10/27/10

10/28/10 Thursday

In Dog We Trust





In Dog We Trust



Stories of dogs and cats and other animals that live in our homes. Exactly how much are they caught up in everyday family dynamics? We answer this question and others.






Prologue.

Heather and her girlfriend lived with a cat named Sid. The girlfriend showed all sorts of affection toward Sid that she never showed toward Heather. And at some point, against her better judgment, Heather started to become jealous.



Act One. The Youth In Asia.

When a pet dies, to what degree can it be replaced by another? And to what degree can pets replace people in our lives? David Sedaris tells this story of cats and dogs and other animals.


Song: "A Dog Is a Man's Best Friend"



Act Two. If Cats Ran Hollywood.

What do cats want to see on television? Steve Malarky, creator of the world's best-selling home video for cats, tells all.

And—in the interest of equal time—a cashier who works at a chain store that sells pet products rants about the absurdity of the items she's ringing up every day: St. John's Wort for dogs, CDs for pets, spinach-flavored bones.


Song: "Serenade to a Poodle", Slim Gaillard



Act Three. Resurrection.

Writer Brady Udall with another story about what animals can take the place of, in our lives and in our homes—this one involving an armadillo.

This work of fiction originally appeared in the Autumn 1999 issue of Story magazine.

Song: "Gonna Buy Me a Dog", The Monkees


Sedaris, David. Me Talk Pretty One Day. Back Bay Books. New York, 2000.

"Due to their size, Great Danes generally don't live very long. There are cheeses with a longer shelf life. At the age of 12, gray bearded and teetering. Melina was a wonder of science. My father massaged her arthritic legs, carried her up the stairs, and lifted her in and out of bed. He treated her the way that men in movies treat their ailing wives, the way he might have treated my mother had she allowed such naked displays of helplessness and affection. Melina's era spanned the final dozen years of his married life. The dog had ridden in the family's last station wagon, attended my father's retirement party, and celebrated the elections of two Republican presidents. She grew weaker and lost her appetite, but against all advice, my father simply could not bear to let her go. The youth in Asia begged him to end her life. 'I can't,' he said. 'This is too hard for me.'"



10/24/10

10/25/10 Monday

Fawn Dreams

Noel With An Osprey

Golden Eagle in the Medroom

Cottontail Going to Heaven

Annie Marie Musselman


http://www.anniemusselman.com/

She may be sentimental/romantic/idealistic in her approach and intent. But I love that about her. Her work is sensitive, personal, honest and genuine. The art world isn't big on her style and attitude I don't think. Its refreshing to see work that isn't sarcastic, cynical, domineering or pessimistic.

Bio:
Annie Marie was born south of Seattle in a quiet town surrounded by deep forests and cold water. As a child, she trailed behind her father as he captured the landscape in sumo inks and watercolors.

She majored in studio art at a small Midwestern college, and spent a year studying photography in Marseilles, France.

Her first personal project, Finding Trust, started 6 years ago at a wildlife sanctuary near Seattle. It has been featured in several magazines and exhibitions, “I strive to confront the destructive side of human impact on the survival of all wild creatures.”

Currently she is working on a project photographing animals in specific sanctuaries around the world to raise awareness of the fragility and beauty of endangered/indicator species – animals which if saved, would save countless other species as well.

Annie’s work can be seen in American Photography 25, Outside, National Geographic Adventure, Harper Collins, Elle, Travel + Leisure, The New York Times and Newsweek among others. Her work is currently in the Changing Earth exhibition at the Ansel Adams Gallery in Nappa Valley, CA.


Awards:

2010 Getty Grant For Good, Recipient
4Culture Grant, Recipient
PDN Photo Annual, For The Innocent
Art Wolfe Environmental Photography Invitational 2nd Place

2009 American Photography 25, 5 selected images
Hey Hot Shot honorable mention, Jen Bekman Gallery NYC
PDN Photo of the Day

2008 PDN Exposures "Annie and the Wild Animals"
Blue Earth Alliance Project Photographer Award
Lost at E Minor, Interview

2007 PDN Photo Annual, Personal Projects
Environmental Photography Invitational, First Place
4 Culture Individual Artist Grant

2006 American Photography 22, 4 selected images
Print Sponsorship program, Photographic Center NW

Solo Exhibitions:

2009 Finding Trust, The Sarvey Wildlife Project, Alice Austin House, NYC
2006 Finding Trust, The Sarvey Wildlife Project, Seattle Public Library, Seattle, WA

Selected Exhibitions:

2010 Environmental Photography Invitational, The Burke Museum, Seattle
2009 Changing Earth, Ansel Adams Gallery/Mumm Napa Gallery, Napa Valley CA
2008 Bird Studies, The Photographic Center Northwest, Seattle, WA
Kibale Wood Project, Uganda, Benaroya Hall, Seattle, WA
My Dad and Me, Working Together, GinoMai Studio, Seattle, WA
2007 A Delicate Balance, The Photographic Center Northwest, Seattle, WA
2006 Environmental Photography Invitational, Art Wolfe Gallery, Seattle, WA
2001 Beneath the Surface, The Photographic Center Northwest, Seattle, WA
2000 Life of the City, Museum of Modern Art, NYC

Lectures:

2010 Lecture: Finding Trust, My Discoveries at a small wildlife sanctuary, The Frye Art Museum, Seattle, WA

Statement:

"The work I produce documents the delicate union that exists between humans and animals. The series Finding Trust documents the infirmed animals’ recovery at the Sarvey Wildlife Care Center in the Cascade Mountains near Seattle with a sense of wonder as they heal, hoping to return to the wild forests of the Northwest."

