Galleries

Results 401 - 425 of 1334

<< Start < Prev 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 Next > End >>

Author:Philip Gefter
  In 1999, Philip-Lorca diCorcia set up his camera on a tripod in Times Square, attached strobe lights to scaffolding across the street and, in the time-honored tradition of street photography, took a random series of pictures of strangers passing under his lights. The project continued for two years, culminating in an exhibition of photographs called Heads at Pace/MacGill Gallery in Chelsea. "Mr. diCorcia's pictures remind us, among other things, that we are each our own little universe of secrets, and vulnerable", Michael Kimmelman wrote, reviewing the show in The New York Times. "Good art makes you see the world differently, at least for a while, and after seeing Mr. diCorcia's new Heads, for the next few hours you won't pass another person on the street in the same absent way." But not everyone was impressed.   When Erno Nussenzweig, an Orthodox Jew and retired diamond merchant from Union City, N.J., saw his picture last year in the exhibition catalog, he called his lawyer. And then he sued Mr. diCorcia and Pace for exhibiting and publishing the portrait without permission and profiting from it financially. The suit sought an injunction to halt sales and publication of the photograph, as well as $500,000 in compensatory damages and $1.5 million in punitive damages.   Pace/MacGill Gallery, New York The man in "Head No. 13, 2000," by Philip-Lorca diCorcia is Erno Nussenzweig. When he saw his picture in an exhibition catalog for diCorcia's "Heads," he sued the photographer and his gallery.   The suit was dismissed last month by a New York State Supreme Court judge who said that the photographer's right to artistic expression trumped the subject's privacy rights. But to many artists, the fact that the case went so far is significant.   The practice of street photography has a long tradition in the United States, with documentary and artistic strains, in big cities and small towns. Photographers usually must obtain permission to photograph on private property — including restaurants and hotel lobbies — but the freedom to photograph in public has long been taken for granted. And it has had a profound impact on the history of the medium. Without it, Lee Friedlander would not have roamed the streets of New York photographing strangers, and Walker Evans would never have produced his series of subway portraits in the 1940's.   Remarkably, this was the first case to directly challenge that right. Had it succeeded, "Subway Passenger, New York City," 1941, along with a vast number of other famous images taken on the sly, might no longer be able to be published or sold.   Metropolitan Museum of Art, Walker Evans Archive Walker Evans took a series of pictures on the sly in the subway in the 1940's; "Subway Passenger, New York City."   In his lawsuit, Mr. Nussenzweig argued that use of the photograph interfered with his constitutional right to practice his religion, which prohibits the use of graven images.   New York state right-to-privacy laws prohibit the unauthorized use of a person's likeness for commercial purposes, that is, for advertising or purposes of trade. But they do not apply if the likeness is considered art. So Mr. diCorcia's lawyer, Lawrence Barth, of Munger, Tolles & Olson in Los Angeles, focused on the context in which the photograph appeared. "What was at issue in this case was a type of use that hadn't been tested against First Amendment principles before — exhibition in a gallery; sale of limited edition prints; and publication in an artist's monograph," he said in an e-mail message. "We tried to sensitize the court to the broad sweep of important and now famous expression that would be chilled over the past century under the rule urged by Nussenzweig." Among others, he mentioned Alfred Eisenstaedt's famous image of a sailor kissing a nurse in Times Square on V-J Day in 1945, when Allied forces announced the surrender of Japan.       Several previous cases were also cited in Mr. diCorcia's defense. In Hoepker v. Kruger (2002), a woman who had been photographed by Thomas Hoepker, a German photographer, sued Barbara Kruger for using the picture in a piece called "It's a Small World ... Unless You Have to Clean It." A New York federal court judge ruled in Ms. Kruger's favor, holding that, under state law and the First Amendment, the woman's image was not used for purposes of trade, but rather in a work of art.   Also cited was a 1982 ruling in which the New York Court of Appeals sided with The New York Times in a suit brought by Clarence Arrington, whose photograph, taken without his knowledge while he was walking in the Wall Street area, appeared on the cover of The New York Times Magazine in 1978 to illustrate an article titled "The Black Middle Class: Making It." Mr. Arrington said the picture was published without his consent to represent a story he didn't agree with. The New York Court of Appeals held that The Times's First Amendment rights trumped Mr. Arrington's privacy rights.   In an affidavit submitted to the court on Mr. diCorcia's behalf, Peter Galassi, chief curator of photography at the Museum of Modern Art, said Mr. diCorcia's "Heads" fit into a tradition of street photography well defined by artists ranging from Alfred Stieglitz and Henri Cartier-Bresson to Robert Frank and Garry Winogrand. "If the law were to forbid artists to exhibit and sell photographs made in public places without the consent of all who might appear in those photographs," Mr. Galassi wrote, "then artistic expression in the field of photography would suffer drastically. If such a ban were projected retroactively, it would rob the public of one of the most valuable traditions of our cultural inheritance."       Neale M. Albert, of Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison, who represented Pace/MacGill, said the case surprised him: "I have always believed that the so-called street photographers do not need releases for art purposes. In over 30 years of representing photographers, this is the first time a person has raised a complaint against one of my clients by reason of such a photograph."   State Supreme Court Justice Judith J. Gische rejected Mr. Nussenzweig's claim that his privacy had been violated, ruling on First Amendment grounds that the possibility of such a photograph is simply the price every person must be prepared to pay for a society in which information and opinion freely flow. And she wrote in her decision that the photograph was indeed a work of art. "Defendant diCorcia has demonstrated his general reputation as a photographic artist in the international artistic community," she wrote.   But she indirectly suggested that other cases might be more challenging. "Even while recognizing art as exempted from the reach of New York's privacy laws, the problem of sorting out what may or may not legally be art remains a difficult one," she wrote. As for the religious claims, she said: "Clearly, plaintiff finds the use of the photograph bearing his likeness deeply and spiritually offensive. While sensitive to plaintiff's distress, it is not redressable in the courts of civil law."   Mr. diCorcia, whose book of photographs "Storybook Life" was published in 2004, said that in setting up his camera in Times Square in 1999: "I never really questioned the legality of what I was doing. I had been told by numerous editors I had worked for that it was legal. There is no way the images could have been made with the knowledge and cooperation of the subjects. The mutual exclusivity that conflict or tension, is part of what gives the work whatever quality it has."     Mr. Nussenzweig is appealing. Last month his lawyer Jay Goldberg told The New York Law Journal that his client "has lost control over his own image."   "It's a terrible invasion to me," Mr. Goldberg said. "The last thing a person has is his own dignity."   Photography professionals are watching — and claiming equally high moral stakes. Should the case proceed, said Howard Greenberg, of Howard Greenberg Gallery in New York, "it would be a terrible thing, a travesty to those of us who have been educated and illuminated by great street photography of the past and, hopefully, the future, too."     Philip Gefter ©The New York Times March 19, 2006       http://zonezero.com/magazine/articles/gefter/index.htm    
Sunday, 19 March 2006
Author:Andy Grundberg
  Gordon Parks, a master of the camera, dies at 93.       Gordon Parks, the photographer, filmmaker, writer and composer who used his prodigious, largely self-taught talents to chronicle the African-American experience and to retell his own personal history, died on March 7, 2006, at his home in Manhattan. He was 93.   Gordon Parks was the first African-American to work as a staff photographer for Life magazine and the first black artist to produce and direct a major Hollywood film, "The Learning Tree," in 1969.   He developed a large following as a photographer for Life for more than 20 years, and by the time he was 50 he ranked among the most influential image makers of the postwar years. In the 1960's he began to write memoirs, novels, poems and screenplays, which led him to directing films. In 1970 he helped found Essence magazine and was its editorial director from 1970 to 1973.   An iconoclast, Mr. Parks fashioned a career that resisted categorization. No matter what medium he chose for his self-expression, he sought to challenge stereotypes while still communicating to a large audience. In finding early acclaim as a photographer despite a lack of professional training, he became convinced that he could accomplish whatever he set his mind to. To an astonishing extent, he proved himself right.   Gordon Parks developed his ability to overcome barriers in childhood, facing poverty, prejudice and the death of his mother when he was a teen-ager. Living by his wits during what would have been his high-school years, he came close to being claimed by urban poverty and crime. But his nascent talent, both musical and visual, was his exit visa.   His success as a photographer was largely due to his persistence and persuasiveness in pursuing his subjects, whether they were film stars and socialites or an impoverished slum child in Brazil.   Mr. Parks's years as a contributor to Life, the largest-circulation picture magazine of its day, lasted from 1948 to 1972, and it cemented his reputation as a humanitarian photojournalist and as an artist with an eye for elegance. He specialized in subjects relating to racism, poverty and black urban life, but he also took exemplary pictures of Paris fashions, celebrities and politicians.   Mr. Parks's films, "Shaft" (1971) and "Shaft's Big Score!" (1972), were prototypes for what became known as blaxploitation films. Among Mr. Park's other accomplishments were a second novel, four books of memoirs, four volumes of poetry, a ballet and several orchestral scores. As a photographer Mr. Parks combined a devotion to documentary realism with a knack for making his own feelings self-evident. The style he favored was derived from the Depression-era photography project of the Farm Security Administration, which he joined in 1942 at the age of 30.       Perhaps his best-known photograph, which he titled American Gothic, was taken during his brief time with the agency; it shows a black cleaning woman named Ella Watson standing stiffly in front of an American flag, a mop in one hand and a broom in the other. Mr. Parks wanted the picture to speak to the existence of racial bigotry and inequality in the nation's capital. He was in an angry mood when he asked the woman to pose, having earlier been refused service at a clothing store, a movie theater and a restaurant.   Anger at social inequity was at the root of many of Mr. Parks's best photographic stories, including his most famous Life article, which focused on a desperately sick boy living in a miserable Rio de Janeiro slum. Mr. Parks described the plight of the boy, Flavio da Silva, in realistic detail. In one photograph Flavio lies in bed, looking close to death. In another he sits behind his baby brother, stuffing food into the baby's mouth while the baby reaches his wet, dirty hands into the dish for more food.   Mr. Parks's pictures of Flavio's life created a groundswell of public response when they were published in 1961. Life's readers sent some $30,000 in contributions, and the magazine arranged to have the boy flown to Denver for medical treatment for asthma and paid for a new home in Rio for his family.   Mr. Parks credited his first awareness of the power of the photographic image to the pictures taken by his predecessors at the Farm Security Administration, including Jack Delano, Dorothea Lange, Arthur Rothstein and Ben Shahn. He first saw their photographs of migrant workers in a magazine he picked up while working as a waiter in a railroad car. "I saw that the camera could be a weapon against poverty, against racism, against all sorts of social wrongs," he told an interviewer in 1999. "I knew at that point I had to have a camera."     Many of Mr. Parks's early photo essays for Life, like his 1948 story of a Harlem youth gang called the Midtowners, were a revelation for many of the magazine's predominantly white readers and a confirmation for Mr. Parks of the camera's power to shape public discussion.
