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William Karl Valentine

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CHI DSC 3029 3-22-24 “Untitled” (Wells & Wacher, Chicago)

Chicago Photograph brings back memories of 25 years ago

June 21, 2024

When I got back from Chicago in March and started going through all my images I came across this photograph above. At first glance I saw how the elements in the frame were interesting, and I understood how I was drawn to make the exposure. But when I zoomed in, I immediately realized that the little girl in the stroller looked so similar to my daughter Alyssa at that age and that reminded me how often we used to take her to Chicago for vacations. The little girl in the stroller is so alert to the world around her just like Alyssa was at that age. I am assuming it was seeing the stuffed animal in the girl’s arm that really made the connection. The girl is clutching it in such a protective way, you know how special the toy is for her. My daughter was exactly the same way, and that period of innocence was so wonderful. The image brought to mind how much a parent tries and protect their children when they are young and also how in today’s society I still worry about my adult children’s safety as crime and world tensions rise. Viewing this image became an incredibly intense experience rather quickly as I realized everything I just mentioned, and I was not expecting that. The experience motivated me to revisit my negatives and see what images I had of Alyssa when we would take her Chicago when she was young. Below is one of my Chicago photographs from 25 years ago when Alyssa two years old.

CHI-171 #29 5-03-99 - Alyssa Valentine at the Hancock Tower

I don’t know if there is too much more to say about these images or the recent experience. I don’t want to make it into something more than it is, but I thought there was value in sharing how I felt with people interested in my work or just interested a photographer’s process. I think it not only gives insight to the fact I am an admitted romantic, but it also highlights how a photograph can evoke strong emotions from the image maker even when that was not the original intent. I know everyone brings their own experiences with them when they view an image and that people often have different responses to images based on their own prior experiences. I also want to point out that images can become more important overtime and develop new layers of meaning particularly if public opinion of the subject matter changes or if the subject matter documents change in and of itself. Viewers opinions can also change over time as they have different experiences with the same image. These are all some of the reasons why I don’t delete image files or purge old negatives.

In Artist, Street Photography, Photographer, Photography Tags Looking at Photographs, Chicago, Street Photography, Power of Photography, Photography, Photographer, Daughters, Alyssa Valentine
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CHI DSC_6274_ 03-26-2024 - Laureen V. Connelly with her Cook County Assessor’s Office Certificate of Retirement plaque documenting 25 years of service.

Nikon Z6ii with a 24-120mm lens - Ms Connelly with her Retirement plaque

June 21, 2024

This photograph is another one from my Chicago trip that took on more so much more meaning once I got home and started going through the editing process. I am sure the faces, the contrast, and the forms all drew my intention when I made this exposure. I almost overlooked it until I zoomed in on the plaque that the woman was carrying and realized it was tack sharp and I could read what it said. The plaque is from the Cook County Assessor’s Office and was recognizing her retirement after 25 years of service, I could also read her name, Laureen V. Connelly. Being a block away from the Cook County Building I assume that this woman was coming from her old office where she had just had a retirement lunch, or reception, and they presented her with this plaque. I have no idea who the woman with here is, but I would guess it might be a daughter or even a former coworker that is a close friend.

With the information in the image, and some reasonable assumptions this image now has become pretty powerful. Laureen and the woman with her look rather solemn, like there might be a lot of reflection and thought going on. I can envision Laureen having the realization of the change in her life might be pretty intense. I assume she had a cubicle type job where she pushed a lot of paper and with it being the Assessor’s Office some of the citizens she interacted with daily might not have been in the best moods. But I can also imagine she took pride in her work and liked some of her coworkers. Change is not always easy and after 25 years to walk out of the office for the last time with just a pension and a basic plaque might be a little tough. The person with Laureen seems to be there in a supportive role. We can all imagine our own scenario of details with this image, and it doesn’t matter who is the most accurate. What is important here is the fact this person spent 25 years doing a job and is walking away with a basic plaque. Does this plaque really sum up her career? It lends the viewer to reflect on their own career and the real impact it is having on themself, on others, and society. This image allows the viewer to run with it. For me when I saw this, I reflected back on my law enforcement career and how it didn’t end on my terms because of an injury. The sudden change was not easy and luckily for me I had my family and my photography career to fill some of the void.

Between the two version I think the black and white image works best because I find the colors in the frame don’t add anything to the image and the monochrome version seems to be more appropriate for my interpretation of the mood. I just wanted to share both versions here so every viewer could have their own experience with the image.

This image is also a great example of how sharp the Nikkor 24-120mm Z lens is and how well it works with a Nikon Z6ii camera body; the autofocus capability is outstanding. UPDATE!!! Nikon Z6iii is out, and Preorders are being accepted at Samys Camera, with expected June 25th availability.

CHI DSC_6274_ 03-26-2024 - Black and White version

In Street Photography, Photographer, Photography, Camera Equipment Tags William Karl Valentine, Chicago, Nikon Z6 ii, 24-120 mm Nikkor Z lens, Street Photography
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Homage to Cameron - Alyssa and me with George Seurat’s A Sunday on La Grande Jatte

Chicago - Art Institute visit March 2024

June 21, 2024

My daughter and I have maintained a membership at the Art Institute of Chicago for time, I love the museum and I always find something new and interesting to advance my knowledge each visit as well as catching up with some old favorites on permanent display. This post is just a visual diary of some of the things we saw this visit with a few links to learn more.

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We started the day in the Modern Wing as usual and found this new work in the hall. The Deluge, 2021

by El Anatsui (Ghanaian Born 1944). It was awesome to see such a recent piece and it the scale is perfect for the space. I also loved seeing the response to it by all the school kids in the museum on field trips, once they found out it was made from aluminum cans, they got all excited.

The Photography and Media Gallery 188 in the Modern wing is a favorite space and location. To have my work on those walls one day would be a dream come true.

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It took me a moment to realize the change with the Modern wing, the last time I was in Chicago was 2020 when my son and I were driving across country trying to get back to California before the Pandemic Shut Down. Margaret Honda’s Double Feature with Short Subject is a perfect fit for the space. It is scheduled to be up through October 7th, 2024 and personally I would like to see it stay up longer. It definitely is a different experience depending on which direction you are traveling. Chair and Curator Matthew S. Witkovsky made a great decision bringing this in.

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Threaded Visions: Contemporary Weavings from the Collection is on display until August 26th, 2024. I enjoyed seeing a different medium especially since it featured a piece by a 28-year-old artist dealing with a contemporary issue.

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The Classics, always great to see and I love photographing the people interacting with them. Museums can be great places to photograph people interacting. Paris Street; Rainy Day and A Sunday on La Grande Jatte — 1884

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The Coffin of Nespahertahat (about 1069 –945 BCE) was incredible on so many levels. Foremost when I considered I was looking at something created 3,000 years ago, and then thinking about the conservation of wood that old. All the Egyptian art is fantastic. The history lesson is important enough, but I was just in awes of all the craftsmanship and skill it must have taken to create the works they have on display.

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I grew up watching movies from the 1940’s this piece immediately reminded me of The Maltese Falcon.

More things I found interesting below.

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Detailed Separate Exhibition Reviews:

David Goldblatts’s No Ulterior Motive - Separate Bog Post Link

Radical Clay - Separate Blog Post Link

Picasso Drawing from Life - Separate Blog Post Link

Unfortunately, O’Keefe Opened in June long after our visit but it is up until September 22, 2024 so maybe I will get back in time to see it. Love this body of work.

