Here’s What’s Going On in Indian Country July 12-July 18

Here’s What’s Going On in Indian Country July 12-July 18

This week in Indian Country, there are plenty of events for everyone to enjoy. From powwows to Native American Art Exhibits, here is Native News Online’s weekly round-up of arts, culture, and entertainment offerings around Indian Country.

Whispering Winds Powwow
West Friendship, MD
July 13-14, 2024

Prepare yourself for an enriching cultural journey at the Howard County Fairgrounds. Engage with American Indian dancers, singers, drummers, artists, and craftspeople. Gain insights into the rich culture and traditions of American Indians, past and present.

Bear Mountain Native American Celebration
Bear Mountain, NY
July 13-14, 2024

Bear Mountain Pow Wow is a full contest powwow attracting over 500 Native American artists, educators, singers, dancers and performing groups from across the Americas. Over 40 artist booths selling crafts, jewelry, food and more. Other highlights of the event include authentic cuisine: buffalo burgers, venison stew and corn soup. 

World Tour Series with Native American: Reg Pettibone
Ludington, MI
July 13, 2024

Reg Pettibone from the Ho-Chunk (Winnebago) Nation will set up a 12-foot tipi and perform a Native American dance with his wife Marca and one of their daughters. Audience participation is integral to their performance. Participants will then make Native American friendship bracelets with leather and beads, followed by the Native American game “Chase the Rabbit,” a toss-type game.

2024 Wishpemishkos Dises Sweetgrass Moon Powwow
Hipkins, MI
July 13-14, 2024

The Gun Lake Tribe of Pottawatomi Indians is inviting the public to the Sweet Grass Moon Pow Wow on Saturday from1 PM to 10 PM and Sunday from noon to 5:30 PM. The Sweet Grass Moon Pow Wow is a cultural celebration of Pottawatomi traditions, dance and songs. Jijak Camp is a sprawling cultural center that features a beautiful pow wow arena, cabins, lakes, a community center and much more. Native American vendors from across the Great Lakes region will offer native foods, arts, and jewelry.

Curators in Conversation: Native Modern Art
St. Louis, MO
July 13, 2024

In recognition of the closing of the exhibition Native American Art of the 20th Century: The William P. Healey Collection, join scholars for an engaging discussion about the revolutionary Native artists and artworks that form the collection. Alexander Brier Marr, SLAM’s associate curator for Native American art, will moderate the discussion with Tony Abeyta, Heather Ahtone, and Bruce Bernstein.

Education Powwow
Ledyard, CT
July 13, 2024

The Mashantucket Pequot Museum’s Educational Powwow is a narrated exhibition showcasing Native American dancers and the significance of this cultural gathering for Indigenous people. Gain a greater understanding and appreciation for the powwow experience and how it helps sustain a sense of community for America’s first people.

The Great Jim Thorpe: Longest Run 40th Anniversary
Salamanca, NY
July 19, 2024

Join in to celebrate the 40th anniversary of Jim Thorpe’s longest run with a day of commemoration featuring some of the original runners and organizers. The day will kick off with a relay run from the Cattaraugus Territory to the Allegany Territory, covering approximately 36 miles. This will be followed by dinner and a Q&A session. 

Sacred Native American Pipe Ceremony
Las Vegas, NV
July 12, 2024

This is an authentic ritual Pipe Ceremony and healing circle, led by Sean Walking Bear of the Cree Indian Tribe. This is an ideal time to bring items such as crystals, necklaces, drums, rattles to be cleansed, energized, and blessed. For those requesting for a more personal healing, blessing, or guidance, it is traditional for the Shaman to be given tobacco as a gift for their sacrifice and offering. The ceremony will involve storytelling, a talking circle, drumming, meditation, and chanting of sacred songs and songs from the heart.

Native Nyyte Lyyv
Spokane Valley, WA
July 13, 2024

Join in to see Indigenous artists of all genres perform live, with an authentic Indigenous menu, and arts and merchandise by independent Indigenous creatives. 

The Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde Veteran Summit & Resource Fair
Grand Ronde, OR
July 12-13, 2024

The Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde invties all veterans to the 2024 Veteran Summit and Resource Fair. Veterans are welcome to visit all the resource tables and talk with Veteran Service Officers about service connection. Come enjoy the day and stay for the 2024 Marcellus Norwest Powwow that begins Friday night at 7 p.m. and goes throughout the weekend.

2024 North Dakota Indian Education Summit – 10th Anniversary Celebration
July 18-19, 2024
Bismarck, ND

This two full-day event will be held at the North Dakota State Capitol. The NDIES is open to all ND educators and is designed to provide professional development and education on best practices in Indian education. The registration cost includes two full days of dynamic keynotes, educational breakout sessions, cultural presentations, breakfast, lunch, snacks, drinks, handouts/resource materials, product vendor and information exhibitor booths, door prizes, and great networking opportunities. Single day rates are not available. 

Native Nations in LA: Pamela J. Peters Photo Exhibit 
Santa Ana, CA
July 13, 2024

Join in for Native Nations in LA, a special pop up photo exhibit by Diné (Navajo) photographer and multimedia documentarian Pamela J. Peters. The Native Nations in LA exhibit showcases the rich diversity of tribal nations present in Los Angeles, California. The images displayed highlight the modern representation of Native Americans from different tribal nations, shedding light on cultures often overlooked in the diverse landscape of Los Angeles.

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About The Author
Kaili Berg
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Staff Reporter
Kaili Berg (Aleut) is a member of the Alutiiq/Sugpiaq Nation, and a shareholder of Koniag, Inc. She is a staff reporter for Native News Online and Tribal Business News. Berg, who is based in Wisconsin, previously reported for the Ho-Chunk Nation newspaper, Hocak Worak. She went to school originally for nursing, but changed her major after finding her passion in communications at Western Technical College in Lacrosse, Wisconsin.


See Ten Creepy-Crawly Portraits From the Insect Week Photography Contest

See Ten Creepy-Crawly Portraits From the Insect Week Photography Contest

When turning their lenses toward wildlife, nature photographers often thrill to majestic bison, otherworldly whales and the varied behaviors of birds.

But perhaps not as many look to the smaller, six-legged creatures that crawl, swim and fly—sometimes under cover of darkness—even though their numbers are legion and they inhabit nearly all parts of the globe.

To put a spotlight on insects, the Royal Entomological Society, a United Kingdom-based charity dedicated to insect science, holds a photography contest each year. In connection with its annual Insect Week outreach event, the group recently announced the winners of its most-recent competition.

