Wednesday, April 30, 2008

'Axis' photography exhibit showcases goth, industrial culture

Neon green mohawks. Black leather boots. Safety pins, spiked collars. These are just some things six individuals have worn in "Axis of Evil," a goth, industrial party in Bloomington.

These individuals are now the subjects of graduate art student John Shearer's currently running photography show, "Axis of Evil," being featured in the Bare Montgomery Gallery in Fairbanks Hall.

Shearer said the main idea behind the exhibit was to see the same six people and how they changed over the course of one year.

In his artist's statement, Shearer said "Axis" was the "longest running, goth/industrial party in the Midwest" because it has been running for the last two years.

The original creators of "Axis" got the name from a Bloomington sports bar which they took over.


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Tuesday, April 29, 2008

New Website Transforms Keepsake Photos, Digital or Print, into Canvas Works of Art - For Home or Dollhouse

A new web based business has launched their website. Photos can be uploaded or mailed. They are then enlarged and printed on canvas to create lasting works of art. A great gift idea for birthdays or anniversaries. Photos of family, pets, kids, graduation, weddings and vacations are all good choices. .


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Monday, April 28, 2008

http://www.pantagraph.com/articles/2008/04/03/life/doc47d1799ae0abf155586339.txt

Everyone sees Hamilton through a different lens.

Now a city project called The Way I See It is putting digital cameras in the hands of immigrants to capture their stories and to see the city through new eyes.

Recruiting recent immigrants through organizations such as Settlement and Immigration Services Organization, North Hamilton Community Midwives, Columbia International College and Hess Street School, the goal of the photography project is to give a voice to new immigrants to tell their Steeltown stories.

"Rather than all the negatives we always hear of the city, let's now see what other people think," said Arts Hamilton executive director Paul de Courcy.

"Let's allow those people a voice and let them use it."

The project plays on the idea of Photovoice, a global initiative that blends photography and social action by allowing marginalized communities to document issues affecting them.


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Sunday, April 27, 2008

Arts haven

On a Saturday, mid-afternoon, in the University Galleries at Illinois State University, a single person was taking in the latest exhibit, a group show by teachers from the College of Fine Arts.The main gallery was filled with examples of paintings, prints, sculptures, photography, books, drawings, glass work, ceramics, film -- the sum total of the art program, with two dozen contributing artists, at the disposal of the solitary viewer.Down the street, a much different scene unfolded that day.At the McLean County Arts Center in downtown Bloomington, a single-event attendance record was set, with hundreds of people coming to the reception featuring Jessica Benjamin, a Bloomington native and ISU graduate who is painting representational portraits of Americans from her studio in Long Island.Benjamin's paintings occupied the Armstrong Gallery, the smaller of the two at the arts center, and consisted of 12 portraits and an impressionistic portrayal of a parade.Extending from her "The American Series" exhibit -- through the hallway, down stairs and into the arts center's basement classroom space -- were 150 amateur portraits and murals produced by students, from kindergarten to high school.She and the arts center's education coordinator, Tony Preston-Schreck, had spent the preceding week leading workshops in the basement, in schools and at the Boys and Girls Club of McLean County.


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Saturday, April 26, 2008

Richard and Mica Hadar Foundation Scholar Has Solo Photography Show

Richard Hadar, founder of the Richard and Mica Hadar Foundation announced today that Stanislav Ginzburg, a recipient of their scholarship for photography in 2002, will have his first solo exhibition at the Peter Hay Halpert Fine Art Gallery in New York City beginning June, 2008. In Ginzburgs words, the show entitled Tales from Vienna Woods is a dark and ominous exploration of a mystical forest, which serves as a playground for artists imagination and solemn narrative vignettes, resulting in lush and colorful cinematic landscapes. Ginzburg was born in Russia and arrived in the United States at the age of 15. He received his BFA with honors from Parsons School of Design. His work has been included in group shows at the Brooklyn Museum of Art, Deitch Projects, New York Studio Gallery and other venues.


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Friday, April 25, 2008

http://www.moultrieobserver.com/local/local_story_093222837.html

A "celebrity"-guided Parlor City trolley tour and Earth Month art exhibits of photography, pottery and mixed media will highlight Binghamton's next First Friday Art Walk this weekend.

Binghamton Mayor Matt Ryan will host a trolley tour from 6 to 7 p.m., talking about his city and highlighting Binghamton's history and revitalization.

