Photography

Toshiko Mori curates a show of photography by Candida Höfer

Toshiko Mori curates a show of photography by Candida Höfer

Candida Höfer: Heaven on Earth
Sean Kelly, New York
475 Tenth Avenue
New York
Through April 15

Candida Höfer: Heaven on Earth demonstrates how both photographers and architects shape spatial experience. Venerable architect Toshiko Mori has selected works from the Cologne-based photographer’s 30-year documentation of libraries, museums, theaters, and churches and installed them at Sean Kelly’s New York gallery, a space she designed. Mori successfully amplifies how “we hear the voice of architecture through her photographs,” according to press materials. She could be speaking of photographers when she describes how architects compose “proportion, detail, materiality, and sequencing into an orchestrated experience.”

To that end, the exhibition features monumental, roughly square prints in understated blond wood frames. The scale, viewpoint, ambient light, and uniform focus create an otherworldly feeling of being in awe-inspiring spaces dating from the Medieval period to the present. At the same time, Höfer’s photographs are famously depopulated, following her counterintuitive belief that the social qualities of the built environment are communicated most strongly in the absence of people. The uncanny feeling of experiencing the works is enhanced by the artist’s use of a large-format film camera and wide-angle lens to render focus throughout the vast spaces, which also distorts the images’ perspectival appearances. This approach also enhances finishes and painted areas to create a vibrant harmony between surfaces and volumes.

Candida Höfer: Heaven on Earth, installation view (Jason Wyche)
Candida Höfer: Heaven on Earth, installation view (Jason Wyche)

These effects are immediately apparent in the soaring introductory image La Salle Labrouste – La Bibliothèque de l’INHA Paris II 2017. Höfer’s expansive view of the now-bright reading room celebrates recent restoration of the 1860s landmark and establishes the centrality of light to both architecture and photography. In particular, Höfer features Labrouste’s nine light-reflecting domes, each topped by an ocular skylight. Designed to cast shadowless light through the otherwise unlit reading room, the image is an indirect homage to a monumental lens.

Candida Höfer: Heaven on Earth, installation view (Jason Wyche)

Among the dominant images of historic interiors, Höfer’s photographs of modern and contemporary architecture stand out. Unlike most works in the show, these incorporate asymmetrical composition, exteriors–and even people. Höfer’s Biblioteca Vasconcelos Ciudad de México I 2015 is notably populated, even lively. In another unusual move, the viewpoint looks across the short axis of the long building rather than into its considerable depths.

Elbphilharmonie Hamburg Herzog & de Meuron Hamburg IV 2016 (Courtesy Sean Kelly)

At the Elbphilharmonie Hamburg, designed by Herzog & de Meuron, Höfer explores the dramatic roof. Its reflective disks suggesting a ship’s sails from a distance and an alien landscape up close. She directs her camera straight at a mirrored door, one that would normally reveal the viewer. How did she edit herself out of the frame? This image—and the exhibition as a whole—remind us how both architects and photographers direct our spatial experience.

Jennifer Tobias is a scholar and illustrator based in New York City.

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Photos of the month: March 2023

