Capturing the Zeitgeist: Global Photography Events Tackle Societal…

Capturing the Zeitgeist: Global Photography Events Tackle Societal…
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In a world increasingly dominated by visual narratives, photography stands out as a potent medium that not only captures moments but also sparks significant conversations around societal and environmental issues. As I embark on this journey to explore the confluence of photography and pressing global themes, I’m drawn to a series of events that not only showcase the artistic brilliance of photographers worldwide but also underscore the urgent need for awareness and action in our contemporary society.

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Spotlight on Young Talent: Foam Talent 2024-2025

The Foam Talent Exhibition in Amsterdam is a beacon of hope and creativity, drawing from a pool of 2,480 submissions across 106 countries. This year, the exhibition focuses on young artists who skillfully navigate the interplay between the past and present to reflect broader societal narratives. Among the 20 selected projects, themes of identity, migration, and the environment take center stage, offering a panoramic view of the challenges and aspirations defining our time. The diversity of techniques and mediums employed by these talented individuals not only enriches the visual experience but also amplifies the voices of a new generation poised to make a difference.

Themes of Care and Survival: Photoworks Summit

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Meanwhile, the Photoworks Summit takes a deep dive into the themes of care and survival. Through a series of presentations, performances, and practical sessions, participants are invited to explore how photography can serve as a tool for empathy and understanding in a world fraught with challenges. This platform not only fosters a sense of community among photographers but also encourages a reflective examination of how visual narratives can contribute to societal well-being and resilience.

Protest Through the Lens: Leipzig Photobook Festival

At the heart of the Leipzig Photobook Festival is the theme of Protest. This event pays homage to the power of photography to document and inspire change, showcasing a selection of photobooks that capture the essence of protest movements across the globe. From the streets of Hong Kong to the climate marches in Europe, these visual stories serve as a testament to the enduring spirit of resistance and the role of art in mobilizing action. The festival also offers portfolio reviews by experts, providing a valuable opportunity for emerging photographers to refine their craft and engage with critical issues through their work.

In the backdrop of these vibrant events, two exhibitions stand out for their thematic depth and relevance. Dirk Braeckman’s somber work at the FOMU museum and the ‘Fault Line’ exhibition at Fotomuseum Den Haag poignantly address the climate crisis, reminding us of the power of photography to confront uncomfortable truths and galvanize collective action. Moreover, the Biennale of Female Photography in Mantova, Italy, enriches the conversation by focusing on private themes explored by female photographers, adding layers of complexity and intimacy to the global narrative.

As we navigate through these tumultuous times, photography remains an essential medium for understanding and engaging with the world around us. By highlighting the innovative and pressing themes at the heart of these global events, we are reminded of the transformative power of visual stories to challenge, inspire, and heal. It is through these lenses that we can hope to capture the zeitgeist of our era, making sense of the chaos and beauty that define our collective human experience.

Amir H. Fallah’s Puzzles Together Monumental Narratives in His Bold Maximalist Paintings

Amir H. Fallah’s Puzzles Together Monumental Narratives in His Bold Maximalist Paintings

“Evolution Is Painful” (2023), acrylic on canvas, 3 x 3 feet. Photo by Ed Mumford, courtesy of the artist and Shulamit/Curcio, Los Angeles. All images shared with permission

“Most of my work begins from an extremely personal place,” says Amir H. Fallah. “When I speak on politics or the environment, I start with my own experiences and try to create something that has a broader reach. It’s the only way I know to make work that feels sincere.”

Based in Los Angeles, Fallah was born in Tehran in 1979, a year of revolution and political upheaval that ultimately brought his family to the U.S. His works in the last few years reflect this early encounter with war, migration, and the ways identities are obscured, mutable, and multifaceted.

Lavish with patterns and textures evocative of ribbed, woven fabrics, the artist’s works are unabashedly maximalist and comprise dozens of allusions to biological specimens, Persian miniature paintings, architectural arabesques, cartoons, material culture, and more within a single frame. Each painting and sculpture begins with a personal narrative that Fallah widens to a broader context, ultimately translating the idea visually by scouring an enormous archive amassed during the last five years. He explains:

I go through the database and pull 25 to 30 images that generally fit the narrative of the work. From there, I move the images around, shift scale, manipulate color, and combine images until the work comes to life. The best way to describe my sketching process is to compare it to a puzzle where you have all the pieces but have to spend days assembling them to get them to fit. For some works, I make 10 to 20 variations and spend months making small adjustments before finalizing the sketch. From there, the work gets drawn on canvas, and the rest of the process is intuitive, with decisions made on the fly.