In Art Collection, Museums Tags George Seurat, Stela of Amen Hat and Hemet, Horus, Qualeasha Wood, Shigeo Kubota, Coffin of Nesi-Pa-Her-Hat, Egyptian art, El Anatsui, Matthew S. Witkovsky, David Goldblatt, No Ulterior Motive, Radical Clay, Pablo Picasso
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Museum of Contemporary Photography - Columbia College - March 2024

June 21, 2024

I hate to admit it but it had been a long time since I made it down to the Museum of Contemporary Photography. If I remember correctly, it was when I heard Duane Michaels lecture before a book signing. So, I decided to make MoCP my first gallery stop on the trip, and it was worth the visit. Their galley space is designed so well and is perfect for a university gallery.

The exhibition Captured Earth runs through Sunday August 18th, 2024, and Featurins works by: Ana Teresa Barboza, Karl Blossfeldt, Jeremy Bolen, Alan Cohen, Antonia Contro with sound design Lou Mallozzi, Barbara Crane, Odette England, Whit Forrester, Bertha E. Jaques, Dakota Mace, Robert Mapplethorpe, Byung-Hun Min, Liza Nguyen, Tarrah Krajnak, Martha Madigan, John Opera, Eliot Porter, Meghann Riepenhoff, Rachel Sussman, and Penelope Umbrico. The Exhibition was curated by Kristin Taylor, Curator of Academic Programs and Collections at the Museum of Contemporary Photography.

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Thanks to Ram for accompanying me to the South Side on this one. A true Renaissance man: From a D-1 College Football lineman to a Yoga instructor who throws some clay when he isn’t carrying my daughter’s hockey bag.

Chicago Cultural Center — Grand Army of the Republic (G.A.R.) Hall and Rotunda

On Monday we made a quick pass through the Chicago Cultural Center which has a variety of things in it. For me the most interesting thing about it is the architecture. The design and the craftsmanship throughout the building are incredible. I am including the visit here with my MoCP post because we were able to see another example of work by ingenious artists in the CCC’s gallery.

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Transformative Threads is an exhibition featuring Dorothy Burge, Miridith Campbell (Kiowa), Mahwish Chishty, and Melissa Doud (Ojibwe) which is open in the historic Grand Army of the Republic Hall at the Chicago Cultural Center until December 8, 2024. The subject matter of the exhibition is perfect for the hall, and I respect the artist’s perspective, but the space is so massive the exhibition gets lost in there. I was way more interested in the building and the space just because of how impressive it is. Worth the visit to see the building and Buddy (the gift shop) is pretty hip.

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In Galleries, Museums, Photography, Photography Exhibitions Tags Dorothy Burge, Miridith Campbell, Mahwish Chishty, Melissa Doud, Transformative Threads, Grand Army of the Republic Hall at the Chicago Cultural Center, MoCP, Teresa Barboza, Karl Blossfeldt, Jeremy Bolen, Alan Cohen, Antonia Contro, Barbara Crane, Odette England, Whit Forrester, Bertha E. Jaques, Dakota Mace, Robert Mapplethorpe, Byung-Hun Min, Liza Nguyen, Tarrah Krajnak, Martha Madigan, John Opera, Eliot Porter, Meghann Riepenhoff, Rachel Penelope UmbricoSussman, Kristin Taylor
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David Goldblatt: No Ulterior Motive

June 15, 2024

Before I went back to Chicago I looked online and saw that David Goldblatt’s retrospective was up in the Art Institute’s Photography Galleries and noted the exhibition was closing while I was there.

I was aware of Goldblatt’s work but did not know it well, and I have never focused on South African photographers from a regional viewpoint.  I obviously was aware of the social and political issues South Africa has gone through during my lifetime, but I never immersed myself in photographs from there as a whole.  I do recall being very interested in South African photographer Kevin Carter and I have a had newspaper clipping of his obituary on my darkroom wall for close to 30 years.  Carter documented a lot of pain and suffering in his lifetime, the nightmares from the things he witnessed eventually became too much and he took his own life.  His photograph that accompanied his obituary was of a South African neo-Nazi Afrikaner Resistance Movement (AWB) member begging for his life moments before he was executed in Bophuthatswana, March 1994.  It is an intense image, and I kept the article because of the message it had about dealing with the things you witness when you photograph bad things.

I was not “wow’ed” by the Art Institute’s online description of the exhibition, it was okay, but it wouldn’t have motivated me to plan a special trip to see it.  So, when I eventually entered the exhibition I did so just interested to learn more about Goldblatt and his photographs.  As I walked around the show it didn’t take long to realize that this was powerful the exhibition and that David Goldblatt was an excellent photographer.  The exhibition exceeded my expectations gave me such a better appreciation of Goldblatt, other South African photographers, and the conditions which people in South Africa endured. 

I was impressed that Goldblatt was able to document South Africa so completely.  It is one thing to capture historical events like Kevin Carter did, but it is another thing to document something as complex as a country in depth.  Goldblatt obviously had the skills to get to know different people and then make those people comfortable in front of his camera.  Given the racial tensions of the period when Goldblatt photographed it was incredible he was able to document all sides so well.  I also loved that Goldblatt documented the subtle important details of his country like the churches and mining.  I came away from this exhibition with such a better understanding of South African and the people.  I also had no idea the country was such a bleak landscape aesthetically.  

The Art Institute of Chicago introduced the exhibition with the following:

Known for his nuanced portrayals of life under and after apartheid, South African photographer David Goldblatt (1930–2018) devoted himself to documenting his country and its people.

Born into a family of Lithuanian Jews who emigrated to South Africa, Goldblatt focused much of his work on Johannesburg, the city where he lived for most of his life. His relative freedom to move within a society bitterly divided by racial segregation influenced the critical perspective of his work. In a church facade, down a mineshaft, through the exchange of glances between a passing man and woman, Goldblatt recorded the uneven application and reception of South Africa’s political values and beliefs.

The Exhibition Title: “No Ulterior Motive”

If you say that someone has an ulterior motive for doing something, you believe that they have a hidden reason for doing it.

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The exhibition included photographs from two other groups of photographers. One group, which included Robert Adams, considered photography’s privileged relationship to reality and its ability to effect social, political. and environmental change. The second group was South African photographers who had attended Goldblatt’s Market Photo Workshop. Goldblatt founded the workshop in 1989 to develop emerging local photographers with a goal to help bring his country closer together again after years of internal turmoil.

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A powerful reminder of the staggering loss of life during the AIDS epidemic. After enduring the Covid Pandemic I am afraid many people have forgotten this chapter of world history.

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I love the power of this image; it reminds me of one of Leonard Freed’s Police Work images where he focuses in on just the officer’s equipment, almost exactly the same portion of the torso.

(Link to exact image I am referencing, it is on the 12th page of the PDF)

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Goldblatt’s photographs of churches were so beautiful. They were wonderful architectural images, but they were deep with meaning capturing the issues of a missionary religion in a nonnative land. They symbolize the conflicts within the country which mirrored issues throughout other parts of the world. When I thought about South Africa it was about Apartheid and relationships between blacks and whites, I had not considered the impact of western religion on the indigenous population (I should have because it is an issue still in our country today), nor did I know about the issues with the Muslim population in the country. In researching the issue of religion further, it appears the conflicts and violence in South Africa related to it appear to be ongoing to this day.

