through this period of her life,” says Stelly Selway.

The apartment is pulled together with walls in a soothing lime-wash hue, charmeuse hemp silk window treatments, earth-toned rugs, and vintage and antique elements sourced from Stelly Selway’s extensive network. Each design choice was deliberately aimed at mirroring the client’s unique interests in nature and the creative arts.

Corner shot of living room area of 44 East Ave

Macro shot of sofa and window

Bar stools and kitchen counter

Office area with built-in shelving

Office area with built-in shelving

Office area with built-in shelving

Corner shot of bedroom at 44 East Ave

Shot of headboard within bedroom at 44 East Ave

Bedroom shot at 44 East Ave

Corner shot of bedroom at 44 East Ave

Bedroom shot at 44 East Ave

Bedroom shot at 44 East Ave

Photography by Austin Leis.

Leo Lei translates his passion for minimalism into his daily-updated blog Leibal. In addition, you can find uniquely designed minimalist objects and furniture at the Leibal Store.

On Fire Island, a Home for Art — and the Artists Who Make It

On Fire Island, a Home for Art — and the Artists Who Make It
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How a New York homeowner and a pair of gay architects turned a midcentury Sears catalog kit house in the Pines into a contemporary refuge that looks nothing like its neighbors.

THERE’S A DISTINCT palette to Fire Island Pines, the gay beach getaway a two-hour train ride from New York City. Boxy houses and boardwalks made of untreated cedar have gone gray from the salt air. Pale sand dunes covered in sea grass and holly trees are muted against the men in neon swim briefs who wander through them. But one house stands out amid the uniformity: a modest, 1,100-square-foot white two-bedroom with a gently peaked roof, its walls filled with colorful contemporary art. Architecturally, it looks like it belongs in Palm Springs; its contents would be at home in any Manhattan gallery.

When the financial adviser Ilan Cohen, 56, found the property in 2021, he asked his friend the 38-year-old painter Doron Langberg to tour it with him. The two had become close a few years earlier, after Cohen bought a painting of Langberg’s for his collection of queer-focused art, which he’d begun acquiring around 2010. Both men had been renting shares in the Pines for many summers but, during the pandemic, Cohen decided to find a permanent escape where he could invite artists and others to stay in his guest bedroom. “It’s not about having art on the walls,” he says, “but about them having a place and creating something here.”

In the sitting area, there’s a Hay sofa, a Finn Juhl lounge chair, a floor lamp by In Common With and a Wittus wood-burning stove beneath a watercolor by Stephen Truax.Chris Mottalini

He immediately knew that this house was the right one: Its slim profile, inspired by the California midcentury Modernism of the American architect Joseph Eichler, had floor-to-ceiling glass windows at the front and back to let in light. The original owner had constructed it from a Sears catalog kit in 1959, making it one of the oldest dwellings on the east end of the island (which is technically more of a sandbar). When Cohen bought it, there were still remnants of a 1999 renovation, including jewel-toned laminate doors on the kitchen cabinetry. To update it, he hired Noam Dvir and Daniel Rauchwerger, a couple who also own in the Pines and are co-principals of the Manhattan architectural firm BoND (short for Bureau of Noam and Daniel). Like Cohen and Langberg, the designers began frequenting Fire Island after they moved to United States from Israel, where they were born and raised.

An in-progress work by Doron Langberg propped against a custom kitchen island designed by BoND. The mixed-media piece on the back wall is by Michiel Ceulers.Chris Mottalini
In the dining room, Langberg’s first mural, alongside other works in progress, is behind a Harbour table and chairs by Artek and Normann Copenhagen.Chris Mottalini

For more than a century, back when New York artists like Paul Cadmus and George Platt Lynes first came to summer here, Fire Island has variously appealed to queer creative types. When the renovation was nearly complete in the early summer of 2021, Langberg used the house to store his pigments, canvases and easels for painting trips to the nearby forest, known colloquially as the Meat Rack because men are known to cruise there. “I would hang all the paintings and Ilan and I would talk about them, and I would get ideas,” he says. With all the Hebrew being spoken, Rauchwerger, 36, likened it to a “kibbutz, but with fences.”