"Looking for truth after my mother passed away in 2002 I found the Sarvey Wildlife Rehabilitation Center. Located in the foothills of the beautiful Cascade mountains, it's a place where injured, wild creatures come to finish their journeys or start new ones, where I've seen love, trust and intuition that equals that of a mother and child, a home where a few humans have come together to save the lives of many precious creatures."

She was recently published in Marie Claire China, National Geographic, and Outside Magazine...
http://www.anniemusselman.com/index.php?/blog/

http://photolucidapdx.blogspot.com/2010/08/and-finalists-are.html

10/22/10

Donkey Basketball

Yes, this is a real thing. How it got started? I have no idea. But my guess is alcohol was originally involved. Nothing surprises me anymore.

[donkey01.jpg]

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I can see why this is illegal in some states...

Pet Costumes


Pet Costumes

10/20/10

10/21/10 Thursday

Stories about the animalness of animals, the irreducible ways in which they are not human.

Samantha Martin trains raccoons to play basketball and rats to bowl. She says that what we want from animals is for them to imitate humans. (5 minutes)

Act One. Food Chain In A New York Apartment.

Paul Tough visits Catherine Chalmers. She raises small animals and insects in her apartment, feeds them to each other, and photographs them eating each other. (20 minutes)

Song: "Insect Collector", Shonen Knife

Act Two. More Animals Eating Other Animals.

An original radio drama called "Kathleen on the Carpet," in which animals talk and hold their own "animal court." It's a comedy by David Sedaris, starring our own radio theater company, the Pinetree Gang. (14 minutes)

Song: "Rocky Raccoon", Lena Horne

Act Three. The Moment Humans Stopped Being Animals.

Anthropologists agree that humans stopped being animals when they started walking upright, on two legs. But scientists don't agree on why our ancestors did this. Ten years ago, Scott Carrier decided to do his own research on the subject. Scott is the author of Running After Antelope. (13 minutes)

Song: "I Wanna Be Like You", Disney's The Jungle Book

Carrier, Scott. Running After Antelope. Washington, D.C. Counterpoint, 2001.

Chalmers, Catherine. Food Chain: Encounters Between Between Mates, Predators and Prey. Aperture. 2000.

Catherine Chalmers: Foodchain / Pinkies



10/17/10

Interesting comments by Alec Soth and David Hilliard

Michael Werner:

In your opinion and experience, how can emerging photographers evaluate themselves as ready to start promoting their works and seek broader exposure for their photographs? What is one vital action you would recommend photographers undertake to find their audience, be included in exhibitions, and gain professional representation?


Alec Soth:

What I like about this question is that you acknowledge that emerging photographers often aren’t ready to start promoting themselves. I find it aggravating that so many young photographers busy themselves with self-promotion when they should just be taking pictures. Let’s use the analogy of the young novelist. When you are writing your first novel, you don’t try to get it published based on a single chapter. First you need to write the book. Too many photographers are shopping for galleries and publishers with unfinished portfolios.

It is a long process getting the first project together. And it often leads to failure. Not only does the novelist need to finish the first book, she might need to write two or three before she hits the target. But here is the thing – when the work is good, you will know it. And when you believe in the work, you can promote it. In the end, good work will find an audience.

Michael Werner:

How did it come about that you achieved the status of successful, professional photographer? What steps were involved in reaching your level of success?


David Hilliard:

Work, lots of energy and a blind faith that what I was making mattered not only to myself but to others as well. I knew that I had to get the work out there. That’s all I’ve ever wanted to do; make my imagery and make a living doing it. I worked, and continue to work very hard. I make, I fail, I make, I succeed. It’s a kind of battle. But through it all I’m learning and finding inspiration. And I might also suggest building a large skill set. Make fine art, commercial art, editorial art, teach, assist, etc, etc. Do it all. It keeps you going and in the end I truly believe that it can inform aspects of your work.

Monday 10/18/10

Tema Stauffer

I like the Dog Show series for its access into a secret, private society. It allows us entry into a world behind closed doors. It reminds me a lot of the movie, Best In Show.
Best in Show


Bio:

Tema Stauffer was born in 1973 and raised in Kalamazoo, Michigan. She currently lives in Brooklyn and teaches at The School of the International Center of Photography and William Paterson University. Her work is represented by Daniel Cooney Fine Art Gallery in New York City.

Tema graduated from Oberlin College in 1995 and received a Master's Degree in Photography from The University of Illinois at Chicago in 1998. She received CAAP grants for projects in 1999 and 2000 and also contributed a series of photographs shot on ride-alongs with police officers to the CITY2000, an archive of photographs examining the city of Chicago in the year 2000.

In 2001, Tema moved to Minneapolis. She collaborated on projects with a minimalist music ensemble called Smattering, including a fusion of digital photography, drawing, and sound at the Cowles Conservatory of The Walker Art Center in July 2002. A large body of her work was shown in an exhibition with The Minnesota Center for Photography at The Katherine E. Nash Gallery at The University of Minnesota, and in a solo exhibition at The Rochester Art Center in 2004.

She has participated in seven group shows at Jen Bekman Gallery and her solo show, “American Stills”, opened in October 2004. Fifteen images from this body of work were selected by The Museum of Contemporary Photography at Columbia College in Chicago for the Midwest Photographers Project. Her work has also been exhibited at Fotofest 2010 Biennial in Houston, The Chicago Cultural Center, The Terra Museum of American Art, The Musee Departmental d' Art Contemporain de Rouchechourt, The Hyde Park Art Center, The Detroit Contemporary, The Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago, The 3rd Ward Brooklyn, Tyler School of Art, The School of the Art Institute of Chicago, Adrian College Gallery, Central Lakes College Gallery, The Joymore Gallery, The Butcher Shop Gallery, The Gallery 400, The Icebox Gallery, Heaven Gallery, David Allen Gallery, Jon Oulman Gallery, The Lyceum Theatre Gallery, Dean Jenson Gallery, Moti Hasson Gallery, Randall Scott Gallery and Sasha Wolf Gallery.

