
By Admin in Photography
A Peruvian artist, who weaves with a native cotton fibre that was outlawed under Spanish colonial rule, is one of 14 artists to benefit from a new partnership between the Sydney Biennale and the Fondation Cartier pour l’art contemporain in Paris.
Cristina Flores Pescorán, who is based in The Hague, uses a Peruvian cotton species called Gossypium barbadense to create her work.
Known for its long, glossy fibres, the plant was a staple of pre-colonial Peruvian society. However, its use was forbidden during colonisation because its natural earth tones were believed to “contaminate” the preferred species of pure white cotton.
Portrait of Cristina Flores Pescorán, the artist’s La Curandera (2020-21)
Portrait: courtesy the artist; work: Juan Pablo Murrugarra. Courtesy of the artist and Ginsberg Galería, Lima
Flores Pescorán uses weaving techniques from the Chancay culture which she learned from specialist artisan Esteban Nazario Redondo.
By favouring the natural beauty of the native cotton, Flores Pescorán told The Art Newspaper, she hopes to connect with a tradition of her ancestors that was “considered dead”.
Fondation Cartier’s partnership with Sydney Biennale began in 2022 with the Australian premiere of The Great Animal Orchestra, a symphony by the pioneering American soundscape ecologist Bernie Krause. The work was shown at the Fondation’s Paris museum in 2016.
Portrait of Tony Albert
Photo: Daniel Boud
This year’s partnership goes much further. A new role of First Nations curatorial fellow has been created at the Fondation Cartier, and celebrated Australian Indigenous artist Tony Albert was named as its inaugural recipient.
Albert told The Art Newspaper his role is to work closely with 14 artists to realise their works for the Biennale. The 14 artists, who are a selection of a much larger group of indigenous artists in the Biennale, were chosen by Fondation Cartier and the Biennale’s artistic directors, Cosmin Costinaş and Inti Guerrero.
Indeed, the Fondation Cartier is supporting indigenous artists from various world cultures.
Portrait of Mangala Bai Maravi, the artist’s Baiga godna (2019)
Portrait: Amit Sharma, work: courtesy the artist
One of the selected artists is Mangala Bai Maravi, daughter of a Baiga tattoo artist from Lalpur village, Madhya Pradesh, India, translates tribal tattoo designs to paper and canvas.
The first ever all-female group of Guatemalan kite makers, Orquídeas Barrileteras, will exhibit the intricately designed, colourful kites that are flown in celebration of life and death.
The Australian Indigenous artist Kaylene Whiskey, whose paintings are a vibrant mash-up of pop culture icons such as Dolly Parton and Tina Turner alongside elements drawn from traditional Aṉangu culture, has also been selected.
Tony Albert met the entire Fondation Cartier team in Paris last year “which gave a lot of clarity to the work they are doing”.
His main role will be to position the new fellowship for success in future Biennales, although the Fondation has only committed to continuing the initiative for this year’s Biennale and the next.
“There’s so many options: will we grow one of the commissions outside of the Biennale for the Fondation?” Albert said.
“I love that it’s not set in stone. It’s quite fluid in the way in which it could happen, which also is much more in line with Indigenous principles and ways of thinking and working. The outcome might even be based on Country.”
Mirdidingkingathi Juwarnda Sally Gabori with Dibirdibi Country (2009).
Private Collection, Melbourne. Photo: Mornington Island Art, Queensland. © The Estate of Sally Gabori.
Albert said the success of the Mirdidingkingathi Juwarnda Sally Gabori exhibition at the Fondation’s museum in Paris in 2022 had trained the Fondation’s gaze on Australia, a country where it previously had relatively little experience.
He said it was important that Fondation Cartier had made it clear that “the [jewellery] product and the art are not aligned in any given way”.
Hervé Chandès, artistic managing director of the Fondation Cartier pour l’art contemporain, said the partnership with the Sydney Biennale “meaningfully demonstrates a commitment to diversity, inclusivity, artistic innovation and excellence”.
