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William Karl Valentine

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Becky Senf - Discovering Academia Podcast

March 7, 2025

Brent Valentine and Keller Kramer are seniors at UC Davis. In March 2023 Brent came up with an idea to start a podcast series where he interviewed professors about their research projects so future graduate students could learn more about programs, they were interested in applying to. Keller is one of Brent’s closest friends and had experience interviewing people. They discussed the concept and created the Discovering Academia Podcast. UC Davis featured them in their campus magazine, check here for that link. Below is their official description of their podcast has become:

Discovering Academia is an interdisciplinary podcast, with some of the world’s greatest thinkers and researchers. Brent and Keller sit down with these academics to have conversations about their background, research, passions and ways for others to get involved. Episodes last for roughly an hour, and they cover a plethora of topics. We launched in March 2023 and are now releasing weekly episodes. We started at our home institution, UC Davis, and have expanded to the London School of Economics, Utrecht University, UC Berkley, University of Geneva, National University of Singapore, University of Hong Kong, Nankai University*, and Zhejiang A&F University* (*Mainland China)

If you had not guessed by now, Brent is my son. We made an investment to help Brent create the podcast as an actual business, and during that process one condition I asked Brent to agree to was to include some photography related podcasts and I specifically suggested interviewing Becky Senf. I have gotten to know Becky fairly well over the last ten years and she is one of the most incredible photography curators / scholars in the world today (and also a wonderful person). I know I have written about her before in this blog, but I need to say this again. She has an incredible talent to be able to communicate concepts or knowledge about the medium which everyone can understand. I don’t care if you have a casual interest in the medium or you hold a PhD in Photographic Studies if you listen to her talk about the medium, you will understand the topic and you will learn something. It is an amazing talent. Last fall Brent and Keller were able to arrange a time to fly down to Tucson to interview Becky. Brent and Keller released the podcast of Becky’s interview last week and I think it is outstanding. Yes, I admit that I am absolutely biased, but I encourage you to listen to the podcast and form your own opinion. I am confident you will take something away from the experience.

Brent, Keller, and Becky at the Center for Creative Photography

Additional Link:

During this podcast Becky spoke in depth about an Edward Weston portrait of his wife, Charis. I was pretty sure I remembered seeing the image, but I wanted to sure I was thinking of the right image. I found it on-line; and confirmed I was thinking of the correct image. I wanted to share the link here for everyone else. I agree with Becky, it is an Amazing Image!

In Photography Curator, Podcasts Tags Rebecca Senf, @beckysenfccp, Becky Senf, Center for Creative Photography, Discovering Academia, Edward Weston, Brent Valentine, Keller Kramer
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Curator Rebecca Senf leading Maine Media’s workshop on Building the Curator - Fine Art Photographer Relationship

Building the Curator - Fine Art Photographer Relationship - Dr. Senf

July 19, 2024

Last month I had the incredible opportunity to participate in a Maine Media workshop, held via Zoom, with Dr. Rebecca Senf who is the Chief Curator at the Center for Creative Photography at the University of Arizona, in Tucson. The workshop, Building the Curator - Fine Art Photographer Relationship comprised of two three-hour sessions with 8 participating photographers. The first session started with Dr. Senf talking about herself and her role as a curator. In the second half of the session the participating photographers shared their work with the group. Dr. Senf critiqued presentations and then during the week between the two sessions Dr. Senf reviewed written artist statement we provided her and reviewed everyone's websites in detail. The second session began with critiques of our sites and submissions and finished with an open discussion period.

This was the best education experiences of my photography career since I graduated from college. To have so much quality time with one of the top curators in the world, giving valuable insight to the curator’s perspective, then reviewing my work’s web presence was priceless. There was also a great benefit in listening to the critiques of the other seven photographer. When I say she reviewed our websites it was obvious she spent at least twenty minutes on every one of our sites and more time than that reviewing our written work. I have met Dr. Senf, Becky, a number of times and I had high expectations for this workshop, she exceeded those expectations tenfold. I normally wouldn’t write a post about this since it has already occurred, but Becky said she really enjoyed the experience and is hopeful to do more of these workshops in the future. For any serious photographer who is mid-career or established I highly recommend participating in this workshop if you see it available in the future. I signed up as soon as I saw Becky make a post about it and it sold out quickly, I am so happy I didn’t hesitate.

Becky said throughout this workshop, networking and developing relationships is the key to obtaining success for most anything. Through the workshop experience I got to know seven other interesting photographers, I have listed their website links below and I encourage you to visit their sites to see their work. We are a stylistically diverse group which helped to make the workshop that much more interesting.

Photographers who Participated in the Workshop:

Diana Nicholette Jeon

Website: http://diananicholettejeon.com

Instagram: @diananicholettejeon

FB http://facebook.com/diananicholettejeon

 

Anne McDonald

Website: AnneArdenMcDonald.com

Instagram: @anneardenmcdonald

https://www.facebook.com/anne.a.mcdonald

 

Chris Leventis

Website: www.chrisleventis.com

IG:  @chrisleventis.artist

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/cleventisphoto/

 

Susan Keiser

Website:  https://susankeiserphotography.com/

IG: @susankeiser 

 

Sara Silks

Website: https://www.sarasilks.com

Instagram: https://instagram.com/sara_silks

 

Ken Karagozian

Website: https://www.kenkaragozian.com

Instagram: @kenkaragozian

 

Lydia Panas

Website:  http://www.lydiapanas.com/

IG @lydiapanas     

 

William Karl Valentine

Primary Website: https://www.williamkarlvalentine.com

Secondary Site: WILLIAM KARL VALENTINE 2020

Instagram:  https://www.instagram.com/williamkarlvalentine/

 

In Photography, Photography Workshop Tags Diana Nicholette Jeon, Anne McDonald, Chris Leventis, Susan Keiser, Sara Silks, Ken Karagozian, Lydia Panas, Becky Senf, Center for Creative Photography, Maine Media
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Phoenix Art Museum - Fashioning Self: The Photography of Everyday Expression

May 16, 2023

Fashioning Self: The Photography of Everyday Expression examines the role of photography in shaping, sharing, and shifting identity. March 8th through November 5th 2023

I made my annual pilgrimage to Arizona in March to photograph a few Cactus League games. On the 18th I left the Angels game at Tempe Diablo Stadium a few minutes early so I could stop by the Phoenix Art Museum on the drive back to California, I didn’t bother to check beforehand what was being shown because the Phoenix Art Museum has never disappointed me; it is also an amazing space which is interesting in its own right.