The photograph above of Ozzie and his daughter is wonderful, they look like great people and Nassima looks so full of life. I had no idea this population was in South Africa nor about how their businesses werer destroyed under the Group Areas Act.

The layers of meaning in this image are incredible, it absolutely was one of my favorite prints in the exhibition. It speaks to so many different issues, there is humor, tension, and great composition.

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These two images are examples of how brilliant a photographer Goldblatt was. To think to photograph in a funeral home office, then garner the trust of the people there to actually photograph there and come away with images of a basic environment that are so deep with layers of meaning and information is incredible. I keep revisiting the top image and pondering the fact there is a tapestry of the NASA moon landing in the office of a South African funeral parlor.

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For a portrait to work for me I always want more information than just what the subject looks like, I want to know about their environment; I think the only photographer to pull off photographing just the person well was Richard Avedon. The subtle information in these images is outstanding. Depicts a bleak, hard, lifestyle. I like his composition with the square format images especially. When I look at the photograph of J.J. Oosthuizen in his office (upper right) I can feel how hot and uncomfortable it is. He obviously holds a position of authority as a Senior Township Superintendent, but it looks like a miserable job. The juxtaposition of this photograph in the exhibition was next to a photograph of a man butchering a broken-down horse which also added to the experience seeing the image.

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I see innocence and hope in this image, it suggests the kids are capable of being color blind. These kids are just laughing and playing together for Goldblatt’s camera. The world today needs more innocence and less stress.

This is one of those photographs when I look at it, I can imagine all the other senses from the moment, the temperature, the odors, and maybe even some dust. I love the composition as well; the framing makes the image more powerful by including all the extra information.

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Goldblatt’s photograph of The Dethroning Cecil John Rhodes - University of Cape Town April 9, 2015, is another great image. The vantage point he chose was perfect because it documents the scale and showcases the relationship between the youth and the country beyond. I also like that the image captures all the people using cellphones and tablets to film or photograph the event. This element speaks to the medium of photography as well as the time in history, it’s another great layer. I also love that fact that Goldblatt was still getting out with the people and photographing at 85 years old. That is one of the wonderful things about being a photographer you never have to retire from it, if you adjust you can keep making images all the way to the end, or at least that’s my goal. Earlier this month I was out photographing the WeHo Pride parade with 84-year-old LA based photographer Ave Pildas and it took considerable effort for me to keep track of where he was because he kept darting through the crowd and often the actual parade (Also, height wise Ave doesn’t stand out like I do).

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Goldblatt’s color images are beautiful, and they showcase his ability to photograph in different styles. The photographs perfectly document the environmental issues Goldblatt was bringing to our attention. I was not aware of Blue Asbestos mining or the issues it caused in South Africa. These prints are perfect compliments to the rest of the exhibition.

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As I have said throughout this post this was a good exhibition, incredible images which were curated and displayed perfectly. I have paid more and more attention to the choices curators make when it comes to selection and exhibition design, it is an artform of its own. Matthew Witkovsky, Leslie Wilson, and Yechen Zhao from the Art Institute of Chicago curated this exhibition with Judy Ditner from Yale. David Goldblatt’s archive was acquired by the Yale University Art Museum in 2018. The Yale University Press published the accompanying catalogue for the exhibition.

Announcement and Reviews

Exhibition Announcement Press Release

New City Art Exhibition Review

Musee Review 1 Musee Review 2

A special thanks to my tour guide Alyssa for taking the day off from deciphering Genetics stuff to guide me around the galleries of the Art Institute.

In Museums, Photography Tags David Goldblatt, South Africa, Kevin Carter, Documentary Photography, Market Photo Workshop, Robert Adams, Ernest Cole, Joseph Koudelka, Shomei Tomatsu, Lebohang Kganye, Sabelo Mlangeni, Ruth Seopedi Motau, Zanele Muholi, Jo Ractliffe, Santu Mofokeng, Cecil John Rhodes
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My guide Alyssa & Ogawa Machiko’s (Japanese born 1956) Red Vessel 2021 - Reduction Fired Stoneware

Radical Clay: Contemporary Women Artists from Japan

June 13, 2024

I loved Play Doh as a kid, you could create so many different things with it. I know it lost its luster when it started to dry out or when the colors got mixed together and you ended up with lots of warm brown or forest green clay it sucked a little but still it was cool. I got my first serious “Art” exposure to clay when I was at Arizona State University. I obviously needed other art courses outside of my specialization in Photography for my degree and one of the courses I took was Ceramics. I was very familiar with the Ceramics studio at ASU because it was downstairs in the Art Building next to the main Photography Darkroom. For anyone not familiar with the process of both mediums this was an interesting decision because Ceramics areas produce lots of dust which is a photographer’s second worst enemy (behind light leaks) when trying to print in a traditional darkroom. Dust sucks for any camera as far as that goes. I assume a senior panting or mixed media faculty member made the recommendation to the Dean for the placement.

The Ceramics course I took had a profound impact on my development as a Photographer. I know many of you are wondering how learning to keep clay at the proper moisture or how different glazes responded to being fired could possibly make me a better photographer. The secret was in the timing. With the ceramics class schedule, we met in the morning for instruction and to create work. We also had a second afternoon block which dealt with firing pieces and all the kiln stuff mostly. A key fact here is I took the course in the Spring Semester, which included the month of March when Major League baseball held spring training in Arizona (as well as Florida). It is also important to understand the demographics of the class, there were a couple serious Ceramics majors, a couple of folks like me getting a requirement out of the way, and two or three ladies in their 30’s or 40’s who were very passionate about the clay based medium. I liked the morning session of the class, but I found sitting around watching cones melt in a kiln all afternoon to be a little boring, maybe even annoying, especially in March when I wanted to spend my afternoon photographing Cactus League baseball games. Luckily those ladies in the class also had something that was annoying in the afternoon session, me; I absolutely was back then, and some say that has not changed. So, I came up with a plan to make all of us happy, if they agreed to fire my creations, I would go photograph games and not be around them. They jumped at the opportunity. It was a total “win win” deal, they had serenity with my absence, and I got to work on one of my favorite portfolios which is still ongoing.

Humor aside, that class expanded my knowledge, and appreciation of ceramics; like so many other classes did outside my major. So, when my daughter told me about the Radical Clay exhibition while we were roaming the Aer Institute, I was excited to go see it.

I don’t have enough knowledge to speak Indepth about the works that I saw other than I was in awe of what these artists created. I know the patience it takes to make a simple bowl; I can’t comprehend the level of patience and skill it took to create the pieces I saw. For some works, I can’t imagine what it took just to construct a kiln big enough to accommodate the work and or move it. These women are incredible artists. I am so happy I got to see this exhibition which closed early this month. Below is the Art Institute’s description of the exhibition and my photographs, it was amazing.

Bag Work (フクロモノ), 2018 Tanaka Yu 田中悠

Art Institute’s Exhibition Statement:

Radical Clay celebrates 36 contemporary ceramic artists—all women—through 40 stunning, virtuosic pieces.