But Mr. Parks made his mark mainly with memorable single images within his essays, like American Gothic, which were iconic in the manner of posters. His portraits of Malcolm X (1963), Muhammad Ali (1970) and the exiled Eldridge and Kathleen Cleaver (1970) evoked the styles and strengths of black leadership in the turbulent transition from civil rights to black militancy.   But at Life Mr. Parks also used his camera for less politicized, more conventional ends, photographing the socialite Gloria Vanderbilt, who became his friend; a fashionable Parisian in a veiled hat puffing hard on her cigarette, and Ingrid Bergman and Roberto Rossellini at the beginning of their notorious love affair. On his own time he photographed female nudes in a style akin to that of Baroque painting, experimented with double-exposing color film and recorded pastoral scenes that evoke the pictorial style of early-20-century art photography.   Much as his best pictures aspired to be metaphors, Mr. Parks shaped his own life story as a cautionary tale about overcoming racism, poverty and a lack of formal education. It was a project he pursued in his memoirs and in his novel; all freely mix documentary realism with a fictional sensibility.   Mr. Parks's simultaneous pursuit of the worlds of beauty and of tough urban textures made him a natural for Life magazine. After talking himself into an audience with Wilson Hicks, Life's fabled photo editor, he emerged with two plum assignments: one to create a photo essay on gang wars in Harlem, the other to photograph the latest Paris collections.   Life often assigned Mr. Parks to subjects that would have been difficult or impossible for a white photojournalist to carry out, such as the Black Muslim movement and the Black Panther Party. But Mr. Parks also enjoyed making definitive portraits of Barbra Streisand, Samuel Barber, Aaron Copland, Alberto Giacometti and Alexander Calder. From 1949 to 1951 he was assigned to the magazine's bureau in Paris, where he photographed everything from Marshal Pétain's funeral to scenes of everyday life. While in Paris he socialized with the expatriate author Richard Wright and wrote his first piano concerto, using a musical notation system of his own devising.   Much of Mr. Parks's artistic energy in the 1980's and 1990's was spent summing up his productive years with the camera. In 1987, the first major retrospective exhibition of his photographs was organized by the New York Public Library and the Ulrich Museum of Art at Wichita State University.   The more recent retrospective, "Half Past Autumn: The Art of Gordon Parks," was organized in 1997 by the Corcoran Museum of Art in Washington. It later traveled to New York and to other cities. Many honors came Mr. Parks's way, including a National Medal of Arts award from President Ronald Reagan in 1988. The man who never finished high school was a recipient of 40 honorary doctorates from colleges and universities in the United States and England.   "I'm in a sense sort of a rare bird," Mr. Parks said in an interview in The New York Times in 1997. "I suppose a lot of it depended on my determination not to let discrimination stop me." He never forgot that one of his teachers told her students not to waste their parents' money on college because they would end up as porters or maids anyway. He dedicated one honorary degree to her because he had been so eager to prove her wrong.   "I had a great sense of curiosity and a great sense of just wanting to achieve," he said. "I just forgot I was black and walked in and asked for a job and tried to be prepared for what I was asking for."   Andy Grundberg ©The New York Times March 8, 2006         http://www.zonezero.com/magazine/obituaries/parks/index.html    
Wednesday, 08 March 2006
Author:George Gilbert
  The Leica is the pioneer 35mm camera. From a nit picking point of view, it wasn't the very first still camera to use 35mm movie film, but it was the first to be widely publicized and successfully marketed.   It created the "candid camera" boom of the 1930s.     It is a German product - precise, minimalist, utterly efficient. Behind its worldwide acceptance as a creative tool was a family-owned, socially oriented firm that, during the Nazi era, acted with uncommon grace, generosity and modesty.   E. Leitz Inc., designer and manufacturer of Germany's most famous photographic product, saved its Jews.   And Ernst Leitz II, the steely eyed Protestant patriarch who headed the closely held firm as the Holocaust loomed across Europe, acted in such a way as to earn the title, "the photography industry's Schindler."   As George Gilbert, a veteran writer on topics photographic, told the story at last week's convention of the Leica Historical Society of America in Portland, Ore., Leitz Inc., founded in Wetzlar in 1869, had a tradition of enlightened behavior toward its workers.   Pensions, sick leave, health insurance - all were instituted early on at Leitz, which depended for its work force upon generations of skilled employees - many of whom were Jewish.   As soon as Adolf Hitler was named chancellor of Germany in 1933, Ernst Leitz II began receiving frantic calls from Jewish associates, asking for his help in getting them and their families out of the country.   As Christians, Leitz and his family were immune to Nazi Germany's Nuremberg laws, which restricted the movement of Jews and limited their professional activities.   To help his Jewish workers and colleagues, Leitz quietly established what has become known among historians of the Holocaust as "The Leica Freedom Train," a covert means of allowing Jews to leave Germany in the guise of Leitz employees being assigned overseas.   Employees, retailers, family members, even friends of family members were "assigned" to Leitz sales offices in France, Britain, Hong Kong and the United States.   Before long, German "employees" were disembarking from the ocean liner Bremen at a New York pier and making their way to the Manhattan office of Leitz Inc., where executives quickly found them jobs in the photographic industry.   The refugees were paid a stipend until they could find work. Out of this migration came designers, repair technicians, salespeople, marketers and writers for the photographic press.   Keeping the story quiet the "Leica Freedom Train" was at its height in 1938 and early 1939, delivering groups of refugees to New York every few weeks. Then, with the invasion of Poland on Sept. 1, 1939, Germany closed its borders.   By that time, hundreds of endangered Jews had escaped to America, thanks to the Leitzes' efforts. How did Ernst Leitz II and his staff get away with it?   Leitz Inc. was an internationally recognized brand that reflected credit on the newly resurgent Reich. The company produced range-finders and other optical systems for the German military. Also, the Nazi government desperately needed hard currency from abroad, and Leitz's single biggest market for optical goods was the United States.   Even so, members of the Leitz family and firm suffered for their good works. A top executive, Alfred Turk, was jailed for working to help Jews and freed only after the payment of a large bribe.   Leitz's daughter, Elsie Kuhn-Leitz, was imprisoned by the Gestapo after she was caught at the border, helping Jewish women cross into Switzerland. She eventually was freed but endured rough treatment in the course of questioning.   She also fell under suspicion when she attempted to improve the living conditions of 700 to 800 Ukrainian slave laborers, all of them women, who had been assigned to work in the plant during the 1940s.   (After the war, Kuhn-Leitz received numerous honors for her humanitarian efforts, among them the Officier d'honneur des Palms Academique from France in 1965 and the Aristide Briand Medal from the European Academy Ianthe 1970s.)   Why has no one told this story until now? According to the late Norman Lipton, a freelance writer and editor, the Leitz family wanted no publicity for its heroic efforts.   Only after the last member of the Leitz family was dead did the"Leica Freedom Train" finally come to light.   It is now the subject of a book, "The Greatest Invention of the Leitz Family: The Leica Freedom Train," by Frank Dabba Smith, a California-born rabbi currently living in England.     George Gilbert     http://zonezero.com/magazine/articles/leica/index.html      
Tuesday, 07 March 2006
Author:Pedro Meyer
    I wonder what is happening in the world of art and culture that an E-mail such as the one I received from the Paul Kopekian Gallery was sent out to their entire mailing list, and no one seems to be particularly surprised.   They write: "We are looking for work that is not politically charged and has no emotional or other negativity"   ------   Call for Photographs and Works on Paper We are looking for photographs and artwork that fall into the following categories: 1. Southern California Landscapes (Photographs) 2. Local San Francisco shots (Photographs) 3. Abstract Works on Paper/Photographs 4. General Photography and Works on Paper - mainly landscape There are no size limitations for the work. Tryptics and dyptics are acceptable. We are looking for work that is not politically charged and has no emotional or other negativity. We would also like to avoid work that has people in it, especially where faces are close-up or recognizable. The work must be appropriate for a corporate environment. If you have any series of photographs or artwork that fall into these categories, please email jpegs to the gallery. Sincerely, Paul Kopeikin email: paul@paulkopeikingallery.com phone: 323-937-0765   ------   The implications are, that there are images that have no content at all. Well, even the abstract work on paper, they are requesting can have serious content, or otherwise the question would be, are they suggesting that all abstract work is devoid of content?   Furthermore, what on earth is this specification of images without people? I was totally bewildered upon reading that they wanted to eliminate people, as if the ideal would be the result of a neutron bomb, an explosion that leaves all material objects intact but is capable of eliminating any trace of life. To suggest as desirable something as nefarious as this, coming from someone in the art world, made me wonder what is happening to culture in the United States of America.   Upon further inspection of the email in question, one comes across another gem: "The work must be appropriate for a corporate environment". I was wondering, what sort of moronic corporation would want to have such art work, defined as devoid of any emotional content. What is the purpose for a corporation to purchase art, if it is not to inspire? or if all they wanted was glorified wall paper, why spend money on so called art through the intermediation of an art gallery, when what they want are objects as far removed from what anyone could define as art.   Lastly I was also focusing on the impact that such a request as that of the Kopekian Gallery could have on a younger generation of photographers, who upon seeing such utter banality as this request, might believe that this is what they have to do with their work in order to be able to sell and be successful. In a very ironic way, I imagine that this sort of negative influence on the photographic community is precisely the political statement Paul Kopekian wanted to avoid by seeking work devoid of emotional content.   You can not get away from it, no matter how much you try, all photography has significant meaning, even the banal stuff the Gallery is requesting. All of this brings to mind some fundamental questions as to what is happening to art in the USA, when a corporation wishing to collect work, comes up with the definition for the art that they want as work devoid of content. Could a corporation really consider that having art that is devoid of meaning, represent their interests best? If so, then we surely can say that such a statement is in itself a political statement. Or does someone consider that a billboard with "Happiness Sold Here" is devoid of meaning? One could argue that there is no negativity in such an image, other than of course, the pathetic statement that suggests that happiness could be purchased.   Pedro Meyer March 2006 Coyoacan, Mexico City       As always please joins us with your comments in our forums.       http://zonezero.com/editorial/marzo06/march06.html      
Sunday, 05 March 2006
Author:Richard Hector Jones
  Digital Storytelling is about reclaiming the tradition of storytelling from the mass media as much as it is about creating personal or social history – a way of dragging the oral tradition up to date through the most basic of technology. In short, digital storytelling is usually short multimedia tales told from the heart and often made up of photos, words and music that come in at about two minutes in length.   A good place to start is by visiting Story Center, a non-profit making organization based in California which assists people in making short meaningful stories from their lives. It got into the possibility of this grassroots media very early, and is very much regarded as the grandaddy of the scene.   A very fine early example of the artistry behind digital storytelling can be found at I Photograph To Remember. At 35 minutes it’s a very long project, but touching and interesting in its portrayal of photographer Pedro Meyer’s parents. And the explanations of the issues behind the work are as engrossing as the work itself.     The BBC has been interested in the concept for a while on a local level, and the Capture Wales site is probably their most fascinating realisation. Partly because it gives people a voice and partly because the Welsh concept of “ysbryd” (spirit) can be found between the diverse stories on display.   Strictly speaking, Jonathan Caouette’s feature film debut, Tarnation, is the product of digital storytelling stretched out to cinematic proportions. Its mix of music, footage and narration reveals truths that straight autobiography might miss.   YouTube is where the next Caouette might lurk, as individuals upload their short projects. A constantly revolving selection of films makes this site worth revisiting.   Possibly the most culturally significant implication of the whole digital storytelling movement, though, lies in its capacity to educate.   Digital StoryTelling is a resource for schools, complete with archives encouraging younger people to create their own stories and reveal their history. It’s proof that even after a decade the art of digital storytelling is alive, well and as vibrant as the original art of storytelling.       Richard Hector Jones © Posted in Collective Interactive Culture Magazine       http://zonezero.com/magazine/articles/jones/index.html    