Sometimes scaling six feet, Fallah’s canvases layer bold motifs, figures, and objects in a way that has an inundating effect, both drawing the eye in several directions and confronting the viewer through their unignorable size. His subjects appear cloaked in patterned fabrics that mask their exact identities, prompting a fundamental question: what do we actually learn about someone by simply looking at their face? Just as Fallah pieces together imagery from a multitude of sources, he asks us to do the same, to search the multitude of visual information and histories tucked into his works and begin to create a rich, entwined tapestry of human life.

If you’re in Los Angeles, you can see one of Fallah’s paintings from February 24 to March 14 at Phillips for a collaborative exhibition with Art for Change. Find more on his site and Instagram.

 

four figures cloaked in colorfully patterned fabric, each holding an object. a furry black dog sits with them and they're surrounded by water with a lush tropical island in the background

“Holiday” (2023), acrylic on canvas, 6 x 6 feet. Photo by Ed Mumford, courtesy of artist and Shulamit/Curcio, Los Angeles

a close up image of two figures cloaked in patterned fabric. the person on the left holds a sword like object, while the person on the right holds a green orb

Detail of “Holiday” (2023), acrylic on canvas, 6 x 6 feet. Photo by Ed Mumford, courtesy of artist and Shulamit/Curcio, Los Angeles

two figures under a patterned fabric each hold telescopes and peer up at the sky. a river and mountain landscape sits behind them

“Look At The Sky Tonight All Of The Stars Have A Reason” (2023), acrylic on canvas, 3 x 4 feet. Photo by Ed Mumford, courtesy of artist and Gallery All, Shanghai, China

Detail of “Evolution Is Painful” (2023), acrylic on canvas, 3 x 3 feet. Photo by Ed Mumford, courtesy of the artist and Shulamit/Curcio, Los Angeles

a black figurative sculpture cloaked in a black patterned fabric holding a fish

“Perpetual Life” (2023), bronze, steel, and marble, 191.4 x 83.2 x 74.9 centimeters. Image courtesy of the artist and Gallery All, Shanghai, China

left: a figurative silhouette cloaked in a colorful orange and blue floral pattern. right; a figurative silhouette with blocky, geometric details covered in purple, orange, and pink floral print

Left: “Lost And Found” (2022), aluminum, hardware, acrylic paint, 72 x 36.62 x 25.30 inches. Photo by Alan Shaffer, courtesy of the artist and Shulamit/Curcio, Los Angeles. Right: “Empire” (2023), acrylic, aluminum, hardware 72 1/2 x 35 1/2 x 20 1/2 inches. Photo by Alan Shaffer, courtesy of the artist and Shulamit/Curcio, Los Angeles

a figured cloaked in striped fabric holds an ornate lock and key

“Unlock” (2021), acrylic on canvas, 32 x 18 inches. Photo by Alan Shaffer, courtesy of the artist and Dio Horia Gallery, Athens, Greece

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 Amir H. Fallah’s Puzzles Together Monumental Narratives in His Bold Maximalist Paintings appeared first on Colossal.

‘A huge opportunity for us,’ Give BIG Green Bay to support Native art, artists

‘A huge opportunity for us,’ Give BIG Green Bay to support Native art, artists

ONEIDA (NBC 26) — Woodland Indian Art, Inc. will receive donations from annual Give BIG Green Bay event.

  • Hand-crafted baskets, lacrosse sticks, raised beadwork and more make up the collection of Woodland Indian Art on display at the Oneida Hotel
  • Woodland Indian Art, Inc. is one of the organizations chosen to receive funds from the annual Give Big Green Bay crowdfunding day
  • The nonprofit plans to use any donations to put on their annual art show and market in November

(The following is a transcription of the full broadcast story)

Here at the Oneida Hotel, art from different tribes is always on display. I’m your Oneida neighborhood reporter Pari Apostolakos. I spoke with a Native artist about the importance of keeping tradition alive.