“This partnership reflects our belief in empowering First Nations communities to share their truths and underscores the crucial role of listening to their voices as we navigate the challenges of our planet,” Chandès said.
• Tony Albert, The Garden + Forbidden Fruit, view at Sullivan + Strumpf, Sydney, until 9 March
• Sydney Biennale, 9 March – 10 June
By Admin in Photography
Sarah Ponwith’s photo “The Edge of Life” is included in the Dahl Mountain Photo Exhibit.
Sarah Ponwith
For 20 years, Dahl Arts Center in Rapid City has celebrated the uniqueness and beauty of mountain culture with its photo exhibit and competition. This year, the competition received more than 200 submissions, 58 of which will be showcased in the Dahl Mountain Photo Exhibit.
The Dahl Mountain Photo Exhibit’s opening artists’ reception will be from 5 to 7 p.m. Feb. 23, with an awards ceremony at 6 p.m. The exhibit is on display in the Inez and Milton Shaver Gallery and the Denise Du Broy Gallery at Dahl Arts Center.
“Photographers from our community celebrate mountain culture through their own lens,” said Noah Geiger, curator and gallery director for Dahl Arts Center. “It’s a show we’re proud of and excited for. We’re excited about the fact that it’s a community-based show and we always get quite the turnout. It brings the community together through the lens of photography, and people get to show off their environment, and that’s a wonderful thing.”
The number of entries submitted demonstrates “the extent of local talent active in furthering the medium of photography in the region,” Geiger said in a news release.
Rebecca DeWitt’s “Moon Castle” is one of two of her photos that is included in this year’s Dahl Mountain Photo Exhibit.
Rebecca DeWitt
Each photographer’s entries capture the essence of the mountain culture lifestyle, encompassing the ideas, beliefs and values shared by people who are immersed in those environments. Whether the photos are set in the Black Hills or other mountainous terrain, the content reflects the landscapes and the way they shape people’s way of life.
This year’s competition and exhibit includes the work of 38 photographers – 22 professional or experienced adult photographers, 12 adult amateur or hobbyist photographers, and four youth (18 and younger) photographers. A complete list of this year’s selected artists and the names of their photo entries can be found at thedahl.org/dahlmtnphoto.
The Rapid City Arts Council will provide cash awards for first, second, and third-place participants selected by the jury in all three categories, plus an award for Best of Show. The community is encouraged to vote for the People’s Choice Award through the closing of the exhibit.
“I love getting to share a moment in time amongst the dirt and grime and pure adrenaline we go through as climbers. Being a part of this exhibit is so incredible as I get to bring my adventure here to share with you,” said Sarah Ponwith, who is a professional photographer and an avid rock climber.
Participants in this year’s exhibit were chosen by a jury comprised of regional photographers Dan Tackett, Nick Krull and Jessica Nelson, owner of JD Photography.
The Dahl Mountain Photo Exhibit will be on display through April 20.
William Casey’s “Birch Undergrowth” is feature in the Dahl Mountain Photo Exhibit.
William Casey
“The Last Resort” is one of three photos by Leith Sandness in the Dahl Mountain Photo Exhibit.
Leith Sandness
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By Admin in Photography
Saul Leiter had a thing for umbrellas. They pepper his mid-century photographs of New York, popping up over years of work: pink umbrellas, red umbrellas, yellow umbrellas. Their owners remain hidden underneath, dry and out of sight, upstaged by their vivid canopies.
In “Saul Leiter: An Unfinished Word,” a joyous new retrospective on view at MK Gallery in Milton Keynes, England, these umbrellas sing out from the walls. As do orange shop signs, scarlet curtains and the custard dashes of cabs.
Leiter, who died in 2013, is now recognized as one of the great color photographers of the 20th century, a pioneer who embraced — and experimented with — color slide film when most professional photographers were still wedded to monochrome negatives. Against muted Manhattan backdrops of concrete, stone and smoke stacks, he focused on the blinking neon and candy-striped barber signs.