Photos of the month: March 2023
Patricia Fleck (left) held up a portion of a twenty-foot nasturtium vine as she and others worked to install hanging nasturtiums above the courtyard at the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum on March 28.Jessica Rinaldi/Globe Staff
Barrett Bellamy, 7 months old, watched a human-operated animatronic baby stegosaurus named Olive during the media preview for the Jurassic World Live at the BU Agganis Arena on March 31.John Tlumacki/Globe Staff
Red Sox right fielder Alex Verdugo scaled the right field wall chasing a foul ball during Opening Day at Fenway Park.Stan Grossfeld/Globe Staff
Six-year-old Conner Hess played with a piece of cardboard while resting at Boston Children’s Hospital, two weeks after receiving millions of his genetically modified stem cells to treat CALD. The treatment involved eight days of chemotherapy to make room in his bone marrow for his altered stem cells, resulted in the loss of his hair and is expected to save his life from the degenerative disease. Erin Clark/Globe Staff
St. Mary’s Yirsy Queliz held up her team’s trophy after winning the MIAA Girl’s Division 3 Basketball Championship against Bishop Fenwick at Tsongas Center on March 18.Erin Clark/Globe Staff
Relonda Ballard (right) was comforted by Michelle Thomas as she became emotional while speaking to the chief-of-staff of Senator Adam Gomez during the annual advocacy day for gun safety measures at the Massachusetts State Houseo on March 28. Both of the Springfield women lost someone to gun violence. Pat Greenhouse/Globe Staff
Jay Bailey reacted as he tasted parsley dipped in saltwater, a reminder of bitterness and hardship. Kindergartners at The Rashi School in Dedham held their annual Passover Seder on March 29.Lane Turner/Globe Staff
Dots stuck to a window as a sunscreen protected the identity of a person walking through MIT near Kendall Square in Cambridge on March 12. Jessica Rinaldi/Globe Staff
Dominic Tran and Sara Young, fourth-year medical students from Boston University Chobanian & Avedisian School of Medicine, celebrated after receiving their assignments on Match Day, the day when the National Resident Matching Program releases results to applicants seeking residency and fellowship training positions in the United States. Tran will go the the University of California San Diego for neurobiology and Young to the University of Virginia for internal medicine. Both got their first choices.Erin Clark/Globe Staff
Walter posed for a portrait that protects his identity. He began working overnight at a factory when he arrived in this country as a 16-year-old in violation of child labor laws.
Jessica Rinaldi/Globe Staff
A pedestrian watched the musicians at the Druid in Inman Square, Cambridge on March 11. Jonathan Wiggs/Globe Staff
Beatrice Tyler, 98, posed for a portrait at her Roxbury home. Although Tyler is no longer working, she is the oldest City of Boston employee. Erin Clark/Globe Staff
Boston University Terriers goaltender Drew Commesso made a save on a point blank shot attempt during the second period against the Providence College Friars on March 17 in a NCAA Hockey East mens’ semifinal game at TD Garden in Boston.Barry Chin/Globe Staff
Isla Mahoney, an Irish Step dancer from the The Woods School of Irish Dance, danced past booths of St. Patrick’s Day celebrators while performing at Lincoln Tavern and Restaurant.Erin Clark/Globe Staff
Boston University Terriers goaltender Drew Commesso and defenseman Lane Hutson were at the bottom of the celebration as they celebrated their 3-2 win on Hutson’s game winner in the overtime period against Merrimack on March 18 in the NCAA Hockey East mens’ championship game at TD Garden.Barry Chin/Globe Staff
Canton’s Brendan Tourgee and his teammates celebrated with the trophy following their victory against Hopkinton in the Division 2 boys’ ice hockey MIAA State Championship game held at the TD Garden on March 19.Jim Davis/Globe Staff
People tried to catch items being tossed out from a float at the annual St. Patrick’s Day Parade in South Boston.
Jessica Rinaldi/Globe Staff
Gary Freeman (right) and his wife, Mary used the headlamps on their hardhats to navigate through a tunnel inside Mount Mica, an underground gem mine that the rockhound couple own where they mine for tourmaline in Paris, Maine, on March 21.Jessica Rinaldi/Globe Staff
Teacher Fartun Abdi relaxed her toddlers at the Ellis Early Learning center in the South End on March 23.Lane Turner/Globe Staff
Boston Bruins center Charlie Coyle made a fan happy as he passed her his stick at the end of the game after being honored with the Number One Star of the game on March 4.John Tlumacki/Globe Staff
(Bottom row, left to right) Felix Poydar of Norwalk River Rowing Association, Alexander Kosior of Glastonbury High School Crew, and Chase Martignoni with Navesink Indoor rowing recovered after competing in the Men’s Under 17 2000 meter race at the 2023 C.R.A.S.H.-B. World Indoor Rowing Championships at the TRACK at New Balance on March 5.Jessica Rinaldi/Globe Staff
Northeastern players celebrated with the trophy for their sixth straight womens’ Hockey East title after defeating Providence 4-1 at Matthews Arena on March 4.Barry Chin/Globe Staff
A Red Sox player was photographed through the netting during spring training in Fort Meyers, Fla.
Stan Grossfeld/Globe Staff
Merrimack’s Ziggy Reid (23, left) celebrated while Javon Bennett leapt into the arms of Jordan Derkack during the men’s basketball Northeast Conference tournament final against Fairleigh Dickinson in North Andover.Jim Davis/Globe Staff