Earth Month events include art exhibits at Anam Cara Art Gallery, 204 State St., Binghamton, and Cooperative Gallery 213, 213 State St.; a multimedia concert and photography show at West Middle School, West Middle Avenue, on Binghamton's West Side, and a fundraising effort for the Clean Ocean Action campaign at Orion Beauty and Balance, 118 Washington St., Binghamton.

This First Friday, presented by the Gorgeous Washington Street Association (GWSA) and sponsored by M&T Bank, will feature 45 locations open from 6 to 9 p.m.


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Thursday, April 24, 2008

Maxwell captures nature in award-winning photos

After his father retired from the Moultrie Police Department, Mike Maxwell moved with his family to Carabelle, Fla., where at age 15 he got his first camera, a Polaroid Instant camera, and began photographing the environs of that Gulf Coast community. Maxwell captures nature in award-winning photos John Mercer MOULTRIE — After his father retired from the Moultrie Police Department, Mike Maxwell moved with his family to Carabelle, Fla., where at age 15 he got his first camera, a Polaroid Instant camera, and began photographing the environs of that Gulf Coast community.

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Wednesday, April 23, 2008

South East Arizona Fine Art And Photography Show Judges

The South East Arizona Fine Art and Photography Show is proud to announce the 3 judges for the April 18-20 show at the Willcox Elks Club, 247 E. Stewart Street in Willcox.All entries must be postmarked by March 31.The 2 judges for the fine art division are Manuel DeLeon and David Aguirre:Manuel DeLeon has been in art since 1942 when he was in Norman Rockwell's class at the Otis Art Institute in Los Angeles. His early training included every art institution in Southern California, and he spent the mid-fifties living and teaching in Europe where he pursued extended study in art history, drawing and painting at the San Fernando Academy in Madrid, the University of Poitier (France), the Florentine Academy (Italy), and the Stadt Akademie in Munich (Germany). Manuel also spent time in Mexico with Tomas Coffeen and Jose Maria de Servin at the University of Guadalajara.


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Tuesday, April 22, 2008

Outdoors Library: The height of beauty

Tim Palmer's book "Luminous Mountains: The Sierra Nevada of California" (Heyday Books, $19.95, 176 pages) is a love letter to his beloved mountain range. His prose is passionate, his photography exhilarating.

"On that first trip to the Sierra, I wanted to see it all, and now, thirty-eight years later, I still do," he coos.

"Back then, I couldn't get enough, and now, half a lifetime later, I still can't."

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Monday, April 21, 2008

Newport gallery shows kids work

NEWPORT - The photography of Cincinnati area children with the Boys & Girls Clubs of Greater Cincinnati will go on display at the Pendleton Art Gallery at Newport on the Levee beginning on Friday.

About 37 pieces from children ages 6-18 will hang in the gallery from April 4-18.

Selected photos will compete in the Boys & Girls Clubs of America ImageMakers National Photography Contest.

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Sunday, April 20, 2008

Apple’s photographers to explain their programs

As part of its Campus Lecture Series, Apple Inc. will bring professional photographers to campus to show how to use the latest software programs that apply to its field. The seminar will be held from 2 to 4 p.m. Thursday in 148 Fine Arts Building. Programs discussed include Aperture, iLife’08 and iWork ’08. According to the company, the Photography Tour is designed to help photojournalists and photographers take pictures, sort through them and file or develop. Reservations are not required. Views: 87 | E-mail .


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Saturday, April 19, 2008

Photoshop Lightroom 2.0 beta ships

Adobe Photoshop Lightroom 2.0 beta is now available. Adobe is making the beta software available as a public preview for testing of its new functions and improvements.

Like Aperture, Lightroom is a tool for professional photographers, capable of managing, adjusting, and presenting large volumes of digital photographs. The Lightroom 2.0 beta offers dual-monitor support, localised dodge and burn correction and will be the first Adobe application to support 64-bit for Mac OS X 10.5 Intel Macs and Microsoft Vista 64-bit operating systems.

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Friday, April 18, 2008

Riverwalk March Shot of the Month Vote For Your Favorite

Every month the Riverwalk Birding Club sponsors a "Shot of the Month" photography competition, allowing the public to vote via Chattanoogan.com Outdoors for their favorite entry.

Below are the entries for the March competition. Take a look and then vote in the web poll at the bottom for your favorite.








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Thursday, April 17, 2008

Outdoors Library: Shutterbugging along with nature

When James Martin started writing books about photography - especially the outdoor variety - the art and science applicable to the craft were limited to imagination, know-how, film and chemical processing.

