A massive crown sculpture is coming to Buckingham Palace this summer
By Admin in Art World News
Artist: Rodrigo Tamayo
Price: $4,000.00
Medium: Photography
Ship From Miami, FL
Creation Date: 2018
Materials: Photograph
Dimensions: 30″ x 40″
About The Artist
Contemporary photographer from Venezuela focused on digital alteration of images.
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Societal expectations for Indigenous dress, especially pan-Native stereotypes, have also been a major influence on Monkman’s practice. ‘Earlier in his career, he leaned into camp and humor to intentionally make very challenging subject matters more approachable,’ explains Lukavic. Objects poked at appropriation of Native symbols and clichés: for example, a Louis Vuitton quiver, dreamcatcher bra, and raccoon jockstrap. ‘I claim some of these tropes to comment on their meaninglessness as mass-produced tourist gifts or novelty items that simply have no significance as Indigenous cultural objects,’ says Monkman. ‘One cannot reclaim something that is already completely fake. Reducing Indigenous people to cartoon characters removes any nuance or cultural difference amongst the hundreds of varied and complex communities and linguistic groups throughout the Americas,’ he adds.
Over the last decade, Lukavic tells me, Monkman’s work has put humor aside in favor of ‘a very direct confrontation and engagement with subjects that are important to contemporary Indigenous people,’ such as generational trauma, urbanization, language loss, and LGBTQ+ representation. ‘At the same time, he’s intentionally “decolonizing sexuality,” as he describes it. It’s about showing the nude human form as normal – not something that has to be sexualized – as well as showing different body types and gender expressions as normal, to counter the imposed, puritanical Christian viewpoints that were never what most Indigenous communities believed.’
Occasionally, Monkman’s alter-ego, Miss Chief, makes an appearance on canvas. In the early 2000s, the artist conceived this time-traveling, shape-shifting performance persona to reflect the Indigenous ‘two-spirit’ tradition, which reveres a third gender and nonbinary sexuality, subverting colonial constructions of masculinity. Feathered headdresses, thigh-high boots, satin gloves, and sequined gowns typically comprise Miss Chief’s attire, though one of her most memorable ensembles is a dress resembling a tipi.
By Admin in Photography
Pipo Nguyen-duy ’83, professor of studio art and photography at Oberlin College, will deliver the Carleton convocation address on Friday, May 3 from 10:50 to 11:50 a.m. in Skinner Chapel. His address is titled, “A Dust of Life.”
Nguyen-duy was born in Hue, Vietnam. Growing up within thirty kilometers of the demilitarized zone near the 18th parallel, he describes hearing gunfire every day of his early life. He immigrated to the United States as a political refugee.
Nguyen-duy has taken on many things in life in pursuit of his diverse interests. He has competed as a national athlete in table tennis, spent time living as a Buddhist monk in northern India, and majored in economics at Carleton. While living in New York City’s East Village, where he worked as a bartender and later as a nightclub manager, his interests turned to art after meeting people such as musician Don Cherry and artist Keith Haring. He then earned an MA in photography, followed by an MFA in photography, both from the University of New Mexico–Albuquerque.
Nguyen-duy has received many awards and grants over the years, including a Guggenheim Fellowship in Photography; a National Endowment for the Arts grant; an En Foco grant; a Professional Development Fellowship from the College Arts Association; a National Graduate Fellowship from the American Photography Institute; a fellowship from the Oregon Arts Commission in Salem, Oregon; a B. Wade and Jane B. White Fellowship in the Humanities at Oberlin; and two Individual Artist Fellowships from the Ohio Arts Council in Columbus, Ohio. Nguyen-duy has been an artist-in-residence at Monet’s Garden through the Artists at Giverny Fellowship from Lila Wallace-Reader’s Digest Fund as well as at the Headlands Center for the Arts in Sausalito, California through the Light Work Artist-in-Residence Program. He has also lectured widely and his work has been exhibited and is in public collections in the United States, Europe, and Asia.
This convocation will also be live streamed — please register in advance to receive information on how to attend via Zoom. Carleton convocations are free and open to the public. Find upcoming events and archived recordings (including in podcast form) on the convocations website. For more information, including disability accommodations, call 507-222-5461 or email nponder@carleton.edu.
After each convocation address, Carleton hosts a luncheon with the speaker. Convocation luncheon is held in the Alumni Guest House Meeting Room (unless otherwise noted) from noon to 1 p.m. and is generally limited to 35 people. If you are interested in attending, please RSVP on the convocations website.
Erica Helgerud ’20 is the news and social media manager for Carleton College.
By Admin in Photography
Moderator, BoredPanda staff
Hi there! I’m Gabrielė, but you can also catch me responding to Gab, Gabi, Gabert, or Gabe – take your pick. Professionally, I’m the senior community manager over at Bored Panda, helping people share their awesome work and connecting artists with a worldwide audience.
Beyond work, you’ll catch me traveling, listening to vinyl and diving into movies, art exhibitions, and concerts. I’m a culture buff at heart, always eager to explore and embrace the richness of the human experience.
By Admin in Photography
Chris Killip was one of the greatest photographers to have picked up a camera. His ability to embed himself and capture various communities from within, with a sense of grace and dignity, inspired generations of photographers, myself included. His new book highlights this even further.
Skinningrove is a body of work created in the Eighties featuring some of Killip’s most intimate and adored images, alongside previously unseen work. Before passing in 2020, he worked with prominent publisher Stanley/Barker to consolidate it into this exceptional new book.