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Richard Brandon: A passion for photography

Richard Brandon: A passion for photography
  

 

Photography has been a lifelong passion that began with my dad teaching me the basics, including processing the film and making slides, to record our family vacations. In high school, I joined the yearbook team as a photographer, capturing the highlights of our school’s sporting events. Those early years provided a strong foundation and enduring interest in photography.

After vacationing and living in Colorado on and off since childhood, I made Gilpin County my home in 2016 with my wife and business partner Amy Skinner. As the Business Director of Peak to Peak Counseling I’ve put my three decades of work experience within the hospitality industry and customer service to use serving our local community. Since 2021, I have enjoyed taking photos for Amy’s monthly mental health column, sharing some of my favorite images from the Peak to Peak area, around Colorado, and across the globe.

Whether hiking, traveling, honing my skiing skills, enjoying a local concert or theater performance, I love capturing special moments on my camera to share with you.

Interested in Photography? Where to Start and How to Grow

Interested in Photography? Where to Start and How to Grow

If you’re interested in photography and are trying to figure out where to start or how to grow, you’ve come to the right place. There’s a lot of information out there, how do you even determine what to focus on? Sometimes in trying to do too much we find ourselves accomplishing nothing.

Photography is both technical and creative. That’s part of what I love about photography because we can always improve our technical skills and our creative range. In fact, when we work on both simultaneously they can have a compound effect with our increasing technical skills making us more capable or increasingly creative challenges.

In this article, I’m going to help you start with what you already know and what you love about photography. Then, we’ll talk about how you can grow by learning more about light, composition, or your photography gear. Lastly, and perhaps most importantly, we’ll talk about taking risks so that you can continue to grow creatively.

Start With What You Know

Let’s start simple. Let’s start with what you know. If you can identify why you are interested in photography you’ll be on your way to not only getting started but getting started the right way.

For example, if you love capturing fleeting moments then you’re better off approaching learning the technical skills with that in mind. You might not think you care about understanding various lighting techniques until you start to see how they can improve your ability to accomplish your personal goal.

The best way to get started in photography is to reflect on why you’re interested in the art. What do you think makes a great photo and what types of photos inspire you the most? Keep that in mind as you’re learning, you probably know more than you think about what makes a great photograph and you can use that to determine how to take one.

Start With What You Love to Photograph

As I mentioned above, if you take some time to reflect on what makes a good photograph you can start to break down the process you need to learn. Starting with what you love to photograph will be the fastest path to learning. For example, if you love shooting wildflowers because you love the vibrant colors and bringing small things to life then you’re already learning about color and scale.

Additionally, when you start with what you love you can choose which photography concepts are going to be most important to you in the short term. There are some aspects of photography that might not interest you. However, you might find that you come back to them later when you reach a point of knowledge and skill where the information might be useful to you.

Learning any new skills is about the journey and the process. The more you can enjoy the process the more motivated you will be. There’s a lot to learn so do what inspires you to keep learning.

Grow by Learning More About Light and Composition

You can practice your photography skills even when you don’t have your camera in front of you. Notice the light as you go about your day or pay attention to composition and design of everything from the ads you see in a magazine to the way your friend decorates their house.

If you learn to see light and design in everyday things, you’ll be able to practice them in your photography. You can be intentional too but setting little challenges for yourself to practice one new technique and then another until you have a full toolbelt of techniques that you know how to use. Again, don’t focus on learning everything at once but start with what interests you.