Tema has shot for The Chicago Reader, The City Pages, The Rake Magazine, Lavender Magazine, The Village Voice, and W Magazine. She has contributed to online publications including Ausgang, A Field Guide to the North American Family and Humble Arts Foundation’s Group Show. Tema was a finalist for the McKnight Photography Fellowship in 2005 and was nominated for the KLM Paul Huf Award in 2008. She is also currently a curator for Culturehall, an online resource for contemporary art.


Solo Exhibitions:

Tyler School of Art, Elkins Hall Gallery, Philadelphia, PA, Selected Works, 2008
Jen Bekman Gallery, New York, NY, American Stills, 2004
AvroKO/PUBLIC Gallery, New York, New York, Photo installation in project space, 2004
Minnesota Center for Photography at The Katherine E. Nash Gallery, Un. of MN, Minneapolis, MN, Heart Land, 2004
Minnesota Center for Photography at Jon Oulman Gallery, Minneapolis, MN, Dog Show, 2004
The Rochester Art Center, Rochester, MN, American Stills, Emerging Artist Series, 2004
Central Lakes College Gallery, Brainerd, MN, Seven Scenes, 2004

Group Exhibitions:

Randall Scott Gallery, Washington D.C., 8: Eight Photographers, 2008
Dean Jenson Gallery, Milwaukee, WI, Big, Big Bangs/ Small, Small Bucks, 2008
Jen Bekman Gallery, New York, NY
* The Girl’s Room: By The Drier Project, 2006
* Meditations in an Emergency, 2006
* Best Midwestern: Photography from the Heartland, 2004
* The Pin-up Show, 2004
* Home (for the Holidays), 2004
* 8.5 x 11: Perspectives on the Everyday, 2003

* Inaugural Exhibition, 2003
The School of the International Center of Photography, New York, NY
Faculty Exhibition: About This, 2007, Faculty Exhibition, 2006
G2 Gallery of The School of the Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago, IL, You’re in my space, 2007
Moti Hasson Gallery, New York, NY, HIV Law Project Benefit Exhibition, 2007 and 2008
Lyceum Theatre Gallery, San Diego, CA, The Art of Photography Show, 2007
Gallery at 3rd Ward, Brooklyn, NY, Strange Instrument, 2006
David Allen Gallery, New York, NY, Nymphoto: Filtered, 2004
Heaven Gallery, Chicago, IL, A Great Midwestern, 2004
The Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago, Chicago, IL Exhibition of American Art: People In Motion, 2004
Icebox Gallery Minneapolis, MN, SKIN 2003, 2003
Warren St. Loft, New York, NY, Nymphoto: Women’s Collective Art Show, 2002
Cowles Conservatory, Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, MN
Collaboration of digital photographic imagery, drawing and sound with visual artist, David Hamlow, and minimalist music ensemble, Smattering, 2003
Midwest Warehouse, Minneapolis, MN, Warehouse: A Decade of work/Work, 2002
Chicago-Ashland Space, Chicago, IL, Curious Terrors, 2002
Chicago Cultural Center, Chicago, IL, You Are Here: Chicago in the year 2000, (City 2000), 2000
Joymore Gallery, Chicago, IL, Heavy Petting, 2000
The Butcher Shop Gallery, Chicago, IL, On the Prowl, 2000
Hyde Park Art Center, Chicago, IL, Homegrown: annual exhibition of faculty and student artwork, 1999, 2000, 2005-2007
Musee Departemental d’ Art Contemporain de Rouchechoart, France, Propositions II, 1998
Terra Museum of American Art, Chicago, IL, 1998: New Artists in Chicago: exhibition of 39 selected Chicago-area graduate students, 1998
Gallery 400, University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, IL, MFA exhibition of 23 color photographs, 1998

Grants, Awards, Collections:

Museum of Contemporary Photography, Chicago, IL, Midwest Photographers Project, fifteen images selected for project in 2005
McKnight Photography Fellowship, MN, Finalist, 2005
Minnesota Museum of American Art, Myron James Czarniecki III Photography Collection
The Comer Archive of Chicago in the Year 2000, Chicago, IL
Documentary photographer for photographic archive of Chicago in the year 2000 – photographed scenes from ride-alongs with Chicago police officers, 2000
The Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago, Chicago, IL, Honorable Mention, “Exhibition of American Art: People in Motion”, 2004
Department of Cultural Affairs, Chicago, IL, CAAP grants for Dog Show Photography Project, 1999 and 2000
The University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, IL, The Robert Stiegler Award – annual scholarship given to a graduate student in photography, 1998
San Francisco Art Institute, San Francisco, CA, Second Prize Winner of the national 1997 Visions of Excellence Photography Contest
Battle Creek Art Museum, Battle Creek, MI, People’s Choice Award, “Focus ‘94”, 1994

Education:

University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, IL Master of Fine Arts in Photography, 1998
Oberlin College, Oberlin, OH Bachelor of Arts, May 1995
School of the Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago, IL Color photography, film and advanced independent study in photography, winter semester, 1994




Mexican Hairless 1998


Breeder 1998


Black Poodle 1998


Dog Art 1999

Interview:
http://2waylens.blogspot.com/2010/02/tema-stauffer.html

Gallery:

http://www.danielcooneyfineart.com/stauffer_photography.html

Website:
http://www.temastauffer.com/

10/13/10

10/14/10 Thursday

Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs and Unconditional Love, This American Life episode


Unconditional Love

Stories of unconditional love between parents and children, and how hard love can be sometimes in daily practice.

Prologue.