Killip is one of Britain’s most recognized documentary photographers. Starting as a commercial shooter he turned to creating important personal projects in the Sixties, photographing his home in the Isle of Man and the working class in the North East of England, producing the books Inflagrante and Isle of Man, which are considered landmark works of documentary photography.
It is in the North East of England that Skinningrove was created, named after a village hidden in a steep valley neighboring the North Sea between Middlesborough and Whitby.
The images that Killip made there could be considered among his most intimate and touching. His skill of immersing himself within a community gained him access to photograph the people as if he were one of their own – and in a way, he was. When documenting a location and its people, Killip would live among his subjects, getting to know them and their way of life, enabling him to capture them as an invisible observer.


The work featured in Skinningrove was taken between 1982 and 1984, many images having previously featured in Inflagrante Two and Sea Coal, and are considered among Killips’ best-known photographs. They are evidence of his mastery of composition and ability to capture an intimate scene in the unlikeliest places.
Throughout his career, Killip has always provided great insight into his experiences with creating the work, and Skinningrove was no different.
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“Like a lot of tight-knit fishing communities, it could be hostile to strangers, especially one with a camera,” he said of his experience.
“‘Now then’ is the standard greeting in Skinningrove; a challenging substitute for the more usual, ‘Hello.’ The place had a definite edge, and it took time for this stranger to be tolerated. My greatest ally in gaining acceptance was Leso (Leslie Holliday), the most outgoing of the younger fishermen. Leso and I never talked about what I was doing there, but when someone questioned my presence, he would intercede and vouch for me with, ‘He’s okay.’ This simple endorsement was enough.
“I last photographed in Skinningrove in 1984, and didn’t return for 30 years. When I did I was shocked by how it had changed, as only one boat was still fishing. For me, Skinningrove’s sense of purpose was bound up in its collective obsession with the sea. Skinningrove fishermen believed that the sea in front of them was their private territory, theirs alone. Without the competitive energy that came from fishing, the place seemed like a pale reflection of its former self.”


Published by Stanley/Barker and available now for $60 / £50 (Australian pricing to be confirmed).
Killip is one of my favorite photographers and has inspired me throughout my entire career. Skinningrove will no doubt join his other works as a landmark photography publication and is among my top picks for the best photography book of the year so far.
If like me you are mad about photography books, see our guides to the best coffee table books on photography and the best street photography books.
Milwaukee Art Museum announces new Herzfeld Center for Photography show
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The loon traveled from Los Angeles to its permanent home in the Twin Cities.
A new beetle species has been named to honor a fellow Husker, bridging the worlds of academia and wildlife conservation.
Silversea, a premier brand in experiential luxury and expedition travel, recently concluded the inaugural season of its first Nova-class ship, Silver Nova,
Silversea, a premier brand in experiential luxury and expedition travel, recently concluded the inaugural season of its first Nova-class ship, Silver Nova,
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