Showing posts with label Martin Parr. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Martin Parr. Show all posts

Thursday, February 20, 2014

A Very Short Analysis of "Aperture Remix: A Sixtieth Anniversary Celebration"

The Aperture Remix exhibition is currently on display at the Ball State Art Museum. I was awarded the prize for "most use" the other day when I admitted, in front of a large audience, to visiting it three times with all my classes. I plan on returning before it closes to peruse the small library thoroughly (sounds like a Saturday afternoon well spent).

The premise of the exhibition explores contemporary photographers looking through the archives of Aperture magazine and responding to their influences. Several of my favorites, both young and old, are represented.


Penelope Umbrico, Moving Mountains (photograph courtesy of Ball State University)

Umbrico was paired with the Masters of Photography series. I was less interested in the original mountain images because I had viewed many of them while working at the Center for Creative Photography in graduate school. Umbrico's work was an unexpected homage to the original yet the presentation still maintained her signature style using low technology as an art form.

Someday I hope to see Sunsets (from Flickr) installed in a gallery space. After looking up this link, I am reminded how very few sunsets I see in one year and how that needs to change.


Stephen Shore and Doug Rickard (image courtesy of Ball State University)

I am thrilled every time I get to see a Stephen Shore print in person, let alone his original Amarillo postcards (below). They were just as mundane and dated as anticipated (hard to believe the world looked like that the year I was born).


Stephen Shore, Tall in Texas, 1972 (image via)


Doug Rickard, Mallard Cove Resort, Lake Sutherland, Port Angeles, Washington, August 27, 1973 (image via)

Doug Rickard's internet search results to find photographs that responded well to Shore's  reminded me of scenes straight out of Mad Men. Of particular interest was the above photograph with two compelling formal combinations: interiors and exteriors and warm and cool colors (particularly blue and yellow).



Images of Alec Soth's video, Summer Nights at the Dollar Tree, in response to Robert Adams's Summer Nights (above two images courtesy of Ball State University)

Unfortunately, the most disappointing part of the exhibition centered around two of my most loved photographers. Maybe there weren't enough of Adams's prints in the exhibition or perhaps it was Soth's casual statement:

"Making night pictures, twenty years later, was a struggle. I just couldn't get the blood pumping through my veins. The world I was looking at didn't feel new. It felt like Robert Adams's world. I had a new camera with a video option that I'd never used. I didn't really know what I was doing technically, but that was an asset. It felt good to be a bit lost."

I should review the video away from the space and in the comfort of the living room because I would like to change my mind.

Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Society for Photographic Education National Conference: Chicago



 Valuable information learned at this year's conference:

1) The Photobook: A History Volume 3 will be published next year! I am a big fan of volumes 1-2 as envious as they make me of Martin Parr's book collection. Who wouldn't love a publication that prints photographs of opened books like this:


Daido Moriyama, Bye Bye Photography, 1972

2) Speaking of Mr. Parr, he is an endearing lecturer (by far my favorite talk of the conference). He showed his undergraduate school installation of photographs displayed in a living room, discussed Bad Weather at length, and his infatuation with collecting political ephemera, Saddam Hussein watches (he owns 85) and Osama bin Laden paraphernalia. So Long Osama Blood Orange Soda was the biggest oddity. Throughout most of the lecture, I dreamed of where Martin Parr stores all his objects (what does his house look like? how does he organize them? does he have room for more?).



 Martin Parr from Parrworld: Objects and Postcards

He also stressed that he is photographing fictions not realities as he intentionally captured litter at its worst in the image below.


Martin Parr from The Last Resort, 1983-85

I immediately placed Autoportrait on my interlibrary loan list when returning. Ending his lecture standing under a photograph of his head superimposed on a muscle man's body was the perfect conclusion coming from a soft spoken Englishman who excused himself for "having a frog" in the middle of his lecture.

 

Martin Parr from Autoportrait

3) Garry Winogrand is on everyone's mind since his first retrospective in 25 years opened at SFMOMA. I tend to love the photographers who make/made work vastly different from mine and he is no exception. Cass Fey and Leslie Calmes delivered an informative lecture on his archive at the Center for Creative Photography. His contact sheets are labeled PD if they are posthumously developed. If a print is made from one of those thousands of undeveloped rolls of film he left after he died, it can never be sold or de-accessioned. It exists only in the CCP archives. Small facts about printing work posthumously that I had always wondered about.