Wednesday, 01 March 2006
Author:Jonn Leffmann
  Date: February 23, 2006 6:20:02 AM   In 1999 I stopped working as a press photographer. I had then spent 15 years doing it. Under all years before pressphoto, art photography has been my great passion. I now devote all my time to artphoto , and I exhibit as often as possible. I do streetphotography and I enjoy playing with form and shape, both in my architectural photographs and in the experiments I do with various paper models. I like zone zero for the big diversity of different photogaphers, and I am interested in participating.   Best regards   Jonn Leffmann  
Thursday, 23 February 2006
Author:Laura Buchholz
  Date: February 21, 2006 6:43:55 PM   I first saw zone zero while studying photography in Ecuador, and am now in Minneasota at Macalester College, where we have very little access to photography resources. I am the president of the photography club and am trying to get the members to look at some work done by people outside the US. Thanks for the access to your site!   Laura Buchholz  
Tuesday, 21 February 2006
Author:Popular Photography
  Can a digital camera really outclass color film?   According to tests done by Popular Photography, Canon's new 16.7 megapixel EOS 1Ds Mark II took better pictures than a regular SLR camera (Canon's EOS 3) shooting high-quality ISO 100 film.   Interesting, as a few years ago Popular Photography predicted that digital cameras would have to reach at least 24 to 30 megapixels before they'd compete against film cameras in quality. But that stance seems to have changed, as they are now claiming the better color and lower noise of the EOS 1Ds Mark II gives digital cameras the winning edge.     Let's Back it Up   Popular Photography has always maintained the image quality of any photographic system -- whether film, digital or otherwise -- can't be determined by testing resolution alone. That's because there are other important aspects, such as:   • Color accuracy   • Noise level (grain)   • Highlight and shadow detail (dynamic range)   • Contrast     Additionally, camera sensors have pixels arrayed in two separate dimensions, horizontal and vertical, meaning it takes four times as many pixels to double the resolution of a digital camera (saving all other aspects such as noise, lens quality and focus accuracy are equal).   Camera Test   With that in mind, Popular Photography compared the resolution, color accuracy and noise ratings of EOS 1Ds Mark II images to those of ISO 100 film shot two years prior. After an uproar in reader feedback, researchers re-evaluated film resolution, using a new roll of Kodak Gold 100 loaded in a Canon EOS 3 SLR and found:   • The Gold 100 film captured 3,000 lines in all directions when shot using the test lab's daylight-balanced HMI lights.   • Using daylight-balanced Elinchrom 1200S flash units, film delivered 2,700 lines in all directions.   • These results compared to 2,400 lines captured by the older ISO 100 film and to the EOS 1Ds Mark II's 2760 Vertical x 2810 Horizontal x 2220 Diagonal lines.     So, while ISO 100 color negative film may capture slightly more detail than the 1Ds Mark II under ideal lighting conditions, with a great lens, and on a supersteady tripod, for its better color and lower noise, the "Color Image Quality" award goes to Canon's digital SLR, hands down.   Popular Photography       http://zonezero.com/magazine/articles/popularp/index.html    
Friday, 17 February 2006
409. JimD
Author:JimD
  Date: January 29, 2006 10:02:12 PM   I work as an engineer in Silicon Valley. My education is in photography. I have an MFA from the University of New Mexico. Even though I have a day job I do photography in my spare time. Digital tools have been a personal renaissance for me and my interest in photography since they facilitate the image making process without the need for a darkroom. For my interests Zone Zero is one of the better 'serious' sources for contemporary image making/   Regards,   JimD  
Sunday, 29 January 2006
Author:Pedro Meyer
  As some of you might know there is an American show on TV called "Extreme Makeover", dedicated to restore or rather reconstruct people and then there is another one which does the same thing, only with your home: Extreme Makeover, Home Edition.   In walking past the colonial church that is located one block away from my home, and noticing how it is being restored, all sort of thoughts were triggered in my mind. The restoration of this church has probably as little to do with any past reality as the reconstruction of the people shown on television. Fortunately we are in the process of being able to witness how the church is losing all patina of time, which in many ways represents an equivalent to the wrinkles on the face of contestants which are being erased by plastic surgery, the process of aging is deleted as it would be in a photographers studio using Photoshop on a digital portrait.     Everything is geared to be rendered as new, young, or as it were, "seldomly used". But do not think that this is something that only happens in Mexico, it is the same in the US were in Los Angeles a hotel renovation is advertised in terms of plastic surgery and as the billboard suggests: everyone needs a little bit of that."       Or in China, for that matter, were the Forbidden city, is now under an extreme makeover of its own, being closed down for the coming two years, in preparation for a debut in time for the Olympics in 2008.     But getting back to the nearby San Juan Bautista (John the Baptist) church, not only is the face lift something to ponder about, as making it look like if it was "born" yesterday might not be the most promising form of representation for a building were the passage of time is as much part of its history as it is it's architectural nature. You can't get away from the fact that the frontispiece offers us the real dates of it's construction. There are in fact, two dates making reference to when the church was built. One is 1582 and the other is 1804. Which brings up an interesting consideration with regard to digital images as to what is the date one should apply to a picture when it is done in several stages over time.   I've had the custom of dating my pictures just like that, stating the dates pertaining to the time line of the various stages within the same image. Thus a photograph might have several dates to it, just like this church has (Ooops, there goes the decisive moment!). What seems so strange to me is how difficult it has been for the photographic community to come to terms with a practice that has been accepted and commonly used in architecture since Colonial times.     Pedro Meyer January 2006 Coyoacan,     As always please joins us with your comments in our forums.         http://zonezero.com/editorial/february06/february06.html      
Saturday, 28 January 2006
Author:Alexis Gerard
    By affirming "you push the button, we do the rest", George Eastman created the photography industry. Today the future of that industry lies in extending its partnership with users to enable them with a true synthetic eye — an image capture device that forces no compromises compared to human vision — and with the full complement of tools needed for the coming age of pervasive visual communication.   As Eastman's successor, Kodak CEO Antonio Perez, quipped in his recent CES speech, digital cameras have been "like horse-drawn carriages with the addition of a motor instead of a horse" (or "digital analogues of analog cameras" as we at Future Image have been saying.) To be fair, that is hardly surprising: As a rule, a new technology begins by emulating another technology; then it equals it — and only later does it develop into its own medium. There are technical reasons for this: the new technology needs development and scale to catch up first to the raw performance, then to the price/performance, of the older one. There are also psychological reasons: users — and often product developers — learn only gradually to think "outside the box" of what the older technology defined as "possible."   Recently a twenty-something asked me how come his digital camera produced blurred images in low light. I looked at his pictures and pointed out they were superior to what he would have obtained with a film camera. Then the irrelevancy of my statement hit me: He had no film-based reference — he had probably never used film. He was comparing the performance of his camera to the only standard that made sense to him, the only standard that makes sense today: his eye.   The eye, or to be more accurate the human visual system, is the performance standard that digital camera designers should have in their sights for the immediate future. There's a lot of work to be done just to equal it. Our best cameras do not have our ability to see fine detail (therefore, don't expect the resolution race to end anytime soon), or to hold detail at both ends of high-contrast scenes. They do not match even our limited ability to see in color in low light. In anything less than full daylight, cameras produce blurred images if they are not held completely steady, or if the subject itself moves. (We are starting to see progress in preventing camera blur with a flowering of anti-shake technologies, but nothing yet that helps with subjects that won't hold still.) And there are less obvious ways that cameras don't match human vision: cameras don't have peripheral vision. They don't perceive and record depth and dimension information. And they don't record anywhere near as much "metadata" as we associate with our visual memories.   Rising to these capabilities is a huge challenge. But ultimately, whether we realize it or not, we as users expect nothing less from our cameras than to equal what we see with our eyes — and we won't be satisfied until we get it.     It's also a huge opportunity because, in this dawning age of images-as-language, the integrity of visual information — how well it reproduces our perception of reality and the richness of context associated with it — who, what, when, where and why - are what determines the value of that visual information.   Which points the way to the real target for image capture engineers: Remarkable as it is, the human visual system is designed to enable us to function and survive in the natural world. It does not take into consideration the existence of computing devices, the internet, televisions — all the artifacts and infrastructures of a technological society. In fact it doesn't assume any society at all. But the ways we use — and the new ways we want to use — the images we capture is highly influenced by and dependent on all of these. And that's where the money is.   We are now in an imaging economy where the historical consumables and service-based value propositions, which were also the industry's primary monetization models, have largely migrated into the initial purchase of the camera itself: film to sensor, print to screen.   The recipe for future success centers around understanding how customers want to use images after they've captured them — and beginning, at the capture stage, a partnership to optimize their experience of these downstream uses as well as the capture experience itself. In order to accomplish that, generating sophisticated metadata [information about the picture] based on location awareness and scene analysis is necessary. But is not sufficient. Partnering with the user involves understanding both their intent and their system constraints, and also assisting them with future-proofing. By this, we mean:   Intent: What is the user trying to communicate? Will that intent be best served by a single frame, or by a short motion sequence? How can composition, focus and lighting be optimized to the user's purpose? These skills, which we at Future Image call "visual eloquence," are currently the domain of the pros, just as, until the advent of automatic cameras, achieving accurate exposure was beyond the skill set of the average user. And just as before that, until the advent of roll film and develop/print services, the entire realm of photography was accessible only to a small minority. Today, anyone can operate a point-and-shoot camera with satisfactory results. It's time to build that next level of professional skill — "visual eloquence" — into the capture process.   System Constraints: Will the picture be displayed on a 60 inch high-definition TV, or on a cell-phone screen? If it's the latter, not only would it be wise to create a low-res version for transmission, it might also be advisable to zoom and crop so that the key elements are clearly visible on a small screen. Or perhaps a dynamic file that pans and zooms across the image should be generated.   Future-Proofing: One of the key findings to come out of the research on my book "Going Visual" is that the lifecycle of images extends long after their original use, and to uses that are not predictable at the time of capture. It turns out that one of the keys to the imaging industry's "holy grail" — extensive re-use of pictures — is not just the ability to find a picture when you need it, but the option to do what you want to do with it now, which may be quite different than what you wanted to do then. A year later, I'd like to display on a 60-inch high-definition TV that same image I originally sent to a cell phone. Oh, and Uncle Bob, who was just outside the frame when I took the picture? I want him in it now. Film photography, rooted since its birth in the constraints of scarce physical materials, is all about editing time and space at the moment of capture. The digital age by contrast is about having it all, and editing for particular uses at the time of those uses.   Alexis Gerard is co-Author of "Going Visual" (John Wiley & Sons 2005) and Founder and President of Future Image Inc, the leading independent center of expertise focused on the convergence of imaging, technology and business and hosts of the Mobile Imaging Summit executive conferences       http://zonezero.com/magazine/articles/gerard/index.html    
Tuesday, 24 January 2006
Author:Michael Rips