The featured Photography exhibition had 54 works of street, documentary, and self-portrait prints curated to examine the long-intertwined relationship between people’s use of fashion for self-expression and photography’s role in documenting it over a century of time.  The exhibition was organized by the Phoenix Art Museum and the Center for Creative Photography.  I didn’t see the curators listed for this exhibition, but I assume Becky Senf was very involved in this project.

I have a simple sense of fashion, I live in T-shirts, basketball shorts, and baseball hats (fitted & prefer wool 59Fifty’s) most days.  So, an exhibition dealing with fashion shouldn’t be where you would find me.  But this exhibition had Max Yavno and Garry Winogrand photographs in it, and they are two of my favorite photographers. 

The exhibition is curated so well, the curators had knowledge of works I had never seen before, and they brought everything together perfectly to tell this story.  Just the design of the exhibition layout is so creative. How the various prints were grouped, the use of video, and incorporating an interactive Instagram component all come together to create a perfect experience.  It is not like the old days where the selected works were just hung in a line, and it was more about the individual prints or paintings.  The creativity of the curators shows through. This exhibition is timely and a great document of part of our history, the Phoenix Art Museum and CCP staff nailed it.  Below are my images of the exhibition.

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I wasn’t that familiar with Bill Cunningham’s work but it was a perfect addition to this exhibition. They had a video installation showing Bill working and his photographs. Bill was definitely a street photographer, but when I picked up of his book, which I bought in the Museum shop, I learned that he considered himself a fashion historian before being a photographer. He was good at both.

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Selfie on the left, a self portrait, with the help of Adam from Phoenix Art Museum staff on the right. Below are examples of the interactive Instagram component of the exhibit. Notice my classic T-shirt and hat style, perfect for a day at the yard watching ball (and looking at art and driving 350 miles comfortably). #PhxArtFashioningSelf .

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The Geoffrey Beene exhibit was outstanding, and it was because of the design of the space. Graphic colors and patterns, how the mannequins are posed, and the incorporation of the fashion still photographs & proof sheets, just come together amazingly. The curators had incredible vision to be able to take the artifacts they had and create this space. The exhibition is obviously static but had the feel of action the way it was designed. I loved how they worked the photography component in too, it added to the experience perfectly.

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More photographs of the Phoenix Art Museum. I love the scale and design of this space, plus I always discover artwork I didn’t know about every time I visit. Phillip C. Curtis’s paintings are fantastic and I love Rebecca Campbell’s “Jack and Diane”; humor in the title and the painting style was so unique how it dealt with the light.

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Miguel Palma’s(1964) “Action Plan” (2009) was on display near the Museum Store and immediately grabbed my attention. Miguel is just a year younger than I am, so I assume he grew up with G.I. Joes like I did. I understand the psychology behind why societies have had toy soldiers for their boys to play with, and I recognize the horror of war, but as a kid I loved my collection of G.I. Joes and spent lots of days outside in the dirt playing with them. This collection of accessories is epic. I appreciate the deeper meaning here, but with every piece of artwork on display, each view brings their own past experiences with them when they experience the work. A nice work of art but I am still also jealous of this collection.

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In Galleries, Museums, Photography, Photography Exhibitions Tags @phxart, #PhxArtFashion, #GeoffreyBeene, #Selfie, #Selfportrait, Doris and John Norton Gallery, Becky Senf, Eduard van det Eisken, Louis Carlos Bernal, Milton Rogovin, Charles "Teenie" Harris, Lila and Joel Hartnett Gallery, #Move, Authentic Brands Group, Deanna McBrearty, Rebbeca Campbell, Phillip C. Curtis, David Hume Kennerly, Dennis Feldman, Max Yavno, Garry Winogrand, Bill Cunningham, Center for Creative Photography, Vogue, Roger Minick, Richard Sandler, Joan Lifton, Helen Levitt, Andrew Eccles, Lee Bontecon, Sin titulp, Miguel Palma, Action plan, @cntrforcreativephoto, Laura Volkerding, @beckysenfccp
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LACMA’s Wallis Annenberg Photography Department Curator Rebecca Morse by Robert Heineken’s images.

"Objects of Desire" - curated by Rebecca Morse - LACMA through December 18th 2022

November 16, 2022

On October 7th I had the incredible opportunity to spend two hours talking one on one with Rebecca Morse at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art viewing the exhibition “Objects of Desire”.

Rebecca Morse is coming up on her 10-year anniversary as a Curator in the Wallis Annenberg Photography Department at LACMA. Prior to LACMA she spent 15 years as a curator at MOCA in Los Angeles. Originally from upstate New York, Rebecca worked for a commercial photographer in New York City and earned her Master’s degree at the University of Arizona before moving to Los Angeles. Rebecca curated the “Objects of Desire” exhibition and authored the accompanying catalogue for the exhibition.

Here is LACMA’s Statement for the exhibition:

“Objects of Desire: Photography and the Language of Advertising traces the artistic manipulation of advertising, the most powerful, mainstream visual language. Since the 1970s, creative innovations led to dramatic shifts in the possibilities for photography as artistic expression, as photo-based artists reworked advertising strategies to challenge the increased commodification of daily life, and later to appropriate the command these images have over the viewer/consumer. By exploiting advertising’s visual vocabulary and adopting its sites and formats, and through re-photography, appropriation, and simulation, artists create a shared photographic language that puts the onus on the viewer to determine what exactly these pictures are asking of us.”

I appreciate diversity in photographic styles although I always gravitate toward documentary images because that is my style. I think it is important that all genres of photography are showcased, and I try to view as many different types of photographs as I can to keep up my knowledge of the medium.  Viewing other images and talking about photography always helps me refocus on my own work.  My expectation in viewing Objects of Desire was that I would learn something new and hopefully see a couple images I could connect with.

The Objects of Desire exhibition exceeded my expectations. It is truly amazing, one of the tightest exhibitions I have seen.  It has some images I was familiar with, some work by photographers I had never heard of, and some totally unique pieces like Urs Fishcer’s “Mirror Box” series.  What made this exhibition so outstanding is how Rebecca Morse curated and designed the installation such that seemingly eclectic works when put together are in fact totally congruent with the goal of the exhibition.  The pairings make perfect sense when you follow the chronology and sequence of the installation.