Since World War II, women have made influential contributions to the ceramics field in Japan that have not been adequately recognized. This exhibition focuses on the explosion of innovative and technically ambitious compositions by such artists since 1970—a body of work which they developed in parallel with, but often separately from, traditional, male-dominated Japanese practice and its countermovements.

Link to an additional Art Institute article about the exhibition

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Alyssa pointed out Kitamura Junko’s (Japanese born 1956) Vessel 91-A (1991) to me and we both agreed it was our favorite piece in the exhibition, insane detail and patience plus such a clean design.

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View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_Rad Clay 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute 13.jpg
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View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_Rad Clay 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute 13A.jpg

Konno Tomoko’s 今野朋子 Liberation (解放), 2022 had more detail in a ceramic piece than I have ever seen before. I don’t know how you can accurately describe this work with just words, another incredible piece.

View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_Rad Clay 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute 15A.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_Rad Clay 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute 15.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_Rad Clay 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute 15B.jpg

Dream Flight, 2019 Tanaka Tomomi (Japanese Born 1983) (Left)

Wandering (彷徨う), 2012 Hattori Makiko (Japanese born 1984) 服部真紀子 (Right)

Such wonderful shapes and another example of incredible patience to create such detail.

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View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_Rad Clay 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute 6B.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_Rad Clay 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute 6A.jpg

Mishima Kimiyo (Japanese Born 1932) both pieces are glazed and silkscreened, the Beer Box (2007) is stoneware, and the Crumpled Newspaper (1981) is Porcelain. I was intrigued to see the use of silk screen in a ceramic application.

A few additional photographs:

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In Museums, Ceramics Tags Radical Clay, Women Artists from Japan, Ogawa Machiko, Red Vessel 2021, Tanaka Yu, Kitamura Junko, Konno Tomoko, Liberation (解放), 202, Hattori Makiko, Tanaka Tomomi
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My museum guide for the day, Alyssa

Picasso: Drawing from Life - Art Institute of Chicago

June 12, 2024

On this trip to Chicago, I was lucky enough to see the Picasso: Drawing from Life exhibition before it closed on April 8th. I always enjoy seeing the works of the great artists up close, so I can inspect their craftsmanship detail. Experiencing well-crafted artwork always makes you better at your own craft regardless of if their medium is the same or different as yours.

The curators designed this exhibition to examine the people in Pablo Picasso’s life who supported him as he developed as an artist. It considers his artist network, the art dealers who promoted his work, the printers who crafted his editions, his family and friends, as well as his lovers. The exhibition is centered on his works on paper to tell this story. The exhibition illustrated how Picasso needed this support network to achieve the prominence he gained in his career.

The exhibition is arranged chronologically and showcases over 60 of his works to illustrate Picasso’s incredible 70-year career. It was incredible to consider all the world events that occurred during the period in which Picasso lived and how they impacted his works.

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I loved drawing as a child, my mom knew how important it was to be creative while developing, but I have never been satisfied with my drawing or art skills. I always wanted to be more accurate like several of my talented friends were. I assume that desire to better with a pencil or brush may have helped influence me becoming a photographer. I loved seeing the artist’s had in this work above, Seated Female Nude - Sumer 1909, I was probably drawn to the detail with this work more than the whole image.

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View fullsize WEB CHI Art Ins   3-25-24 William Karl Valentine 13A.jpg

The lithograph above, Paloma and Her Doll on a Black Background, got my attention because I was interested in how he documented his feelings for his daughter for his daughter with it as well as the innocence element of Paloma’s relationship with her doll. As today’s world gets more tense, I have paid more attention to examples of the innocence of youth and their fragility. It is deeper than I want to go in to here, but this print had an impact.

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View fullsize CHI DSC 6181 3-26-24 William Karl Valentine
CHI DSC 6181 3-26-24 William Karl Valentine

I loved seeing this drawing Six Busts of Women because I was able to spend so much time on the trip photographing the actual statue in Daley Square. For all the time I have spent in Chicago I have never explored Daley Square before as much as I did on this trip. Loved learning more about the subject matter in my photographs from there.

One of Picasso’s most important Cubist Portraits, a painting of Picasso’s long-standing promoter and influential art dealer Daniel-Henry Kahnweiler (1884-1979) (Below)

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Below are more random selections of works in the exhibition. I truly appreciate Pablo Picasso’s work, especially how he worked with so many different materials and was not afraid to explore with his creativity.

Still Life with Glass Under the Lamp - March 19, 1962

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The Art Institutes copy of the famous Picasso etching Minotauimachia (Above)

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In honor of Picasso’s titling style (maybe his dealer Daniel-Henry Kahnweiler handled the titles since so many are obvious descriptions of the work, seemingly assigned for record keeping purposes) I title my photograph below: My Daughter Alyssa by sign for the Picasso Exhibition at the Chicago Art Institute.

In Artist, Museums Tags Pablo Picasso, Cubism, World War, France, The Art Institute of Chicago, Drawing from Life
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NASA Photograph by Bill Anders - December 24, 1968, at 16:39 Hours with a highly modified Hasselblad 500 EL.

"Earthrise" Photographer (& Astronaut) Bill Anders dies in plane crash

June 9, 2024

The above photograph is one of the most iconic images from the 20th century and it was taken by Astronaut Bill Anders who died in a plane crash yesterday in Washington State. The press release and CNN announcement are listed at the bottom of this post. I assume he may have had some type of medical emergency and left this world doing something he loved, flying.

Apollo 8 Astronaut WIlliam Anders - NASA Official Photo

But since my focus is Photography, I wanted to recognize Bill Anders here on my blog for his contribution of capturing one of the most iconic images of all time. Bill is credited with taking the photograph above which was the first color photograph of the earth from the perspective of the moon. I was five years old when this image was taken and have seen it countless times in my life. It is one of the most published images ever and it has been used to generate dialogue on our place in the universe and the reality we are a very tiny part of everything that is. something people often lose sight of with their perspectives on earth.

With the news of his passing, I decided to research the photograph and Anders. I found the Wikipedia entry on the image and the events of December 24, 1968 to be outstanding and I encourage you to visit that link learn more. I was amazed the details of the photograph were so well documented and I found it interesting that mission commander Frank Borman took a black-and-white photograph of the scene, with the Earth's terminator touching the horizon just prior to Bill Anders making his exposure. I also loved that the post documented the conversation the Astronauts jokingly had about not taking unauthorized photographs. I huge component of the Apollo 8 mission was to document the moon and they only had so much film loaded in their cameras which were modified for the conditions they were photographing in. In today’s digital world so many younger people will have no appreciation of being judicious with exposures because of the amount of film you have with you. I also love how the Wikipedia post details how the film, Kodak Extachrome 220 slide film, was driven from Houston to Corpus Christi, Texas where a private lab had the capability of processing the film in four hours. The Wikipedia page is a great read. I also think recounting these images is a good reminder how so many of, especially in today’s world, are photographers and both Anders and Borman crafted nice images on that day in 1968.

Mission commander Frank Borman’s Black and White photograph taken moment before Ander’s color image. NASA photo

Moonrise, Hernandez New Mexico by Ansel Adams 1941

I think I should also mention Moonrise over Hernandez, New Mexico by Ansel Adams which I assume was the inspiration for the title given to Ander’ photograph. Moonrise is another one of photography’s most iconic images and one of Ansel’s most famous images. I remember when I was studying photography at Arizona State University that a print of Moonrise sold for a then record price of $64,000 and Professor Bill Jay lead some incredible discussions about the image and the impact the sale amount had on the medium of photography.