“It’s wonderful to know that so many individuals have engaged with insects in this way, capturing some incredible moments for their world and showcasing the beauty and diversity of insects,” contest judge Ashleigh Whiffin, entomology curator at the National Museum of Scotland, says in a statement.

Amateur photographers from all over the world are invited to enter the contest, calling attention to the wonders of our planet’s insects at a time when roughly 40 percent of them may be threatened with extinction.

The Royal Entomological Society shared online galleries of all the commended photos in this year’s competition, from both adult and youth photographers. Here’s a selection of ten stunning images recognized by the judges.

Sleeping cuckoos by Luke Chambers

Black-thighed cellophane-cuckoo bees sleep holding onto blades of grass.

© Luke Chambers, First Place

Gripping onto grasses with their jaws—yet still fast asleep—two black-thighed cellophane-cuckoo bees are the peaceful subjects of the winning image for this year’s contest.

Named for the birds that lay their eggs in other birds’ nests, cuckoo bees also parasitize the nests of other bees. They do not collect pollen or nectar, since they lack some of the specialized body parts for it, such as pollen-carrying hairs. This gives cuckoo bees a shinier and less fuzzy appearance.

Coming across these tranquil creatures was “one of my best encounters to date,” says photographer Luke Chambers in a statement. “Finding any sleeping invertebrate is always brilliant, but two so close together, well that’s like winning the photography lottery.”

Caddisfly larvae in a jelly egg sac by Tim Jonas

more than a dozen larval caddisflies clumped together against a green leaf background

Larval caddisflies in an egg sac under a leaf

© Tim Jonas, Second Place

Adult caddisflies are moth-like, known for flocking toward light bulbs at night. But for most of their lives, the insects live in water, providing an important food source for fish.

In this image, which took second place in the contest, larval caddisflies have just hatched within a gelatinous egg sac, positioned on a leaf hanging over water. When they are ready, the insects will drop into the water where they live as larvae. In the pupal phase of their lives, they will build aquatic cocoons and undergo metamorphosis, then take to the air as adults.

“Having photographed a caddisfly laying her eggs at this location the previous year, I was keen to document the next stage showing eggs and larvae inside the gelatinous mass,” photographer Tim Jonas says in a statement. “I captured images of several egg masses near water, returning a few days later to find they had hatched.”

Nature’s jewels by Nikita Richardson

roughly 17 brightly colored beetle-like bugs in red and green all in a clump and overlapping

A cluster of brightly colored male cotton harlequin bugs

© Nikita Richardson, Behavior Specially Commended

Cotton harlequin bugs, which sport vibrant colors in a captivating pattern, are each less than one inch long. But together, they often form large clusters as an anti-predator adaptation.

“When one bug emits a bad smell as a deterrent for predators, it will trigger the others to do so as well,” says Nikita Richardson, who captured this photo in Australia, in a statement. The bugs pictured here are males, while females tend to be mostly orange.

Robber fly by Steven Mahy

a close-up of the front of a fly's face and its legs holding onto a plant in front of a blurred purple flower

A brown heath robber fly stares into the camera lens, its compound eyes on display.

© Steven Mahy, Portraits Specially Commended

Also known as “assassin flies,” robber flies are notorious for their lethal predatory habits. From its perch on a plant or rock, the fly will watch for an insect passing by, then swoop down and snatch it out of the air. Robber flies use venomous saliva to quickly immobilize and kill their unfortunate prey.

But to photographer Steven Mahy, finding this robber fly was a stroke of luck. “I was looking for butterflies an hour or so before sunset, in an area where I had seen plenty in the daytime,” he says in a statement. “Could not find a single butterfly but then noticed this robber fly.”

Picasso bug by Robin Backhouse

a stinkbug-like insect grips onto a thin green plant and faces the camera, its head and back are yellow with black and blue scalloped stripes on its back and a yellow background

A portrait of the aptly named Picasso bug

© Robin Backhouse, Portraits Specially Commended

The Picasso bug looks like an artist has painted on its back—atop its base green hue, one of these creatures has 11 ring-shaped spots in various colors, which are meant to serve as a warning to predators. Residents of tropical and subtropical regions of Africa, the insects give off an unpleasant odor when threatened, revealing their relation to stink bugs.

Robin Backhouse photographed this individual in Kenya. “They don’t sit still for long, so I had to be patient to get the face-on composition,” Backhouse says in a statement.

Brown argus roosting at sunrise by Richard Sheldrake

a small butterfly appears in profile and as a silhouette against the orange orb of the sun, gripping to some blades of grass and facing the ground

A brown argus butterfly at sunrise

© Richard Sheldrake, Portraits Specially Commended

At dawn, a brown argus butterfly awakens, backlit by the rising sun. Often, groups of these butterflies—which, despite their brown color, belong to a subfamily known as the “blues”—roost communally on blades of grass overnight. These congregations can present a golden opportunity for photographers.

“I start very early, before dawn and search for the butterflies as they start to climb higher up grass stems to get the early sun warmth,” Richard Sheldrake says in a statement. “On this day, I found this beauty on a long grass stem on the top of a bank, so I could get right down low to catch the sun in the background.”

Look into my eyes by Pete Burford

close-up of the face and front legs of a dragonfly-like creature, its compound eyes black and green and its body blue; it sits on a leaf against a blue background

A damselfly covered with drops of dew sits on a leaf in this close-up photo.

© Pete Burford, Portraits Specially Commended

Being cold-blooded, damselflies and other insects cannot generate their own body heat. At night, when temperatures drop, this can render the creatures unable to move. Damselflies, long-bodied creatures akin to dragonflies, can sometimes be covered by dew at night as they lie still.

Photographer Pete Burford was outside at 2 a.m., looking for resting damselflies in the United Kingdom. “I lucked out near a fishing pond and found a couple of them still on the reeds covered in dew,” Burford says in a statement. “I was able to get quite a few interesting poses of them whilst I was there.”

Evening prayer by Leela Channer

a silhouette of the full body of a praying mantis on a reed in the upper left in front of a pink sky, the sun visible as an orange circle at the lower right

A praying mantis stands on a reed in front of the setting sun.

© Leela Channer, Environment Specially Commended

Praying mantises might look peaceful, but they are pretty fearsome hunters, capable of taking down prey three times their size. As such, mantises are sometimes considered beneficial to gardens, since they eat damaging insects. Here, one sits at the edge of a plowed field in France.

“[I] lay on the ground to photograph it silhouetted against the sky just before the sun dipped behind the hills,” photographer Leela Channer says in a statement.