Obviously, there is nothing like viewing an exhibition with the curator who is sharing insights on how they constructed the exhibition. That was a huge advantage for me.  But if the average viewer follows the wall signage the story is laid out in a clear, concise and easy way to understand manner.  I don’t think Rebecca missed a single detail; the show accomplishes exactly what the statement says.

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I had never met Rebecca before, and I earned this private tour by winning a fundraising bid for the Los Angeles Center of Photography, so I didn’t fully know what to expect.  What I discovered is an amazing photography professional. 

I gained a ton of insight into the curator’s mind with this visit, which was one of my goals.  Rebecca talked about how the concept for the exhibition formulated over many years, and as I expected her interests and experience were the foundation.  There was one specific image (Ericka Beckman’s 1987 image “Spoonful”) I had never seen before.  Rebecca explained that she had seen the photograph years ago, how the image stayed in the back of her mind, and when she had the right exhibition for it, she remembered it.  We also talked a lot about presentation and design of the space. I loved hearing about the many details and fine adjustments, and I could see how each thing she mentioned made the exhibition better.  We ended up talking about every piece.  I knew that Rebecca had worked with Robert Heineken when she was at the University of Arizona and the Center for Creative Photography was adding Heineken’s archive to their collection.  I enjoyed the opportunity to talk to Rebecca about his work given her firsthand connection to it and that’s why I made a point to photograph Rebecca by Heineken’s work. 

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Sarah Charlesworth: Figures, 1983-84, Cibachrome with lacquered wood frame, 2 panels, 42 by 32 inches each
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Asha Schechter’s 2020 print “Junk Drawer”

I found it particularly interesting when Rebecca pointed out the reflective qualities of Sarah Charlesworth’s Cibachrome “Figures” and Vikky Alexander’s “St. Sebastian” and how the viewer’s reflection on the surface of the prints was such an important element of the viewer’s experience.  The importance of the reflective quality of Urs Fishcer’s “Mirror Box” series was more apparent, but in talking with Rebecca I learned the placement of each box had been carefully considered.  If a box was moved one way or another the reflected background would be completely different.  Asha Schechter’s 2020 print “Junk Drawer” is unlike any other exhibition photograph I have ever seen. It is an inkjet print on adhesive vinyl and it was made specifically for this exhibition and the precise location in the gallery where the print hangs. The drawer which was photographed to create the image has reflective surfaces although the print itself does not have reflective qualities. But when you look at the print it appears those reflective surfaces are mirroring the lights and other objects in the room because Schechter actually photographed the room during installation and added those elements to his print to appear as if they are reflections. The perspective of the drawer also seems off with the back of the drawer appearing to be bigger than the front of the drawer which is closest to the viewer. In the catalogue Rebecca describes this print as being based on reality but feeling “off kilter”, she’s right, I found it to be subtly bothersome and I respect that.

I also enjoyed listening to her thoughts on the scale of certain pieces and the overall design element regarding placement of work.  I know how much effort I put in to editing my own work, it takes a lot of time and focus, but to hear Rebecca talk about her curatorial process for an exhibition of this scale is a completely different level.

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One other thing I enjoyed on my visit was watching other patrons view the exhibition.  Rebecca also liked being in the gallery when no one realized she was the exhibition curator so she could stand back and see what people were drawn to and how they experienced the exhibition.

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Rebecca also authored the accompanying catalogue for the exhibition which is one of the best exhibition catalogues I have ever seen.  It explains the overall exhibition nicely and showcases many details about individual works.  If you get the book and read the Acknowledgements you also get insight in to how many people are involved in producing an exhibition of this scale too, it definitely takes a good team. David Karwan designed the catalogue and he did a fantastic job capturing the magazine / advertising spirit in a beautifully published book.  LACMA co-published the book with DelMonico  Books.

The Exhibition runs until December 18th, and I highly recommend a visit.

 
In Museums, Photography Books, Photography Exhibitions Tags William Karl Valentine, Rebecca Morse, Robert Heineken, Sarah Charlesworth, Vikky Alexander, Urs Fishcer, Ericka Beckman, Center for Creative Photography, LACMA, Los Angeles, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, MOCA, David Karwan, Los Angeles Center of Photography, DelMonico Books, Photography, Objects of Desire, Asha Schechter
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CCP's "Why Photography?" Video Presentation 6-24-21

June 27, 2021

I watched the on-line video event by the Center for Creative Photography’s titled “Why Photography” on Thursday.  The 45-minute presentation was a collection of video interviews where different people talked about why photography was important to them.  The group was varied, photographers, curators, collectors, and educators.  What I enjoyed most was hearing a diverse group of people describing why photographing was important to them and saying time and again to myself “me too” when they described why photography was important to them.  I have included the link to the presentation here and I will highlight some of the comments I really connected with below:  CCP “Why Photography” 6/24/21

Curator Susan Bright and Art Collector / Retired Dance Professor Douglas Nielsen were the first pair to discuss photography.

Nielsen spoke how he was often photographed while he was dancing and that he would tell photographers to “Catch me in the Act”.  He went on to say “Any photography that is interesting is catching someone doing something, not just sitting there”.  He continued, saying “Knowing Dance evaporates the second you see it I wanted proof I existed”, which photographs provided him.  Nielsen went on, “A photograph tries to defeat time, death.  It captures a second in time and its there.  But with Dance, its just gone”.

I completely understand his comments.  I respect portraiture photography, and it seems to be trending now in galleries and museums, but it rarely speaks to me.  I really began to understand photography when I started seeing the images by the great documentary photographers.  For me I love being able to capture a moment in time, and know that image is completely factually accurate for that 1/500th of a second.  As a child I loved to draw but I was frustrated because my pictures weren’t perfect.  Features were distorted, the perspective was slightly off, they just didn’t look exactly how I saw something.  Photography fixed that problem for me.  I am also a romantic and I am constantly wanting to preserve memories and freeze moments in time forever, the camera allows me to do that.

Nielsen made an interesting comment about his collection that I loved: “When I collected photography, it kind of collected me”.

I get it, in life we gravitated towards things which catch our interest and draw us in.  His statement is dead on.  I was fortunate to have dinner at the home of a prominent wealthy art collector a couple years ago.  The house was amazing on its own and everything I saw on the walls was museum grade, mostly paintings but also an installation piece, and some of Cindy Sherman’s prints.  As he gave me the tour of his collection he spoke about was why that piece of artwork was important to him, why he connected to it, and why he liked that artist’s work.  He never mentioned price or collectability, every work spoke to him and wife personally.  It was an incredible opportunity for me to get that insight.  I should also say it was a great night socially too, good people there.