  Even by the elevated standard of the New York art world, the rumor was exceptional: a tin of negatives buried in Africa for three decades that, when opened, revealed the work of a photographer who was neither "outsider" nor "indigenous" but spectacularly modern. And so the bejeweled and bohemian showed up at the Gagosian Gallery the evening of Oct. 18, 1997, wearing Fulani bracelets beneath their Charvet cuffs, blouses referencing Matisse referencing North African fabrics, Xhosa men in dinner jackets.   As accustomed as they were to art-world rumors, as familiar as they had become with exaggerations in the photo market, they could not help but be impressed. They saw mural-size black-and-white portraits in which the intricate designs of tribal costumes were set against backdrops of arabesque and floral cloths, the subjects disappearing into dense patterning that suggested Vuillard. A number of the photographs sold immediately, at prices of up to $16,000, and by the end of the evening, many in the crowd stood childlike in front of their limousines, waiting to catch sight of the photographer whose images they would never forget.     He finally appeared, old and regal.   The show was uniformly well received. Margarett Loke, writing in The New York Times, described Seydou Keïta as "the man who brought renewed vitality to the art of photographic portraiture." An article in Artforum praised the show, noting that the photographs "were very successful with sophisticated New Yorkers."   Not long after the exhibition, I received a phone call from a man I knew as Ibrahim. He had something to show me. A trader from Mali, Ibrahim would frequently appear at my door with garbage bags of fetish figures that he had brought back from his trips to Africa. The objects that I did not buy he took to others, and at the end of the day, to a mini-storage facility in Chelsea where West African traders do business, play music and entertain their relatives.   That day Ibrahim carried no bags. After a few minutes of conversation, he reached into his pocket and extracted a small piece of paper. On the front was the image of a young African woman. The contrast and density of the blacks and whites were minimal, the light modest, and the patterns on the costumes barely visible.     I turned the photograph over. "Keïta Seydou, Photographe Bamako - Contra en face prison civile Bamako (Sudan Français)". And then a date: "3 Avr 1959."   I was confused. This photograph was nothing like the colossal high-contrast portraits that I had seen at the gallery. But this, Ibrahim explained, was an original. This was what Mr. Keïta's modest photography studio made. I was later told that there were only a handful of such prints. (I bought it for several hundred dollars and went on to buy other prints; they are no longer a part of my collection.)   The story of this discrepancy - how a pocket-size print, sold for a few dollars in a neighborhood shop in West Africa, became a wall-size photograph that sold for $16,000 in an upscale SoHo gallery - begins in colonial Mali in the 1930's and continues into the future: a new show of Mr. Keïta's work opens at the Sean Kelly Gallery in Chelsea on Friday.   It is a story that includes screaming fights, a lawsuit and charges of theft, forgery and perjury. It survives the photographer himself, who died in 2001. And it touches on the broadest channels of human history, from colonialism to capitalism to revolution to race. But it also involves a conflict of the most rarefied sort - a philosophical disagreement over the nature of photography and the concept of authenticity.     In the 1930's, Seydou Keïta, who was then young, uneducated and working in his father's carpentry shop, received a Brownie camera (producing a 6-by-9-centimeter negative) from his uncle. In 1948, Mr. Keïta (pronounced kay-EE-tah) set up a commercial studio in downtown Bamako, across from the city's prison and down the street from the train station. He was poor, so he made prints, using a 5-by-7-inch view camera, by placing the negative directly against the photographic paper, used his bed sheet as a backdrop, and photographed outdoors using available light.     Unlike his predecessors, who had photographed Africans to encourage missionary work or justify colonization, or as erotica, Mr. Keïta made photographs of Africans for their own personal use, and he revealed them as they had not been seen before: wearing Western suits and bow ties (his own), sitting on motorbikes or holding radios, or cradling a single flower, a reference to the Symbolists taught in Mali's French schools. For the others, it was a mixture of Western dress and African poses, African dress and Western poses - people defining themselves at the uneven edge of modernity.   Okwui Enwezor, a scholar of photography and curator of a 1996 exhibition at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum that included Mr. Keïta's work, maintained that in the amount of information he conveys about his middle-class subjects, in the controlled complexity of the portraits and the high level of quality maintained over a great volume, his work is "comparable to the portraiture of Rembrandt." What makes this all the more astounding, he added, is that Mr. Keïta was "working outside any aesthetic discourse" - that is, he was uneducated in the history of art and photography. Mr. Keïta claimed that when he set up his studio, there were only four other studio photographers in Mali.   Following that nation's independence in 1960, he was told to close his studio and work for the government. When he resisted, he once recounted, a general visited his studio. Mr. Keïta closed up shop, locking his roughly 7,000 negatives in a tin and burying them in his yard.   Fifteen years later, near the day when he retired from government, someone broke into his studio and stole his photography equipment. To support himself, he began to fix mopeds, converting his studio into a repair shop.   It was there, in 1990, that he met Françoise Huguier, a French photojournalist. Ms. Huguier arranged for a small number of Mr. Keïta's photographs to be exhibited outside of Africa, where they came to the attention of Jean Pigozzi, heir to the Simca car fortune and one of the world's pre-eminent collectors of contemporary African art. In 1992 Mr. Pigozzi sent André Magnin, the curator of Mr. Pigozzi's African collection, to Bamako to find the photographer, and Mr. Magnin returned with 921 negatives.   He made prints from those negatives, which appeared a couple of years later at an exhibition at the Fondation Cartier in Paris and then in 1997 at a solo show at the Scalo Gallery in Zurich, accompanied by a book called "Seydou Keïta: An African Photographer." Walter Keller, curator of the Scalo show and editor of the book, said the prints at both those shows were 20 by 24 inches - bigger than the originals (5 by 7 inches) but not yet enormous. By the time the new prints reached the Gagosian exhibition four months later, some had grown to 48 by 60 inches.   Mr. Magnin sold the prints he made to Mr. Pigozzi and to other collectors, galleries and museums. Mr. Enwezor credits him with bringing Mr. Keïta to the attention of the world.   Mr. Keïta, however, was not pleased. Jean-Marc Patras, a well-known agent for African artists and musicians, said that Mr. Keïta believed that Mr. Magnin was making unauthorized prints and signing them. "I absolutely deny these accusations," Mr. Magnin said. "Seydou Keïta was involved in every decision, was aware of every print made, and signed every print that has his signature. We were also very careful about giving him an accounting of the money that we received for the prints."   Mr. Pigozzi said on Tuesday that without André Magnin's and his efforts, Mr. Keïta "would have been totally forgotten." They published an important book, he continued, and got his work into the collections of major museums. "Also with our help, Keïta was able to finally make a lot of money by selling his prints in a very orderly way," Mr. Pigozzi said, adding that Mr. Patras, however, had managed to make a mess of things.   At the time of the Gagosian show, Mr. Keïta met with Sean Kelly of the Sean Kelly Gallery in New York. "Keïta," he said, "was not pleased with what Pigozzi and Magnin were doing with his photographs, which is why Keïta approached me." But it wasn't until 2001 that the photographer severed his ties with them.     A relative of Mr. Keïta, Kader Keïta, a former diplomat who was present for a meeting between Mr. Keïta and Mr. Magnin, said: "Seydou was furious about the possibility that Magnin was forging Seydou's signature. Seydou also wanted the negatives back." He assigned the exclusive rights to sell his photographs to Mr. Patras. The negatives were not returned. Mr. Patras went to work on an exhibition of Mr. Keïta's photographs at the Sean Kelly Gallery. Weeks before the exhibition was scheduled to open in 2001, Mr. Keïta flew to Paris to confront Mr. Magnin, Mr. Patras says. But within days of his arrival, Mr. Keïta was dead at around 80.   Two weeks later, Mr. Keïta's work went up at Sean Kelly. Just before the opening, Mr. Kelly says, Mr. Pigozzi, a large man, charged through the gallery. "What do you think you're doing!," Mr. Kelly recalls him shouting, albeit it in more pungent language. "I own Seydou Keïta."   After bringing in a third party to witness the outburst, Mr. Kelly, a large-chested former rugby player, who said he "was not about to be intimidated by Pigozzi," threw him out.   A month earlier, Mr. Patras and others had set up the Association Seydou Keïta in Bamako to preserve the negatives that were still in Mr. Keïta's possession and to oversee and approve the printing of all future photographs. Mr. Keïta and the association, working with Mr. Kelly, decided that all new prints would be made in limited editions, with no edition greater than 15 and some as small as 3. These prints, certified by the association, are the basis for the new show.   As for the 921 other negatives, Mr. Magnin says they are no longer in his possession. He said he gave the negatives to Lancina Keïta, one of Mr. Keïta's brothers, at the photographer's funeral. Lancina Keïta has refused to coment.   In July 2004, the association filed a lawsuit in Paris against Mr. Pigozzi and Mr. Magnin. That litigation is in the discovery phase. Julie Jacob, the French lawyer who is representing the association, contends that "Magnin and Pigozzi are causing the negatives to be moved between individuals, some of whom are members of Keïta's family, so as to avoid having to turn them over to the association." Mr. Kelly said he feared that the negatives might be lost altogether.   The controversy presents a difficulty for those who buy and sell prints made from Mr. Keïta's negatives. Barbara Wilhelm at the Gagosian Gallery said that "because it is difficult to tell which of Keïta's prints were signed by Keïta or signed by someone else with or without Keïta's authorization, each print must be dealt with on a case-by-case basis."   "From the fact that Keïta attended the show at Gagosian and voiced no complaints about the prints," she said, she is "satisfied that the signatures on the prints that were exhibited that evening were legitimate."       Mr. Keller, who organized the 1997 show in Switzerland, recommends that "signatures on Keïta's prints should be checked against those signatures that are known to be authentic."   As for Mr. Kelly, he said he "would never buy a Keïta photograph that was produced by Magnin and Pigozzi." He added, "You don't know how many are out there, you don't know if Keïta authorized the prints and you can't be sure of the signature."   At the coming exhibition, the largest photographs (60 by 48 inches) will be offered in limited editions of three for $18,000 to $22,000, not much above the price at Gagosian eight years ago. Over the same period, some other celebrated photographers' work has quadrupled in price.   But for all the controversy that now surrounds Mr. Keïta, Mr. Kelly seems surprised that there hasn't been more. "If you take this story and substitute the name of Bresson for Keïta, the world would be in an uproar," he said. "So far few have paid attention."   There are many reasons why posterity might regard Cartier-Bresson and Mr. Keïta differently: Cartier-Bresson was white, French and received important European commissions early in his career, whereas Mr. Keïta was a self-taught black African of modest ambitions for whom photography was, most of all, a job. Still, Brian Wallis, the director of exhibitions and chief curator of the International Center of Photography, describes the issue of what to do with new prints from the negatives of any deceased photographer as "one of the most vexing in photography." Sandra Phillips, senior curator of photography at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, pointed out that earlier photographers barely noticed how their work was printed. "It was the image, not the print, that was all important," she said. "Photographers would literally drop their negatives off at magazines or museums and let the editors and curators decide how the photographs were to be developed."   Julia Scully, the former editor of Modern Photography, said that "the idea that the vintage or limited-edition print is of special value has been promoted by collectors and gallery owners, who, having witnessed the recent increase in the market value of photography, seek to protect their investments. When it comes to photography, authenticity is artificial."   As a photograph (or any other work of art) is separated in time from the cultural context in which it originated, the work becomes open to new meanings. This idea, perhaps first articulated in Walter Benjamin's landmark 1931 essay, "The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction," has been embraced by many curators in recent years, leading them away from what Mr. Wallis refers to as the "fetish for the vintage." Instead curators are more open to the new meanings that may emerge from manipulating the originals, even if those meanings are different from - or in direct contrast to - anything the artist had in mind.   The result is ripe with possibilities, but also with contradictions. It is now not uncommon for galleries to put on shows that reflect this postmodern approach but at the same time to charge higher prices for original works.     In the case of Mr. Keïta, the original photographs were taken at a significant moment in West African history, amid a great migration from rural to urban areas. His customers, said Mr. Enwezor, were part of that shift: newly arrived in the city, they would mail photographs to relatives who were still in the countryside. The prints were a type of private correspondence. As the formal elements of the photograph - its dimensions, its contrasts and densities - are manipulated, this history of the image, as contained within the photograph, begins to evaporate.   