Woodland Indian Art artist-in-resience Liandra Skenandore started learning to make baskets in 2019.

“So this is all made from the Black Ash tree that I harvest and process by hand.”

The process of going out to a swamp and finding a Black Ash tree, to actually weaving the basket, can take her weeks at a time if she’s working alone. She says she enjoys keeping the tradition alive.

“This is a pack basket [so] these baskets are really cool because they’re custom fitted to sit against the individual’s back.”

Woodland Indian Art, Inc. Is one of the organizations benefiting from the Give Big Green Bay fundraiser.

“This is a huge opportunity for us to further support indigenous artists in our community,” Gabrielle Metoxen, the orginization’s treasurer, said. “We want the arts and culture to continue through the youth up into future generations.”

Donations from Give Big Green Bay will help them to put on their annual art show and market, happening in November.

“It is our mission to make certain that the Woodland Indian tribes get as much recognition and we give them opportunities similar to what the southwestern tribes do,” Woodland Indian Art, Inc. president John Breuninger said.

The Give Big Green Bay fundraiser starts Feb. 21 at noon. It ends at the same time Feb. 22.

Apple Vision Pro for Photographers: How Useful?

Apple Vision Pro for Photographers: How Useful?

The Apple Vision Pro is all over the news lately. It’s an expensive $3,500 wear-on-your-head device that offers augmented reality, virtual reality, and what Apple calls “Spatial Computing.” (That’s just the base price. Adding memory and prescription lenses adds to your ticket.)

It’s been all over YouTube, with people singing its praises and others damning it with some glee. It’s filled with sensors, which immediately interested photographers, including two high-resolution main cameras, six tracking cameras, four eye-tracking cameras, a TrueDepth camera, a LiDAR scanner, a flicker sensor, and an ambient light sensor.

For display, it offers 23 million pixels, a 3D display system, Micro OLED screens with 7.5 micron pixel pitch, and it covers 92% of DCI-P3 for color fidelity. It supports playback multiples of 24 fps and 30 fps.

And it has 720p AirPlay for mirroring what you see to any AirPlay-enabled device. Video playback includes HEVC, MV-HEVC, H.264, HDR with Dolby Vision, HDR10, and HLG, with audio support for AAC, MP3, Apple Lossless, FLAC, Dolby Digital, Dolby Digital Plus, and Dolby Atmos.

Also intriguing for photographers is the ability to mirror a Mac laptop or desktop screen, giving you a very large virtual monitor for editing.

Using the Apple Vision Pro

First, how about taking photos and video? Uniquely, the AVP can take spatial videos, basically 3D videos. They can be played back on the Vision Pro, and they look pretty good. You can also take spatial stills (3D photos) on the Vision Pro. The stereoscopic cameras operate at f/2 and are 18mm, so pretty wide. I found pictures taken in fairly low light rendered nicely, but if it gets too dark, noise takes over.

The cameras each produce a 6.5-megapixel image, not exactly high quality in terms of detail, but not terrible, especially in a 3D video or still because the 3D effect can sort of make up for the lower resolution.

This is a frame from a spatial video shot outdoors. It doesn’t have the impact of the 3D capture, which of course I can’t share. You can email or message any of your 3D videos, and anyone getting them will get the depth effect if they view them on a Vision Pro.

Happily, Apple lets you shoot spatial videos on its high-end iPhones, iPhone 15 Pro or Max only. You get the benefit of more megapixels (I used my iPhone 15 Pro Max, which has a mixture of 12-48 megapixels depending on which lens you use and how you set up the camera. I thought spatial videos looked better taken with the iPhone than on the AVP. After you take the video, it winds up in your Apple Photos app on all your devices, including the AVP. It will playback there in 3D. On other devices, it’s flat with no depth.

Surprisingly, you can’t produce spatial stills on the iPhone even though you can on the Vision Pro. It seems like a real oversight. However, a developer has come up with a $2.99 app called Spatialify that lets you take spatial still images. They also show up in the Photos app and look great on the AVP. If you own a Vision Pro, it’s a must-buy in my view.