Leiter’s abstracted shots of New York seem radical, yet they are true to how we all see the streets: fragmented by traffic, building facades, doorways, angles and crowds. By embracing that jumbled, naturalistic viewpoint, Leiter could create a collage within a single frame, a snap-and-grab of all the urban elements glanced on the fly. Into these cut-up compositions, we see pedestrians and policemen, store workers, dog walkers and construction workers, but not as specific characters, more as notes on a musical score.
Leiter’s photographs are often interrupted, confused or ornamented — and sometimes all three — by the whims of weather and atmospheric effects. Figures are seen through veils of condensation or snow; taxis barrel and blur through the rain; a traffic light punctuates a blizzard. “A window covered in raindrops interests me more than a photograph of a famous person,” he remarked in the 2013 documentary “In No Great Hurry: 13 Lessons in Life With Saul Leiter.”
Leiter was not supposed to have been a photographer. He was born in 1923 into a strictly observant Jewish family in Pittsburgh and was expected to become a Rabbi like his father, a Talmud scholar. That all changed in 1946 when Saul caught a train to New York. He was 23 and wanted to be a painter. He would remain estranged from his father for most of his adult life.
It was Leiter’s friendship with the photojournalist W. Eugene Smith that led him to consider photography, although he continued to paint. Some of his works on paper and canvases are on view in Milton Keynes, abstract and figurative paintings influenced by the post-Impressionists and Japanese printmakers such as Hokusai (another artist who loved the rain). While Leiter saw parallels between the mediums, he thought paintings were made and photographs were found.
His private, now celebrated, sidewalk photographs were not what supported him. From the late 1950s to the 1980s he shot fashion pictures for periodicals such as Queen and British Vogue, enjoying much of the work but sometimes finding himself constrained by briefs from picture desks. “I once said to the editor at the magazine that a drawing by Bonnard meant more to me than a whole year of Harper’s Bazaar,” he recalled. “She looked at me in complete horror.”
“He was not just a photographer, he was not just a painter, he was a poet,” said the exhibition’s curator Anne Morin. Indeed, Leiter’s unconventional handling of a camera mirrored the literary experimentation of his contemporaries Jack Kerouac and Allen Ginsberg. His photographs were formed from out-of-date film stock, strange exposures, erratic focus and crazy perspectives. He even enhanced some of his prints with gouache and watercolours to create hybrid photo-paintings.
Rather than take a chronological journey through Leiter’s career, the MK exhibition immerses visitors in his philosophy of seeking beauty in the everyday by combining periods, mediums and subject matter together. His sensibility — a feeling for lively serendipity — shines through all of it.
The show, which comes in the wake of a monumental new book, “Saul Leiter: The Centennial Retrospective,” is a box of delights and surprises. His early black and white prints — especially his portraits of women — are close-cropped and sensitively-handled little gems, tiny windows on friendships. While a series of nudes reveal a talent for capturing subtle and sweet intimacies — especially when framing his long-time lover and muse Soames Bantry — his citrus-hued paintings illustrate his ongoing adventures with the brush.
But it is his color photography out on the bustling blocks — he left some 40,000 slides — that is his most distinctive body of work.
With their large planes of obfuscation — the result of a shop awning or a passer-by — his photographs echoed the canvases of the Abstract Expressionists, some of whom Leiter knew personally (he lived for a time on 10th street at the heart of the scene). Similarly, he was in the orbit of the “New York School of Photographers,” a loosely-connected group that included Diane Arbus and Robert Frank. But he always remained a character apart, never quite a member of any movement.
“He never really settled into society,” says Morin. Leiter recognised this, but did not see it as a failure. “I have succeeded in not being famous,” he observed. What he did instead was retain an unapologetic and unwavering eye for the less obvious. As his weary lab assistant once remarked: “Not umbrellas again!”
“Saul Leiter: An Unfinished World,” is at MK Gallery, Milton Keynes, until June 2. “Saul Leiter: The Centennial Retrospective,” is published by Thames & Hudson and out now.