Susan Bright spoke of her background and how when she was studying Art History in the late 1980’s to early 1990’s that photography was not considered “Art”.  She described when she was nearing the completion of her studies how she felt when she realized she had just spent three years only studying art by men.  She also told us she had not seen a Fine Art Photographic Print without glass in front of it until after she graduated.  She was shocked with how beautiful  a well-crafted print looked in person and wonderful the experience was.

I know exactly what Susan meant about the wonder in seeing a good print.  I was lucky to see fantastic prints when I was Arizona State University.  I was on the Northlight Gallery staff when we exhibited works by photographers like Mary Ellen Mark and William Christenberry.  After graduating I went to one of the first Photo LA events and I remember going over to a bin at one booth and being able to pick up a Weston print.  Holding it, examining, realizing Weston himself did the same with that print was powerful.  I believe a photographer has to spend time with really goof prints before they can fully understand the medium.  It is unfortunate that in today’s two second Instagram post view we are getting away from the concept taking our time to experience, and understand, a well-crafted print and good image.  I have been lucky to have seen as many good prints and exhibitions in person as I have, but I have also made an effort to do that including travelling to see the best exhibitions.

Bright stated, “I feel like Photography is the bastard child of the Arts, that’s why I like it”.  She went on saying when she was younger how much she enjoyed the images on album covers , and that when she went to museums she enjoyed the post cards in the gift shop more than the paintings on the wall because they were obtainable, she could collect them.

I understand her comments about photography being considered a second-class citizen in the art world, and I agree with her, and I see how that could attract her to the medium.  There is something special when you are involved in a less popular community.  The relationship you have with others in that community is often more unique, and usually a closer bond.  I feel those bonds when I am at a racetrack or an ice hockey rink.  Everyone there has a common interest in something that many people do not fully understand.  I tend to be more of an individual when it comes to photography, I truly enjoy community interaction, but the act of photographing and seeing the world is very personal and usually a solo activity.  The process of photographing is my “Why Photography”.  Being a photographer is how I experience life.

University of Arizona President Dr. Robert Robbins spoke next and said something I definitely agree with: “Photography opens questions, teaches us history, and keeps our memories.  It shows us the beauty of the world and of the universe, it shows us what we know and what we have left to discover”.

Dr. Meg Jackson Fox, The CCP’s Associate Curator for Public Programs introduced Valerie Trouet who is a University of Arizona professor in Tree Ring Research who spoke about the use of photography in relation to the study of science.  Trouet talked of the importance of “Repeat Photography” to identify changes in landscapes over time and mentioned the importance of photography being able to document and retain evidence related to scientific research.  A good reason for “Why Photography”, the same should be said for forensic photography.

I don’t ever recall hearing the term “Repeat Photography” before but I well aware of this type of work.  I know Mark Klett from my ASU days and know his Rephotographic Survey Project well.  Good for me to learn a new term.

Photograph Conservator Peter Mustardo was next up.  For his “Why Photography” he said he was drawn to how photography is ambiguous. He pointed out how photography is everywhere and most everyone has the ability to photograph.  He also noted photography’s ability to create a “preserved moment” within the passage of time.

I think it would be valuable to take a moment and focus again on the definitions of Ambiguous – “open to more than one interpretation; having a double meaning.” And “unclear or inexact because a choice between alternatives has not been made.”.   I love that characteristic of photography.  I think back to my days at ASU in Bill Jay’s class and how he was able to really demonstrate how different images have different values depending on the viewer and the  relationship the viewer has with that image and its subject matter.  With most of my street photography or city based images I usually title the work as “Untitiled” , except for a file number, because I don’t want to influence the viewer’s experience beyond having them contemplating the elements I have included in to the frame.  I know what I see and what I am trying to convey but I think it is important for the viewer to have the ability to come to their own conclusion based on their experience and perception.

Mustardo’s inference that everyone is a photographer reminds me of my favorite Photography quote, which was by László Moholy-Nagy’s in 1926: “The illiterate of the future will be those who can not photograph”.  That quote always amazes me, his foresight was dead on. We all live in a selfie and Instagram world today.

The next part of the presentation had shorter individual segments with more individual insight.  CCP Senior Registrar Megan Clancy commented how she enjoys how photography can freeze a moment in time, that split second, allowing us the ability to see something important.  CCP Chief Curator Rebecca Senf shared how she enjoys specializing in a relatively new medium with such a wonderfully short history to explore.  I think her point was its easier for a historian to have a more complete knowledge of the medium since it is only 182 years old unlike most all the other artforms.  Joan Lifton spoke of the creative process and shared a Dorothea Lange quote about her photographic process: “How do we organize the chaos of our individual experience in to a narrative that carries a collective meaning?”  This quote inspired me to look up more Lange quotes, I found a nice list on John Paul Caponigro’s site which are worth the read.

W.Eugene Smith’s widow, Aileen Smith, had a conversation with photographer, and educator, Aaron Turner next. She told how W. Eugene Smith always wanted his work to be as close to the truth as possible and how he was dedicated to have integrity in his images.  She pointed out how almost every experience is subjective not objective and I very much agree with her.  Aileen went on to say “We are subjective beings, we have subjective eyes, its not unfair, a person is subjective, that’s it”.  She also said the goal of journalism for W. Eugene Smith was to convey the reality of other people.  Aileen then recalled how people would ask W. Eugene Smith if he was an Artist or a Journalist and that he would reply “No, its just one and the same for me, to be a good journalist, and to really convey it, it has to be art”. 

I truly enjoyed the passion Aaron Turner conveyed for the medium of photography.  He spoke of love of the process of photography, especially the darkroom. He then said “I see in pictures. The act of walking around and envisioning what I see.”

I absolutely understand what Aaron meant because I am exactly the same way.  To be in a darkroom, and printing is a spiritual experience for me, I am at home in  my darkroom.  When I walk or drive around doing normal activities, I find that my eyes are constantly looking for items, grouping them, framing them, and considering what would make an interesting photograph.  I am so conditioned to look for images in the world, and have been doing it for so long, that I can not turn it off.  It is how I experience the world.  Especially as documentary photographer who photographs on the street so much, I am constantly hunting for imagery.