There is, though, another argument, based in the technology of photography, that undermines the concept of photographic authenticity. Charles Griffin, who prints the photographs of Cindy Sherman and Hiroshi Sugimoto, observes that the resolution of photographic negatives is far greater than that of the prints made from them. The negatives, you might say, contain a far greater amount of information than can be shown, placing those who make prints in the position of having to select and suppress the information that will ultimately appear.   And the printer's responsibility in this regard, Mr. Griffin added, has been heightened by the decision of paper companies to reduce the silver content in, and therefore the sensitivity of, photographic papers.   As a result, artists, museums and galleries treat printers in the same way that writers treat good editors, trusting them to add and subtract material from a manuscript to achieve the best result. It was to Mr. Griffin that Mr. Kelly turned when he took over the representation of Seydou Keïta. Because of the respect that the dealer and the association have for Mr. Griffin's work, they have given him great license over the way in which Mr. Keïta's photographs are printed.   Mr. Griffin said that when he attended the 1997 exhibition at the Gagosian Gallery, he was immediately disturbed by a number of factors, especially the extent of the contrast between the blacks and the whites. "Too often," he says, "printers are influenced by the preference wealthy collectors have for highly graphic images." When he was asked later to make prints from Mr. Keïta's negatives, he made a number of important changes, including the decision to "give more emphasis to the ground between the blacks and whites." He has yet to see a vintage photograph of Mr. Keïta's.   Mr. Griffin's observation about the influence of collectors contains a paradox: however much scholars talk about alternative modes of interpretation, the dominant force in the current market is one which makes many re-interpretations look a great deal like the cover of Cosmopolitan - a result that is probably not what Walter Benjamin had in mind.   In the end, the debate over how to make prints from Mr. Keïta's negatives may soon be academic. As a result of the litigation to recover the 921 negatives from Mr. Magnin and Mr. Pigozzi, the association has little money left to preserve those negatives that are in its possession - negatives which, according to Mr. Griffin, are quickly deteriorating. In the end, the controversial prints may be all that is left of Seydou Keïta. And at that point, the postmodern will have become the authentic.   Michael Rips © New York Times January 22, 2006   Michael Rips is the author of two books,"The Face of a Naked Lady: An Omaha Family Mystery, "and "Pasquale's Nose: Idle Days in an Italian Town".     http://www.zonezero.com/magazine/articles/rips/index.html    
Sunday, 22 January 2006
Author:Pedro Meyer
    I have been getting a lot of complaints recently about how the digital world has turned everyone into a photographer.   There are those who believe that only those who actually understand what they are doing should be taking photographs, that otherwise we end up devaluing photography as in an inflationary process in which everything loses it’s value.   Although I don’t agree with that premise, I understand where such a sentiment comes from. As more and more photographers see an erosion of their work environment by the encroachment of people that also take pictures, thus taking away opportunities for earning a living, it is understandable that such a defensive attitude happens.   I was recently in Hong Kong; at the time when the meetings of the WTO (World Trade Organization) were held. As everyone probably read in their local papers across the globe, the protests were very intense outside those meeting halls. The local paper had advertisements that were in keeping with a world trend of gathering images in ways that were unheard of not too long ago.     The advertisement read: Be a Citizen Journalist. As you probably recall, the most important, and of course, the first images of the terrorist bombing that took place in London, in 2005, were made with cell phone cameras, both in their video and still image formats. The same happened with the first images we got from the Tsunami in Asia. In Iraq today, the news agencies do not bring in any Western photographers anymore. Instead, they train local people who not only have the benefit of speaking the language but also have the necessary credentials for being present in those places where a photographer needs to be at and to which a Westerner most probably would not have access to. The citizen journalist is in keeping with the notion that these days almost anyone, or shall we say everyone, is recording everything that happens all the time.   Ever since photography became so easy that a five year old can take pictures (and with the advent of digital technology picture taking has become an increasingly simple operation) a lot of pictures which would have required a professional, now can be done by just about anyone. Even wedding pictures are no longer the exclusive realms of a professional.     Yes, we are seeing a very deep transformation of who takes pictures and what for. The emergence of a vast number of people taking pictures today that are not particularly interesting or good save to the person who is taking them and their friends or relatives, brings to forefront the need to reconsider the very notion of what makes a professional photographer. No longer is it just someone who is capable of actually making a picture, like it has been in the past, but new criteria is in now in order depending on the final usage of the image.     I actually enjoy the proliferation of people taking pictures, no matter that they are not very good; as I find that it has an equivalent in singing. How many people who love to sing in the shower or in a karaoke, are actually very good at singing? They are simply enjoying the pleasure of singing the same way as their counterparts enjoy taking pictures. I find that to be a very encouraging sign about the universality of capturing an image.   Pedro Meyer January 2006 Coyoacan, Mexico     As always please joins us with your comments in our forums.       http://zonezero.com/editorial/enero06/january06.html      
Thursday, 05 January 2006
Author:Alexis Gerard
    For the Imaging Industry, "Mobile is the New Digital". Much as digital imaging began as a niche and became pervasive over the course of a decade, mobility – continuous wireless connectivity to a high-bandwidth global network - will soon be integral to every imaging product and service. The tidal wave of transition is already upon us. Consider the following:     These statistics reveal another fundamental trend: A dramatic expansion in overall market scale. At the same time as rapid progress continues to be made in quality and convenience at every stage of the imaging chain (capture, processing, and viewing/publishing), advances in mobility and miniaturization are driving a historically unprecedented proliferation in the number of embedded cameras. These developments point directly to an age of pervasive image capture, functionally integrated with mobile communication (rather than simply "bundled" in the same enclosure). The attendant changes in user behavior — personal, business, and social — are driving major shifts in the opportunity and risk landscape for vendors. We'll examine those in our interactive conference sessions.     Alexis Gerard     http://www.zonezero.com/magazine/articles/alexisgerard/index.html    
Wednesday, 04 January 2006
415. Enigma
Author:Pedro Meyer
      I have found that for me the best pictures are those that leave me with more questions than answers   When I do not fully understand what I am looking at, I feel more intrigued by the image. It allows me speculate, it gives me the opportunity to be creative with the possible interpretations of what the photograph is all about.   I have always felt that photographic images were multifaceted in their possible interpretations, even those of a photo-journalistic nature, which is the main reason why photography is such a poor medium to deliver specific information. How else to explain that a photo-journalistic image always requires captions in order to anchor the image to a specific interpretation of its content.   For the viewer the story telling abilities of an image are open ended, and when the story is presented well, we become intrigued by the information we are given. What am I looking at? is never a bad question to provoke in the mind of a viewer.   Pictures that are so easily decoded that the moment I look at them I've already answered the question "what I am looking at?", are usually quite uninteresting images. They are the equivalent of "one liners". Before a dialogue is established between the viewer and the creator of the image, the photograph has ceased to raise interest.   While having a conversation with a friend of mine, we were discussing what it must have been like to be aboard a nudist flight. We came to the conslusion that all those naked bodies elicited absolutely no erotic emotions in us. I was very understanding of this situation remembering a time when I had taken pictures in a nudist colony. I feel that complete exposure with nothing left to the imagination would be the equivalent to pictures that have no veil of unanswered questions. They become so explicit that one is left with no particular interest in the imagery.   We at ZoneZero, wish you the very best for the Holidays. I am leaving for a month long journey with my ten year old son, Julio. We are going fishing. Fishing, not as in fish, but as in explorations and the capture of images, hopefully with plenty of room for the imagination. We will be going to China, which has all the enigmas one can imagine, especially for the outsider. There is nothing there that is so explicit that you loose interest in the dialogue with their reality. Hopefully we will have some interesting things to report back to you next year, in the year 2006.   Pedro Meyer December 2005   As always please joins us with your comments in our forums.       http://zonezero.com/editorial/diciembre05/december.html      
Tuesday, 27 December 2005
Author:Francesco Imperato
  Date: December 24, 2005 8:14:32 AM   Hi, My name is Francesco Imperato and I study cinema and television in Italy, where I live. As you can nderstand my interests in visive arts bring me to explore also the photography field that I'm exploring and learning little by little. I've been in many photo sites and finally I found this one. I saw some portfolios and I think the quality of people registered here it's very high...that's why I want to register...to exchange opinions, and have suggestions by other people. I found this site thanks to a friend that suggested it to me as a good photo site.   Thanx and happy xmas! Francesco Imperato  
Saturday, 24 December 2005
Author:Anandaroop Ghosh
  Date: December 20, 2005 9:14:47 AM   Hi, I am an amateur photographer, actually more of a photography enthusiast than an actual photographer, considering I bought my first camera only last year. As of now, I am just shooting whatever I can, and hoping someday, I'll evolve my own style. This was my first visit to your site, and I really liked what I saw. It'd be wonderful if you could include me in your miling list. Thank you,   Anandaroop Ghosh, Kathmandu, Nepalo  
Tuesday, 20 December 2005
Author:Alex Waterhouse-Hayward
  When Pam McCartney walks into my studio I am walloped visually. She is an asymmetric delight that I am not quite accustomed to. This is because I have always suspected that our attraction to symmetry is innate. To begin to appreciate the lopsided view, we often have to turn to visual arts. One of the last bastions of symmetry is the car. Cars, except for small details such as the gas tank flap, are the same on both sides. American designer Raymond Loewy pointed out that with the steering wheel on one side, cars have always been asymmetric already.     I first realized I was dyslexic 30 years ago while watching a TV program on the subject. Instructing my subjects to move their left arm or right hand when I am taking their pictures is tough for me. I joke with Pam that she's easy to work with: all I have to do is tell her to move her arm here or there.   It is because of my dyslexia that I am partial to Winslow Homer's Right and Left. In this painting (I have gone to the National Gallery in Washington, DC many times to admire it) there are two flying ducks which are askew. Only when you get close do you see a man in a boat and see the two red flashes of the shotgun's right and left barrels. I can never remember the name of the painting. Is it Left and Right or Right and Left?     With Pam I deal with my dyslexia in a playful manner. I asked her if she was left handed or right handed. She did not know. By doing the shifting finger in front of one's eyes-trick, we determined that she is right handed. Below, in Left and Right, I flopped some of the negatives around to blur the issue of what arm it is she does not have.     Pam's asymmetry does not stop with her one arm. Her hips are asymmetrical. She has a narrow waist and voluptuous hips. And with her smallish breasts, her torso has a direct parallel with the temple, tomb carvings and statues of Akhenaten (a.k.a. either Amenophis IV or Amenhotep IV) the monotheistic Egyptian Pharaoh of the 18th Dynasty (1427-1400 BC). When Pam puts her hair up, the combination of her forehead, which slopes upward, and her long neck combine to make her a dead ringer for Akhenaten's wife, Nefertiti.       Such is Pam's enigmatic charm that when she was posing for collaborative work with my Argentine artist friends Nora Patrich and Juan Manuel Sanchez (in their living room), Juan did not give his sketch of Pam his usual stylized South American aboriginal nose. This time around we worked on our ethnic Madonna series and posed Pam by Argentine painter Victor Pissarro's nude. In a future project Juan wants to paint Pam's‘"missing" arm on her body.         Alex Waterhouse-Hayward alexwh@telus.net   Alex Waterhouse-Hayward was born in Buenos Aires, Argentina in 1943. His photos have appeared in The New York Times, The London Times, The Daily Telegraph, Esquire, Vanity Fair, Spin, Time, American Photography, Interview, Stern, The National Post and The Globe and Mail. He has photographed Bob Hope, Audrey Hepburn, Candice Bergen, Liv Ullmann, Kenneth Branagh, Vittorio Gassman, Martin Scorsese, Krzysztof Kieslowski, Annie Leibovitz, Elliott Erwitt, Mario Vargas Llosa, Leonard Cohen, P.D. James and William F. Buckley.       http://www.zonezero.com/magazine/articles/alexwaterhouse/index.html    