Garry Winogrand's Women are Beautiful on view at the Art Institute

4) Why or why wasn't Kate Palmer Albers teaching the history of photography at University of Arizona when I was in graduate school? Her lecture Abundant Images and the Collective Sublime resonated with me on so many levels. She discussed one of my favorite contemporary photography installations:


Erik Kessels, printing every photograph uploaded onto Flickr in a 24 hour period (image via)

Kessels piece, Penelope Umbrico's millions of sunsets, Mark Klett and Byron Wolfe's 100 Setting Suns at the Grand Canyon, and Gerhard Richter's Atlas were her primary examples of artists establishing mass.


Penelope Umbrico, Suns from Sunsets from Flickr, 2006-ongoing

These artists obsessively mark time with photography. She also stressed that the "self-archive is rapidly gaining headway" as a viable form of art. Albers' talk validated my current interests in masses of objects and introduced me to new artists like Hasan Elahi who explore surveillance and tracking in a contemporary way.

5) Richard Misrach's keynote lecture reminded me that I have to watch Spike Lee's follow-up to When the Levees Broke - If God is Willing and Da Creek Don't Rise. I've refrained for a few years but after hearing Misrach discuss his latest photographic series, Petrochemical America, the time has come.


Richard Misrach, Untitled, February 14, 2012, 6:19 PM

Misrach is getting closer to making portraits of people as he zooms in on the faces of swimmers. He returned to the same hotel room where he photographed On the Beach (above) with a digital camera and telephoto lens. I don't know how I feel about those and am looking forward to seeing how they are received when he publishes them soon. I am so enamored with the vulnerable human surrounded by the sea (substitute me), I am not sure I want to know their identity.

6) SPE brought so many of my wonderful photo friends to Chicago some of which are pictured below.


 James Luckett, Laurie Blakeslee, and Amelia Morris


Adam Neese in the Empire Room



Mark A. Lee after winning the Richard Misrach raffle photograph

Sneaking an image of a famous photographer...


the back of Jerry Uelsmann's head.

Wishing I had a photograph of...


me talking to Richard Misrach about our meeting in 1996.

7) The biggest surprise I received will be featured in a post next week. I am not opposed to a sneak peek however:


Chris Toalson's A Long Overdue Artist's Book, 2011-2013


Saturday, August 18, 2012

Birthdays? I just have one thing to say about that.


Found postcard from the collection of JR


Found postcard from the collection of JR


Lara Shipley, Night Drive


 Martin Parr, From the book Mexico


Robert Voit, New Trees


Lee Friedlander, Tucson, Arizona, 2011


Peter Granser, From Sun City

Saturday, June 23, 2012

Swimming Pools: This Summer's Encore

Apparently I need to curate an exhibition covering this topic.


Giffen Clark Ott, James Turrell Swimming Pool, (thanks to Elise for the link) 



Astrid Kruse Jensen, Hypernatural #37




Loretta Ayeroff, Motel Series


 

Emily Shur, The Swimming Pool by Leandro Erlich, Kanazawa



Andreas Gursky, Swimming Pool, Ratingen, 1987



Martin Parr, From Mexico, c. 2006


Clint Baclawski, Private Cove, 2012



Paul Kranzler, From Brut

Reiner Riedler, Horizon #01, Tropical Islands, Germany, 2007


Richard Kolker, David Hockney: A Bigger Splash, 1967 from the series Reference, Referents, 2011

Shawn Huckins, 510D Hockney Splash, 2008



Samantha French, Dive In; Float, 2011


Wolfgang Tillmans, Hallenbad, Detail, 1995


Alex Webb, Ciudad Madero, Mexico, 1983


Garry Winogrand, Memphis, 1964 (there's a 2013 Garry Winogrand retrospective coming soon to a giant coastal city near you)

Monday, December 12, 2011

Baked Goods with a Concentration on Doughnuts


Donut Queen, Link courtesy of Amelia


Martin Parr, From Mexico, 2006


Martin Parr, From Mexico, 2006


Martha Rich, Chocolate Electric


William Eggleston, From Before Color, 1965-73


Sandy Skoglund, Cookies on a Plate, 1978


Daniel Stier


David Politzer, Baked Goods Docent, Canfield


Rebecca Sittler, Donuts of Long Beach