I will wrap this up by saying I am thankful for programs like this from the Center for Creative Photography.  When I was at Arizona State University, I was in such an amazing photo environment every day, I miss that.  But that was college, you have the experience, it is your base, and from there you go out and do what you studied (hopefully). Presentations like this one I shared allow me to get refocused on my photography and experience that education environment again.  To be good at your craft you have to know the history of your medium and stay up to date with the current trends, never skip a chance to learn or grow.

In Art Collection, Photography, Photography Collector Tags Center for Creative Photography, Arizona State University, The University of Arizona, Becky Senf, W. Eugene Smith, Aaron Turner, Aileen Smith, Peter Mustardo, Photojournalism, Journalism, Meg Jackson Fox, Valerie Trouet, Tree Ring Research, Repeat Photography, Susan Bright, Douglas Nielsen, Megan Clancy, Emily Una Weirich, Joan Lifton, Dorthea Lange
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Phoenix Art Museum

Phoenix Art Museum

Phoenix Art Museum - Ansel Adams - Performing the Print

April 22, 2021

At the end of March I saw a social media post from Beck Senf , the Norton Family Curator of Photography for the Phoenix Art Museum, about the Ansel Adams “Performing the Print” exhibition at the Phoenix Art Museum.  She encouraged people to see the exhibition and said it was coming to an end soon.  Because of this I got in the truck and headed East on the 10 freeway, from California, to check it out. Okay, I better give a disclaimer here, we were already heading out to see some Cactus League games but I still made a point to get over to the Phoenix Art Museum to see the exhibition after seeing her reminder.

I remember well seeing an exhibition of Ansel Adams prints at the Friends of Photography in San Francisco years ago and being so intrigued by his different printing styles over time. Seeing his prints in person is always a great reminder of what a good print should look like. I don’t recall if the Friends of Photography had as much text explanation next to the prints as they included in the Phoenix exhibition. I thought the accompanying text at the Phoenix Art Museum exhibition was outstanding.  It clearly and concisely described how the prints differed and it was written in a way that everyone could learn something from it.  From a casual museum patron to a photographer with darkroom expertise.  Unfortunately, the exhibition closed earlier this month and had been interrupted by the pandemic lockdown, but luckily I was able to see it and share the experience here.

There are better resources than me regarding the differences in Adam’s printing styles so I think it is best to just show a few photographs of the exhibition here to highlight what the exhibition was like.

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The Phoenix Art Museum is itself a work of art, one of the best museum spaces I have ever seen.  I would go there to see the building even if there weren’t any exhibitions up, the design and space is just that interesting.  Below are a few examples of the space. Plus, you have to love any museum that has Wayne Thiebaud’s paintings in their collection. If you live in Phoenix join the museum and if you are just visiting make sure to get over to see the Phoenix Art Museum, you will not be disappointed.

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One other

In Museums, Galleries Tags Ansel Adams, Phoenix Art Museum, Doris and John Norton Gallery, Center for Creative Photography, Becky Senf, Arizona, Phoenix, Photography, Performing the Print, Wayne Thiebaud, Vaughn Spann, Raymon Saunders, Danielle Hacche, @phxart, #AnselAdamsPhxArt
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Dr. Maurice Berger at the Legacies of LIGHT Symposium at the Center for Creative Photography 1-19-20

Dr. Maurice Berger at the Legacies of LIGHT Symposium at the Center for Creative Photography 1-19-20

Dr. Maurice Berger 1956 - 2020

March 25, 2020

As I have written before in posts, when I was at the Legacies of LIGHT symposium at the Center for Creative Photography back in January I realized I was participating in something very special. Not only was the event documenting an important period in the history of the medium of Photography but I felt the symposium itself would one day be looked back upon as an historic event. One thing I noted was that the symposium would most likely be the last time all these incredibly influential people, those who helped shape where our medium is today, would be in the same room together. I had no idea how soon this would happen but on Monday March 23rd the Photography / Art / History worlds lost an important professor and curator who was at the symposium.

Maurice Berger was a writer, cultural historian, and curator whose work focused on the intersection of race and visual culture.  In 2018 he won the “Infinity Award” in Critical Writing and Research for his NY Times Lens Section columns “Race Stories”. He was also the Research Professor and Chief Curator at the Center for Art, Design and Visual Culture, University of Maryland, Baltimore County. His spouse of 27 years was Marvin Heiferman who was a former LIGHT gallery employee and presenter at the symposium. Maurice passed away in New York from complications related to the COVID-19 virus.

View fullsize  Maurice photographing Marvin and Laurence Miller as they recreated a photograph from the LIGHT gallery period.
View fullsize  Marvin Heiferman and Laurence Miller
View fullsize  Maurice Berger

I did not know Maurice personally but I photographed him several different times at the symposium, including the moment he was photographing Marvin with their long time friend a fellow LIGHT gallery alum Laurence Miller, some of my best images from the symposium.

Earlier this month I sent prints to many of the people I photographed at the symposium . Larry Miller got his prints before Maurice and Marvin, Larry showed his prints to Marvin who immediately reached out to me asking for a copies, not knowing I had already made him prints. I am in shock right now with the realization that two weeks ago I was trading emails with Marvin about these images and two days ago Maurice died from the COVID-19 virus. After hearing the news last night I looked on Maurice’s Instagram page and saw a week ago he had posted an image of Marvin photographing in Hyde Park, NY and made a comment in another post about being in a crowded upstate New York market listening to people discuss the virus. Maurice’s decline and passing must have been incredibly fast which is scary. I was in Boston with my son, Brent, when concerns about COVID-19 started to really take hold in this country. We had planned a long road trip back when Brent’s hockey season ended but changed plans for a fast direct route when we realized how serious the situation was becoming. We have been back in California for almost a week now after witnessing the country shut down more and more as we traveled West. Hopefully we will continue to stay healthy as this pandemic passes through our society. Maurice’s passing brings mortality in to focus for me one more time this year (just a brutal year of loss), hopefully others in society will recognize the seriousness of the situation and be even more vigilant in their habits. My thoughts and prayers go out to Marvin, Maurice, and all their family and friends.

Obituaries for Maurice:

Baltimore Sun

The Jewish Museum

ArtNet.com

In Photography, Galleries, Museums, Photography Theory Tags Emily Una Weirich, Dr. Maurice Berger, Center for Creative Photography, Tucson, Arizona, #Light2020, LIGHT gallery, @cntrforcreativephoto, #lifeinthetimeofcorona, @maurice.berger, #ArtInTheTimeOfCovid
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Anne Breckenridge Barrett, Peter MacGill, Susan Harder, Laurence Miller, Jack Sal, and Rick Wester.