Jumping bristletail by Tim Jonas

seen slightly from above, a long, brown and slightly iridescent-looking bug with black eyes and two short mouthparts and two long antennae

A portrait of a jumping bristletail, which resembles a silverfish

© Tim Jonas, Portraits Specially Commended

The odd-looking jumping bristletails are among the most primitive insects known today—their lineage appeared with the arachnids during the mid-Devonian period, and it predates dinosaurs by roughly 200 million years. Though the creatures may look a bit like silverfish, they have a distinctive hump on their backs—and they can leap several inches into the air.

When walking at Brockadale Nature Reserve in England, Tim Jonas often finds jumping bristletails hidden under stones. They’re “one of my favorite subjects to photograph,” Jonas says in a statement.

Les fleurs du mal by Panagiotis Dalagiorgos

blurred pink petals of flowers surround a green praying mantis, just its head and a bit of its front legs visible; it is looking at the camera

A praying mantis peers through walls of pink petals.

© Panagiotis Dalagiorgos, Portraits Specially Commended

Nestled among some pink cyclamen, a flower in the primrose family, a praying mantis is seen through a gap in the petals—in sharp focus, even as the plants blur.

“I love the way she peeks through the cyclamens,” says Panagiotis Dalagiorgos in a statement. “I think it adds some mystery and danger to the beautiful flower scenery.”

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SlickPic Photography Challenge: Double Exposure

SlickPic Photography Challenge: Double Exposure

Feel like doing a photography challenge? Here’s one that you can tackle over the weekend to put your photography skills to the test and refill your creative juices! For the 28th week of their 52-week Photo Challenge, the folks of SlickPic want us to craft ingenious Double Exposures.

In this challenge, the task is to use double exposure to combine two different images in a single frame. With this creative technique, you can experiment with blending elements from the two images to create surreal and dramatic images. So, part of the challenge is to skillfully and creatively fuse shapes, textures, and subjects and even different photography genres to make your photos extra interesting and artistic.

You can go the old school route using film cameras, or use your favorite image editing software to create double exposure composites. If your digital camera has a double exposure feature, this is the perfect opportunity to explore it if you haven’t yet.

To help inspire you with some tips and ideas, we suggest checking out our resources on double/multiple exposures, as well as useful guides from Adobe and ProGrade Digital. In case you’re just joining, we also encourage you to check out the full info on the 52-week Challenge.

Photography challenge details

  • Submissions will be accepted until the end of the day on July 14, 2024. So, if you’re in the mood to flex your creative muscles, there’s still plenty of time to make something nice!
  • Submit 3 images by clicking this link
  • Please submit images in JPEG format. Uploading photos that are at least 2500 on the long side is recommended for the highest quality.

Once you submit your photos, you can review them here: https://52weekchallenge.slickpic.com

As always, you can ask your friends to join the challenge as well by clicking on the Share button for the album and inviting them to join in. Of course, you can also encourage them to Like and Comment on your submissions!

Submit your Double Exposure photos now!

Artist in Residence at the Remington

Artist in Residence at the Remington

WATERTOWN, New York (WWNY)

Welcome to Summer Artist in Residence

Marjorie Kaniehtonkie Skidders

Artist Talk: Saturday, July 20th at 2PM

Curator Talk: Saturday, August 3rd at 2 PM

Throughout her residency, Skidders’s artwork will be on display in the Frederic Remington Art Museum’s Hirschey Family Gallery.

“As an Indigenous photographer, I am always searching for beautiful moments occurring in everyday life. I view every photo shoot as an opportunity to capture those moments and share my Kanienkeha life with the world.”

Kaniehtonkie will discuss her work in an artist’s talk on Saturday July 20 at 2:00 pm. The talk is free with admission and open to the public, with a reception to follow.

This year, Marjorie will work directly with the Akwesasne Boys & Girls club to bring students to the Museum for photography composition classes. These classes will encourage Mohawk youth to tell their stories and express their identity, experience, perspectives, and culture through photography. One will be a beginner class for youth children, and the other will be for pre-teen to teen classes for students with some experience with photography. The students will also have a chance to explore Remington’s work with Educator and Museum Experience Manager, Julie Pratt.

As part of her collaboration with the Remington Museum, Kaniehtonkie will curate an exhibition of select Remington works, which will open on Saturday, August 3rd with a public curator talk at 2:00 pm in the Museum’s Addie P. Newell Gallery. A reception will follow.

Marjorie Kaniehtonkie Skidders is an award-winning photographer. Among other awards, she earned first and second place at the prestigious Adirondack Mohawk and Abenaki Art Markets in 2018 and 2019. In 2021, she had a one-woman show at the Native North American Traveling College, in 2022, she won second place in the juried Ganondagan Museum’s Hodinöhsö:ni′ Art Show in photography, and in 2024 had a one-woman show at the Richard F. Brush Art Gallery at St. Lawrence University. As proud Ista of four children and twelve grandchildren, she is currently the editor of Indian Time newspaper.

Kaniehtonkie also served as juror for the Museum’s Annual Members’ Juried Art Exhibit, which opened in May and which will remain on view through September 7. As juror to the annual Members’ Juried Art Exhibit, the resident artist provides fresh insight into and analysis of the work of the Museum’s community of artists, a number of whom are long-time participants in these exhibits. As with previous resident artists, Marjorie Kaniehtonkie Skidders is a skilled artist working in a field (photography) relevant to the Museum and its audiences. She has spent a career in education and is poised to offer instruction to under-served youth and interpretation at the highest level. An Akwesasne Mohawk woman, Skidders’s curation of a new exhibit of work by Frederic Remington will offer a fresh perspective on the artist and his work.

Marjorie Kaniehtonkie Skidders, a member of the Bear Clan of the Akwesasne Mohawk Nation Territory, has a bachelor’s degree in art and a master’s in education that turned into a 25-year career in education as a teacher, director, Indigenous content curriculum writer, and school principal. After retiring in 2007, she returned to her roots as an artist focusing on writing and photography. Her work has been acquired by the New York State Museum; Adirondack Experience, the Museum at Blue Mountain Lake; and St. Lawrence University.

Vivo X Fold3 Pro review: easily the best foldable for photography

Vivo X Fold3 Pro review: easily the best foldable for photography

Introduction

Book-style foldables aren’t exactly in abundance on this side of the world, where Samsung rules the roost through a combination of brand recognition and slick software. It’s a different story in China, where the best smartphones simply must have the best hardware. It’s enough to make a phone fan jealous – which is why I’m stoked Vivo has brought the X Fold3 Pro to an international audience.

This featherweight folder has a trio of high resolution cameras, a flagship chipset, and two sizeable AMOLED screens. Add in a monstrously big battery, and there’s little else out there with such a comprehensive spec sheet. It’s not exactly getting a wide release, with India and Indonesia the main markets so far – and at ₹159,999 (roughly $1900/£1500), it’s not exactly cheap.