The architects preserved the original Modernist layout of the house, with its end-to-end sightlines; the aluminum side table in the back bedroom by Frama CPH is next to a Jens Risom chair.Chris Mottalini
In the primary bedroom, T.M. Davy’s portrait of his partner, Liam Davy, on top of a Design Within Reach bedside table, is lit from above by an In Common With hanging pendant.Chris Mottalini

THE ARCHITECTS STARTED by stripping away the colorful finishes, then moved the stovepipe fireplace to the other side of the 600-square-foot main room to create distinct spaces for lounging and dining. Most of the overhead shelving and cabinets were removed, and kitchen appliances — including the refrigerator and freezer — were sunk low in an island and adjacent cabinets to create unobstructed sightlines and allow conversation to flow easily across the open floor plan. “We were trying to de-complicate and bring back the simplicity of the original idea,” says Dvir, 40. At the same time, Rauchwerger adds, “Modernism was quite rigid at times, so we introduced blurred boundaries.” Along one wall of the living area, they installed wood paneling at contrasting vertical and 45-degree angles in homage to Horace Gifford, the architect of many in-demand historic homes in the Pines. On the ceiling, a fresh coat of glossy white paint reflects aquamarine from a saltwater pool set into the front deck. The only areas left unchanged were the twinned bathrooms, with their royal blue tile and voyeuristic ribbed-glass wall, through which the adjacent showers are foggily visible to one another.

Cohen on his back deck, which is furnished with a Hay outdoor dining set.Chris Mottalini

From the beginning, Cohen knew he wanted a mural behind his dining table. Langberg — whose luminous oil-on-canvas scene of two men reclining naked in bed together, “Lovers at Night” (2023), was recently acquired by the Metropolitan Museum of Art — had never painted one before, although he soon began experimenting with diluted acrylic, which would be less vulnerable to the island’s heat and humidity. Last summer, over the course of a single day, he completed an ethereal beach scene, depicting a view toward the sea from the Meat Rack, which adds a nearly eight-foot expanse of roiling color behind the round wood Harbour table. As Langberg says, “There’s something quintessential to the Fire Island experience of witnessing either moonrise or the sun coming up in the early hours of the morning after a night out.”

The mural keeps company with pieces by several other artists, many of them island regulars. A watercolor by the 38-year-old painter Stephen Truax, depicting a man tanning on the beach, hangs on the living room wall. At the back of the house, in the well-shaded primary bedroom, two early works by T.M. Davy flank the bed. One’s a 2012 painting of a single lit candle; the other a 2006 portrait of his partner, Liam Davy, the owner of the Pines-based landscaping company Gay Gardens, who planted the edges of Cohen’s property with native summersweet, blue vervain and hibiscus, some of which made their way into Langberg’s landscape paintings.

Another view of Cohen’s bedroom, with a candle painting by Davy and a photograph by Mark McKnight.Chris Mottalini
The wooden front gate, which came with the house.Chris Mottalini

“Each person that shapes Ilan’s house is also someone who’s close to him,” the artist says. Dvir and Rauchwerger, whose clients are mostly L.G.B.T.Q, were especially proud to leave their mark on their favorite queer idyll: The project was their first in the Pines, and now they’ve begun work on their sixth. “You can’t take this place for granted,” Dvir says. “This renaissance we’ve seen in the last six or seven years has to do with people mortgaging their future and buying a place here knowing all of the complications.” During the AIDS epidemic, many residents of the Pines and neighboring Cherry Grove died, then the region became less popular in the late 1990s — there were simply too many ghosts lingering. Yet if the crowded bars and boardwalks this summer are any indication (not to mention last year’s “Fire Island” film), the vacation destination is busier than ever. This resurgence has come even as storms and rising sea levels have washed away much of the beach this year, portending an uncertain future.