By Admin in Photography
COLUMBIA, S.C. (WIS) – In honor of Black History Month, we continue to recognize trailblazers in all aspects of history, even those told through a lens.
Photographer Matthew Jordan Smith has captured the legacy and impact of an iconic voice known as “The Queen of Soul.”
Smith captured the legacy of Aretha Franklin in his new upcoming book, “Aretha Cool”.
“Aretha Cool” will be available on March 15th.
To pre-order, click here.
Feel more informed, prepared, and connected with WIS. For more free content like this, subscribe to our email newsletter, and download our apps. Have feedback that can help us improve? Click here.
Copyright 2024 WIS. All rights reserved.
By Admin in Photography
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JOHNSTOWN, Pa. – An evening of cultural appreciation and visual storytelling will highlight this exhibition.
To cap off Black History Month, the “Black Essence Photography Exhibit” will be held from 5 to 8 p.m. Saturday at Studio 404, 404 Messenger St., Johnstown.
“I feel like sometimes with Black history we focus on the past and the past isn’t the nicest, so for the photography exhibit I wanted to focus on the present and the future,” said Camillya Taylor, owner of Camille’s House of Styles Salon and Boutique and founder of Johnstown Fashion Week, who curated the show.
“It’s an exhibit of beautiful people.”
Featured will be black-and-white photographs by six Black photographers – Brenda Yancey Davis, Johnstown; Darius Levine Davis, Harrisburg; Corwin Hall, Pittsburgh; William Pittman, Pittsburgh; Lawrence Smith, Harrisburg; and Tifya Taylor, Johnstown.
“The photographers featured, I’ve worked with in the past for Johnstown Fashion Week,” Taylor said.
“I realized they are bigger than fashion and they do so many more things, so I wanted to exhibit a lot of the beautiful work they have.”
She said much like fashion, art allows people to express themselves individually, tell their stories and celebrate diversity.
“The walls become the catwalk, showcasing the ever-evolving and -captivating expressions of the soul,” Taylor said.
The evening also will feature light hors d’oeuvres, poetry readings and soulful music.
The exhibit will be on display through March 2.
“I hope people will feel uplifted,” Taylor said.
“Sometimes Black History Month can feel sad, but I hope people will feel encouraged and want to move forward and be the best they possibly can.”
All pieces are available for purchase.
A portion of the proceeds will benefit the Keystone Equity and Empowerment Project, which aims to uplift, empower and strengthen Black communities within western Pennsylvania.
Tickets are $20 and can be purchased at www.eventbrite.com/e/black-essence-photography-exhibit-tickets-778693452077.
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By Admin in Art World News
Starts 3/8
Yurika Horikawa, A2Z, Koji Shiouchi, Nobuyuki Kai, Kana Minami, Nana Murata, Keiko Aikawa, Kohei Hanawa, Sayaka Miyauchi, Akane Kanamori, Ryosuke Misawa, Ryoten Ogata, Kohei Arano, Riku Matsuzaki, Bae Sangsun, Shunta Imamura, Michael Whittle
This event, which started in 2021 with the theme of “see, listen, feel, enjoy, discover,” has been well received as an opportunity to hear directly from artists about their creative process and to see their work up close. This year, art gallery cafe What Cafe, will be hosting exhibitions, sales, art performances, talk shows, workshops, and more. The venue will feature works from 22 emerging artists, mainly paintings and sculptures, providing visitors with the chance to encounter unique pieces and discover their latent love for art. Additionally, following the success of the previous edition, Avi, the “Art Museum for Your Ears,” will serve as a special ambassador, and gallery tours will also be held during the exhibition period.