But that still neatly undercuts the Galaxy Z Fold6, a phone that gives me a strong impression Samsung has taken its foot off the gas on the hardware front. Has Vivo stepped in to fill the gap for those that want the best bang per buck?

Design & build: thinner winner

At a ridiculously light 236g, the Vivo X Fold3 Pro is barely any heavier than a traditional flagship phone – and almost as thin when closed. That’s mighty impressive given its palm-stretching proportions. Each half is a barely-there 5.2mm thick, which is only really beaten by the Honor Magic V2. Vivo’s carbon fibre hinge has that phone licked for range of angles it be used in before either snapping open or shut, which it does in a very satisfying manner. The phone folds fully open, too – something the Google Pixel Fold can’t manage.

The giant circular camera bump on the rear panel has a lot in common with the Vivo X100 Pro, including the Zeiss branding and how it protrudes from the glass. Vivo has dialled the cursive branding right back here, which can only be a good thing, and the frosted finish does a great job at hiding fingerprints. The whole thing is IPX8 rated, which is up there with the best foldables for water resistance but a step behind the Galaxy Z Fold6 for dust ingress.

An alert slider at the side feels pinched directly from OnePlus; it’s nice to have, but I’ve barely used it as I keep forgetting it’s there. That’s also the case for the IR blaster at the top of the phone. The one thing I did miss was eSim support, which will be a downer for frequent travellers. It can at least swallow two nano SIMs.

This is the first foldable I’ve used two two under-display fingerprint sensors. The one on the cover screen was the more reliable of the pair, with the one beneath the inner screen needing a second attempt more often. As a left-handed phone user, though, I massively prefer this setup to the side-mounted scanners used by most other foldables.

Screen & sound: picture perfect

Size isn’t everything – but it’s a large part of what makes the Vivo X Fold3 Pro’s pair of screens so impactful. At 6.53in and with a 21:9 aspect ratio, the outer display is a real monolith, while the 8.03in inner panel dwarfs just about every other book-style foldable. The 4:3 aspect ratio also means black bars don’t eat up nearly as much screen space when streaming TV shows as they do on the square OnePlus Open. The inner screen has a punch-hole webcam rather than a camouflaged under-display sensor, but Vivo sensible stuck it right in the corner. It effectively vanishes from view when watching letterboxed video content.

Both displays have high resolution AMOLED panels with impactful colours and infinite contrast. Photos and videos look properly impactful in the standard display mode, while staying on the right side of realistic. There’s a Professional mode in the Settings menu that’s more subdued, and I appreciate the inclusion of a colour wheel that gives fine-grain control over colour temperature.

LTPO tech lets the adaptive refresh rate dip as low as 1Hz for maximum power saving when showing static images, or up to 120Hz for smooth scrolling and motion. Vivo claims an eye-searing 4500 nit peak brightness – though only for a tiny portion of the screen when showing HDR video. Dolby Vision and HDR10+ are both on board, and both pack a punch. More importantly, both screens easy shine bright enough to read clearly in all conditions. I could leave my sunglasses on when outside on especially sunny days and still see everything clearly.

Top marks to Vivo for making the inner screen’s crease barely detectable, and also for the way the non-removable screen protector keeps light reflections at bay. It’s not on the same level as the Galaxy S24 Ultra’s Gorilla Armor glass, but it’s a major step up from the Galaxy Z Fold6.

Putting the stereo speakers in the upper half of the phone was a smart move; you don’t obscure them when unfolding to use the larger inner screen. They’re on par with every other foldable I’ve tried, with a decent amount of volume and clarity.

Cameras: new benchmark

The X100 Pro’s epic 1in main camera sensor may not feature here, but Vivo otherwise pulled out all the stops on the photography front. The X Fold3 Pro has a 50MP lead snapper with wide f/1.7 aperture lens, optical image stabilisation and laser-assisted phase-detect autofocus; a 50MP ultrawide (also with autofocus); and a 64MP periscope telephoto good for a stabilised 3x optical zoom. Zeiss optics and some of the most nuanced image processing of any phone brand then tip it over the edge.

This is a simply brilliant cameraphone, in just about all lighting conditions. It’s easily the best foldable. Pictures are stuffed full of detail, with convincing colours, effective HDR and plenty of contrast. All three lenses are well matched on exposure and colour balance, with very little in the way of visible noise or overly aggressive sharpening.

Portraits and close-ups taken with the telephoto show convincing depth blur. They don’t come undone in darker environments either. I definitely picked up some unwanted extra processing on faces and skin, which the X100 Pro was also guilty of; even with facial retouch turned off, there’s a smoothness here that isn’t entirely true to life. It can’t match the best flagship phones for outright clarity, either – but it gets very close. For a foldable, that’s damn impressive.

The global X Fold3 Pro variant runs Vivo’s FuntouchOS skin, which sits on top of Android 14. The firm has committed to three years of new Android versions and four years of security patches. That’s not a bad showing, but still half of what you’ll get with a Samsung or Google foldable in your pocket.

My review unit had a bunch of India-specific apps preinstalled, along with a bunch of Vivo’s own. Not all can be uninstalled, and the firm’s bespoke app store is a bit too keen to take over update responsibilities from the Google Play Store, but at least notifications can be silenced fairly quickly. The notes and voice recorder apps are worth keeping around: they piggyback off Google’s Gemini AI algorithms to summarise long strings of text and transcribe audio files. The photo gallery has a magic eraser to delete unwanted distractions, but there’s none of the generative editing smarts you’ll find from Samsung’s latest foldable.

Multitasking on the inner screen uses a combination of the stock Android app toolbar and a bespoke floating menu. Dragging out an app opens it in split view – but only ever with a portrait split. You’ve got to tap the dividing line every time you want a landscape view, which is frustrating. Samsung does a better job here, and the OnePlus Open has both phones beat.

Vivo has added an always-on clock when the phone is propped up like a tent, and opening it up like a laptop turns the bottom half into a touchpad – but there’s so much more the firm could’ve done with the form factor. I couldn’t find any way to use the outer screen with the rear cameras for framing selfies. You don’t get any stylus support here, and no Samsung Dex-style big screen mode either. You’re also limited to two apps in split view, with a third in a floating window. The Galaxy Z Fold6 is still the folding world’s productivity powerhouse.

Performance & battery life: serious stamina

Like any top-tier 2024 phone, the Vivo X Fold3 Pro is powered by a Snapdragon 8 Gen 3 chipset. My review unit had a generous 16GB of RAM and 512GB of storage, but the base model gets 12GB and 256GB respectively.