Hard as it is to believe, during the early Twentieth Century, a whole school of mental health professionals decided that unconditional love was a terrible thing to give a child. The government printed pamphlets warning mothers against the dangers of holding their kids. The head of the American Psychological Association and even a mothers' organization endorsed the position that mothers were dangerous—until psychologist Harry Harlow set out to prove them wrong, through a series of experiments with monkeys. Host Ira Glass talks with Deborah Blum, author of Love at Goon Park: Harry Harlow and the Science of Affection.

Act One. Love Is A Battlefield.

Alix Spiegel tells the story of a couple, Heidi and Rick Solomon, who adopt a son who was raised in terrible circumstances in a Romanian orphanage, unable to feel attachments to anyone...and what they do about it. Song: "Loveless Town," Sarah Blust

Act Two. Hit Me With Your Best Shot.

Dave Royko talks about the decision he and his wife faced recently about his autistic son's future, and whether he should continue to live with the family.




Pets fit into Maslow's hierarchy of needs. They serve as a solution to a basic human need. Pets serve under 2 of the deficiency needs of love/belonging and esteem. The increase in mobility of modern society and has led to the disruption or fragmentation of the traditional family clan. This trend has increased the need for alternative sources of emotional support and companionship, particularly within the socially alienating and depersonalizing environments created by large cities. This explains and the recent and anticipated growth of pet populations in western societies.



2. Esteem

All humans have a need to be respected and to have self-esteem and self-respect. Also known as the belonging need, esteem presents the normal human desire to be accepted and valued by others. People need to engage themselves to gain recognition and have an activity or activities that give the person a sense of contribution, to feel accepted and self-valued, be it in a profession or hobby. Imbalances at this level can result in low self-esteem or an inferiority complex. People with low self-esteem need respect from others. They may seek fame or glory, which again depends on others. Note, however, that many people with low self-esteem will not be able to improve their view of themselves simply by receiving fame, respect, and glory externally, but must first accept themselves internally. Psychological imbalances such as depression can also prevent one from obtaining self-esteem on both levels.

Most people have a need for a stable self-respect and self-esteem. Maslow noted two versions of esteem needs, a lower one and a higher one. The lower one is the need for the respect of others, the need for status, recognition, fame, prestige, and attention. The higher one is the need for self-respect, the need for strength, competence, mastery, self-confidence, independence and freedom. The latter one ranks higher because it rests more on inner competence won through experience. Deprivation of these needs can lead to an inferiority complex, weakness and helplessness.

3. Love and belonging

After physiological and safety needs are fulfilled, the third layer of human needs are social and involve feelings of belongingness. This aspect of Maslow's hierarchy involves emotionally based relationships in general, such as:

  • Friendship
  • Intimacy
  • Family

Humans need to feel a sense of belonging and acceptance, whether it comes from a large social group, such as clubs, office culture, religious groups, professional organizations, sports teams, gangs, or small social connections (family members, intimate partners, mentors, close colleagues, confidants). They need to love and be loved (sexually and non-sexually) by others. In the absence of these elements, many people become susceptible to loneliness, social anxiety, and clinical depression. This need for belonging can often overcome the physiological and security needs, depending on the strength of the peer pressure; an anorexic, for example, may ignore the need to eat and the security of health for a feeling of control and belonging.


Serpell, James. In the Company of Animals. Cambridge University Press. New York, 1996.

Maslow, Abraham H. Toward A Psychology of Being. John Wiley and Sons. New York, 1999.

Blum, Deborah. Love At Goon Park: Harry Harlow and the Science of Affection. Berkley Book. New York, 2002.

10/12/10

Emerging Artist Gallery Search

East Coast

Jen Beckman

Colleen Plumb

Animals Are Outside Today examines the intersections between humans and animals, studying how animals are woven through the fabric of culture. I began this project looking at fake nature, considering how substitutions for nature might satisfy people. Looking deeper I began photographing real animals, investigating how they provide intangible links to a deeper world of instinct and rawness.

Contradictions define our relationships with animals. We love and admire them; we are entertained and fascinated by them; we take our children to watch and learn about them. Animals are embedded within core human history--evident in our stories, rituals and symbols. At the same time, we eat, wear and cage them with seeming indifference, consuming them in countless ways.

Our connection to animals today is often developed through assimilation and appropriation; we absorb them into our lives, yet we no longer know of their origin. Most people are cut off from the steps involved in their processing or acquisition, shielded from witnessing their death or decay. I am interested in moving within these contradictions, always wondering if the notion of sacred will survive alongside our evolution.



Bio:
Born and raised in Chicago, Colleen Plumb worked as a graphic designer for several years before switching gears to pursue a degree in photography. She holds an MFA in Photography from Columbia College Chicago (1999), where she is currently an adjunct faculty member. She makes photographs ab out connections--or the lack thereof--between humans and the natural world.

Plumb’s work is in several collections, including the Museum of Contemporary Photography in Chicago, IL and Fidelity Investments in Boston, MA. Her photographs are part of the Midwest Photographers Project at the Museum of Contemporary Photography and the Chicago Project at Catherine Edelman Gallery and are featured online in Photo-Eye’s Photographer’s Showcase. Plumb’s work has been widely published.

She was a 2008 First Edition Hot Shot at Jen Bekman Gallery. She has upcoming solo shows at the Center for Fine Art Photography in Fort Collins, CO and the Historic Water Tower Gallery in Chicago.

Tema Stauffer
http://www.temastauffer.com/dog_show.html

Tema Stauffer was born in 1973 and raised in Kalamazoo, Michigan. She currently lives in Brooklyn and teaches at The School of the International Center of Photography and William Paterson University. Her work is represented by Daniel Cooney Fine Art Gallery in New York City.

Tema graduated from Oberlin College in 1995 and received a Master's Degree in Photography from The University of Illinois at Chicago in 1998. She received CAAP grants for projects in 1999 and 2000 and also contributed a series of photographs shot on ride-alongs with police officers to the CITY2000, an archive of photographs examining the city of Chicago in the year 2000.