It is always sad when chapters of history close with the loss of someone but that is the only way new chapters can be written. I hope that in the coming years our generations will be able to write more positive chapters than negative ones, we haven’t started out well with that this century. God Bless Bill Anders and thank you for your courage and contributions during your lifetime. Below are a number of links about Photographer /Astronaut Bill Anders:

NASA Official Statement

CNN Announcement:  

William Anders, a NASA astronaut who was part of the 1968 Apollo 8 crew who were the first three people to orbit the moon, has died in a plane crash in Washington state, according to his son, Gregory Anders. He was 90 years old.

My “dad passed in an aircraft incident in the San Juan Islands,” Anders told CNN Friday evening. “The family is devastated and grieving the loss of a great pilot,” he added.

The San Juan County Sheriff’s Office said in a news release an aircraft went down off the coast of Jones Island.

In Photography, NASA Tags NASA, Bill Anders, William Anders, Astronaut, Earthrise, Bill Jay, Arizona State University
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© 2024 William Karl Valentine - Fatal Collision, Chino, California (CPD DSC 1344 1-9-24) Nikon Z6ii with a 24-120mm Lens. ISO 16,000 f/4 1/320 at 24mm

The Best Camera for Low Light Photography - Nikon Z6ii / Nikon Z6 iii rumors

June 2, 2024

My photographs documenting the Pasadena Police Department in the 1980’s are some of my best-known images. I spent over a thousand hours riding in police cars documenting the officers working for that portfolio. I started off photographing with a Nikon F and finished up with a couple Nikon FM2 bodies. I used Kodak Plus-X film mostly, and later on I used some T-Max 400. Since I was photographing mostly at night, I used a Sunpak 522 Thyristor off camera flash which paired up great. The exposures were good, and the high contrast of the flash added to the images. Throughout my law enforcement career when I photographed at night, I had to use a flash although I did experiment pushing Kodak T-Max 3200 to an ISO of 25,000 one night. I actually got images using just streetlights, but they were very grainy.

A couple years ago I was asked to come back out and start documenting the Chino Police Department, where I had worked for 20 years, and I immediately agreed. I had been looking for an opportunity to photograph law enforcement in today’s world to compare the new images with my work from the 1980’s. I started off using a Nikon D850 with a flash and I tried photographing some without a flash since today’s sensors are so improved. I wasn’t getting great exposures in low light with the D850, the grain was too much, and the camera struggled with focusing. The D850 can produce some beautiful images in perfect conditions, but I have never loved the camera, especially the auto focus. I eventually went and talked to my friends at Samy’s Camera in Pasadena, some of them I have known for 40 years, and I asked which cameras performed best in low light conditions. I expected they would suggest a Sony A7IV or A1 or A9. Sony’s are amazing cameras and I had rented several different models recently when I was considering switching over to their brand. I liked the Sony’s I rented but none were perfect. Several of my contacts told me the Nikon Z6ii as the best low light still camera on the market. They explained that the smaller, 24 MB, full frame sensor handled noise better than most the 45MB sensors. I had no interest in the original release of Nikon Z series camera bodies because they did not have an SD card slot option and I was skeptical that the new lens mount adaptor would work well with my older lenses. I had recently read that Nikon had their Z line to now have SD card slot options and my friends explained how well the lens mount adapter was designed. I had wrongly expected that the adaptor would change the focal length of my older lenses, but learned the adaptor doesn’t because the sensor in the mirrorless Z series cameras had been moved forward to accommodate the adapter while maintaining the original focal length of the older lenses and the new lenses are designed with the new sensor position in mind (the lack of a mirror allowed this design to work).

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Everything sounded right so I bought a Nikon Z6ii as a kit with the 24-120mm f/4 lens, along with an adaptor for my older lenses. The camera performance has been outstanding, and the 24-120mm lens is one of the sharpest lenses I have ever owned. I am not going to get into a detailed tech review here because there are other people that do tech reviews for a living and have access to everything to compare. Links to some of those sites are listed at the bottom of this blog post. What I will talk about is how the camera is performing me.

In low light conditions, the images I am getting with the Z6ii are amazing. I took the camera to Chicago in March for a weekend as my primary camera and the images were great. I specifically went to photograph my daughter play in an ice hockey tournament and this lens and camera combination were the best I have every used in a rink before. I also took the adapter and an F mount 100-400mm lens and that worked well. The adapter handled the auto focus well and ergonomically was good. I ended up using the camera more for my street photography than I expected. Lately I have been using a Sony RX100 VII for my street photography because I use it from the hip and most people don’t realize I am photographing. In Chicago I started using the Z6ii some for my street images and I was getting better images with that the Sony, so I went with it. Most days were overcast so the light wasn’t fantastic but that was fine for the Z6ii. The auto focus was solid, and the lens was so sharp I got detail like I never have before. Here are a few examples of the camera from Chicago:

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f/4 1/500 ISO 900
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f/4.5 1/1000 ISO 400 @ 24mm
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f/4 1/800 ISO 2200 @100MM
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f/5.6 1/800 ISO 5000 @400mm
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f/4 1/250 ISO 16000
View fullsize f/4 1/400 ISO 16000
f/4 1/400 ISO 16000

The experiences in Chicago inspired me to photograph on the street more with a Z body. I need to also share with you that earlier this year, after having success with the Z6ii, and after becoming more and more frustrated with the focus ability of my D850, I bought a Z8. The Nikon Z8 is one of the most incredible cameras I have ever owned, and I am just scratching the surface with learning all it is capable of. The sensor captures outstanding images and the camera focusing is such a huge upgrade. I also got a 24-120mm lens for the Z8 which pairs perfectly. In recent months I have also added the following Z lenses: a 26mm, a 40mm, and a 105mm macro. All three of these fixed length lenses are super sharp. I bought the 105mm, which is capable of a 1:1 magnification like the old 60mm F mount Nikkor lens, primarily to do copy stand work of my old negatives so I can digitize the images (I have a process where I upload image files in Bridge to crop, open them in Photoshop to Invert the image, then return to Bridge to finetune it). I bought the 26mm and 40mm as walk around lenses and incase I wanted to take the camera into certain venues with camera restrictions. Both those lenses are sharp, super-fast, and lightweight. The 40mm is a little hard to use walking through crowds but the extra length has been great in certain situations. The 26mm is ideal for walking on the street and photographing from the hip, I have been able to use it somewhat like a range finder, and it is so small people don’t notice it. It also has a great balance when photographing with one hand a waist level. The 40mm and 26mm lenses are also very reasonably priced.