Either way, it’ll have more than enough oomph to run Android 14 perfectly smoothly. Synthetic benchmarks see it score higher than some traditional flagship phones, and it opens up an especially wide gap to the OnePlus Open (which uses a previous-gen processor). I saw no slowdowns, zero stuttering, nor sluggishness of any kind at any point during my testing. I’m expecting the Galaxy Z Fold6 to be faster still, on account of its custom-tuned silicon, but in day-to-day use I doubt you’ll notice any difference.

Squeezing such a potent processor into a slim chassis was always going to mean the phone gets toasty when under sustained load. A vapor chamber cooling system keeps temperatures largely in check, though, so gaming never dissolved into a slideshow. I was able to play demanding 3D titles like Zenless Zone Zero at high settings on either screen.

Arguably more impressive is this phone’s outstanding battery life. I spent an entire day on mobile data, streaming YouTube videos on the inner display, taking photos and running a hotspot for my work laptop, and still wasn’t in the red before bedtime. The giant 5700mAh capacity is more than you’ll get from any flagship phone right now, foldable or otherwise. Two days is doable if you stick to Wi-Fi and avoid gaming.

Charging speeds are practically unmatched, too. The X Fold3 Pro can manage 100W over USB-C and 50W from a powerful enough Qi wireless pad; on the former I managed a complete refuel using the bundled power brick in just under 45 minutes, or half the time you’d need to fully juice a Galaxy Z Fold6.

Vivo X Fold3 Pro verdict

Vivo X Fold3 Pro review innerVivo X Fold3 Pro review inner

This is hands down my favourite foldable of 2024 so far. The Vivo X Fold3 Pro is as slim and light as a traditional flagship, with equally impactful performance and even better battery life. Charging speeds leave rivals for dust, and its cameras are second to none in the foldable world. Both screens are a treat for the eyes.

Vivo isn’t a class leader on the software front, though, lacking the productivity-boosting features found in the best foldables. The firm’s long-term update commitment is average at best, too. Then there’s the fact most Stuff readers are going to have to import it, which carries its own risks and doesn’t include any warranty.

Buying one will take commitment, then – but those that see it through will end up with a fantastic phone.

Vivo X Fold3 Pro technical specifications

Screen 6.53in, 2748×1172, 120Hz AMOLED (cover)
8.03in, 2480×2200, 120Hz AMOLED (inner)
CPU Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Gen 3
Memory 12/16GB RAM
Cameras 50MP, f1.7 w/ PDAF, laser AF, OIS +
64MP, f/2.6 telephoto w/ PDAF, OIS, 3x optical zoom +
50MP, f/2.0 ultrawide w/ PDAF rear
32MP, f/2.4 cover +
32MP, f/2.4 inner
Storage 256GB/512GB/1TB
Operating system Android 14 w/ FuntouchOS
Battery 5700mAh w/ 100W wired, 50W wireless charging
Dimensions 160x142x5.2mm (open)
160×73.11.2mm (closed)
236g

Eye Of The Century: What’s Made The Cameras Of Leica So Iconic

Eye Of The Century: What’s Made The Cameras Of Leica So Iconic

Children of tenacious families

Fatima was the first to choose to emigrate. It was she who opened that path that took the Nasraoui clan from Tangier to Madrid and then to Catalonia.

We are all Lamine Yamal, but we are also his mother Sheila and his father Mounir. We are his grandmother Fatima. And we are the shining determination of their dreams.

These are families who grit their teeth

Yamal is just one symbol of the so-called second generation (an obsolete term that should be changed because it tends to exclude many), the faces of an expanding diaspora empowering itself from near and far. We also see ourselves in his teammate Nico Williams, whose parents walked across the Sahara to give their son a chance.

These are families who grit their teeth and push through to achieve in a Europe that often considers non-white or non-national bodies to be too much, a hindrance, a danger even. Families who, despite those attitudes, continue to try their best. The reality is far more nuanced than what the mainstream tells us.

u200bJasmine Paolini waves to the spectators after defeating Donna Vekic

Jasmine Paolini waves to the spectators after defeating Donna Vekic

John Patrick Fletcher/Action Plus Sports/ZUMA

Not a fairy tale

Take also, for example, emerging Italian tennis star Jasmine Paolini — Polish mother (who came to Italy to work) and Italian father. But also Polish grandmother and Ghanaian grandfather.

Sports shows us endless stories. Paola Egonu in volleyball or Yeman Crippa and Marcell Jacobs in athletics.

At first glance, their stories could look like the ending of a fairy tale: they all lived happily ever after. But they didn’t. There is unfortunately a symbolic and bureaucratic resistance to this plural Europe from a part of our continent. There are still too many hostile words — and hostile laws.

In Spain, for example, a word, “Mena,” is used to refer to nonwhite, working-class suburban youth. The word is short for unaccompanied foreign minors, but usage has turned it into a racist, demeaning, criminalizing slur for young people.

In Italy, on the other hand, we know that a citizenship law for the children of migrants born and/or raised in the country has been missing for too long. People who are part of this country, but because of the shortsightedness of politics are considered foreigners in their own nation.

The risk of being swept away is high.

In Italy, a talent like Lamine Yamal would not even have been summoned to the national team. Not only because of the lack of legislation that would grant him citizenship, making him a foreigner for life, but also because of the color line that demarcates a national-popular-colonial space like soccer.

Unaccesible realms

And not all fields are created equal. We still swim within white, very classist, inaccessible worlds. Think of radio, television, newspaper editorial offices, universities, schools, cinema, theater, politics, science, our intellectual class. These are environments that people with migrant backgrounds rarely enter. And when they do get in, it also comes with healthy doses of compromises and suffering. The risk of being swept away is high.

Think of the story of Dacia Valent, Europe’s first Black member of the European Parliament, whose brother Giacomo was killed with 63 stab wounds in Udine in 1985. She became an MEP in 1989 only to be wiped out by the system. In fact, if one examines her story, one sees that it was the violence of the structures, the nefarious circle of those who would not listen to her words, that ultimately destroyed her.

Now, as always, Italy, Spain, and all of Europe have a chance to change course. Yamal’s story — but also Nico Williams’s and Jasmine Paolini’s — instinctively speak to our hearts. No matter what our backgrounds. But how do we transform these stories into new policy, and new attitudes?

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These photos are a love letter to NYC’s elite nightlife

These photos are a love letter to NYC’s elite nightlife
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Partying with Suzy Clue and getting shot by the Cobrasnake. Scheming about the latest ghostwriting scandal while playing pool. Falling in love with the guy that cast you in the play and dressing up as a princess for both recreation and pay. These are just a few things that photographer Matthew Weinberger considers peak-NYC behaviour, taken from the flyers for his new exhibition NEW YORK IS, each closing with the line “(and I love it so much)”.