Of course, the reality is, most of the serious photographers I know have little interest in 3D videos or stills, but for consumers, getting these videos of the family is going to be of high interest.

Editing Photos on the AVP

This is where photographers will get more interested, I think. While Adobe and other providers of photo editing apps haven’t produced native Vision Pro apps, Apple lets us treat our Mac laptops and desktops as a source computer, and the AVP gives us an incredibly large monitor to work on.

To get linked to your Mac, you just look at your laptop or desktop computer. The word “connect” will float above that device, and when you click on it, your computer screen goes blank, and it shows up on your Vision Pro. It’s startling and looks very good, with excellent color and contrast.

I spent some time in Photoshop editing some photos and used my laptop’s trackpad and keyboard. I found it a good experience. I tried this in my kitchen, but if you find the backgrounds distracting, you can use one of Apple’s immersive environments and edit near a lake with Mount Hood in the background, or at Yosemite, or Joshua Tree National Park. If that’s too distracting, you can have a nighttime view. I thought that was the best way to edit. Check my Lightroom edit above.

I didn’t have any trouble editing in Photoshop, or Lightroom, or Luminar Neo, or On1 Photo Raw from my Mac using Vision Pro because none of the rules changed. I was using my familiar trackpad and keyboard.

Apple allows you to use most Bluetooth keyboards with the Vision Pro, and their Magic Trackpad. For some reason, you can’t use a mouse, which is one of those baffling Apple decisions.

So What’s the Use Case?

I could see photographers away from home wanting to edit on the big screen the AVP provides. You’ll still need your laptop with you, but I can see the advantages of having an ultra-large monitor.

At home, the value proposition drops a bit, but I still found it stimulating to edit on a big screen. A laptop monitor can be confining, and even on my Mac Studio, my 27″ monitor isn’t as big as I sometimes wish it was.

You’ll probably want to work plugged in, as the Vision Pro has at best about a 2.5-hour battery life. That involves the Vision Pro power brick. It’s about the size of an iPhone but heavier.

I think the big changes will come when there are native apps from Adobe and others for the Vision Pro. Adobe has offered its Firefly AI image generator in a native Vision Pro version. Lightroom can run in its native iPad version, and it works well, but adjusting things with finger gestures seemed pretty sloppy. A trackpad will come to the rescue there.

Summing Up

The Apple Vision Pro is not a must-buy for photographers. As camera gear for video or stills, it’s not first-class in dynamic range or resolution, although the 3D Spatial Videos and Photos are fun to play with.

Editing on the Vision Pro is nice. While some complain about the weight, I did not have any issues with weight or fit. Going a couple of hours in an edit session is no big deal, and I could have gone longer. Some purchasers, with different head dimensions, aren’t happy. If you are interested, test it out at an Apple Store.

I think the Apple Vision Pro signals further evolution of AI, AR, and there are certainly advantages for photographers who travel. People are successfully editing on commercial flights, although passengers must wonder what is going on. It’s expensive, yes, but so are big, high-quality monitors you would likely not want to take on the road.

If you think about the Vision Pro as basically a head-mounted iPad, you’ll get a realistic picture of it as a computer. It’s got Apple’s M2 chip inside, and I found it quick and responsive. It can play games, let you get and respond to email and messages, browse the web, and its gesture-based control is intuitive, consistent, and easy to learn.

It’s terrific for playing movies in 4K, and the 3D titles look better than they ever did in theaters. It supports multi-channel sound and Dolby Atmos. I rate the sound as very good.

So, the Apple Vision Pro is not a must-have for photographers; it’s a nice-to-have for traveling editors, an interesting addition to your gear even for editing at home, and taking 3D pics and videos.

If nothing else, get a demo because, like all Apple products, it will evolve as more and more software appears, suggesting new and productive uses for it. I think it’s important for content creators to see what’s coming, and I think the Apple Vision Pro will be something that most of us will want as more and more features and capabilities appear.