Example Images with Technical Information:

View fullsize f/4 1/1000  ISO 16000 @120mm
f/4 1/1000 ISO 16000 @120mm
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f/7.1 1/1000 ISO 8000 @104mm
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f/4 1/1000 ISO 5600 @30mm
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f/4 1/250 ISO 16000 @50mm
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f/4 1/320 ISO 16000 @24mm
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f/4 1/25000 ISO 4500 @120mm
View fullsize f/5 1/320  ISO 16000  40mm
f/5 1/320 ISO 16000 40mm
View fullsize f/4 1/320  ISO 8000  26mm
f/4 1/320 ISO 8000 26mm
View fullsize f/3.2 1/1000  ISO 500   40mm
f/3.2 1/1000 ISO 500 40mm
View fullsize f/4 1/200  ISO 16000  @24mm
f/4 1/200 ISO 16000 @24mm
View fullsize f/5.6 1/250  ISO 12800  @78mm
f/5.6 1/250 ISO 12800 @78mm
View fullsize f/4 1/125  ISO 16000  @120mm
f/4 1/125 ISO 16000 @120mm

Camera lens and strap options for Street Photography

View fullsize Nikkor Z 40mm and 26mm lenses
Nikkor Z 40mm and 26mm lenses
View fullsize Z6ii with 24-120mm compared to 26mm lens
Z6ii with 24-120mm compared to 26mm lens
View fullsize Nikon Z6ii with the 26mm f/2.8
Nikon Z6ii with the 26mm f/2.8

I know it is late notice, but Nikon has all their Z camera bodies and lenses on sale through the end of this week. Camera bodies are discounted about 25% and lenses are about 20%. My daughter purchased a Z6ii with a 24-120mm lens, and the 26mm lens online from Nikon last week for approximately $2,400. She found an online coupon that coupled with Nikon’s Z discounts, and she utilized Nikon’s two-year interest free purchase plan (I purchased my Z8 with their 0% interest plan as well). Nikon is being very aggressive in the market now so I would expect the sales to continue or be brought back with some frequency this year.

I have a Peak Camera strap system on my Z6ii. I love the design of the locking disc. It makes it easy to go from a traditional camera strap position to a solo wrist strap position. The wrist strap pairs great when the 26mm lens is on for street images.

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There are lots of amazing cameras and lenses on the market today, I have always used Nikon, I have friends that swear by Canon, and I know lots of people have gone all in with Sony. Because of all the variables I don’t think it is possible to have a camera that does every task perfectly, especially since cameras are now as much about video as still images. But I am convinced that right now the Z6ii is the best camera for photographing in low light conditions. I researched it online, talked to people with expertise, tested several different bodies and nothing came close to the Z6ii in low light. I am sure technology with continue to evolve and there will be better cameras in the future, but right now the Z6ii is my suggestion. (I also want to acknowledge that many cellphones like the iPhone 14 & 15 also create amazing low light images but obviously don’t have the same capabilities of real camera body)

Nikon Z6iii - Now Pre-Ordering $2,496.95 Delivery estimated 6/25/24

As I was wrapping up this post, I checked Nikon Rumors and saw there was talk that Nikon might be announcing a Z6iii in a couple weeks which could explain all the recent sales. Well, it has been announced and I wanted to update this. Samy’s has a great video review of the camera already on their order page for the camera. Link below.

The Z6iii has been announced and pre-orders are now being taken by Samys and B&H

Links to Reviews:

DP Review December 15, 2020

DP Review on You Tube December 2020

Nikon Website Z6ii

SLR Lounge 2021

In Street Photography, Photography, Photographer, Camera Equipment Tags Nikon Z6 ii, low light photography, Mirrorless Cameras, Nikon Z6iii, Nikon Z8, Samys camera
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A Long Arc - Photography and the American South

May 26, 2024

When I was studying photography at Arizona State, I became aware of the FSA photographers, the photographers who documented the Civil Rights Movement, Matthew Brady, and William Christenberry.  The images these photographers captured impacted how I see today.  I remember installing Christenberry’s photographs for an exhibition at the Northlight Gallery in Matthews Hall on campus, and being in awe of how beautiful the prints were. Christenberry’s work probably was the most obvious in documenting the American South, he captured scenes that only exist there.  At that time in my life when I was looking at the work of other photographers working in the South I was focused more on the specific subject matter and the craftsmanship of the images.  Over time, from revisiting my own images, I have gained a better understanding of how many layers of meaning an image can actually have.  Some images may have an obvious singular message, but many images have multiple layers of meaning and information once you learn how to look at photographs.  I also remember Bill Jay stressing to us in class that every viewer brings their own experiences to each image and what is important to one viewer may not be important to another. 

One of the people I follow on social media is Gregory Harris who is the is the High Museum of Art’s Donald and Marilyn Keough Family Curator of Photography. I have had the opportunity to meet Greg and I greatly respect his knowledge of Contemporary and Documentary Photography. At the end of last year, I saw him announce the release of the catalogue / book titled A long Arc Southern Photography which accompanied the exhibition at the High Museum.  I was immediately interested in the book, so I contacted the High Museum gift shop to arrange a purchase.  The book is the subject of this blog post, a post that is woefully overdue.

Weighing in at over 4 lbs. this 304 page Aperture book with over 275 photographs was published last November to accompany the exhibition which opened at the High Museum and is now currently on display at The Addison Gallery of Art at the Phillips Academy in Andover, Massachusetts until July 31st. From there it moves to the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts for an exhibition opening October 5th, 2024. The book is a beast, but it must be to properly cover the subject matter otherwise they would have omitted important photographers.  I love the layout of the book and the content; it is an amazing documentation of the history of photography in the American South.  The printing is good, and I like the fact the image descriptions and titles accompany the images.  The dimensions of the book are unique, but it works well, allowing creativity with the image placement on the pages.  The amount of information in this book, written and actual images, is incredible.  The only complaint I have about the book is the font size and text padding are smaller than I prefer, it isn’t an easy read, but I understand why that is because it would probably add another twenty-five plus pages to an already big book.

This book really brought in to focus how important the American South has been to the history of photography.  As I stated above, early on in my career I was aware of many of the notable photographers who had photographed in the South, but I hadn’t given any thought to how much the region was actually documented.  When I started going through this book I was immediately impressed by how many great photographers had photographed in the South.  I also was surprised to learn that some images I knew well, but had not considered the location, had actually been photographed in the South; the cover image of Robert Frank’s The Americans book is an example of one of those images.

A Long Arc - Photography and the American South - Page Examples:

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 Much of America is changing today because of ideological influences, migration, and a host of other factors that are too complex to get in to here.  Many of our major cities have quality of life issues with things like the high cost of living, overcrowding, and criminal justice failures.  Having visited Atlanta a couple years ago I felt the region seemed less affected by the problems in other parts of the country.  I am not naïve to problems of the South’s past, but I didn’t feel the same racial tension in Atlanta that I have felt recently in Los Angeles (which has increased dramatically from when I was younger).  The small portion of the South I have seen seems to be more like the America of the 20th Century than a lot of other parts of the country are today and I appreciate that.  It is important to retain our American identity as a society while still appreciating and respecting the diversity within the whole.  I think the residents in the South may be doing a better job of this than other regions of our country.  So, with all this said, I think this book also has value documenting the community of the South which is separate from the history of photography element of the book.  Another thing to appreciate is how many images in the book also document important historic and transformative moments in American history.

I have reviewed several books here on my blog and with each the goal is to give a fair evaluation of the book along with my personal taste opinions.  One thing I always try to identify is who the book is best suited for, since photography interests and tastes are so varied and photography books can be expensive.   This is one of the few recent books that I believe would be a good addition to anyone’s photography library.  This book is as complete a document as you can author for the subject.  The reader will definitely learn something new about the medium and probably rediscover some images they had not thought about in a while.  The book is well worth the price, Amazon now has it for $47.  It is important for photographers to understand the history of the medium to be good at their craft.  I know most of us think New York is the center of the photographic universe but the photographs from the American South are some of the most important images ever made. 