An avid member of New York’s eclectic club scene, its moments such as these that Weinberger celebrates in this exhibition. From intimate pre-party shots of the city’s socialites applying makeup in front of the mirror, right through to frantic blurs of movement and light on the dancefloor, NEW YORK IS is a love letter to the chic cultural milieu of the city that never sleeps.

What makes New York so special is all the people coming in from all over the world. We get this huge talent draw which is super exciting,” Weinberger told Dazed earlier this year. Born and bred in the Upper East Side, Weinberger spent time at university in Maddison, Wisconsin, before being drawn back to his home city by a desire to capture its flourishing art scene.

“I am a person who is at the party, who happens to be taking photos. If there’s a mosh happening, I’m getting in there”, Weinberger continues, “As I’m bumping into people, I’m flashing, having the best time ever. You have got to make the world you want to see, so I like to always bring the energy.” 

Indeed, Weinberger’s portraits arrive hard and fast, casting Julia Fox, Gabbriette and an anonymous baby in a onesie against the dark yet vibrant backgrounds of the club. Looks are diverse, as are the people, but the images are all rooted in Weinberger’s own experiences of New York’s febrile nightlife, providing viewers with an exhilarating tour through the city’s seediest underground parties and most exclusive gatherings. 

NEW YORK is at Sitting Room Gallery in Manhattan’s iconic Lower East Side runs until the July 16, 2024. Visit the gallery above for a closer look. 

Missoula’s Rocky Mountain School of Photography closing after 35 years

Missoula’s Rocky Mountain School of Photography closing after 35 years

MISSOULA — Rocky Mountain School of Photography (RMSP) in Missoula has announced it will be closing its doors after 35 years.

“We’re not as much an art school. We’re more of a trade school for artists,” shared Director Forest Chaput de Saintonge.

Rocky Mountain School of Photography has been offering courses for aspiring photographers.

“There’s so many people who have a better life, a life that they’ve wanted forever, a better career after attending,” said Chaput de Saintonge.

Chaput de Saintonge’s family started the school in 1989. His father studied with Ansel Adams and brought some of Adams’s technical expertise to RMSP.

“We are a technical school in the way that there’s a lot of lecture, but every lecture is usually accompanied with a field shoot or practice time where the students get their hands on their gear, they’re learning it with assistants and instructors standing by and then there’s critiques,” explained Chaput de Saintonge.

Chaput de Saintonge grew up as the school grew its programs.

“Most of my formative memories as a kid were in and around the school.” He continued, “I was probably five or six years old when I would draw out mazes on pieces of paper and then copy them on the copy machine and give them out to students. I started teaching when I was 17 and kind of just kept doing more and doing more.”

Forest Chaput de Saintonge

Emily Brown/MTN News
“I think the biggest thing is just reading the word life changing again and again and again,” Chaput de Saintonge said of reading comments on the school’s closing post on Instagram

The family announced on July 10 that they would be closing the school’s doors for good.

“Registrations are dropping because, just industry changes, I think online education has had a huge impact. We fought it for as long as we could and kind of made that our niche,” said Chaput de Saintonge.

Additionally, the cost of living is making it harder for people to attend the school in person.

“Missoula is expensive to live here. And for someone to think about, you know, coming to our professional program, which is nine months, paying the tuition, but also paying nine months of living also not being able to have a job for nine months because our programs are intense,” Chaput de Saintonge stated.

Staff are pouring all they have into their last summer intensive class and students are taking note.

“So, I sort of tried to go down the, like YouTube tutorial sort of self-teaching kind of route and I just found it was kind of slow and it just wasn’t really doing it,” shared student Kevin Doherty. “And this course just looked like it was going to tick all the right boxes and it definitely did,” he added.

Doherty came all the way to Missoula from the West coast of Ireland. He loves to film big wave surfing and thought RMSP would elevate his craft.

Kevin Doherty

Emily Brown/MTN News
Kevin Doherty’s aunt’s friend did a program at RMSP and inspired him to come to the states and try the summer intensive

“It’s made a huge impact even on my learning stuff I already thought I knew how to do. I’ve learned how to do the right way now. And just technical stuff and I think really just how I see photography as well,” Doherty said.

He’s feeling honored to be part of the last RMSP class.

“You know, it’s sort of the end, but I’m just delighted that I got to experience it and it’s really, it’s been amazing. I’d do it 10 times again if I could,” expressed Doherty.

More local news from KPAX

Weekly Rec: Hopper’s Plein Air Pop-Up Weekend with Flash Sketch Mob, Rockland Photography Club Exhibit, and Nyack Street Fair

Weekly Rec: Hopper’s Plein Air Pop-Up Weekend with Flash Sketch Mob, Rockland Photography Club Exhibit, and Nyack Street Fair

Flash Sketch Mob headlines Hopper Plein Air Pop-Up Weekend

NyackNewsAndView’s own Bill Batson organizes his first Flash Sketch Mob in Nyack in 9 years in collaboration with the Edward Hopper Museum and Studio Center this Saturday, July 13, from 12:30 – 3:30pm. The crowd-sourced landscape portrait project was born on the pages of Batson’s Nyack Sketch Log column. You can register for the Hopper Flash Sketch Mob here. Scholarships are available.

A lecture entitles “Painting In the Open Air” by Elizabeth Thompson Colleary will precede the Flash Sketch Mob and is the perfect precursor. Colleary will present numerous oils and watercolors, many rarely seen, that Jo Nivison and Edward Hopper painted in outdoor settings where they found inspiration. Get tickets here.

Entire sections of the village were captured by groups of 100 artists respectively in Flash Sketch Mobs in 2012 and 2015. Artists lined both sides of the street, arriving as individuals, couples and families all becoming one giant flash sketch mob that is creating a handmade google map street view of our one square mile village. 

Images are then scanned and shown as a collective representation of the village we all love. A village that inspired, Hopper and that has been subsequently shaped and defined by Hopper. Please join us Saturday from 12:30 to 3:30pm here at the hopper house.

The Flash sketch mob is open to artists of all ages and skill levels. After folks return from their designated assignments, we will scan their work for a screening on July 2Oth. The slideshow on that day will cap off a day that includes a Hopper Ride from the Whitney Museum in NYC to Nyack and a concert by Night Hawk.

Cyclists in the “Tour de Hopper,” will start their journey at registration early on Saturday, July 20 from 7–8:30am outside the Whitney Museum (99 Gansevoort Street, Manhattan) before heading north to the Edward Hopper House Museum & Study Center (82 North Broadway, Nyack).