Friday, 09 December 2005
Author:Héctor Quiroga Pérez
  The Photographic Archive Armando de Maria y Campos When the Theatre Research Center "Rodolfo Usigli" (CITRU) was founded in 1981, the photographic material of the Armando de Maria y Campos Archive became one of the materials that needed to be organized by the Phototheque of the Center. Since 1990 the new Audiovisual Materials Department had transformed into a workshop in which physical cleanliness and reorganization of the scattered materials was the main goal, looking to set up a series of Photo Shows in the Center’s facilities in 1992.   After performing the basic tasks as a photo archivist to preserve the historic materials of the Maria y Campos Archive, my job ended when these materials were transferred to the research area of CNA (National Art Center) to be handed over to the Special Meterials Department of the Library of the Arts. Pina Penotti. Prima donna brillante assoluta of the Italian Opera and Operetta Comica Company “Cità di Trieste”of the brothers Pío and Francisco Verona at the Gran Teatro Nacional in 1893.Cabinet-portrait.-Silver solution in self developing paper.G. Marchand. Calle de los Loros No. 4.Puebla. 13 X 19 cm. After a very productive conversation with Sergio Torres Cuesta, the research coordinator of CITRU, we considered that a digital archive would be a great option, since it would speed up consultation by users and avoid human contact with the original images, which is the main cause of deterioration of photographic materials. A digital archive would facilitate the making of my project "Iconography of the mexican Stage, a history of theatre in Mexico", which would bring into context the photos of the artists that were part of the Maria y Campos Archive. Since March 2002, now helped by the technological know-how of the Digital Graphics Workshop of the Multimedia Center of CNA, we produced an electronic catalog of the 1951 images of the archive in 85 CD ROMs, an index of the photographs plus the contact sheets printed in letter-size paper.   María Conesa. First Tiple Ballerina of the Maria Conesa Company at the Teatro Principal in1923.Cabinet portrait. Silver solution in self developing paper.- s.p.i.- 19 X 23 cm.   This interdisciplinary project intends to add an aspect of the artists life that is missing in the cold news reports of the entertainment press. Part of the protocol of the presentation of Mexican and foreign artists to Mexican Society was represented by the photographic studies of the actors, which identified them, put them into a hierarchy and fixed them upon the visual memory of their fans. This pecularity made the artists a showcase for fashion. They were of great importance and in them we see the costumes of the characters that were brought to life by them. The portrait of an artist on stage has an intrinsic value. It is an important part of the evolution of Photography in Mexico. Much of the work of many wonderful photographers would be in danger of disappearing if it were not by the new technologies which enable their optical and chromatic restoration. The decay of the paper and fading of the images even happens in the best of conditions, and let’s not talk about the normal deterioration sufferd by the portaits of the artists, which at their prime were exposed to strong lights, stained by humidity and the occasional insect and also by the tear drops of the loyal fans and friends that demanded a signed souvenir!!.   It is now the time to try out a new way to enjoy the marvelous work of either 19 th. Century photographers using the wet collodion process or the industrial photomechanic processes used during the first threee decades of the 20th Century. Hector Quiroga Pérez hquirogap@yahoo.com.mx     http://zonezero.com/magazine/articles/iconografia/  
Thursday, 03 November 2005
Author:Andrés Hax
    At her small studio she trapped as no one ese the golden Porteña decade, while transforming the craft of photography in art. Her life and work are an undying testimonial to the argentinean migration. October 1st, at age 93 Annmarie Heinrich died, symbol of the argentinean photography of the XX century and a core figure in the cultural history of the country. Her expertise in portrait, captured the big stars of argentinean movies, at the top of the golden decade of the 40's, for the covers of magazines such as El Hogar, Sintonía, Alta Sociedad and Radiolandia. She also portrayed with her unique glance, several cultural figures like Eva Duarte, Jorge Luis Bourges, the singer Marlene Dietrich and Pablo Neruda, among many others. Her sons Alicia and Ricardo Sanguinetti -photographers as well- in pain expressed through a bald but sensitive note: "With the spring arrival, she decided to leave. Still, she is capable of life in us with her images, those which were emerging as a result of a strict conjuction of life, ethics and art, basis of her aesthetic conception, where her commitment was human in all it's dimension." Heinrich was born in Germany on January 9th 1912. Her father Walter, a professional violinist, decided to move his family to Argentina, after being injured on the First World War. In 1926 they arrived to Entre Ríos where her uncle Karel, a photographer, introduced her to what would be her profession. By moving with her family to Buenos Aires, Heinrich started her apprenticeship in a photographic studio in Belgrano, and self-taught in her Villa Ballester home, where she had a dark room. According to Juan Travnik, "Annmarie had the subtle capability of observation to retrieve from every portrait, a deep sparkling look, a unique gesture, magical". Heinrich's career took place in a parallel way to the growth of the film industry as well as the radio popularization. Travnik, curator to Heinrich's retrospective, believes her passion for dance, scenery and plastic arts were the basis for her photographic look.     Marcos López - the argentinean photo-artist with the most international projection- spoke about the deep influence that Heinrich had on his work. "When I arrived from Santa Fe at the early 80's, I visited her at her studio at Avenida Callao. She was one of the first ones to support my work. I respected her deeply for her work: her prints were admirable, the way she put light, how she was at the portraits command. Today, as it is so common to be artist-photographer, Annemarie's career is a huge model". Heinrich considered portrait art as a colaboration between the photographer and the model. In an essay published by Clarin in 1993 she wrote: "A good portrait is much more than a carné photo. A face must express all a human beeing has inside, and this takes time". Heinrich, was also an exceptional technique, masterful and innovator in lighting and negative retouch. In a moment she confessed: "For sure I will not go to heaven, for the most part of my career I used too mucho retouching and don't have the number of fat women I portrayed as skinny".     Images created by Heinrich are part of the collective argentinean memory. In 1939 she made the first photographs of the at that time unknown Eva Duarte, at that moment a 20 year-old actress. Recalling that session Heinrich said, "The first time I photographed her, was for Sintonia Magazine. I was asked to make: "good-slightly-sexy photographs of her, if it's possible" something that I simply couldn't do because Eva was not sexy. She was a simple modest girl". Besides the portrait, Heinrich developed during all her career the art of nude. In 1991 she caused a small scandal when she showed, in the window of her Callao and Las Heras studio, a nude photograph of actress Niní Gambier, done in 1944. To abbreviate her artistic career and her vision of art, she said:   “Beauty is learned by watching. All my life I worked by looking to a body, a light, a reflection.”   Heinrich didn't die, then, she stopped looking.   Clarín Andrés Hax. ahax@clarin.com         http://www.zonezero.com/magazine/obituaries/annmarie/index.html  
Wednesday, 02 November 2005
Author:Pedro Meyer
              So where do we go from here? The decisive moment had been explored through an infinite variety of great images over the past decades. However, there came a point, that I was looking at images that looked like those of other great photographers where only the subject matter would be slightly different, from one author to the next. But what could follow after “great images” would be for me, the great unanswered question.   In art there has always been this search for new formal solutions to express the ever changing potential presented by and through new tools. So throughout the history of art, we have a panorama that has always been in the process of transformation. The present moment, being no exception.   With regard to photography, pictorialism was an important movement at the end of the nineteenth century up to the start of the twentieth.   * Robert Leggat, wrote in 1999, the following: “The modern usage of this term may give a misleading picture of the movement as it arose in the second half of the nineteenth century; in any case, like the all-embracing word "art" it is a most elusive, intangible, and highly subjective term. In modern parlance it is sometimes taken to suggest conservatism, and the unwillingness to explore new approaches. In its original meaning anything that put the finished picture first and the subject second was pictorialism. Given such a meaning, pictorialism by no means excluded more modern trends; any photograph that stressed atmosphere or viewpoint rather than the subject would come under this category.   By the second half of the nineteenth century the novelty of capturing images was beginning to wear off, and some people were now beginning to question whether the camera, as it was then being used, was in fact too accurate and too detailed in what it recorded. This, coupled with the fact that painting enjoyed a much higher status than this new mechanistic process, caused some photographers to adopt new techniques which, as they saw it, made photography more of an art form. These new techniques came also to be known as High-Art photography.   In effect, the term Pictorialism is used to describe photographs in which the actual scene depicted is of less importance than the artistic quality of the image. Pictorialists would be more concerned with the aesthetics and, sometimes, the emotional impact of the image, rather than what actually was in front of their camera.   Because pictorialism was seen as artistic photography, one would not be surprised that current styles of art would be reflected in their work; as impressionism was in vogue at the time, many photographs have more than a passing resemblance to paintings in this style. Examples of this approach include combination printing, the use of focus, the manipulation of the negative, and the use of techniques such as gum bichromate, which greatly lessened the detail and produced a more artistic image.”   If in fact conservatism would be the perception that would define pictorialism, because of it’s unwillingness to explore the new. One could say that today, the precise opposite has started to happen. Where the practitioners of the “straight picture” seems to be on the defensive and unwilling to explore the potential use of all the new digital tools at our disposal.   This arsenal of new options provided by the digital tools, open up vistas, that are very different in many ways to the historical notions of pictorialism.   Let me point some of these out, so that we can observe what is new and different. I would start out by the single most important aspect I have encountered in my personal explorations. The level of control, down to the last pixel to be found within the image. Such fine and precise slicing and dicing of the image, would be unimaginable in the past.   What this level of control provides us with, is the option to define and combine styles that would have eluded most practitioners of photography in the past. I am always hesitant to suggest that this has never been done before, because as soon as something like this is stated, someone will surely come up with an example by someone who in fact did something like that a hundred years ago.   The problem is not so much if something has never been done before, but if that something was produced in such a way, that the effort might be repeated in more than just an isolated instance. Photography became a world wide cultural phenomenon precisely because of it’s widespread adaptation, and ease of use is certainly at the center of such an experience.   So being able to combine within a single image, various styles, where the pictorial and the hyper real essence of straight photography, might be merged into a seamless presentation, is hinged directly to the possibility of control over every single pixel within the frame.   I am well aware that the defenders of the “straight image” would somehow like to retain the aura of veracity about the photograph, even though all the evidence from a factual point of view flies directly in opposition to such an argument. The photograph is merely a piece of evidence about something that took place in front of the camera, not a slice of reality as some would like to interpret.   As we are well aware, such evidence is very much a subjective representation, because that is all it can be. Even scientific pictures created by robots sitting on top of remote rovers on a distant planet need to be interpreted for their evidential representation. Who would believe if you had a little figure appear staring into the view finder of such a robot visiting a far of planet, that this was indeed proof of life there?   But getting back to life on this one, if Pictorialism was a photographic term used to describe images that emphasized the artistic quality of the photograph rather than the scene it depicted. The movement’s primary aim was to bring photography into the fine art realm. Also concerned with aesthetics and impact, Pictorialists sought to produce images that were not solely about the objects in front of the camera. Techniques used by these photographers to create a more painterly effect included combination printing, focus, and manipulation of the negative.   So then what is different this time around is the emphasis on representing the “photographic reality” of the scene depicted while incorporating at the same time the “artistic quality” of the painterly technique. I would imagine that combining elements of the pictorial with traces of photographic realism, might take us into a new territory worthy of exploration. Is this neo pictorialism, or is it neo realism? or something yet altogether different, either direction depends on the preference of what is emphasized within the image. Let us have your opinion, as the subject lends itself to a lot of very interesting debates.   Pedro Meyer November 2005   As always please joins us with your comments in our forums.         http://zonezero.com/editorial/noviembre05/november.html      