But in today's digital age, a time when everybody has an amazing amount of technology and camera equipment at the ready, there seems no end to what one can do before, during and well after capturing an image.

So it makes perfect sense that mountaineer and adventurer Martin would already be on his second edition of "Digital Photography Outdoors" (Mountaineers Books, $18.95, 208 pages).

Nothing will replace the hard work and genius of being in the right position at the right time to make an outdoor picture, but plenty has enhanced the ability to polish the stone after the fact.


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Wednesday, April 16, 2008

FIRST FRIDAY | Brian Merriman's ‘Pictures'

Brian Merriman is turning 50 this week. But instead of a birthday party, he has planned a career-spanning retrospective — a show he hopes will explain what it's like to lead the life of an artist. His exhibition, “Pictures,” opens Friday at Bill Krzyzanowski Photography.</p><p>Merriman studied printmaking at Emporia State University and went on to a career in graphic design. But he was making fine art much earlier.</p><p>“The oldest piece (in the show) is a linoleum cut I made when I was 12,” he explained.</p><p>With work that covers the last 38 years of his life, one would expect some false starts or mistakes. Instead there's strong continuity from the old to the new works.</p><p>“The theme hasn't really changed much,” Merriman said.


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Tuesday, April 15, 2008

Local NC Photographer Recognized

The Knot weddings magazine is pleased to announce that Neil Boyd Photography has been selected as a 2008 Pick for The Knot Best of Weddings magazine, a coast-to-coast, by-brides-for-brides guide to the top wedding sites, photographers, florists, and more in over 40 key cities across the United States published by The Knot Inc. (www.theknot.com), the #1 wedding website and most trusted wedding resource.

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Monday, April 14, 2008

Academy of Art University's Digital Arts and Communications Program Prepares Students for the "Best Career"

Top design school offers usability/user experience training.

San Francisco, CA (PRWEB) April 1, 2008 -- Usability/User Experience Specialist was recently named one of the best 31 careers in 2008 by the US News & World Report. The Digital Arts and Communications school (DIG) at Academy of Art University is one of a few select programs in the nation that offers BFA degree training in Usability or User Experience.

Usability and user experience specialists (also known as "UX specialists") make sure that technical products are easy and pleasurable to use. They watch and interview potential users to find out what their needs and preferences are for the product. After a prototype is developed, they watch and re-interview potential users to suggest changes in the product.


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Sunday, April 13, 2008

MP's motion backing public photography

An Early Day Motion has been tabled by an MP fighting to protect the rights of photographers.

Former journalist Austin Mitchell, Labour member for Great Grimsby, put forward the motion entitled 'Photography in Public Areas', calling for support for snapping away in public. He has so far been backed with 107 signatures.

In it, he calls on the House to "deplore the apparent rise in the number of reported incidents in which the police, police community support officers or wardens attempt to stop street photography".

He adds that "photography in public places and streets is not only enjoyable but perfectly legal" and urges the "Home Office and the Association of Chief Police Officers to agree on a photography code for the information of officers".

Last year ACPO set out on a nationwide code of conduct for police officers when dealing with press photographers.


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Saturday, April 12, 2008

National Geographic photographer Sam Abell to hold an exhibition at Center for Photography

The Center for Photography has brought legendary National Geographic photographer Sam Abell to Charleston to teach a weeklong workshop. Unfortunately for the public, the workshop sold out almost immediately. However, the center is offering a photo presentation of Abell's "A Photographic Journey" today at 7 p.m. The exhibit is free and open to the public.

Abell has worked with the National Geographic Society since 1970 and has photographed more than 20 articles on various cultural and wilderness subjects. He also has lectured on photography and exhibited his images to audiences throughout the world.

In 1990, Eastman Kodak published a retrospective monograph of his photographs titled "Stay This Moment: The Photographs of Sam Abell." A companion exhibit of his work was shown at New York City's International Center of Photography in November of that year.


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Friday, April 11, 2008

Cumberland Falls Entices Photographers

Cumberland Falls State Resort Park will host a nature photography weekend Friday through Sunday, April 18-20.

The famous park with the largest natural waterfall south of Niagara has hosted an annual nature photography weekend for more than 25 years. The program offers photographers inspiring guest speakers as well as a 24-hour competition.

Participants can enroll in either digital or slide-film photo classes, and there will be six categories of competition to enter. All shots must be taken during the weekend within the Cumberland Falls area.