 

The book’s official description is as follows:

Collects over 175 years of key moments in the visual history of the Southern United States, with over two hundred and fifty photographs taken from 1845 to present. The South is perhaps the most mythologized region in the United States and also one of the most depicted. Since the dawn of photography in the nineteenth century, photographers have articulated the distinct and evolving character of the South’s people, landscape, and culture and reckoned with its fraught history. Indeed, many of the urgent questions we face today about what defines the American experience—from racism, poverty, and the legacy of slavery to environmental disaster, immigration, and the changes wrought by a modern, global economy—appear as key themes in the photography of the South. The visual history of the South is inextricably intertwined with the history of photography and also the history of America, and is therefore an apt lens through which to examine American identity. A Long Arc: Photography and the American South accompanies a major exhibition at the High Museum of Art in Atlanta, with more than one hundred photographers represented, including Walker Evans, Robert Frank, Gordon Parks, William Eggleston, Sally Mann, Carrie Mae Weems, Dawoud Bey, Alec Soth, and An-My Lê. Insightful texts by Imani Perry, Sarah Kennel, Makeda Best, and Rahim Fortune, among others, illuminate this broad survey of photographs of the Southern United States as an essential American story. Copublished by Aperture and High Museum of Art, Atlanta

Details         

Format: Hardback

Number of pages: 304

Number of images: 275

Publication date: 2023-11-21

Measurements: 8.07 x 11.42 inches

ISBN: 9781597115513

Contributors

Imani Perry is the Hughes-Rogers Professor of African American Studies at Princeton University and a faculty associate with the programs in law and public affairs, gender and sexuality studies, and jazz studies.

Sarah Kennel is the Aaron Siskind Curator of Photography and Director of the Raysor Center for Works on Paper at Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, Richmond.

Gregory J. Harris is the Donald and Marilyn Keough Family Curator of Photography at the High Museum of Art.

Makeda Best is the Richard L. Menschel Curator of Photography at the Harvard Art Museums.

LeRonn P. Brooks is associate curator for modern and contemporary collections at the Getty Research Institute in Los Angeles.

Rahim Fortune is a photographer living and working between Austin and Brooklyn.

Grace Elizabeth Hale is commonwealth professor of American studies and history at the University of Virginia.

Maria L. Kelly is assistant curator of photography at the High Museum of Art.

Scott L. Matthews is assistant professor of history at Florida State College at Jacksonville.

Brian Piper is Andrew W. Mellon Foundation Assistant Curator of Photographs at the New Orleans Museum of Art.

Press Quotes:

“The magnificence of a retrospective like this is not just the accounting offered by its historical sweep, but the way it conveys the immense complexity of this region, to inspire a renewed attention to the cruel radiance of what is. Suffering does not always lead to compassion and change, but photographs like these remind us that standing in witness to suffering surely should.”—Margaret Renkl, The New York Times

“…these photographs demonstrate how essential the South has been not only to American history and identity, but to American photography—from Mathew Brady’s battlefield images of the Civil War (1861–65) to the intimate interiors of Carrie Mae Weems.”—Andrew Durbin, Frieze magazine

Additional Information about the Exhibition:

You Tube Video of the Installation at the High Museum (11 mins)

In Photography Books, Photography Collector, Photography Exhibitions, Museums, Photography, Civil Unrest Tags A Long Arc - Photography and the American South, Brian Piper, New Orleans Museum of Art, Scott L. Matthews, Maria L. Kelly, High Museum, Grace Elizabeth Hale, University of Virginia, Rahim Fortone, Gregory Harris, LeRonn P. Brooks, Getty Research Institute, Makeda Best, Harvard, Sarah Kennel, Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, Imani Perry, Princeton, Walker Evans, Gordon Parks, William Christenberry, William Eggleston, Dawoud Bey, Baldwin Lee, Aperture, Matthew Brady, Robert Frank, Garry Winogrand, FSA, Margaret Renkl, The New York Times, Andrew Durbin, The Addison Gallery, Phillips Academy, Arizona State University, Bill Jay, Photography, Photography Book
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Winogrand Color & Friedlander's The People's Pictures

March 9, 2024

This blog post is a review of several new photography books I recently added to my library.

The release of Winogrand Color was my motivation to go book shopping online.   I have mentioned this time and again I love Winogrand’s photographs, and I am always interested books about his work.  While ordering the Winogrand book I also came across The People’s Pictures by Lee Friedlander and two other books which were on sale and looked interesting, so I added them to the cart as well.

 

Twin Palms publishers describes Winogrand Color as follows

Winogrand Color presents 150 photographs selected from the archives at the Center for Creative Photography by the American film director, Michael Almereyda and former Museum of Modern Art curator, Susan Kismaric. It is the first monograph dedicated to the artist's rarely seen color work.

Images were selected from the 45,000 color slides that Winogrand photographed in the 1950’s and 1960’s.

Published November 2023, 12” x 12”, 176 pages, 150 four color plates.

The retail price is $85. Twin Palms produced two slipcase editions of 50 which are already sold out at ($300 ea) and they produced a limited edition of 750 books with an alternative cover image ($85) which is still available.  The first edition printing is 7,000 books.

 

My first impression of Winogrand Color was good.  I like the page layouts; I think the image sizes and book size are appropriate and the design is clean and simple, which I really like.  The printing is very good, many images have deep shadow areas, and the printer was able to keep shadow details while still achieving solid blacks where appropriate.  In reading the book detail I saw it was printed in Turkey and that several people were involved in the image restoration process, this suggested the Winogrand’s transparencies may not have been properly processed or stored. 

As a document the book is good.  First it documents an era in color well that most of us remember primarily in black and white. Second, and most importantly, the book allows us to see more Winogrand photographs, most of these images we have not seen before, and that allows the viewer to gain deeper knowledge about one of the greatest documentary photographers of all time.  The photographs in this book also reaffirm that Winogrand was not wedded solely to Black and White photography.  I remember in the 2018 documentary film on him, “All things are Photographable”, where Winogrand spoke about photographing with color film but had reservations about it because, at the time, he could not produce archival prints of color images.  It showed the choice was at least partially a business decision not just an artistic one.  So, as a photographer myself, the photographs in this book gave me a lot of clues about how Garry Winogrand photographed.

Many of Winogrand’s most famous images were made with a 28mm lens on a Leica M4.  A number of the color images in the book seem to be made with longer legnth lenses.  Winogrand is at his best when there are layers of information in his image.  Winogrand was quoted numerous times talking about how he liked his photographs to be more interesting than the subject matter and how he photographed to see what something looked like photographed.  With a wide-angle lens, you tend to have more content in the frame which lends itself to what Winogrand was after.  You can still achieve images with deep meaning using longer focal lengths, Max Yavno is someone who photographed that way, but it did not seem to be Winogran’s typical approach.  Thinking of Winogrand’s Women are Beautiful, when I saw the entire portfolio displayed at Pier 24’s exhibition “The Grain of the Present” in 2017, I really became aware of how rarely he used a longer lens. 