Through it all, Cohen and his guests are holding steady. Langberg returned this summer along with other artists, including the painter Louis Fratino and the sculptor Oren Pinhassi, who all found time to dream up new work or just take a break. Come what may, art will always have a home here.

Through the Lens with Michelle Mensing Photography

Through the Lens with Michelle Mensing Photography

The western, rural, and ag life has been a part of Michelle Mensing’s entire life, and now she’s sharing it with the rest of the world through her photography. 

Krysta: Can you give our audience a little background on yourself and you got into photography?

Michelle: I grew up on a family farm in southwest Iowa and was active in 4-H and FFA where I began learning more about photography and showing some of my images at the fair. Following college, I started my career in the agriculture industry and picked up a camera again as a hobby. I loved how that creative outlet kept me connected to the family farm I grew up on. My husband and I also enjoy traveling to see and photograph beautiful rural America. 

Krysta: Has your style of photography changed at all since you started your business? If so, how would you describe your style then compared to now?

Michelle: My photography style is always changing as I continue to learn more about the art of photography and improve my editing skills. I definitely lean towards rustic and warm vibes in my editing style but like to make sure the colors remain authentic.

Krysta: What inspires you as a photographer?

Michelle: Farming and ranching includes long days and nights, sacrifices, tough decisions, and an uncertain financial reward. But it provides an incredible way of life for so many families. I love capturing these everyday moments to let them see the beauty of their hard work and I think it is so important to preserve the memories of generations learning and working together.

Krysta: What do you want people to feel when they look at your photography?

Michelle: At peace. I hope it makes people feel the comfort of home no matter where they are from. People are becoming further removed from agriculture, and I love being able to help others feel more connected to the industry through my images.

Krysta: What is something you wish people knew about being a professional photographer?

Photography does not feel like work to me. I truly love capturing these moments for families to look back on and helping small businesses showcase their products and services. 

Krysta: Can you tell us a little more about your idea for offering stock photography to rural businesses?

Michelle: My photography hobby turned into a business when I realized there was a demand for these agriculture and western photos I had been taking. During a call in the online Cowgirls Over Coffee group, several women expressed the desire to share their farm or ranch story, but struggled to have time to take photos while juggling their many responsibilities with work, kids, etc. I realized that my photography skills could help fill this need. 

There are many stock photo memberships available, but a lot of the photos are perfectly styled flatlays with pink and bright white colors. I felt like that type of image didn’t resonate with anyone in farming and rural communities. I had tons of photos of my family’s farm that were just sitting unused on my computer, so I decided to make them available to rural entrepreneurs to share their story or help promote their businesses by using photos that resonate with their communities. As I’ve continued to build my stock photo membership, I’ve added additional photos for service providers with a more rustic feel, beef and dairy photos for producers to promote their products, as well as other rural, ag and western inspired photos. 

Michelle Mensing Photography creates digital content for rural entrepreneurs. Her stock photography subscription provides a library of high-quality images that accurately portrays rural lifestyles. These photos are great to use on social media, for creating graphics, in newsletters, blog posts, emails and presentations. Michelle also does custom product photography for business owners, as well as family farm and lifestyle photoshoots. Follow along on Instagram @michellemensing.photography to learn more. All photos were taken and supplied by Michelle Mensing.

Cowboy Lifestyle Magazine

This article with Michelle Mensing was created for the Spring Issue of the Cowboy Lifestyle Magazine which was released in April 2023. You can catch this article and many more by checking out the full issue. For more information on Cowboy Lifestyle Magazine, visit the website here.

CLN Community & Event Sponsor

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Hi everyone! I’m Krysta Paffrath, I am a proud Arizona native who has a passion for everything business and rodeo. I am beyond thrilled to be the Editor in Chief for Cowboy Lifestyle Network.