Edward Hopper House is where Hopper was born and grew up in Nyack before moving to New York City. The Edward Hopper House will offer snacks, Hopper birthday activities, and tours of the artist’s home, including a look at his 1897 bicycle. At the end of the visit, riders will head back to the Whitney Museum which is located near the neighborhood where Hopper lived and worked for much of his life

The day ends with a Edward Hopper birthday concert by Night Hawk, a Hopper inspired indie band currently touring the northeast this summer.

The band’s name “Night Hawk” is an allusion to Edward Hopper’s painting Nighthawks (1942) and they sings the stories of Edward Hopper paintings and more.

Night Hawk is a Bowdoin-based outfit led by Colter Adams and Peyton Semjen, whose music often blurs the line between indie rock and performance art. Featuring a rotating cast of intrepid players from the New England underground, the project revolves around the question: what do Edward Hopper’s paintings sound like?

The band members (all recent graduates of Bowdoin College (Brunswick, Maine), are reprising a concert, presented this spring at the Bowdoin Museum of Art, on the Garden Stage of the Edward Hopper House Museum.

Night Hawk

Dozens of artists coming together to make art in public on the occasion of the 100th anniversary of the marriage of Joe and Ed two artists that shared that same art partnered art making experience.

The Flash Sketch Mob will continue to be a part of future Hopper Birthday weekend celebrations as a way of paying homage to Jo and Ed, two star-crossed creatives, painting side-by-side in the town where they lay side-by -side in eternal repose at Oak Hill Cemetery. Observational art making is a great way for visitors to experience our village, leaving behind a record of their perspective.

And for those of us who live here, what better way to reacquaint ourselves with a landscape animated by light reflected by a river that inspired America’s most renowned realist painter. The unexamined place is not worth inhabiting.

The more we learn about where we live, the more zealous we can be in her defense.

Join the Hopper Flash Sketch Mob and become better acquainted with our community.

Nyack Famous Street Fair

Hundreds of vendors and thousands of visitors will transform Main Street and Broadway in Nyack into an outdoor bazaar the size of a small city on Sunday, July 14.

Sunday’s fair is sponsored by ACADA, the Arts, Crafts and Antique Dealers Association. Proceeds from the street fair are used to support promotional initiatives like Visit Nyack.

All street fairs run from 10am – 5pm, rain or shine

FYI: Pets are forbidden by village ordinance.

Silent Film Screening with Live Music From Hervé and Skyler Alexandre

Comedy and Fantasy From the Silent Era With Live Musical Accompaniment by Hervé and Skyler Alexandre. Presented by Garner Arts Center and Rivertown Film Saturday, July 20, at 8:30pm. Outdoors at Garner Arts Center, 55 W Railroad Ave, Garnerville, NY

After a stunning performance accompanying silent classics last summer, Hervé and Skyler Alexandre return to Garner Arts Center to accompany classic comedy and fantasy from the early days of experimentation and discovery in filmmaking.

The Goat by Buster Keaton
Dream of a Rarebit Fiend by Edwin S. Porter
KoKo’s Earth Control by Dave Fleischer
AND MORE

Tickets on sale here. Rivertown Film members receive a discount.

Rockland Photography Club Members Exhibit

A reception with light refreshments will be held on Tuesday, July 16 from 6-7:30pm at the Hidden Treasures Gallery in Palisades Mall on the first floor by Macys.  The president of the Rockland Photography Club is our own Photo Editor, Andrea Swenson.

Brooklyn Demme screens Mountain Lion to Benefit Ashley Dawson

On Friday July 26, Rockland County filmmaker Brooklyn Demme will share his debut fictional feature film at the Cultural Arts Theatre of Rockland Community College. Mountain Lion: Healing Film of St. Francis is an intense drama about personal relationships, mental health, and family dynamics, that uses magical realism to express mindfulness in intimate relationships and seriousness in prayer. It was entirely shot in Rockland County.

The Sandhill Band of Lenape & Cherokee Indians, Rivertown Film, TurtleGang Edutainment, and Truth 2 Power, are offering a free screening to promote and benefit That Kid, the upcoming debut fictional film of Truth 2 Power co-founder and producer of Mountain Lion, Ashley Dawson.

Registration is required in order to secure seating, and any donations given at registration or at the screening will be directed to the production of That KidREGISTER HERE. If you do not receive a confirmation email, you have not successfully registered. Names of everyone who registers will be at the door. You do not need to bring a printout or show your receipt on your phone.

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Analog Photography: Award-Winning Images From The 2023 IPA

Analog Photography: Award-Winning Images From The 2023 IPA
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The 2023 International Photography Awards (IPA) showcased a stunning array of analog photography that captivated audiences globally. These remarkable winning images transport us into the enchanting realm of analog photography, with categories including fine art, landscape, and portrait.

Join us in celebrating the accomplishments of the world’s top photographers, uncovering new and emerging talent, and fostering a deeper appreciation for the art of photography.

Submit your work for the 2024 IPA edition and compete for the most prestigious photography award. Don’t miss this chance to shine on an international stage!

More info: photoawards.com | Instagram | x.com | Facebook

#1

3rd Place In Analog/Film/Landscape: “Sunkissed Hills” By Bernarda Nibera Conič

“Sunkissed Hills unveils a captivating analog film photograph by renowned European photographer Nibera, capturing the majestic beauty of the Slovenian Julian Alps. Bathed in the golden hues of a setting sun, a vibrant mountain range evokes a timeless and nostalgic sentiment. The image exudes serenity, harmony, and stillness, inviting viewers to immerse themselves in the tranquil scene. Through expertly composed visuals, Nibera’s artistry showcases the enduring power of analog photography, preserving fleeting moments while evoking profound emotions.”

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#2

Honorable Mention: “El Mar Y El Infinito” By David Flores

“The sea is a symbol of freedom and natural force, of calm and storm. From the shore, the sea is infinite, like thought and its mental drift. At a time when we are increasingly disconnected from wildlife, these photographs share the experience of feeling and loving the territory through contemplation, creating images that connect with the feeling of infinity and permanence. This series arises from the need to disseminate and promote values of respect, conservation, and sustainability of our seas and oceans through deep, contemplative, and emotional reflection of the territory.”

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#3

Honorable Mention: “Solitude” By Cristiano Xavier

“A lone tree at night, surrounded by the spinning stars.”

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#4

Honorable Mention: “Theory Of Relativity” By Lukasz Spychala

“Models: Weronika Waclawik & Kasia Markiewicz.”