By Admin in Photography
TORONTO, ON / ACCESSWIRE / February 22, 2024 / Toggle3D.ai (the “Company”) (CSE:TGGL)(OTCQB:TGGLF)(FSE:Q0C), a revolutionary AI solution harnessing the power of generative AI to convert CAD files, apply stunning 4K texturing, and seamlessly publish superior 4K 3D models is pleased to announce it is expanding its portfolio with a GPT AI virtual photography service. Also, Toggle3D,ai’s parent company, ” Nextech3D.ai ” is in negotiations with a number of large enterprise manufacturers which produce hundreds of thousands of products annually, for contracts valued in the seven figures. The deals are expected to close in Q1, and if closed would involve GPT AI from Toggle3D providing a significant revenue sharing opportunity for the Company.
A key aspect of the Toggle platform is the licensing of this 3D modeling software to major manufacturers, enabling their own employees to create high quality, 4K resolution 3D product models without the need for specialized skills in 3D modeling. This empowers businesses to harness the full potential of 3D modeling internally, while reducing the 3D model production cost by as much as 80%.
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By Admin in Photography
By Admin in Photography
Jeff Koons is the world’s second-most expensive living artist and, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index, Elon Musk is the richest man in the world. Both have been publicly denounced as “repulsive” and “vacuous” little men. And now, they have something else in common – together, they’re making history by sending art to the moon!
Yes, in the latest development of humankind’s quest to return to the moon, Koons has cooked up some little models of the moon to be carried on board Odysseus, a lunar lander developed by the US company Intuitive Machines. Titled Jeff Koons: Moon Phases – just in case you forgot whose big brain was behind the project – the artwork consists of 125 one-inch stainless steel balls, each representing a phase of the moon as seen from Earth and space. These are housed in a transparent cube designed by 4space and built from sustainable materials, although that seems like a fairly arbitrary distinction since it was loaded on board Odysseus and blasted into space on one of Musk’s SpaceX rockets.
Each of the Jeff Koons: Moon Phases models is also named after a famous and influential world-historical figure, like Plato, David Bowie, Artemisia Gentileschi, Leonardo da Vinci, Ada Lovelace, Hellen Keller, or Gandhi (it’s what he would have wanted). In this way, according to PACE Gallery, the artist “honours some of the greatest achievements of the past to inspire future generations”. These “inspirational” objects are twinned with larger iterations, which will remain here on Earth.
Now, we know what you’re thinking: “Please say that each stainless steel ‘moon’ pair comes with an NFT-based counterpart to ‘cultivate connections between the digital and physical worlds.’” Of course it does! Launched on February 15 (alongside the actual moon mission) each NFT includes an image of the corresponding artwork, alongside other, unspecified images and – most importantly – Jeff Koons’s “iconic” signature, which is sure to join names like Plato and Gandhi in inspiring our spacefaring offspring for generations to come.
The launch of Intuitive Machines’ Nova-C lunar lander on top of SpaceX’s Falcon 9 rocket was a spectacular event. In person, the scale, the forces, and the experience of space being penetrated was unbelievable! Photo credit SpaceX @spacex @intuitivemachines @nasa#jeffkoons#moonpic.twitter.com/5Mb4zcHrwZ
— Jeff Koons (@JeffKoons) February 16, 2024
It should be noted that Jeff Koons isn’t the first person to think of sending art to the moon. Last year, Dazed talked to the physicist and entrepreneur Samuel Peralta about The Lunar Codex, his arduous – and not-for-profit – effort to send the work of more than 30,000 artists, filmmakers, writers, and musicians to the lunar surface as a time capsule for “future human travellers”. Unfortunately, NASA’s Peregrine lander, which was carrying the first digitised Lunar Codex payload, crashed back to Earth a few months later, after suffering a propellant leak.
The Intuitive Machines moon mission itself is groundbreaking, however, as the first ever private lunar landing. As of writing, Odysseus is circling the moon in preparation for its landing, which is due to take place on February 22, no sooner than 10:30pm (UK time). Let’s hope that it doesn’t go the way of a Jeff Koons balloon dog, and explode into hundreds of pieces on impact.
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The Desert Foothills Land Trust (DFLT) is proud to announce a special presentation event featuring acclaimed botanical photographer Jimmy Fike on Saturday, Oct. 12 at 6:30 p.m. at the Sanderson