With my background in digital marketing and rodeo, this was a natural fit for me to join the team. My adventurous and entrepreneurial spirit has guided me to work in many places like the WYO Quarter Horse Ranch in Thermopolis, Wyoming, a working cattle ranch in Seligman, Arizona, and many places in between.

I am passionate about preserving the western way of life and working with different brands and rodeos to make that happen. If you’re looking for a write-up, please shoot me an email at krysta@clngo.com. Learn more about me at krystapaffrath.com. Looking forward to hearing from you!

Watch: Hilarious video is a 10-minute non-stop roast of photography

Watch: Hilarious video is a 10-minute non-stop roast of photography

There are a lot of public perceptions when it comes to photographers. There are also a lot of in-jokes amongst the photography community. This ten-and-a-half-minute video from Casually Explained mocks all of them.

It’s an absolutely hilarious take on a hypothetical newbie’s potential future in their photography journey. What camera should you get? What genre should you shoot? How do you make money with photography?

What really got me about this video is that it’s so relatable throughout the entire thing. Some of it, where he starts off sounding sincere, I get into. Then, when I hear the twist at the end of the story, I immediately think of people I knew in my own photography past who were at least a little bit like that, or it mocks the sometimes hard reality of being a photographer.

The biggest decision you can make is the jump from a phone camera to a DSLR or film SLR camera. This is because of two major factors.

Firstly, you can swap the lenses on these bad boys. Meaning you never have to about where to waste your next paycheck. And just as importantly, they have a much, much bigger sensor.

After choosing to make the leap to a “DSLR or film SLR”, it’s time to pick your genre. This is a tough one because it could determine your whole future not just as a photographer but as a human being.

As you can imagine, this topic, too, is tackled with similar silliness.

Disposable camera photography – Even though the very hipster colour palette is caused by the horrendous lens, flash and camera quality, film is nevertheless a full-size 35mm sensor. Meaning you’re technically using pro-level equipment.

One of the downsides of a disposable camera is that it’s fun. Which is in strict contrast to real professional photography, which must always be stressful or else you go to photography jail.

Once you’ve picked your subject matter and want to attempt to make money from it… Well, this is where we’re reminded of all the struggles we’ve either faced ourselves or seen other photographers face.

It’s an incredibly thorough video, with a surprising level of detail. If it doesn’t brighten up your day, there’s something wrong with you. You should probably watch more of Casually Explained’s videos.

Dealers look to Frieze Seoul after bumpy year for Korean art market

Dealers look to Frieze Seoul after bumpy year for Korean art market

South Korea’s art market in 2022 shattered records, bolstered by the launch of Frieze Seoul and the country’s early lifting of Covid travel restrictions compared to the rest of East Asia. This year has seen a readjustment, dropping to 2019 levels with global economic woes echoing in Korea. Meanwhile other Asian art centres, particularly Hong Kong, seek to reclaim their former market positions. Dealers hope that the September art week surrounding Frieze Seoul and Korea International Art Fair Seoul (Kiaf) will provide a much-needed boost.

“During the Covid era, the market was so overheated, and now that it is back down I feel it is more stable,” says Jane Yoon, managing director, South Korea at Sotheby’s. “Customers are more cautious than they have been in the past two years, but it is clear that the number of buyers in the Korean market is larger than before. Pre-pandemic, only a rarified few people collected art, but now a significant number of people are interested in buying art. The art market is popularising.”

A trillion-won market

The Korea Arts Management Service (Kams) tallied the total art market volume as worth 1 trillion won ($782m) in 2022, up 32.2% from 756.3bn won in 2021. The auction market in the first half of this year was 80bn won—down by 9.9% from 88.8bn won in the second half of 2022, and by 44.8% from 145bn won in the first half of 2022. Kams found that sales of high-end works are particularly affected, probably due to increased interest rates.

“The market size has returned to pre-Covid times,” says Hyunsoon Do, the chief executive of K Auction, adding that “the Korean art market is particularly volatile because [it] is thin”, rising and falling sharply. “However, you can also find the floor quickly. While the global art market continues to decline, Korea is believed to have stopped declining and reached its bottom.”