In 2001, Tema moved to Minneapolis. She collaborated on projects with a minimalist music ensemble called Smattering, including a fusion of digital photography, drawing, and sound at the Cowles Conservatory of The Walker Art Center in July 2002. A large body of her work was shown in an exhibition with The Minnesota Center for Photography at The Katherine E. Nash Gallery at The University of Minnesota, and in a solo exhibition at The Rochester Art Center in 2004.

She has participated in seven group shows at Jen Bekman Gallery and her solo show, “American Stills”, opened in October 2004. Fifteen images from this body of work were selected by The Museum of Contemporary Photography at Columbia College in Chicago for the Midwest Photographers Project. Her work has also been exhibited at Fotofest 2010 Biennial in Houston, The Chicago Cultural Center, The Terra Museum of American Art, The Musee Departmental d' Art Contemporain de Rouchechourt, The Hyde Park Art Center, The Detroit Contemporary, The Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago, The 3rd Ward Brooklyn, Tyler School of Art, The School of the Art Institute of Chicago, Adrian College Gallery, Central Lakes College Gallery, The Joymore Gallery, The Butcher Shop Gallery, The Gallery 400, The Icebox Gallery, Heaven Gallery, David Allen Gallery, Jon Oulman Gallery, The Lyceum Theatre Gallery, Dean Jenson Gallery, Moti Hasson Gallery, Randall Scott Gallery and Sasha Wolf Gallery.

Tema has shot for The Chicago Reader, The City Pages, The Rake Magazine, Lavender Magazine, The Village Voice, and W Magazine. She has contributed to online publications including Ausgang, A Field Guide to the North American Family and Humble Arts Foundation’s Group Show. Tema was a finalist for the McKnight Photography Fellowship in 2005 and was nominated for the KLM Paul Huf Award in 2008. She is also currently a curator for Culturehall, an online resource for contemporary art.

dog show : Couple with Weimaraner / Porter County Fairgrounds / Valparaiso, IN / June 1998

Bill Charles Gallery

Sage Sohier
www.sagesohier.com


Lyme, NH, 2009
Bharat Sikka
http://www.bharatsikka.com/
Bharat Sikka (b 1973) grew up and then worked as a photographer in India before deciding to study at the Parson's School of Design where he earned a BFA in photography. Establishing a fine art approach to the field of photography, as an art form Bharat documents contemporary visions of India. His portfolio consists of environmental portraits of “Indian men”, “Urban landscapes” in India and a personal project on his family. Since his first exhibition "India n Men" at the Artists Space in NYC, his work has been displayed in numerous national and international exhibitions, including one at the National Museum of India (2008). Bharat has contributed for magazines and publications such as the New Yorker, I.D, Vogue, Vogue Homme International, Details and Time Magazine, where his work was featured as amongst the best photographs of 2005. Bharat now lives and works between Europe and India.
West Coast

Fahey/Klein Gallery

Jill Greenberg
http://www.manipulator.com/

Jill Greenberg was born in Montreal, Canada in 1967. At the age of 2, her family moved to Bloomfield Hills, Michigan where Greenberg began her arts education while attending Cranbrook’s elementary school where she was in the photo darkroom in 5th grade. Many extra-curricular courses supplemented her arts education: Kingswood, Birmingham Bloomfield Art Association, and the Center for Creative Studies in Detroit. Before senior year in High School, she enrolled in Rhode Island School of Design’s pre-college program in Illustration 1984. Senior year, she was the recipient of the Traub Scholarship for Art from Andover High School, which afforded her the opportunity to attend Parsons in Paris for Photography the summer before entering college in Providence at RISD.

She earned a BFA with honors, RISD ‘89 Photo with a senior thesis called “The Female Object”; took a class at Brown University, in Semiotics. After graduation, Greenberg moved to New York City. Interned at Pace MacGill, and enrolled in continuing education classes at School of Visual Arts: Studio Art, Contemporary Art History, Photoshop 1.0 in 1991.
Then, after almost-but not quite- getting into the Whitney Program for fine art in 1992, she opted to focus primarily on assignment work until 2001, when the “Monkey Portraits*” series began.


Julie Blackmon
http://www.julieblackmon.com/index.cfm

Domestic Vacations:

The Dutch proverb “a Jan Steen household” originated in the 17th century and is used today to refer to a home in disarray, full of rowdy children and boisterous family gatherings. The paintings of Steen, along with those of other Dutch and Flemish genre painters, helped inspire this body of work. I am the oldest of nine children and now the mother of three. As Steen’s personal narratives of family life depicted nearly 400 yrs. ago, the conflation of art and life is an area I have explored in photographing the everyday life of my family and the lives of my sisters and their families at home. These images are both fictional and auto-biographical, and reflect not only our lives today and as children growing up in a large family, but also move beyond the documentary to explore the fantastic elements of our everyday lives, both imagined and real.

The stress, the chaos, and the need to simultaneously escape and connect are issue that I investigate in this body of work. We live in a culture where we are both “child centered” and “self-obsessed.” The struggle between living in the moment versus escaping to another reality is intense since these two opposites strive to dominate. Caught in the swirl of soccer practices, play dates, work, and trying to find our way in our “make-over” culture, we must still create the space to find ourselves. The expectations of family life have never been more at odds with each other. These issues, as well as the relationship between the domestic landscape of the past and present, are issues I have explored in these photographs. I believe there are moments that can be found throughout any given day that bring sanctuary. It is in finding these moments amidst the stress of the everyday that my life as a mother parallels my work as an artist, and where the dynamics of family life throughout time seem remarkably unchanged. As an artist and as a mother, I believe life’s most poignant moments come from the ability to fuse fantasy and reality: to see the mythic amidst the chaos.