Anne Breckenridge Barrett, Peter MacGill, Susan Harder, Laurence Miller, Jack Sal, and Rick Wester.

The Legacies of LIGHT symposium - The Center for Creative Photography

March 4, 2020

The CCP describes the Qualities of LIGHT exhibition as this: “The Center for Creative Photography’s exploration of LIGHT Gallery is an institutional history that investigates the impact of this commercial space through its role in the larger community.”

When I attended the opening in December, I saw the description was accurate.  It’s a unique exhibition in how it recreated certain physical elements of the LIGHT Gallery, displayed works of LIGHT’s artists, had a component for highlighting emerging artist of today (an important function of LIGHT back when it was open), and was able to show how important this gallery was to the history of the medium.  One of the most impressive elements for highlighting the impact LIGHT had on photography today was Curatorial Assistant Adam Monohon’s brilliant concept of creating a line map showing the connections of so many important photographers, curators, and photography institutions back to LIGHT gallery.  The exhibition also has so many cool interactive elements which I documented in a separate post. I had no idea that so many of the people who effected my growth as a photographer were linked back to LIGHT in some way. I think the entire exhibition really does well to capture the spirit of LIGHT and that time period.

Another important aspect of the exhibition is to highlight the connection between CCP and LIGHT.  Harold Jones was the first Director of LIGHT and his vision set the course for the galley.  Harold left LIGHT to help with building the Center for Creative Photography and the Studio Photography Program at the University of Arizona.

So this blog post is about the “Legacies of Light” symposium which was held in January at the CCP in conjunction with the exhibition.  I signed up for the symposium as soon as I learned of it after having my work included in the exhibition.  I thought it would be a good experience to learn more about LIGHT’s history and to have an opportunity to interact with so many people involved in photography.  I was blown away with the experience of this symposium, it far and away exceeded my expectations.

Here is a link to the description of the speakers and the subject matter o the “Legacies of Light” symposium on CCP’s website.  It is the best way to accurately describe the event in detail.

Another great resource is this link of CCP’s videos of the symposium: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCRnlWp7M-YuVQY_okRmQmGA .

Now for my impressions. While attending the Legacies of Light I quickly realized one of the symposium’s primarily goals was to document the history of photography’s evolution to becoming a recognized as fine art.  The people connected to LIGHT, many of whom attended the symposium, played so many important roles in photography’s rise in status within the art world.  The symposium also talked about the current state of the photography community and our future.  Everything was so well done by Anne Breckenridge Barrett, Rebecca Senf, and the entire CCP staff.  There is so much to cover I will just jump in and start talking about the weekend and hopefully all my notes and recollections are accurate.

View fullsize Anne Breckenridge Barrett
Anne Breckenridge Barrett
View fullsize Anne Breckenridge Barrett
Anne Breckenridge Barrett
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View fullsize Fern Schad, Britt Salvesen, and Charles Traub
Fern Schad, Britt Salvesen, and Charles Traub
View fullsize Fern Schad, Britt Salvesen, and Charles Traub
Fern Schad, Britt Salvesen, and Charles Traub

Things started Friday with small tours of the CCP facilities (I covered that experience in this linked: blog post) and a Keynote speech by Britt Salvesen who is the Curator and Head of the Wallis Annenberg Photography Department at LACMA.  She gave an overview of LIGHT’s impact on the development of fine art photography followed by a panel discussion with Fern Schad and Charles Traub about LIGHT.  Fern owned LIGHT with her husband Tennyson. She had an early interest in photography and had worked for Bill Jay in England before coming to the US where she spent time as a picture editor for LIFE magazine.  Tennyson was an attorney who had the vision for the gallery and supported it financially.  Traub spent time as a Director of LIGHT gallery and later was instrumental in establishing The Museum of Contemporary Photography in Chicago.  He is also an established photographer an educator.  I was fascinated by how much effort went in to establishing the gallery and maintaining it. 

View fullsize Becky Senf, Sally Stein, and Marvin Heiferman
Becky Senf, Sally Stein, and Marvin Heiferman
View fullsize Sally Stein, and Marvin Heiferman
Sally Stein, and Marvin Heiferman
View fullsize Fern Schad - Legacies of LIGHT at the CCP
Fern Schad - Legacies of LIGHT at the CCP

Saturday began with two former LIGHT employees Marvin Heiferman and Sally Stein reminiscing about the gallery and the atmosphere of New York in the 1970’s art world.  Marvin spoke about how he learned to “see” pictures at LIGHT.  He said Harold Jones taught him to “Just look at stuff” and to learn by the experience of looking.  He went on to explain how he came to understand what pictures communicate to viewers.  This really resonated with me because I feel too many people today don’t take the appropriate amount of time to actually look and experience images, we live in an Instagram world of the two second page view then “Like and Swipe”.  Marvin gave examples of how photography wasn’t always accepted as art then.  He remembered how a New York Times art critic had told Harold that photographs were not art.  He also remembered an occasion when a woman accidentally got off the elevator on their floor while looking for another gallery  He said she stepped off the elevator looked down the gallery wall at all the prints and stated “Oh photographs…” then stepped immediately back on the elevator.  Marvin said Weston Neff and representatives from the Fogg Museum at Harvard would come in to the gallery but MoMA’s John Szarkowski would not, speculating because he didn’t want to acknowledge there was another “game in town”.  Sally spoke to how the gallery struggled financially to survive.

View fullsize Fern Schad, Andy Grundberg, and Marvin Heiferman
Fern Schad, Andy Grundberg, and Marvin Heiferman
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Becky Senf, Andy Grundberg, and Marvin Heiferman
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Andy Grundberg, Marvin Heiferman, Michal Raz-Risso, and Sally Stein

Michal Raz-Russo, who is the Associate Curator of Photography at the Art Institute of Chicago spoke next of her Master’s thesis research about LIGHT gallery.  She talked about how LIGHT was innovated in how they presented work, specifically hanging rows of images in grid form which hadn’t really been done before.  She described Light’s 1972 exhibition of Stephen Shore’s “American Surfaces” which was shown three rows high and taped to the wall (No installation prints from this exhibition survived) and the 1975 exhibition of Garry Winogrand where LIGHT displayed over 100 of his prints behind glass and “L” hooks on one wall.  Michal said Harold Jones used the grid style to try and show how Winogrand approached photographing: “Rapidly and Quickly”. It was fascinating to learn this because I can see the impact on some of the exhibitions I have seen. Most notably the Pier 24 Gallery exhibition where Winogrand’s complete “Women are Beautiful” series was displaced in a grid in one room while Stephen Shore’s prints were in another room. I can also recall MoMA, MFA, The Milwaukee Art Museum, The Art Institute and other institutions using grids in fantastic exhibitions, so I found it interesting to know where the possible origins of these designs came from.