Cost of the event is $40 per person, and registration is limited to 125 participants. The registration deadline is April 15.

The region surrounding Cumberland Falls is a nature photographers' dream come true.



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Thursday, April 10, 2008

Photography Forum Site Conducts Poll on Common Online Equipment Buying Scams

NoBS Photo Success, an online source for digital photography tips and resources, is releasing the findings of a recent survey. The poll reveals numerous photographers who have been scammed when purchasing equipment at online auctions.

Garson, Ontario (PRWEB) March 29, 2008 -- In a recent poll conducted by NoBS Photo Success, which provides online digital photography resources, 29 percent of members reported that they had been scammed when attempting to purchase equipment on eBay. Surprisingly, these members continue using the online giant to purchase equipment, but with much more caution.

One NoBS member was recently scammed out of $800 in an eBay transaction gone wrong. The individual paid $800 via Western Union for a pair of Alien Bee lights she thought she had won in the online auction site.



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Wednesday, April 9, 2008

Photo club holds exhibit

The Georgetown Shooters photography club will host an invitational exhibit Friday through April 25 at the Arts and Cultural Center, 117 Water Street in Georgetown. The opening will be from 5 to 8 p.m. Friday. The show will be open from noon to 4 p.m. Tuesdays through Saturdays, or by appointment. To make an appointment, call (502) 863-0909or (502) 570-8366.

Artweek coming up

Artweek will be held from 6 to 8:30 p.m. Monday through April 11 in Georgetown College's Anne Wright Wilson Fine Arts Gallery, at Mulberry and College streets. Visit www.georgetowncollege.edu/art/.

Beginner clogging lessons by the Shack Shakin' Hoedowners at 6:15 p.m. Mon. April 7 through Mon. June 30, at the Center of Town Building on Washington Street, Georgetown.


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Tuesday, April 8, 2008

Linked by Eugenia Loli-Queru on Thu 27th Dec 2007 05:38 UTC

A few weeks ago I published an editorial on the new school of videographers that has recently started to emerge as profoundly as digital art photography did a few years ago. (OS) News are slow during holiday seasons, so I thought I put together an article with a small collection of some of the best examples of amateur cinematography for your viewing pleasure, as found on the popular with the movement site, Vimeo.com. Leave a comment with what you think of these clips, or even download them in order to watch them in full HD quality through your AppleTV, XboX360 or PS3. .



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Monday, April 7, 2008

E-E photographer claims top honor: Newspaper staffers win AP photography, writing awards

Examiner-Enterprise staffers took home awards from the annual Associated Press/Oklahoma News Executives' Carl Rogan awards competition.Awards for work published in 2007 were presented during a banquet held Saturday evening at the Doubletree Hotel at Warren Place in Tulsa.E-E Chief Photographer Becky Burch won first place for her Spot News Photo, "Awaiting Rescue" showing a pair of Bartlesville firefighters preparing to rescue a teen who broke through the ice at Bartlesville's Jo Allyn Lowe Park. The firefighters successfully rescued the girl and were later honored by the City of Bartlesville for their heroic efforts.The photo also won the prestigious "Sweepstakes" award in all photographic categories among the AP's Division B newspapers.Burch also took home a pair of runner-up awards. Her emotionally-packed photo of "Flood Victims" took second place for General News Photo, while her "Baseball Salute" won second place for Feature Photo."Becky has been shooting great photos of ordinary people doing extraordinary things for a long, long time," said E-E Managing Editor Chris Rush.


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Sunday, April 6, 2008

High School Photography Contest Winners Announced

The Department of Education, Arts & Culture and the Chattanooga Housing Authority have announced the winners of the 2008 Photography Contest. Twenty-seven entries were received, representing public, private and home schooled students. The judges were professional photographers and graphic designers as well as a representative from CHA.

A reception will take place honoring all participants and those who placed on Thursday at 3:30 p.m. at the CHA�s administrative office. Mayor Ron Littlefield will present the winners their prizes and will also present the contestants with certificates of participation.
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Eastman Kodak Promotes Snyder

Photography products maker Eastman Kodak Co. on Wednesday promoted Kimberly A. Snyder to president and general manager of its entertainment imaging unit.

Snyder, 45, assumes the role from the division's acting president, Mary Jane Hellyar. She previously served as general manager of the unit's image capture business.

In her new role, Snyder will handle all components of Kodak's business with the motion picture and television industry.