Broken Toy
Broken Toy

Pigment Ink Print
22x22"

Kopeikin Gallery

Andrew Miksys
http://www.andrewmiksys.com/



ANDREW MIKSYS is a native of Seattle, Washington. His photography
has been shown internationally including exhibitions at the New Orleans
Museum of Art, Vilnius Contemporary Art Centre, and De Appel Contemporary
Arts Centre in Amsterdam. In 2002 he was selected by Photo District News (PDN)
as one of the "top 30 emerging photographers to watch" and in 2006 he
was featured in Slate magazine as Slate's "Artist of the Month". Miksys has also
been the recipient of grants from the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial
Foundation (2000), the J. William Fulbright Program (1998 and 2002) and the
Aaron Siskind Foundation (2009). He currently divides his time between Seattle
and Vilnius, Lithuania.


Thomas Wrede
http://thomas-wrede.de/photography/magic-worlds



International


Unit (Netherlands)

Isabella Rozendaal

http://www.isabellarozendaal.com/
http://www.photoeye.com/bookstore/citation.cfm?catalog=dq072&i=&i2=&CFID=11377251&CFTOKEN=35640281



Jasper Buninga

http://www.jasperbuninga.com/



Stills Gallery (Australia)

Sandy Edwards
http://www.stillsgallery.com.au/artists/edwards/index.php?obj_id=about&nav=0

Sandy Edwards is one of Australia's leading documentary photographers. Her images have been widely exhibited and published. Her work focuses on the portrayal of women and Aboriginal issues.

Her best known work Paradise is a Place is an evocative black and white series about a young girl's growth to adulthood set on the far south coast of NSW. This highly successful exhibition has been published by Random House with an accompanying story by Gillian Mears. Her series Welcome to Brewarrina, is an intimate portrait of the Aboriginal community in the NSW country town of Brewarrina.

Indelible (2004), was a 10-year retrospective of her more personal work. The resulting exhibition was a meditation on portraiture, exploring themes at the intersection of human lives: trust and relationships, growing up and ageing. With a magnificent quality of colour and light, Edwards' work tells the story of not just her life, but touches on universal truths about our interconnectedness and the ultimate importance of relationships in life. From July 2005 - July 2006 Sleep late from Indelible is the feature image on Melbourne's Mirvac Yarra's Edge Tower billboard.

First Love (1999), a series on a first long term relationship, was exhibited as part of Close Relations at the Australian Centre for Photography and Self Assured, on teenage girls, which marked a move into colour.

Her work is held in collections at the Art Gallery of NSW, Parliament House Canberra and the National Gallery of Australia. Sandy Edwards is also the curator of two major photographic public art programs - Sydney Airport 2000 Art Project with Linda Slutzkin, and Sydney Looking Forward, part of AMP and Sydney City Council's project Art & About.

View Image

Alasdair and Peter, both blue, backyard, Clifton Hill, Melbourne, 1999

Beverley Veasey
http://home.zipworld.com.au/~bev/

This work presents a number of artificial habitats for animals. These purpose built spaces are found in zoos, shows and aquariums around the world. The inhabitants of these spaces are absent and so we are left to ponder what animal may reside there. As more of their natural habitat is destroyed, these simulated environments may be the only way that we can engage with other animal species of the natural world in the future.

View Image

Habitat #1, 2008
from Habitats
Lightjet print

Throughout her art practice Beverley Veasey makes wry and gentle observations on the relations of humans to the world around them - the landscapes we build for ourselves and our engagement with the natural world.

Beverley Veasey's previous exhibitions, Natural History and Natural History #2 depicted animals and birds in artificial environments. In Habitats, exhibited at Stills Gallery in 2008, she is still interested in the artificial however this time the inhabitants, the animals, are nowhere to be found. We are left to gaze at the man made spaces created to replicate the wild - taking us 'into the wild'.

There are monkey bars, but no orangutans; forests, but no bears; and token logs absent of reptiles lizards or snakes. Water holes suggest life just out of sight, but no matter how much our eyes search the crevices amongst fake rocks and grass, we find nothing. At the back of the habitats, positioned in rock faces and painted landscapes, are doors - leading nowhere. Most remarkable are the painted landscapes reminiscent of Namatjira paintings or American recreations of the Grand Canyon. These mythic landscapes are the stuff of postcard dreams of travel beyond the limitations of the urban.

In 2008/09, a selection of works from Habitats were featured in Dubbo Regional Gallery's exhibition, In Captivity, which focused on the theme 'the animal in art'. Dubbo Regional Gallery acquired a number of these works for its permanent collection. In 2008 works from Habitats also featured in the exhibitions Beastly, MOP gallery, Sydney and It must be love, Mars Gallery Melbourne and Veasey was selected as a finalist in the William and Winifred Bowness Photography Prize 2008, Monash Gallery of Art, Melbourne.

Natural History 2006 and its continuation Natural History #2 2007, are a collection of images depicting animals and birds in artificial environments. Unlike the animals in a zoo amongst fake rocks and ponds, these animals are in stark white enclosures. In removing all traces of a natural habitat Veasey's works amplify our often-mediated experience of the natural world in a subtle and potent way.

In isolating animals such as monkeys and goats and presenting them almost as if they were subjects of a studio portrait she also creates pathos. Their animal expressions have a melancholy air that we could read as a response to their spare and finite world, an effect enhanced by the subtle tonal quality of the works.

Beverley Veasey has been a practising artist and teacher for over 10 years. She currently lectures in Photomedia at the National Art School in Sydney. Her work has been selected in many major prizes including the Citigroup Portrait Prize, the William and Winifred Bowness Photography Prize and the Olive Cotton Prize and continues to be featured in numerous exhibitions both in Australia and overseas.

10/11/10

Interview questions for Kenney

1. How did the evolution of sculpture being incorporated into your photography come to be? Why is the sculptural element important to the work?