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#5

3rd Place In Analog/Film/Portrait: “Bond” By Franklin Yeep

“I want to highlight the genuine beauty of relationships and connection through my portraiture.”

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#6

3rd Place In Analog/Film/Other: “Slide” By Chalet Chan

“A colorful children’s slide in the mist.”

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#7

2nd Place In Analog/Film/Portrait: “Sunset At The Supermarket” By Ousman Diallo

“Representations of the neighborhoods I was raised in have always been a constant source of tension for me. There are too few opportunities for people of diverse backgrounds to tell their own stories, so stereotypes, some based on truth, but many egregiously exaggerated are able to persist and proliferate. With this project, *Sunset At the Supermarket*, my aim was to re-examine narratives buried deep within the American culture. Sunset at the Supermarket is a collection of portraits intimately depicting the diverse youths of New York City.”

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#8

Honorable Mention: “Lucky Bird” By Lui Araki

“My best friend passed away in 2012. He was also a photographer. His mom asked me to take something usable from his room. I got some films from his room. After that. I went to Hong Kong. I put his film on my camera. This is a photo I took with my first roll. Hong Kong friend told me this is a very rare lucky bird. I got his power I think.”

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#9

Honorable Mention: “Golden Gate Barbie” By Lori Eanes

“From a Barbie series, I did where I tried to imagine Barbie more as a retro femme fatale in a noir story using moody lighting and simple backgrounds.”

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#10

1st Place In Analog/Film/Fine Art: “Tetrachromacy” By Mateusz Żurowski

“And you? What do you see? Happiness is just around the corner. Tetrachromacy (from Greek tetra, meaning “four” and chromo, meaning “color”) is the condition of possessing four independent channels for conveying color information or possessing four types of cone cells in the eye. Organisms with tetrachromacy are called tetrachromats.”

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#11

3rd Place In Analog/Film/Portrait: “Terrell Owens” By Jared Schlachet

“4×5 portrait of NFL Hall of Famer Terrell Owens.”

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#12

2nd Place In Analog/Film/Other: “Mapping Time” By Emily Hlavac Green

“The outside world has never been more alluring, calling from the windows, stretching its fingers of light inside and pulling my mind out with it. I talk to my plants, I watch the leaves unfurl. I buy myself flowers from the bodega just to watch them die because their decay maps time in a way that the days of the week no longer do. Plants become my language, a way to speak about human connection and contradiction. Rooting ourselves so deeply that we are stuck, having a desire for the unknown yet finding comfort in routine. We grow together to the point of coming apart. Hopeful, hopeless.”

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#13

3rd Place In Analog/Film/Other: “Der Dunkle Strom (Dark River)” By Michael Anker

“I came back to the landscape of my childhood three years ago. Also to look for traces in the topography of my family. After the end of the Second World War, my father’s and my mother’s paths crossed in this landscape along the Oder River. Between the fields, the river makes its way through the plain. He carries my family history with him. Calm and dark, it flows full of memories of itself and the people on its shores. Dark shoals remain hidden. I photographed this series exclusively analog in 6×6 format. To photograph this story digitally would be an anachronism.”

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#14

3rd Place In Analog/Film/Fine Art: “Musings Of Boscoe” By Kelly-Ann Bobb

“The editorial entitled “Musing of Boscoe” is influenced by the paintings of the contemporary Trinidadian painter Boscoe Holder. The Black Imagination and utilizing fashion as a vehicle to highlight our culture and to reference ourselves, has led to this collaboration.”

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#15

Honorable Mention: “The Last Yaqui” By Gaspar Marquez

“This project is a Visual Photographic Ode to La Danza del Venado (Dance of the Deer). Its objective is to be a cultural magnet among the following cultures; Native American Yaqui, Mestizo, and European, besides rebuilding artistic/cultural bridges between the US and Mexico. The Origins of The Danza del Venado are pre-colonization, it was first discovered during the expedition under command by Diego de Guzman near the Rio Yaqui in the XVI century( Mexico ), however, it is celebrated by other ethnic groups with a few variations in costume and/or style in the Sonora-Arizona.”

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#16

Honorable Mention: “Butterfly Angel (Blue)” By Fabian Kochendoerfer

“The butterfly is a deep and powerful representation of life. In many cultures, butterflies are symbolic and a metaphor representing spiritual transformation. Symbolic for rebirth, change, hope, and balance in life. The transformation from a caterpillar to a butterfly mirrors the process of spiritual transformation. The short life of the butterfly serves to remind us life is short. I took this photograph with a vintage Polaroid SX-70 camera from the 70ties. I used a limited edition film with blue and black tones only. I spend many weeks taking very many pictures to get this perfect shot.”

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#17

Honorable Mention: “The Sonoran Desert” By Gaspar Marquez

“These images belong to a series called The Sonoran Desert, shot in The Saguaro National Park in Tucson Az. My unique artistic style is an expression of creating images in an almost mathematical way, dissecting the subject aesthetics piece by piece, somehow creating an illusion of movement as a consequence of the 35 or more shots taken in the making of the “contact sheet”. Therefore, these images all together are seen as a whole and allow the viewer to witness an almost life-size 2D sculpture in a Neo-Cubism fashion.”

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#18

2nd Place In Analog/Film/Portrait: “Mr Tadeusz” By Szymon Skowyrski

“Mr. Tadeusz is a Polish baron who spent his life as a documentary film director. His attempt was to improve the world through the stories he showed. Picture made in wet plate collodion technique on 18x24cm glass plate.”

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#19

Analog/Film Photographer Of The Year: “Where Does The Tree End And The Rest Of The World Begin?” By Daniela Balestrin

“In the beginning, the intimate sphere. And then an inflated community of circles before the eyes. So much roundness formed a thread of beads, and the essay proceeded in lines where each photograph called upon met the choice of meaning to make meaning exist. By displacing the individuality of the photographs, and giving them to the opening, a story of reciprocal animation occurred, where the breath of one extends into another. Things are alive and dream of us. This essay seeks to imagine its dreams, to venture an invention.”

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#20

3rd Place In Fine Art/Nudes, 2nd Place In Analog/Film/Fine Art: “Book Of Light_portrait Of My Love Nita Curled Up_chine Colle Washi Paper With 24k Gold Flakes” By Mo Verlaan

“Book of Light comprises a series of (self-)portraits based on a handful of images that are only slightly different. However, they each have a different frequency and express a different piece of the greater narrative. Each portrait has gone through a series of individual manipulations. All were developed in the darkroom, and printed on unique old papers, some received additional layers while printing. These were digitized and used for photogravures, then printed on delicate washi papers. The portraits came to express different emotions, different moments, a search within the self and the now.”

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