Art Notes: Longtime Lebanon photographer ‘doesn’t want that kind of exposure’

Art Notes: Longtime Lebanon photographer ‘doesn’t want that kind of exposure’

Valley News – Art Notes: Longtime Lebanon photographer ‘doesn’t want that kind of exposure’

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Larry Vanier photographs the Hanover girls hockey game in West Lebanon, N.H. on Saturday, Feb. 17, 2024. In addition to photographing landscapes for about the last 40 years, Vanier attends and photographs local events, including games and concerts. (Valley News – Jennifer Hauck) Copyright Valley News. May not be reprinted or used online without permission. Send requests to permission@vnews.com. Valley News — Jennifer Hauck

Alex Hanson. Copyright (c) Valley News. May not be reprinted or used online without permission. Send requests to permission@vnews.com.

Alex Hanson. Copyright (c) Valley News. May not be reprinted or used online without permission. Send requests to permission@vnews.com. Geoff Hansen

Larry Vanier's

Larry Vanier’s “Seal Cove” photograph from 2004. (Larry Vanier photograph) Larry Vanier photograph

Larry Vanier's

Larry Vanier’s “Mascoma River” photograph from 2019. (Larry Vanier photograph)

Larry Vanier's

Larry Vanier’s “Heading Out” photograph. (Larry Vanier photograph) LARRY VANIER photographs

Larry Vanier's

Larry Vanier’s “The Ridge” photograph from 2009. (Larry Vanier photograph)



Larry Vanier started taking photographs as a hobby. He already enjoyed hiking and being outdoors, so it was natural to him to start taking a camera along.

This was in the 1970s and early ’80s, the apex of film photography. The Upper Valley had a robust community of professional photographers and, particularly in the 1980s and ’90s, a substantial infrastructure of camera shops and photo processors. Vanier absorbed all that expertise and made photographs on his time off from his job at Stateline Sports, the West Lebanon sporting goods store.

For decades, Vanier didn’t have much to say about his photography. It was, he said recently, “just something to do” or “a hobby that became more serious.”

“I’d load my truck and go on vacation and see what happens,” he said. “That’s the enjoyment of it, is just being out there.”

Though he still considers photography a hobby, Vanier has amassed a body of work that deserves recognition. His friends in the photography community are respectful of Vanier’s privacy, but they’ve seen his work, thousands of images that would make clear that Vanier is one of the best landscape photographers working in New England.

There’s a small show of Vanier’s photos in a basement room at Stateline that used to hold hockey gear. Vanier didn’t want me to make a big deal out of his photography. As a human being, I’m sorry, Larry. But as a community journalist, I’m not sorry. I can’t think of anyone more worthy of this kind of attention.

A Lebanon native, Vanier grew up on School Street, one of eight children. He graduated from Lebanon High School in the 1960s and from UNH. He worked at Tommy Keane Sports, then followed his brother Bob, who co-founded Stateline with Jon Damren in the early 1980s.

With photography, “I just kind of got interested in it and taking pictures and started to teach myself stuff,” Vanier said, “probably in the 1970s.”

John Preston, who has owned and operated Slide Specialists, a photo developing and finishing company that caters to professionals, since 1987, has known Vanier at least since then. Jeremy Dixon, a co-owner of ProCam, the White River Junction shop that billed itself as the biggest camera outlet north of Boston, was an early mentor to Vanier.

“Larry came into photography in a very interesting way, which I think reflects why he’s such a good photographer,” Preston said.

Growing up on the edge of Lebanon, Vanier walked everywhere. “He said he was always fascinated by how the changing light made things look different,” Preston said.

Most people come to photography because they want to capture a particular subject or activity. “With Larry, subject was secondary,” Preston said. “The light was the thing.”

While Vanier started out with a 35mm camera, he soon started to think bigger. He found a Linhof camera that took 2-inch-by-3-inch film, then gradually went bigger still, to 4×5, 5×7 and 8×10 view cameras, which result in huge, detailed images that can be enlarged to cinematic scale.

As his cameras scaled up, so did his subject matter. Always a hiker, Vanier took cameras with him into the White Mountains, often in company with his longtime friend, Greg Hubbard, and on vacation to the Maine coast.

Then, in the late 1980s, he read a story in the Boston Globe about Grand Manan, an island off the coast of New Brunswick just north of the Maine border. He wrote to the provincial government for information and got back an envelope containing a ferry schedule, a map of hiking trails and a topographic map “that looked like it was from the early 1950s.” Nothing about hotels or restaurants or tourist attractions.