Maybe today you want to practice silhouettes and then next week you want to play with leading lines. And then the following week you might see if you can incorporate both techniques into one photo. If you open yourself up to constant learning you’ll never get bored by all the ways you can combine photography techniques.

Grow by Learning More About Your Photography Gear

At some point you’re going to have to learn more about your gear. Maybe you’ve beat me to that and you’re a gear nut that reads every user manual ever. But if you’re not you can remind yourself that learning technical things will help you accomplish more inspired ideas and open more creative doors.

You’ll want to learn how your camera works and understand the exposure triangle: shutter speed, aperture, and ISO. Also, understanding how to edit your photos can make you better too because you’ll know what’s possible in post-production. Play with different lenses and focal lengths and see how you can create different looks and feels from your work.

There’s a lot to learn and even things that you may dismiss as unimportant to you now might prove interesting later on in your photography journey. For example, you might think you always want a fast shutter speed so that your images are sharp until that day you see a waterfall and wonder how it would be to create that creamy water look. You don’t know until you try.

Grow by Taking Risks

And speaking of trying, don’t be afraid to. Try things that don’t make sense or things that sound silly or cheesy. The more you try new and different things, the more you learn.

Sometimes you’ll learn what doesn’t work and that’s great too because it might give you a clue to something else that does work. Or it might simply solidify a lesson in your head. Sometimes the best way to remember something is by making the mistake in a memorable way.

Have a mindset that there are no bad ideas. There might be bad results from an idea, but sometimes those bad results teach you exactly what you need to know to come up with the next best idea. Combine different things that you know in different ways and see what you come up with, maybe it’ll suck but it sounds like fun and it sounds like growth.


About the author: Brenda Bergreen is a Colorado wedding photographer, videographer, yoga teacher, and writer who works alongside her husband at Bergreen Photography. With their mission and mantra “love. adventurously.” they are dedicated to telling adventurous stories in beautiful places.

Plum Island Photography Workshops

Plum Island Photography Workshops

Door County photographer Dave Heilman will share his talent during photography workshops set for June 3 and Sept. 23 on Plum Island and hosted by Friends of Pilot and Plum Islands. Heilman has explored photography as a part-time hobby, a full-time profession and now an outlet for his passion for landscapes and nature.

All types of photographers are welcome, and no experience is necessary. Proceeds from this workshop (the cost is $35 per person) will go toward historical preservation of the maritime structures on Plum and Pilot Islands.

Find details about registration and cancellation at plumandpilot.org.

How to Use Gels and Hard Light in the Studio

How to Use Gels and Hard Light in the Studio

Mixing gels and hard light, when done properly, can result in some truly memorable images. In this video, watch as you are walked through the setup, the shoot, and the results.

For far too long, I didn’t experiment with gels. I was interested in artificial lighting early one and I experimented by using LED torches and lamps around my house before I even bought my first flash. However, I didn’t really know what I’d use gels for. It was until a few years later, when I was trying to setup my first organized shoots, that I had looks in my mind that could not be achieved without gels. I ordered some — they’re very cheap — and was blown away by how dramatically they can change an image instantly.

I have used gels for both soft and hard lighting for varying effects. For example, I have used orange gels with soft lighting to simulate golden hour on indoor shoots. Alternatively, I’ve used red and blue gels with hard lighting to give a punchy, stylized and less natural look. Introducing color into a shoot can be transformative, particularly if the location you’re shooting in is a little plain, such as a studio or white backdrop.

How do you use gels in your work? Share your experiences in the comment section below.