Snyder will report to Hellyar, who continues to serve as a Kodak executive vice president and president of the company's film, photofinishing and entertainment group.

Kodak's entertainment imaging division had revenue of $1.1 billion last year.

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Saturday, April 5, 2008

Free Times - Ohio's Premier News, Arts, & Entertainment Weekly

The Magnum Photo Agency has been one of the prime distributors of news photography covering events around the world since its 1947 founding by photojournalism giant Henry Cartier-Bresson. That was the year prior to the establishment of the state of Israel so Magnum was there from the beginning. Sixty of its photos covering diverse aspects of life in Israel make up the exhibit Israel: 60 Years opening today at the Maltz Museum of Jewish Heritage (2929 Richmond Rd., Beachwood, 216.593.0575) as part of its Israel: Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow package of exhibitions and events. Admission: $12 adults, $10 students and seniors, $5 ages 5-11. - Anastasia Pantsios

Wednesday, April 2

Swedish Chamber Orchestra

Unfamiliar musicians will be filling the orchestra chairs at Severance Hall (11001 Euclid Ave.) tonight when the Swedish Chamber Orchestra arrives for its 7:30 performance.



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Friday, April 4, 2008

New nominee named for spot news photo category of National Newspaper Awards

TORONTO - A new nominee has been named in the spot news photography category of this year's National Newspaper Awards after one entry was disqualified.

A photo by Mike Carroccetto, a freelance photographer for the Ottawa Citizen, was inadvertently nominated for the wrong category and will no longer be eligible, the NNA board of governors announced Wednesday.

The photo of a woman cradling a cat who woke her up in time to flee a burning building was supposed to be entered in the feature photography category.

It was the Ottawa Citizen that notified the board of governors about the nomination mistake and a special committee came to a unanimous decision to select a new nominee.

The new nominee is Ottawa Citizen freelancer Ashley Fraser, who snapped a shot of a protester in a Santa Claus costume who was arrested following a protest outside the prime minister's residence in Ottawa.



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Thursday, April 3, 2008

FotoFest: "Independent Documentary Photography 1985-2008"

There wasn't exactly a lot of art being made during China's Cultural Revolution, unless you count portraits of Chairman Mao or, maybe, "inspiring" Socialist Realist murals. A lot of the country's real art was destroyed during that period. Last week's review took a look at "Ethnography, Photojournalism and Propaganda, 1934-1975," which featured the earliest work out of the many FotoFest exhibitions of Chinese photography. This week brings work made after the Cultural Revolution, FotoFest's "Independent Documentary Photography 1985-2008" at Winter Street ­Studios.

Independent documentary photography didn't really exist in the People's Republic of China until things loosened up after the Cultural Revolution. Before then, photography was done in the service of the state, to create propaganda to support the government agenda.



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Wednesday, April 2, 2008

Carnegie Announces Photo Contest

The Carnegie Visual Arts Center has issued a call for entries in a photography contest. 5 Days & 50 Cameras is a unique opportunity for amateur photographers to compete for inclusion in an upcoming exhibition. Selected photos will also be featured in a catalog commemorating the Carnegie's fifth anniversary.

The title, 5 Days & 50 Cameras, hints at key elements of the contest and ensuing exhibit. All submitted photographs must be taken between April 10 and April 15, 2008 (5 days) and should represent daily life in the Tennessee Valley. Photographs will be juried and selected pieces will be exhibited at the Carnegie Visual Arts Center June 20 - July 26, 2008. Photos selected for inclusion in the Carnegie exhibition will also be published in a catalog commemorating the Carnegie's 5th Anniversary. 50 photographers will be chosen but there is not a limit on how many photos may be selected by any one photographer.


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Tuesday, April 1, 2008

http://www.chattanoogan.com/articles/article_125062.asp

Vogue's 'art' problem. "Should the one time that you 'allow' a black man to grace the cover of your magazine continue in the tradition of problematic images of black men in art, photography, film and television? Vogue claims that it is 'art,' but the photo lacks any 'artistic' value in my mind, much like the images that came before them."

It's true because I say so. "But don't tell the president, the VP, or McCain -- they're no longer with us poor slobs in the 'reality-based community.' As McCain said yesterday, 'We're succeeding, I don't care what anybody says.'"

The rules of cheating. "When you're a politician who uses public money to pay for your cell phone, don't send text messages to your mistress and then lie about the affair. What the hell do you think Tracfones are for?"

For more, visit www.theclogblog.com.


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