Tuesday, 01 November 2005
Author:Roger Bruce
  The plasticity of the digital photograph is astounding. Limited only by the imagination or possibly, processor speed, new tools offer seamless efficiency in intra-image editing for manipulation and montage. Occasionally, such new software capabilities will spawn a new fashion of graphical effect or visual cliché before assuming a reserved availability among all of the other tackle in the digital toolbox.   The skill and motivation to attempt recombinant photography appear early in the history of the medium, notably in the work of pictorialist photographer, Henry Peach Robinson, who refined the craft of combining elements of multiple images to effect the illusion of a single exposure. His print titled "Fading Away" portrays a young woman dying of consumption accompanied by other figures including that of an older man gazing through a window to clouds visible in the distance. To capture such a scene in a single exposure would have been close to impossible with the technology of the 1850s, so Robinson had little choice but to physically cut and paste picture elements. (Remember that he did not even have the advantage of an enlarger.) At our archives here at George Eastman House, close inspection of Fading Away does reveal Robinson's method, but the results are surprisingly good.       Given that photographers have, for so long, demonstrated a reliable urge to re-arrange picture elements, the architects of Photoshop were safe to assume the desirability of tools that will enhance any illusion that the artist desires to achieve. The progressive refinement of image editing software will likely continue. For example, one recently added Photoshop (CS2) filter called "Vanishing Point" is designed to automate the repositioning of areas of an image across varying planes within a single photographic image. In other words, beyond augmentation of the two dimensional morphology of the photograph, this tool can be used to adjust image elements within the illusory third dimension of a picture.   It was in the 13th Century that Leon Battista Alberti (In his treatise "On Painting" completed in 1435) articulated a geometry of three-dimensional space represented on a two-dimensional plane. Today, these geometric principles are applied to variables in an application that allows a user to "dial-in" the illusion of spatial relationships.Large sectors of computer science are devoted to the challenges of modeling information -- performing "what if" calculations for every conceivable discipline. It is increasingly easy to imagine an interface in which the modeling "clay" is photography itself. Roger Bruce Director of Interpretation George Eastman House October 13, 2005     http://zonezero.com/magazine/articles/photoasclay/index.html  
Thursday, 13 October 2005
423. Shannon
Author:Shannon
  Date: September 18, 2005 1:10:01 PM   Hi there,   My name is Shannon and Im studying photography at Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University in South Africa. I'm Specialising in Fashion and Documentary.   Im writting an essay on documentary and my approach is how involved should a photographer be in his subjuect matter. I mean this in the context of when does a photographer stop taking the photographs and start physically helping the person whos being beaten or assaulted. Does the photographer get involved at all? And what emotional damage can war photography and photojournalism cause to the photographer.   Thank you for supplying such a brilliant site, its verry inspiring!   Thanks again Shannon  
Sunday, 18 September 2005
Author:Manuel García
  In memoriam Adolfo Patiño "Adolfotógrafo"     Self-taught artist. Founder of the experimental art group "Peyote y la Compañia", 1978-1984 and "Grupo de Fotógrafos Independientes", 1976-1984, with whom he presented the Ambulant Exhibition Series "Fotografia de la Calle". He was also the founder of the vanguardist gallery "La Agencia", 1987-1993. Photographer, painter, sculptor and installation artist, his latter work tended to be readymades. Since his first exhibition in the now extinct Chapultepec Gallery in 1983, wood remained his medium of preference through his artistic career. Another constant motif in his work was the use of red roses, which became an iconographic symbol in his later work. Polaroid pictures, performances, installations, paintings, art-object, drawings, sculpture, video and super 8 film were amongst his favorite mediums.   Adolfo also participated as jury at the VII Photography Biennial, at the first exhibition at the Centro de la Imagen in Mexico City. Since 1983 to 2005 he realized more than twenty individual exhibitions in wich he always involved photography. In 1982 he received an honorific mention at the Second National Meeting of Youth Art; amongst his other recognitions we can highilight a painting acquisition award at the third National Meeting of Youth Art, 1983, an honorific mention at the first Biennal in la Habana, Cuba, 1984, and an honorific mention at the first Biennal in Monterrey, México, 1992.   ADOLFO PATIÑO, A NIGHT OF IMAGERY The image of Adolfo Patiño, Mexican photographer takes me to the last years of the past century. In those days he owned an art gallery “La Agencia” in Colonia Roma in Mexico City. I went to see him and bought a Frida Kahlo t-shirt that I still have. It was not until the symposium "Reflexión de la Imagen" (Reflection of the Image) in 1991, where I was invited by Alejandro Castellanos to talk about the Mayo brothers, when I saw Adolfo Patiño again. I think he had a relationship with Laura Anderson then. I remeber him as witty,cheerful and active man. Was he an artist-Photographer or a Photographer-Artist? I thought he had a mind of his own. A few years later, Elisabeth Ferrer had begun the project A Shadow Born of Heart. New Photograph in Mexico, 1995, with a cover by Adolfo Patiño. A portrait of Afdolfo and Armando, joined together by a heart. A proper collage. Patiño was looking back to the European avant-garde. Was he flirting with Dada? His artistic support oft his work in those days includad B&W photos of Mexsican indigenous people and color of the Modern Americans. We could say that his work in painting terms was “well cooked”. His series "Elementos para la navegación" (1991-92) is an autobiographic work. The photo as a document, as introspection, as family protrait. But also as a field for experimentation, for the application of new techniques and renewal of languages. Elisabeth Ferrrer said so “his photography becomes a way of spiritual exertion, a way of defining values and one’s place in the world. This reflection about “ones place in the world” seemed to be on the middle-aged artist. His words to the newspaper “La Jornada” seemed to confirm it: “I am at the threshold of a rebirth, I was born in a moment of wolrd decadence, since art no longer has a philosophical meaning and is a commercial product, with no identity due to globalization”. I am sorry that because of his loss of equilibrium, alone in his home he cannot be a fellow of the National Artists Endowment , receive an “Honoris Causa” degree by UNAM, or see his retrspective at Museo Carrillo Gil. It is frequent that the independent artists cannot cope with academic boundries of Art institutions. I met Adolfo Patiño again at the 10th anniversary party of Centro de la Imagen, a celebration where both the high and low ends of Mexican photo shared drinks at the same venue, a generous night filled with flashlights, dancing, and libido everywhere. An unforgettable night of young phto masters celebratin their success and photojournalists selling low priced signed copies to get the cab- fare to get back home. I went to the library to look for a catalog of his work or to see if he was in the Rio de luz collection or a small place in the Litografica Turmex collection, but did not find his name amongst the great masters of Mexican Photography. An American colletor might have bought his work , or his work could be found at the Alvarez Bravo phototheque or at Centro de la Imagen. Oh That elusive Eternity! A deep revision of the contribution of this untamed artist is in order . He passed away with no warning -Death makes no invitaions, it just takes you away- at the prime of his life, he had a mature work, clear ideas and a great will to live. In this script that this life of ours is, we forget thet the future is a blank page in which the random lights and shadows are written down. It is now the turn of Mexican art curators to be generous with the work of Adolfo Patiño.   Manuel García Art Critic.         http://zonezero.com/magazine/obituaries/adolfotografo/adolfotografo.html    
Sunday, 04 September 2005
Author:Pedro Meyer
  - Original published in 1993 in Luna Cornea, Mexico, D.F. -   "The great writer Jorge Luis Borges was once asked what he thought about a certain translation of one of his works, “The original does not do justice to the translation” was his response. Today, Photography, is confronted by Digital Imagery in much the same way".     Only a few minutes away from having the minute join the hour hand, and both of them turning to the hour zero, as if pointing in prayer towards the new year of 1993, in parallel, the odometer in the car also turned to zeros after displaying 99 999 kilometers. We have these wonderful and basically simple instruments to tell us how far we have gone, both in time and distance. They perform quietly and steadily, day in and day out, until that special moment which informs us of a new marker in the path of our lives. As I age, these changes in the year tell me there is less time ahead of me than there used to be, and as with my car, I also disclose the inevitable passage of time and how use takes its toll. My eyes are not as strong and focused as once they were, the vertebrae in my back are all bent out of shape and hurt after carrying heavy camera bags all my life, and I do get tired more frequently. I don't say this in a complaining mode, these statements are simply facts that I acknowledge for myself. Another such fact irrespective of any choice, and which I acknowledge in order to move on with my life, relates to the inconceivable speed with which technology is altering every single activity that I have been or will be involved with, in the years to come. Complaining about poor eye sight, does nothing to solve the problem, eye glasses do that; complaining about the rapid change of technology will do nothing to restore our placid past, learning about such issues in order to deal with them, might help much more.   The digital revolution, is going to have a much larger impact on the surrounding landscape, than did the internal combustion engine in its time. At stake is the way we produce, distribute and consume, everything related to communications, entertainment, education, travel, management. Photography is only a minute part within this tidal wave of change, and anyone who still harbors doubts whether the new technologies are going to change photography, is ignoring, if you will, the “larger picture."   It's not easy to see oneself age, as it's not easy to find oneself technically obsolete when one thought that a life's experience actually meant something. All of a sudden that which one knew from the accumulated experience of decades, is brought into question by all the innovations spawned by emerging technologies that alter the equation of the how, and the why, of an image. The rules of the past are no longer valid, a new set of values are taking over, and so they should. To our good fortune civilization has the promise of a new renaissance in the making.   It only took six years, to have the IBM corporation come tumbling down from being the world's pre-eminent leader in the world of computer technology, to become a fractured and disintegrating empire. IBM's income used to be larger than the gross national product of several sovereign nations combined. No one in their right mind, at least none of the eight hundred thousand stock holders of the company, considered it even remotely possible that their life savings invested in owning IBM stock, might be so savagely ravaged as was the case over the last few months, when the market value dropped up to 70 % from the level of its better days. This collapse has become a true testimony to the speed with which technology can pronounce obsolete an existing structure, no matter how important and large it used to be. Very few believe that the company has the slightest chance of ever coming back to its vanguard days. What happened? You might ask, and the answer is very basic: arrogance. They truly thought that their economic clout would enable them to hold back the threat from emerging technologies that would have forced them to change their traditional way of doing business, it only took six years to prove that they couldn't.   Apart from the 100 000 employees that IBM had to let go over the past 24 months, they now have to fire an additional 25 000 people, nothing to say of all the plants, and research laboratories now programmed to be closed. When I hear such statistics, I can't get over the fact that so many photographers still question the fact that their livelihood is going to be affected by advanced technologies.   Lets face a few facts just as we had to do when confronted with the issue of age. We have to go back to school once again; there is no way around this if one is intent on remaining active in the world of image making. It's daunting I admit, to find the time needed to re-train oneself, but that, I'm afraid, is only the beginning. The lesson we can derive from observing IBM's debacle, is that trying to maintain “business as usual” will work only for a few years, after which it's going to be increasingly harder to play catch up with those that are ahead in the game.   