Andy Grundberg spoke next on the evolution of photography as an accepted art form and LIGHT’s important involvement in that process.  For those of you reading this who aren’t familiar with Andy he is possibly photography’s most well known art critic and the author of numerous great books on photography.  He has written for the New York Times and is also a professor at the Corcoran School of the Arts and Design at George Washington University.  Andy was in New York City during this period and summed it up perfectly when he commented “I was a witness of photography at its most incredible time, the 70’s and 80’s”.  I loved hearing him describe the New York scene like the print bins at The Witkin Gallery and studying under Lizette Model at the New School.  I am also interested in upcoming new book, How Photography Became Contemporary Art because I understand there was considerable focus on LIGHT gallery’s impact.

Becky Senf lead a Q&A panel session next which focused on the history of photography and LIGHT’s impact.  In summary they acknowledged how prior to the Witken Gallery and MoMA showing photographs that photography magazines and publications were the primary source for people to see good photography (way different than today’s Instagram era).  They spoke how Winogrand and other photographers all got their start with photography-based magazines. Fern Schad, LIGHT’s co-owner, brought up how LIFE magazine closed in 1972 with the advent of television news, and how images on TV are fleeting. The panel spoke of Susan Sontag’s writing on photography and John Szarkowski’s catalogues at MoMA and how photography began to be looked at for its artistic value and not just a means of describing news.  Michal Raz-Russo added to that saying that some Photojournalism is now starting to be accepted as artwork. 

The panel recognized the important influence entities like The Society of Photographic Education, The George Eastman House, The ICP, National Geographic, The Visual Studies Workshop and others had on the medium.  They also identified that the 1970’s were really when much of the movement occurred; in example the first formal photography department was at the Art Institute of Chicago in 1974.  Becky Senf then pointed out something very important when she said “It’s remarkable how much (photography) history from the decade of the 1970’s isn’t documented.”  Becky’s comment came in to focus for me more and more as the weekend went on.  I realized the symposium was really focused on preserving photography’s history while it was still possible to get it firsthand from people who were part of it.  Looking around the room there were so many icons from the industry and I knew because of reality of their ages that this symposium was most likely the last time you would have so builders of the medium together in one room.  I also realized that with all my previous history of photography courses the focus was primarily on the photographers.  Yes, Beaumont and Nancy Newhall were recognized, and we used their textbook, and we were taught about Stieglitz’s influence but most my knowledge was on image makers.  It makes since because I studied at Arizona State University in the mid 1980’s when this New York scene was still strong and the Center for Creative Photography was just getting started.  For me personally it was very good to grow my knowledge of the medium.  By Sunday I realized the symposium was not only exploring and documenting the history of the medium, and considering its future, but I think the symposium was becoming an historic event in the history of the medium itself by what was being accomplished there.

View fullsize Dominique Luster
Dominique Luster
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Rick Wester, Liz Allen, Dominique Luster, and Alec Soth
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Liz Allen, Dominique Luster, Alec Soth, and Sarah Stolfa
View fullsize  Liz Allen, Dominique Luster, Alec Soth, and Sarah Stolfa
Liz Allen, Dominique Luster, Alec Soth, and Sarah Stolfa

The afternoon session on Saturday began with a panel discussion “Engaging Community” moderated by Rick Wester.  The first thing they focused on was how we define the photography community.  ASU Professor, and current Society for Photographic Education President Liz Allen spoke about SPE’s formation in the 1960’s under Nathan Lyons.  She talked about the changing landscape of education the challenges educators have now with colleges having fewer tenure tract professor positions.  Dominique Luster who is the endowed Charles “Teenie” Harris Archivist at the Carnegie Mellon Museum of Art spoke about her role with the Harris archive.  I was not familiar with Harris who was a Pittsburgh based commercial photographer who documented the African American community.  It was highly interesting to hear the impact Harris had on documenting the history of his community with his camera and how their museum is keeping that legacy of community moving forward.  Magnum Photographer Alec Soth spoke about once he had a photography career, he craved a community.  Something I can related to after graduating from ASU and leaving behind the academic environment.  For Soth he started blogging in the early days of social media and found a safe way to engage a photography community.  Soth remarked how he now followed by over 100,000 people which he still is awe of considering how few comments he got on his earliest posts.  He also mentioned the weekend of the symposium was the 10th Anniversary of Instagram and added the “Corporation of Instagram has taken over” how we interact with photographs.  Rick Wester added insight from a gallerist’s point of view when he said “The Internet has replaced the experience with information, people are now getting information and want to get the experience to go with it.”.

Following up on the last two quotes, I want to again talk about a theme I heard throughout the weekend and mentioned above, that you learn about photographs by looking at them.  Now this might seem like an obvious thing but it isn’t today.  We now live in the age of the “two second page view”, where people scroll through Instagram, or any other social media platform, as fast as they can until an image catches their attention.  Unfortunately these “lure images” are usually the ones which catch people’s attention (my term based on the concept of shiny fishing lures).  Intense saturation, lots of post-production, or a trending subject.  Many people are missing out because they aren’t spending time with images to experience them.  One of the best exhibitions I saw recently was the Howard Greenberg Collection at the MFA last November.  The prints in the exhibition were some of the best I have ever seen.  But to get the full experience you had to spend time inspecting them, noticing details, and thinking about them.  I walked through there exhibition twice to make sure I experienced it as well as I could, and if I could have gone back and seen it a second time, like I did the Warhol at the Whitney Museum recently I would have.  Everyone I saw at the MFA was taking their time viewing the prints, it gave me hope.