He drove nine hours and caught the last spot on the ferry. It was so foggy, “I didn’t see anything for three days,” he said.

But that fog makes for great photography: “The light frickin’ bounces around.”

Grand Manan was pretty sleepy at the time. “I couldn’t believe a place like that existed in 1989,” Vanier said. He has been steadily documenting the island and its fishery ever since. He also has traveled farther afield, to Newfoundland.

At the same time, Vanier has been taking photographs closer to home. He photographs a stretch of the Mascoma River in Lebanon during morning walks and local musicians performing at local venues.

For a long time, Vanier didn’t want to talk publicly about his photography. I can understand why. If an activity brings you peace and satisfaction, there’s no need to get the public involved. Wider attention can distort a person’s perceptions, too. Vanier’s single-minded focus reminds me of photographers like Vivian Maier and Gary Stochl, who amassed substantial bodies of work that only later became well known, in Maier’s case posthumously.

But Vanier emailed me to let me know about the photos on view in Stateline’s basement. And he was willing to talk to me about his hobby. I don’t want to spend a lot of space characterizing the work on view, other than to say that it is masterful.

In our conversation, Vanier made one point several times: “My time is getting short to do this type of stuff,” he said, on the subject of having large prints made. To me, this sounded like the clearest acknowledgment we’re likely to get that Vanier has taken an untold number of photographs that are deserving of a kind of display and attention that only a larger art institution can give him.

Hubbard, a professional photographer since 1992, and Preston, who probably know Vanier’s work best, say most of it consists of 4×5 transparencies. Vanier said he has boxes of transparencies he’s shot both at his home and in a storage unit. He started using digital cameras in 2006 and had to stop using film in 2010 or so, when it became impossible to find sheet film, so he also has a huge digital archive.

“He’s always taken photography seriously,” Hubbard said. “He says it’s just a hobby, but he’s devoted a good part of his life to it.”

But the important thing to understand is that Vanier doesn’t want to be thought of as an artist. Fellow photographer Jack Rowell said Vanier calls it “the A-word.” He would rather spend time making photographs than wading through the images he’s already made. When he makes prints, it’s usually to give away to people on Grand Manan.

In talking to him, though, I got the feeling that Larry knows what his work means. At a book sale, he picked up a copy of “Maine,” by the celebrated photographer Eliot Porter. For a long time, he didn’t look at it, but when he started to leaf through it “about half a dozen times, the hair on the back of my neck stood up, because I realized I had been about an inch away from where he’d been.”

Did that give him the idea that he was onto something, that his own instincts had led him to walk in the footsteps of a master? His response was like a bite of pickled egg after a shot of maple syrup; it cut the sweet.

“I just went on my way.”

It seems to me that Vanier is too much of a community guy to permit himself the kind of self-absorption characteristic of professional artists. That’s to his credit, I think.

“I enjoy other things,” he told me. “I don’t want to go overboard with it.”

The other side of the coin is that most artists I know work hard at their craft and take it seriously. How that makes them different from Vanier isn’t clear to me.

Hubbard called Vanier “the best friend anybody could ever have.” His loyalties to Lebanon, to family and friends, to Stateline and the community around it, run deep. But his photographs have a life of their own, and Vanier needs help.

His friends in photography have long wanted to see Vanier’s work on display.

“I think we’ve all tried to help him with that, but without stepping on his toes, it’s hard to do,” Preston said.

Maybe that’s changing. “I think he’s ready,” Preston said.

Hubbard seemed less certain. “He enjoys doing it; he enjoys giving it away.” Vanier “doesn’t want that kind of exposure.”

If there’s a dilemma here, I think it has less to do with Larry Vanier and more to do with the way we treat art. It’s too often exalted, too often walled off, too seldom considered a community resource. If an arts organization could help Larry Vanier without making a big deal out of it, then maybe his photographs could become a kind of community treasury, both here and where they were made.

In the meantime, go see the photographs on view at Stateline and say hi to Larry Vanier.

Alex Hanson can be reached at ahanson@vnews.com or 603-727-3207.


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