Do says South Korea has managed inflation comparatively well, with its central bank benchmark interest rate currently lower than that of the US. “Since there are no plans to increase it further, and we expect it to go lower, asset prices will go up from the second half of the year, which will naturally be a positive for the art market again. I think that from next year, if not from the second half of the year, the Korean art market will be in an upward mode again.”

The use of art as an investment vehicle has seen continued enthusiasm in Korea amid the economic doldrums, with fractional art investment expanding its appeal. One fractionals firm, Yeolmae, between 2020 and 2022 purchased 400bn in works and resold 200bn won of shares. Yoon posits that purely speculative buyers have exited with the market’s decline, though young collectors remain as cognisant of investment as aesthetics. According to Taehee Joung, a fine art specialist at Seoul Auction: “The market for young artists, whose prices have risen sharply, has been hit the hardest. The blue-chip market is becoming the baseline for maintaining the current market, and the market for antique art and Korean painting is growing gradually.”

Despite this year’s slowed market, Frieze Seoul is unlikely to see a sophomore slump, with Korea’s recently reopened neighbours providing new exhibitors and collectors as well as resumed competition. Around 40% of Frieze Seoul’s more than 120 participating galleries are from Asia, including newcomers like Shanghai’s Antenna Space and Ho Chi Minh City’s Galerie Quynh.

Energetic atmosphere

Emma Son, the senior director of Lehmann Maupin Seoul, predicts an energetic fair atmosphere: “Last year, pandemic shutdowns affected collectors’ ability to travel internationally, especially for those in China, but this year, the restrictions have been lifted, so I think many major collectors from Asia will probably visit Korea. But I think we’ll just have to see whether that produces sales.”

Korea’s collector base and comparative ease of operations have prompted many international blue-chip galleries to establish permanent venues in Seoul, with White Cube the latest to launch in the city this September. Although the pace of expansions into Seoul has slowed compared with last year, Son says, “Interest is still high”. Beyond opening full facilities, “overseas galleries will continue to seek representation in Korea”.

Sotheby’s Yoon says: “One can’t ignore Art Basel Hong Kong, but Frieze operates at the same level and is building Korea into another international art platform.” Even if some sales siphon back to Hong Kong and other centres, Yoon says, Korean collectors are Asia’s biggest consumers of contemporary art and “are considered to be the most sophisticated in the contemporary art market among Asian collectors, even in auctions”.

Collectors under the age of 50 account for about 80% of sales, Yoon says. “Increasing accessibility to the Korean art market through Frieze Seoul will see things improve in the coming year and in the years to come.”

• Frieze Seoul, Coex, 6-9 September; Kiaf, Coex, 7-10 September

Medford Barton to present at Grand Canyon Photography Club meeting

Medford Barton to present at Grand Canyon Photography Club meeting

The September meeting of the Grand Canyon Photography Club will feature a presentation on composition by longtime member Medford Barton. The program will be held at 7 p.m. on Sept. 12, at the Gmeiner Art & Cultural Center in Wellsboro, after a short business meeting.

“I’ve been taking photographs for about 70 years, having received a Kodak Hawkeye box camera when I was 10,” Medford explained. “Back then I took mostly family photos but don’t remember much else. Throughout most of my adult life it was an on again off again love relationship with photography.

“That all changed when I retired in 2006. Having more time, I started to take photography much more seriously. I had the time to travel and to participate in photo workshops. Most of these workshops were weeklong when I was able to be totally immersed in photography.

“My photography improved but I admit, composition eluded me until these last few years.

“In September’s presentation I don’t plan to discuss the common ‘rules of composition’ but to share some of my thoughts about some lesser discussed guidelines of composition.”

Barton has won numerous awards in club exhibits, including “Best In Show.”

Visitors are invited to attend the photography club’s September meeting. New members to the club are always welcome.