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CCP’s Meg Jackson Fox and Emily Una Weirich moderated the next session which was “Valuing Story”.    I think the best way to describe this session was an exploration of how institution are preserving history in non-traditional ways; basically history used to be written in text books and now we are capturing oral traditions and digital forms of communication to preserve historical information.  Cassie May – an Oral History Archivist focused on the medium of Dance, Molly Garfinkel – Managing Director of City Lore, Dr Matthew Grilli – Assistant Professor of Psychology at the University of Arizona, and Photographer Judy Natal were the panelists.  Cassie, Molly, and Judy spoke about the projects and the process in their approach to documenting oral histories.  It was interesting because they had diverse approaches and subject matter.  They expressed the common theme that telling one’s story was important to create connections between people.  Dr. Grilli then went on to examine what motivates people to tell stories, “The Why”.  He said this motivation can change over time, often with younger people the goal may be to solve a problem while with older people the goal of story telling may be to teach, to inform, or to contemplate what may come to pass.  They all agreed that documenting oral history is often a challenge because it is usually recorded in a long form manner which is hard to create sound bites from to be used in different ways of presentation.  Several panel members also spoke of past problems they have with documenting oral histories and use rights.  The panelists told of several stories where the original use release signed for an audio recording or filming for a specific project did not include wording in the release such “In all media for perpetuity”.  The problem they have encountered is when they want to digitize the original oral histories and share them the original releases do not specifically authorize that and the interviewed persons are now deceased.  Where it is obvious the person interviewed wanted to share their story, heirs have at times refused to grant new releases to use the materials in new formats. 

View fullsize Tennyson Schad
Tennyson Schad
View fullsize Tennyson Schad
Tennyson Schad
View fullsize Fern Schad
Fern Schad
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Original LIGHT exhibition
View fullsize Peter MacGill
Peter MacGill
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Winnogrand show announcement
View fullsize Stephen Shore announcement for LIGHT
Stephen Shore announcement for LIGHT
View fullsize First exhibition at LIGHT Gallery
First exhibition at LIGHT Gallery
View fullsize Max Yavno
Max Yavno
View fullsize Bruce Davidson at ASU
Bruce Davidson at ASU

Saturday concluded with a screening of Lisa Immordino Vreeland’s new documentary “LIGHT; When Photography was Undiscovered, 1971-1987”

View fullsize Peter MacGill
Peter MacGill
View fullsize Peter MacGill, Susan Harder, Laurence Miller, & Jack Sal
Peter MacGill, Susan Harder, Laurence Miller, & Jack Sal
View fullsize Anne Breckenridge Barrett, Peter MacGill, Susan Harder, Laurence Miller, & Jack Sal
Anne Breckenridge Barrett, Peter MacGill, Susan Harder, Laurence Miller, & Jack Sal
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View fullsize Peter MacGill, Anne Breckenridge Barrett, and Harold Jones
Peter MacGill, Anne Breckenridge Barrett, and Harold Jones
View fullsize Peter MacGill, Anne Breckenridge Barrett, and Harold Jones
Peter MacGill, Anne Breckenridge Barrett, and Harold Jones
View fullsize Harold Jones and his family
Harold Jones and his family

Sunday started with a panel discussion about LIGHT from the perspective of people who worked there. Included in the panel were Peter MacGill, Laurence Miller, Rick Wester, Susan Harder, and Jack Sal. Its too hard to go in to all their comments, and this post is longer than I had intended already, but the thing I really came to understand listening to this group was an understanding of the atmosphere and energy of the LIGHT gallery. Susan Harder and Peter MacGill talked about handing them portfolios of photographer’s work and being sent out to museums across the country to cold call curators to promote photography as art and stir up business. They also told stories of going and staying with iconic photographers as they were preparing to exhibit their work at LIGHT and had so many funny experiences they shared. There is no doubt everyone involved with LIGHT helped pave the way for every photographer today. The panelists also accurately recognized how important the symposium was for recording the history they were part of because much of the knowledge of those days is on the cusp of going away with the aging of those involved. The final event was a celebration honoring Harold Jones who spoke along with several his close friends and family members.

Personally, I am still processing all the experiences of the weekend because it truly was an epic event. I believe this symposium, which was designed to document Photography’s history, will in fact be recognized in its own right as an historic event for Photography. The topic material from the symposium was fantastic but I more so I had so many valuable interactions with people, I am just thankful I was able to attend.

View fullsize Becky Senf and Rick Wester
Becky Senf and Rick Wester
View fullsize Richard Misrach
Richard Misrach
View fullsize Anne Tucker and Meg Jackson Fox
Anne Tucker and Meg Jackson Fox
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View fullsize Web 1-17 to 19-20 CCP - 5 Legacies of LIGHT 10.jpg
View fullsize Dr. Maurice Berger and Emily Una Weirich
Dr. Maurice Berger and Emily Una Weirich
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View fullsize Sally Stein and Jack Sal
Sally Stein and Jack Sal
View fullsize Audry Sands
Audry Sands
View fullsize Alec Soth and Michal Raz-Rizzo
Alec Soth and Michal Raz-Rizzo
View fullsize Mark Klett and Alex Turner
Mark Klett and Alex Turner
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View fullsize Web 1-17 to 19-20 CCP - 4 Legacies of LIGHT 17.jpg
View fullsize Mary Virginia Swanson
Mary Virginia Swanson
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View fullsize Rick Wester with Alec Soth
Rick Wester with Alec Soth
View fullsize William Karl Valentine and Eli Giclas
William Karl Valentine and Eli Giclas
View fullsize William Karl Valentine and Liz Allen
William Karl Valentine and Liz Allen
View fullsize William Karl Valentine with Meg Hagyard
William Karl Valentine with Meg Hagyard
View fullsize William Karl Valentine , Becky Senf, & Frank Gohlke
William Karl Valentine , Becky Senf, & Frank Gohlke
After-party Sunday at Mary Virginia Swanson’s home - Mark Klett and Peter MacGill - perfect finish to the weekend.

After-party Sunday at Mary Virginia Swanson’s home - Mark Klett and Peter MacGill - perfect finish to the weekend.

 

 

 

In Museums, Photography, Photography Theory Tags The Legacies of Light, The Center for Creative Photography, Tucson, Arizona, Garry Winogrand, Andy Grundberg, Michal Raz-Ruzzo, Becky Senf, John Szarkowski, Sally Stein, Marvin Heiferman, Harold Jones', Museum of Contemporary Photography, Britt Salvesen, LACMA, Center for Creative Photography, CCP, LIGHT gallery, Alec Soth, Emily Una Weirich, Charles Teenie Harris, Dominique Luster, Beaumont Newhall, Arizona State University, Anne Breckenridge Barrett, Laurence Miller Gallery, Peter MacGill, Jack Sal, Bill Jay, #light2020, #qualitiesoflight
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