La Gacilly-Baden : Interview with Lois and Silvia Lammerhuber  – The Eye of Photography Magazine

La Gacilly-Baden : Interview with Lois and Silvia Lammerhuber  – The Eye of Photography Magazine
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Le livre d’Elizabeth Clark Libert, Boy Crazy (Workshop Arts, printemps 2023), est une invitation à marcher le long d’un morceau de son parcours alors qu’elle examine les effets des traumatismes passés. Nos expériences et nos souvenirs ultérieurs ne disparaissent pas ; ils se combinent tous pour créer notre histoire. Les perspectives peuvent changer avec le temps, les couches de la vie peuvent contribuer à différents contextes, mais les événements eux-mêmes…

Carl Fischer, Who Shot Attention-Getting Esquire Covers, Dies at 98

Carl Fischer, Who Shot Attention-Getting Esquire Covers, Dies at 98
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Among his most famous photographs was one depicting Muhammad Ali as a martyr stuck full of arrows.

Carl Fischer, the photographer who shot some of Esquire magazine’s most famous and provocative covers of the 1960s and early ’70s, including images of Muhammad Ali pierced by arrows and Andy Warhol falling into a giant can of tomato soup, died on Friday at his home in Manhattan. He was 98.

His granddaughter Alice Lloyd George confirmed his death.

Mr. Fischer, a self-taught photographer, had been working as an art director in advertising when, in 1963, Harold Hayes, Esquire’s editor, began engaging him regularly to shoot covers. He would ultimately shoot 60 covers for the magazine, usually working with the art director George Lois.

Mr. Lois, who died in November, was generally credited with the concept for a particular cover, but it was up to Mr. Fischer to figure out how to implement the idea and capture it on film. In the predigital age, that often meant seat-of-the-pants improvising.

The April 1968 cover featuring Muhammad Ali as a martyr. It took some persuading to get him, a Muslim, to agree to the concept, since the Christian imagery bothered him. Carl Fischer

For example, for what was perhaps his most famous cover, from April 1968, the idea was to depict Ali in a way that evoked the Christian martyr Saint Sebastian. The year before, Ali had been stripped of his heavyweight title after he refused to be inducted into the armed forces on religious grounds.

Mr. Lois and Mr. Fischer intended to show Ali shirtless with arrows stuck in his body. It took some persuading to get Ali, a Muslim, to agree to the concept, since the Christian imagery bothered him. But once he did, there was an entirely different glitch.

“The arrows turned out to be a major headache,” Mr. Fischer told Esquire in 2015 for an article looking back on his career. “We’d practiced on a model beforehand, and when we tried sticking the arrows on the body with glue, they were so heavy that they hung down.”

So Mr. Fischer put a bar across the ceiling of his studio, on Manhattan’s Upper East Side, and ran practically invisible fishing line from it down to the arrows to hold them up.

Mr. Fischer, left, had to use practically invisible fishing line, strung from a bar across the ceiling of his studio, to hold up the arrows on Ali’s body.Carl Fischer

A number of his Esquire images were in fact multiple images, pieced together with what would today seem primitive photo collage tricks. The Warhol cover, for instance, showed Mr. Warhol seemingly drowning in a giant can of Campbell’s tomato soup. According to Mr. Lois, when Mr. Warhol was approached about the idea, he said, “But George, aren’t you going to have to build a giant can of soup?”

No; what was actually needed was a regular can of soup and some marbles.

“I dropped marbles in the soup,” Mr. Fischer said, “and tried to photograph the marble just as it hit the liquid so I could get a nice hole.”

Then Mr. Warhol posed with his arms flailing in the air as if he were drowning. The two photos were combined, and the resulting image was on the May 1969 Esquire cover.

Carl Fischer
A number of Esquire covers combined multiple images, such as the one above from May 1969, which paired a photo of Andy Warhol with another one of a Campbell’s soup can.Carl Fischer

Other times, it wasn’t the image that was manipulated but the subject. The was certainly true of the November 1970 cover, which Mr. Lois called “the most controversial of them all.” It showed William Calley, who had led one of the platoons responsible for killing much of the population of the South Vietnamese village of My Lai in 1968 during the Vietnam War, in a military uniform surrounded by children of Asian descent, with a grin on his face.