2. Why photography? Why is the photograph necessary? Why not just show the sculpture?

3. Can you talk about your process? Do you have an idea for a photograph or a sculpture first? And how do you proceed from the original idea?

4. Do you consider yourself a photographer, a sculptor, both, neither? Why?

5. Why landscapes? Why space? What is it about landscapes and space that interests you?

6. Is it important that the viewer know/not know they are looking at a photograph of a sculpture? Is the mystery an effect you desire? Are the materials used to create the sculpture in need of identification in the photograph? (for example, does the viewer need to know if/see that clouds were made from cotton balls?)

7. In a gallery setting, do you exhibit the sculptures along with the photographs?

Interview Questions for Ivanov

1. Is it a goal for your work to make a political statement? If so, why?

2. How did your interest in trash/waste/consumerism develop? Is this of personal interest?

3. You've spoken about what gets thrown away and forgotten about. Do you want to make people remember these things or force them not to forget them?

4. Are you worried about the aesthetic appeal of the images slightly concealing the underlying reality?

5. Does your work apply equally well to another country? Is it universal? (and is this a critique on American capitalism or is it about a broader of wastefulness?)

6. Do you see your work as documentary/photojournalism? Why or why not?

7. When I think of your images of the recycling facilities I can't help but wonder... There is a danger that one ends up with something that looks like it could be in a National Geographic magazine. Is this something you are concerned with? Why or why not?

Julika Rudelius summary


What artwork/proposals did you present?

Rudiments of Thought and Joy Untroubled (pets)

What topics did you discuss? What was the nature of this discussion?

decaying of society, exclusiveness, prohibition, 1950s America, control.

The photographic styles of William Eggleston and Martin Parr

What were the critical reactions/ suggestions to your ideas/artwork?

Williams Eggleston keeps popping up. I've heard many references made to his work.

the landscape/space images rely heavily on their titles, which is fine, but they need to be more dry and less ironic.

Is this work National Geographic or something else?

What was a suggested plan of action?

classifying my images by grades of sensibility and styles

What insights / new questions / ideas did you take from the meeting?

should i take my compositions in one direction? casual or formal? Are they kitschy, casual or over composed? Is there an access point for the viewer?

Is this work basically witty but boring? Its funny but its already been done. The moment they get funny they become problematic.

How did this meeting affect how you will proceed with your project / proposal?

I need to bring it home with this project. I need to work on the titles, make them less ironic. I may need to dumb down the images. And I need to make a decision about the compositions.

10/11/10 Monday







for his "Mute" series

Statement:

"I was once left in a car at a young age.

I don't know when or where or for how long, possibly at the age of four, perhaps outside Tesco's, probably for fifteen minutes only. The details don't matter. The point is that I wondered if anyone would come back. It seems trivial now but in a child's mind it is possible to be alone forever.

Around the same age I began to feel a deep affinity with animals - in particular their plight at the hands of humans. I remember watching TV and seeing footage of a dog being put in a plastic bag and being kicked. What appalled me most was that the dog could not speak back. It's muteness terrified me.

I should say that I was a well-loved child and never abandoned and yet it is clear that both these experiences arose from the same place deep inside me: a fear of being alone and unheard. Perhaps this is a fear we all share at some level, I am not sure.

The images in this series explore that feeling, both in relation to myself and to animals in general. The camera is the perfect tool for capturing a sense of silence and longing: the shutter freezes the subject for ever and two layers of glass are placed between the viewer and the viewed: the glass of the lens, the glass of the picture frame and, in this instance, the glass of the car window further isolates the animal. The dog is truly trapped.

When I started this project I knew the photos would be dark. What I didn't expect was to see so many subtle reactions by the dogs: some sad, some expectant, some angry, some dejected. It was as if upon opening up a box of grey-coloured pencils I was surprised to see so many shades inside.

I hope that these pictures are engaging and perhaps a little amusing. I want to show that there is life in the dark places within us.

I will stop writing now and you can stop reading. Words can only get us so far. After all, we are all animals."

I chose this work mostly for the artist's statement, specifically the text in bold italics. I think this is a perfect example of projection. The artist is projecting his own emotional response to being left in a car as a child onto the dogs. He gave these dogs specific emotions and feelings. While animals are capable of feeling, he has no way of knowing how each of these dogs actually feel when they are left in the car. He assumes human expressions to these animals. Its easy to make those assumptions, especially when we feel sympathy for an animal but I think its a very idealized and sentimental project. There are problems inherent in this series. I wonder if he got away with this without major criticism.

Bio:

"Martin lives in central London where he has his photographic studio.

He started his photographic career after a number of years working as a creative director in children's TV (which included dressing up as a furry white alien). Before that he studied psychology at Edinburgh University and then animation at Glasgow School of Art.

Martin thinks there is something magical about looking through the lens and capturing a bit of the world. 'You see an interesting array of shapes - people passing in front of a strangely coloured wall and -click- its yours forever. Its so easy it shouldn't be allowed'.

When Martin isn't photographing he is either rockclimbing (he is too heavy to pull himself up), meditating (he can't do the full lotus because he has bad knees) or he is writing his novel (he is stuck on chapter 3 - not having finished Ch.s 1 or 2).

If you care to know more about Martin's work then please go to the portfolio section and look at the 'projects' link. If you are interested in Martin's meandering thoughts you might enjoy the blog and for information on upcoming exhibitions keep an eye on the news section on the front page."

He is not represented by any galleries. However, here is a list of some recent exhibitions of his work:

2010: MUTE: photographs of dogs in cars, theprintspace, Londo, (solo show)

Large scale prints of dogs looking out of car windows shot at night. Solo show at theprintspace, East London.