Those entertaining the idea that acquiring the needed skills to face the technological revolution, can be accomplished without some major adjustment, are only deceiving themselves. Not only are there serious considerations with regard to the investments required, such as, time to learn on one side, and monetary resources for equipment on the other, but an even greater challenge is associated with the conceptual approach to ones work. One needs to rethink visual solutions vis-a-vis all the new possibilities of solving the ever present puzzle of form and content.   No longer are we held back in our creative solutions by the historic limitations placed upon us by chemistry and optics. The result is that we have new levels of creativity to reach for, and impressive as this might be, it only represents the beginning. The power of what is possible within the digital revolution increases by a factor of 100% every 18 month.   The changes we are thinking off, deal not only with how images are made, but how these will be placed into circulation as well. The historic notions of what we can do with pictures in order to either sell them, exhibit them or whatever the photographer has in mind, will be totally overturned before we reach the year 2000. The traditional formats will obviously not vanish, we shall continue to have books, magazines, gallery walls, etc., but these options will now be enlarged to include digital formats unknown until now, these conduits enable a faster, cheaper, and quite effective ways of distributing information, among these we can find CD-ROM disks, fiber optic networks, satellite transmission, cable networks, flash memory cards, compression technology, and so on. Every month one can find news with yet another twist and turn that allows for a more effective way of having digital information flow faster and cheaper, between the creator and the end user.   It used to be that the photographer, either working for someone or for him or herself, only represented a peg within a large cogwheel, with the photographers role clearly delineatead. There were exceptions as when a photographer would venture beyond such lines, by including his or her text as a story to go with the images made, or when the photographer would participate in the layout or design of the work itself. These latter examples being more an exception than the rule, will probably become in the near future, more of a rule than the exception.   The reason seems quite simple to envisage. The access to the main markets for images, that photographers all over the world will have, will increase exponentially over the coming decades. This potential glut of images ( any time you read the word glut you can rest assured that it also involves reduction in price) available to those buying for any publication, will be directly related to the greater ease with which any photographer can place his or her archive on line for direct access and review by those interested in acquiring images, half away across the world. There is going to be an unending spring of images that up to now where not available, and which will be brought forward all of a sudden. Those living in or near the vicinity of major markets will no longer have so much of an advantage over those working far away. As an example, just think of the dozens of first class photographers in Mexico City who at present do not have their work accessible to potential buyers in such markets. And how in the near future one will see all these photographers empowered to show their work with relative ease for both the buyer and seller, anywhere in the world. What is true for the photographic community in Mexico City, can be said, just the same, for any other group in the world, the potential for establishing contact with such talents anywhere, will inevitably lead to an erosion of the competitive advantage of those who were closest to the market. In the near future the photographer will have to deliver more than just the pictures in order to remain competitive. Those photographers that do not retrain will only be able to deliver images as “raw material” for others to transform and use, and we know from history all to well, how those who only delivered raw materials were treated: to say the least, not very well.   As we collectively face technological obsolescence, we should know that all photographers will have for a limited time only, a level playing field. The challenges that need to be met for retraining, are the same regardless of where the photographer comes from, be that San Francisco or Calcutta. A photographer working today in New York does not have that much more knowledge about the digital revolution as a photographer at the other end of the Continent, in Buenos Aires. Every one is in need of learning about the changing realities, and in that sense we're all faced with the same challenges as well as opportunities.   Interestingly enough, richer countries already have a certain built in advantage, with their more developed infrastructure, but this is a blessing in disguise, as developing nations will be able in the future to leap frog towards the latest technological break through, landing with even better and more modern infrastructures than their wealthier neighbors. At the rate of technological innovations, it's almost impossible to predict what the exact scenario might be, however we can be sure that if we don't keep up with events and are knowledgeable about what is going on, instead of us making the needed decision for our well being, someone else will be doing it, and not necessarily to our benefit.   One almost inevitable outcome of all these changes has to do with a vertical integration of photographers' present day activities. Until very recently very few of us had even a clue of what a color separation consisted off, or for that matter how a half tone could be achieved to arrive at a good printed image, these were topics better left to the printer. Today, photographers, are beginning to deliver, instead of a set of pictures as in days past, a color separation or a half tone, and in so doing bypassing altogether the delivery of the print or transparency. Photographers will be able to edit their own publications in ways never before possible when the medium for distribution was the printed book. Digital video will become increasingly the means to capture images, and in so doing the territory for the photographer will expand. No longer will the photographer be circumscribed to a static still image. The moving picture will enter increasingly into the realm of the photographer's domain, and in so doing bring along the need to understand sound. Photographers will be capable of doing in video what before was essentially undertaken only by television crews, thereby altering the concept of reportage and whom it is done by, all of this will take on new meanings and so will the needs and realities of the clients that a photo agency or the photographer will have to deal with.   I've been considered to be a fairly good printer of my own work, so it was with great interest when I unpacked a recent exhibition of my images that had just returned from a two year tour. I was eager to compare a particularly difficult to print image done on a silver based emulsion photographic paper and one that I had recently produced with the aid of the computer and new digital technologies. A process that allows me to have absolute control over each single grain in the image, something unthinkable within the traditional chemical process. The outcome was so astounding when I compared the two, that I felt embarrassed with the terrible silver print I had produced earlier on and allowed to travel. In working with the tools I now have at my disposal, I'm able to reproduce what earlier had always eluded me. The wealth of a tonal range and the possibility to adjust every last detail to my own liking without making any concessions is something that does not cease to amaze me, especially when I compare the output. This was the first time that I had seen the same image produced in their two different technological moments. It was like comparing an old 78 rpm record to a new digital stereo CD recording.   I haven't used a dark room for the last two years, given that I'm only printing with a dye sublimation process or with an ink jet printer, (when I print with the ink jet unit, no longer do I use photographic paper, instead I use the traditional artist's paper such as the French Arches) the quality of the prints is so much richer than anything that I have ever done before, that I find it unthinkable to ever return to the darkroom. I'm one of those who used to work in the dark room enjoying the process very much, so I imagine how ecstatic anyone who didn't like working in the darkroom might be.   This issue of digital image making brings to a head, among many other topics, one that is particularly interesting to almost everyone in the world of culture, namely that of representing “reality." It is has become increasingly clear that we can now alter an image at will, by including or excluding whatever meets our fancy, both before or after having made the picture. The interesting situation that emerges from all of this, is that documentary photography which all along was considered such a bastion of “integrity” when it came to representation, given that there was a negative as proof of something, is now an issue which is fading from the scene very fast. I for one, never thought that photography should have been burdened with this aura of being a reliable representation of reality, especially since it never was true. All too many photographers have used this fragile misrepresentation to fool the public into believing that their documentary images were that: a document, when in fact they were not.   A case in point is the well known image, “The Kiss," by the French photographer Robert Doisneau. It turns out that Doisneau, in order to defend himself from a lawsuit brought forth by the supposedly featured pair, is now alleging that the kissing couple presented to us all along as a prime example of the “decisive moment” is not that at all, but instead, a couple of actors (and he has the negatives to prove it, so he stated, according to a Newsweek magazine). I've always liked that image immensely, I even own a print (given to me as loving gift) which hangs on the wall of our living room, but when I view it today it saddens me that the photographer was less than forthright as he led us believe that the image was a spontaneous moment of love. The information this image delivers is now altered by our knowledge that the moment is fabricated, gone is the idea of real love between those two people, we are now aware that this was only make believe love, as actors do. We were induced to accept that this was a document witnessing love, when all along it wasn't. All of us who own a print, might be inclined to sue him, for destroying the myth of a gesture of genuine love; then we can also be thankful for making us aware of how gullible we had become with regard to the documentary tradition.   The Doisneau affair is very pertinent, as we address the digital revolution in photography and the world of culture at large, it will inevitably bring about the unmasking of all those images that have been presented as “genuine documents” when indeed they weren't. As our knowledge of digital image making evolves, so will the awareness of how images can be fabricated with great ease, they always have been, only now it's no longer solely the domain of what happens in front of the lens, it can also be accomplished, as never before, after the image has been taken. A more challenging public will be less inclined to view pictures with the innocence of days past, thus deceivers such as Doisneau, won't be able to get away with their illusion so easily. The digital revolution will usher forward a whole new gamut of ethical values that need to be adhered to. This doesn't imply that there isn't ample room for fabricated images, quite the contrary, such pictures will come into existence more and more, many of them will be very powerful in their editorial comment, much as the written word is today. We only have to make it clear to everyone concerned, when a photograph is a document and when it's not. I believe we are in for an unpleasant surprise as to the level of present day documentary work that has been constructed, so as vigilance increases due to the potential for mischief by digital means, we will find ourselves scrutinizing as never before, everything we get to see. This enlarged awareness will gradually bring to the surface all those deceptive practices, which to our dismay, will reveal that they are not so unusual. So in a roundabout way, digital image making will also help to clean up our act within traditional photography.   As I look forward to the new year about to begin, I have to review what has elapsed over these last few years besieged with upheaval; a startling period of confrontations with new ways of doing things, changing values, concepts rethought, recast perceptions, and ideas torn asunder. Entropy at it's finest. Which leads me to a recent question posed in San Francisco a few weeks ago, by the distinguished English scientist Stephen Hawking: Why can we remember the past, yet not the future?   It was Giotto who seven hundred years ago, redefined the artist's framework of time, he single-handedly created a new way to envision and organize space, he also isolated for art the frame of stopped time, a precursor to the decisive moment so prevalent in modern photography. We are at the threshold where photography could move beyond the “decisive moment” anchored in Giottos time towards the“decisive pixel” of our time, maybe it's right that we now move towards the future and bring Hawking's question to bear, and that we find a way to remember the future and depict it through digital photography, and by so doing, find a new passage to be marked by the clock and odometer of history.     Pedro Meyer, 1993 pedro@zonezero.com         http://www.zonezero.com/magazine/articles/meyer2/meyer02.html      
Friday, 19 August 2005

<< Start < Prev 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 Next > End >>Page 17 of 54


Share This
|
More