Mr. Fischer said that either Mr. Lois or Mr. Hayes — he couldn’t remember which — had called to tell him that Mr. Calley was coming to his studio and that he should find a half-dozen young children of Asian descent to participate in the shoot.

“Calley came to the studio not knowing the concept,” Mr. Fischer recalled in the 2015 interview, “and somebody, it was Lois or Harold, said, ‘Here’s what we’re going to do; this is going to show that you’re not a monster.’ I don’t know all the details of the conversation, but to this day I don’t understand why he ever did it, except that he probably thought it would make him look good.”

Mr. Fischer shot covers for other magazines as well, including dozens for New York, but the Esquire work attracted the most attention; some of those images are now in museum collections.

“Those covers were outrageous, they were insulting, they were infuriating and they were impressive,” Mr. Fischer told The Democrat and Chronicle of Rochester, N.Y., in 1978, when he was lecturing at the Rochester Institute of Technology.

“A lot of people were shocked,” he added. They would write in outraged over what they perceived as the messages of the covers, but Mr. Fischer said any messages were in the eye of the beholder.

“Actually, they didn’t really say anything in most cases,” he said. “It was all a matter of what you read into it, like all interesting art.”

Carl Fischer was born on May 3, 1924, in the Bronx to Joseph and Irma (Schwerin) Fischer. He grew up in Brooklyn and served in a communications unit in the Philippines during World War II.

In 1948 he earned a degree at the Cooper Union in Manhattan. He then won a Fulbright Scholarship to study at Central Saint Martins College of Art and Design in London and bought a camera to take snapshots.

“One thing led to another,” he told The Democrat and Chronicle, “and I ended up spending about a year working in the darkroom, mostly alone, teaching myself how to take pictures.”

Back in New York, he worked as an art director in advertising, including for the Grey agency. His photography skills continued to develop, and they caught the eye of Mr. Hayes.

One of Mr. Fischer’s earliest Esquire covers, in December 1963, pictured the boxer Sonny Liston, who was Black, in a Santa Claus cap — a somewhat inflammatory image in the midst of the civil rights battles.

One of Mr. Fischer’s earliest Esquire covers featured the boxer Sonny Liston in a Santa Claus cap — a somewhat inflammatory image in the midst of the civil rights struggle.Carl Fischer

In the early 1970s Mr. Fischer had a falling out with Mr. Lois, largely over what Mr. Fischer saw as Mr. Lois’s tendency to take an excess of credit for the covers and not give much to the photographers he worked with. Certainly Mr. Lois drew most of the accolades for the Esquire covers, both at the time and for years afterward. In 2008, after The New York Times published a feature on Mr. Lois that did not mention Mr. Fischer, the photographer Helen Marcus, a former president of the American Society of Media Photographers, wrote a letter to the editor criticizing the omission.

“It is akin to publishing pictures of the Sistine Chapel and mentioning the pope who paid for them but not the painter,” she wrote.

Mr. Fischer continued to work in photography long after his Esquire heyday, and his work was the subject of gallery and museum shows. In 1949 he married Marilyn Wolf, who died in 2017. He is survived by his children, Kim, Douglas and Kenneth Fischer; four grandchildren; and two great-grandchildren.

In a self-published memoir, “Afterthoughts,” Mr. Fischer recalled how he made one particularly harrowing photo-collage cover for Esquire in 1970 centered on the actor Dustin Hoffman, who was making the movie “Little Big Man.” It superimposed an image of Mr. Hoffman amid Manhattan skyscrapers, looking gigantic, even taller than the buildings. To get the aerial image of the city, Mr. Fischer took a helicopter ride. He wanted a wide-angle shot.

“But to get that effect, it was necessary to both fly low and to get outside the helicopter as it banked,” he wrote. “I stood on the pontoon, tethered with a long canvas belt, made for the occasion, that allowed me to stand free of the fuselage so that the skyscrapers could be shot without part of the aircraft getting in the way. I marvel even now that, consumed by the problems and the noise, I was able to concentrate during that deranged procedure.”