2009: Taylor Wessing award, the National Portrait Gallery, London, (group show)

Portrait selected for Taylor-Wessing award in the National Portrait Gallery, London. "Tiger, Rag, Johnny and Emma"

2009:'Unordinary People', PYMCA youth culture portraits, Royal Albert Hall, (group show)

Portraits from nightclub series selected for group show to represent PYMCA image library at the Albert Hall.

2008:'I've lived in Hoxton 81 1/2 years', Candid Arts Gallery, London, (solo show)

Portraits and words about Joseph Markovitch, the original face of Hoxton

2008: Boombox, Beto Reginik Studios, Sao Poalo, Brazil (group show)

Portraits from the infamous Hoxton nightclub, presented in Sao Paulo alongside photographer Beto Riginik

Website: http://www.martinusborne.com/index.php?page=home

Reviews:

MUTE Exhibition by Martin Usborne. http://dog-milk.com/mute-exhibition-by-martin-usborne/ 10 September 2010.

Forlorn Pet Photography. http://www.trendhunter.com/trends/martin-usborne 23 September 2010.

I'm disappointed in all the reviews I read. People are suckers for cheesy, cliched well photographed pet portraits. Once they're romanticized people tend to become blind followers of the work. All they can see is this "tugging at my heart strings" (insert emotion here) pet. In this case, a dog who is experiencing heartbreaking loneliness and is expressing it just like a human would. One of the authors actually stated in their review "Who can say they're not an "animal person"?" Its like this work or the pets themselves hypnotized them.

10/6/10

10/7/10 Thursday



Lucy, the epilogue


"What Lucy's death did was push me toward human beings and away from the island."
Carter, Janice.
http://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/carter.html

"I use perspectives derived from evolutionary theory, studies of complex systems, and developmental research to examine the dynamics and functions of long-term social relationships. I focus on social behavior in nonhuman animals, especially primates, wolves, and domestic dogs. Topics of interest include play, social reciprocity, cooperation, greetings, conflict resolution, emotions, and mood. I study the dynamics of social relationships by observing video-taped interactions in fine detail, using frame-by-frame and slow motion analysis. Questions being addressed include:
  • How do other animals develop trusting relationships in the absence of spoken language?
  • What do animals understand about the beliefs and intentions of their social partners?
  • How can understanding of nonhuman social relationships help us to better understand human behavior?"
Dr. Barbara Smutts, Stanford University. Biopsychology.

Temerlin, Maurice K., Lucy: Growing Up Human : A Chimpanzee Daughter in a Psychotherapist's Family. Science and Behavior, 1976.

Blum, Deborah. Love At Goon Park: Harry Harlow and the Science of Affection. Berkeley Publishing Group. New York, 2002.

Siebert, Charles. The Wauchula Woods Accord: Toward a New Understanding of Animals. Scribner Publishing. New York, 2009.


I am interested in the idea of how nonhuman animals understand and form trusting relationships without spoken language. How do they bond with their social companions. And in the case of pet/owner relationship, how much of the bond really is a reflection of Jung's projection and how much of their communication is two-way. Is there real intimacy between the two species?


10/3/10

Monday 10/4

Alan, Boston (South End), MA 2005

Bonni, Boston (Beacon Hill), MA 2005

Alan, Boston (South End), MA 2005

Mameve, Cambridge, MA 2005

Robert Knight

I liked his series of work, Dwellings, because of his exploration of identity and domestic matter. He attempts to create portraits of unseen people just by photographing the materials and items in their homes. What do these items reveal about the person who owns them? What does it say about their moral values, personalities and behaviors? I think this idea could be imposed on my work. The idea of what keeping pets says about an individual is interesting. It speaks about what they value, what's important to them, how they relate to the world around them, etc.

Bio:

Robert Knight was born and raised in Boston, MA. He received his BA in architecture and economics from Yale University in 1995 and expects to receive his Masters in Fine Art from the Massachusetts College of Art in 2006. His work has been shown nationally in numerous juried exhibitions and is held in private collections. He is currently an instructor at the Mass College of Art and has an budding practice as a commercial photographer.

Statement:

My recent work has focused on the calculated choices people make in the objects they own. What do they care about? How do they allocate their resources? Their domestic decisions are both moral and aesthetic: what does one choose to own and how do they choose to display it? My photographs do not so much attempt to compare classes, or scrutinize one class, as simply attempt to represent identity through the lens of people’s personal spaces. I ask the viewer to consider objects I have seen and selected, in the context of an unseen subject’s material interests. Whether at one time purchased, received as a gift or inherited, things “shape the identities of their users. Man is … a reflection of things with which he interacts” (from Csikszentmihalyi’s The Meaning of Things).

My passion for photographing the material interests of others is largely driven by the childhood experience of being psychologically stretched between the prodigal extravagance of my mother and the Puritan frugality of my father. In the Poetics of Space, Gaston Bachelard describes a viewer who is “‘reading a room’ … and starts to think of some place in his own past”. Similarly, I see my explorations of other’s dwellings as subjective interpretations. I photograph the things that hold signification for me, that resonate with my background, education and upbringing. The word “dwelling” denotes both a tangible physical structure, a home, as well as an internal process of lingering reflection. Thus, my photographs can be seen as both of others’ dwellings and a dwelling on my own memories and past.

Beneath the surface, my work reflects a lack of faith in photography’s ability to objectively portray an other. Roland Barthes, in Camera Lucida, suggests that photography has lost (or never had) the ability to convey authentic meaning. The inherent subjectivity of the artist leaves all interpretation, and thus content, in the hands of the photographer and the viewer. Inevitably, this “failure” of photography applies to my surrogate portraits as well, rendering the absence of an unseen subject not a truer portrait of an other, but perhaps merely a truer portrait of myself.


Represented by Jen Beckman
http://www.jenbekman.com/robertknight/index.html

http://robertknight.com/