This book begins with a number of longer focal length images at Coney Island I assume. They seemed more voyeuristic than insightful and I questioned if these were images that Winogrand really would have included in a portfolio or if he was just exploring with his camera.  Was the color film and the focal lengths a careful creative decision or was it more spontaneous. I don’t know how Garry set up his cameras related to film type or if he carried similar focal length lenses.  I have seen video of Winogrand photographing in the 1980’s and he had a single camera in hand and camera bag, but he didn’t seem to be transitioning to a second camera body.  I wonder if Winogrand had his primary Lieca M4 with the 28mm lens loaded with black and white film and then had a telephoto lens on another Leica loaded with color slide film?  Having photographed in the pre-digital era I remember having to carry two camera bodies if I wanted to photograph in color and black and white.  It would also make sense logistically if he had a telephoto lens on the camera with color film too, because if he wanted to use a telephoto lens for a black and white image, he could just trade the lenses between bodies.  (It is unfortunate that so many photographers today have never worked with analog cameras because it would give them a greater appreciation of what photographers in the past accomplished.)

Several images in the book looked to me as if Winogrand saw something that interested him, and he used the color film camera to just see the difference of how the image would be in color.  One example is his famous image of a couple in Central Park Zoo with the baby monkeys.  The famous black and white image is framed so much better than the color image in this book.  Interestingly when examining and comparing the color and the black and white imagers of the couple it is obvious the color image was photographed with a wide angel lens and that the black and white image may have been photographed with a slightly longer length lens but still not a telephoto lens. The black and white image is the better composed and the lack of color helps the viewer focus on the details within the frame. There are a few images in the book that seem just okay like he was making an exposure to see the difference but not with the intent to ever exhibit the image.  The photo in the book of a boxing match where you basically just see the ceiling looks like an absolute mistake, like it was an accidental exposure (Like most photographers I have captured many mistakes in my time).  There are a number of images in this book that seem to fall short.  This book is not an example of Winogrand’s best work, and I question the curator’s selections and wonder if Winogrand would have showcased the same images; I also can’t imagine if the editors had 45,000 color images that this collection was the best of that lot. I have not been able to find a concise statement about this book from either Tod Papageorge or Joel Meyerowitz who photographed with Winogrand during this time and know his process better than most people; I would love to hear their review of it. I think Arthur Lubow from the New York Times wrote a solid article reviewing the book and comparing Winogrand’s color work with other noted photographers working with color film at the time. The only thing in Lubow’s article I would question is when he said this about the couple in the Central Park Zoo: “It is a biting and unsettling comment on the era’s prevailing slurs about interracial marriage.”. I completely understand interpreting this image this way with today’s viewpoints, and I am sure some viewers now, and through the years, share Lubbow’’s opinion. But I specifically remember Tod Papageorge discussing this image in the documentary film on Winogrand “All Things Are Photographable” and dispelling that intent. Papageorge was there with Winogrand when he photographed the couple and in fact Papageorge photographed Winogrand with the couple. In 2014 Tod Papageorge wrote an article about the image for Transatlantica that explains everything about it. I have authored a separate blog with more detail on this subject.

So, to wrap up my opinion of the book, it does have value for me since I get to see more examples of Winogrand’s work and continue to better understand him. This book is not a priority add for a photography library and it isn’t something everyone should buy.  1964 and Figments from the Real World are much better books that showcase Winogrand at his best. This book is for people wanting to learn more about Winogrand and how he photographed.  I am happy I added it to my library, and I know other Winogrand fans will feel the same way.

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Other Reviews of Winogrand Color:

The New Yorker What Garry Winogrand Saw in Color - by Vince Aletti January 29, 2024

 The New York Times - When Master Photographers Spin the Color Wheel - by Arthur Lubow January 25, 2024

I had not taken notice of The People’s Pictures by Lee Friedlander until I saw it listed at a sale price.  The book was produced in 2021 by Ekins Press Foundation and was printed in East Greenwich, Rhode Island.

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I like this book a lot.  The design and printing are good as is the edit and image sequencing.  It is impressive that there are images from five different decades in this book, the combination of the images makes a great documentation of our world.  I love the first section of the book where Friedlander photographs people with cameras, I like to take those kinds of photographs myself.  The second section where he is taking pictures of things with actual photographs in the frame is stylistically different than the documentary street style of the first section, and I see how that could be slightly confusing to someone. But I understand the connection and I think it works well.  The only frustration I have with the book is the lack of written information.  There isn’t an artist statement or much guidance about the collection other than two vague quotes from books that aren’t specifically about the work.  I always think less is more with artist statements and I think it is best for viewers to see photographs and experience them without being influenced by a complex artist statement.  Good images stand on their own and people should have their own unbiased experience with a photograph.  But after that the viewer should be able to compare their experience with the artist statement to see if their experience was similar to what the artist was projecting with the image.  I think I understand well what this catalogue is saying but I still would like confirmation and in some cases more information.  In reading reviews of the book on line I saw some images had more detailed titles than in the book.  For example plate #31 is of a photographer in New York City in 1975 photographing with a Leica.  You can’t see the photographer’s face well, but I think it might be Garry Winogrand.  If it is I would like to know it.  The opposite image in the book is of a pig roast in Cold Spring, NY in 2013, a great photograph.  I want to know why this pairing was made, what deeper statement was being made here.  There are several other images where I know more information about the image exits but its not included in the book because I expect they wanted to keep a simple clean design throughout the book.  I am fine with it; I just wish there was a detailed description in the back of the book that I could reference to learn more.  I paid under $40 for the book which was a great value.  This is a book I would suggest for anyone who likes documentary and street photography.  You will learn something just by looking at the images and even though I mentioned I wanted a little more text information with it, I am fine without it and I think I understand why this book was designed this way.  A fun addition to the library.

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Florida 1963

 

The two other books I had in this order were Los Angeles Portrait of a City (572 pages, 2009) and Dark City: The Real Los Angeles Noir (478 pages, 2018) both published by Taschen America.  These are not fine art photography books but there are good photographs in both books and with my interest in documenting Los Angeles now, there was valuable information in both.  Dark City also interested me because of the law enforcement and evidence photographs it had.  If these books had not been on sale, I would have passed on them but their prices were reasonable, so I went for it.  Jim Heimann authored both books and there is some overlap of content. These are not fine art photography books but both books contain some outstanding photographs and are interesting, especially since I have been documenting Los Angeles more.

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In Photography Books, Photography, Photography Collector Tags Garry Winogrand, Lee Friedlander, Winogrand Color, Documentary Photography, books, Photography, Photography Book, Jim Heimann, Los Angeles Portrait of a City, Dark City; The Real Los Angeles Noir, The People's Pictures
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Controversy over Garry Winogrand's Photograph of a couple at the Central Park Zoo

March 9, 2024

In authoring a blog post on the book Winogrand Color I came across a review of the book online by New York Times writer Arthur Lubow. I think it was a really accurate review about the images in the book. The only thing I didn’t agree with that Lubow wrote were part of his comments on the very famous Winogrand photograph on the left above. Lubow wrote “Even less successful is the color version of one of his most famous photographs, “Central Park Zoo, New York City” (1967), which shows a Black man and blonde woman, seemingly affluent, each carrying a fully clad chimpanzee. It is a biting and unsettling comment on the era’s prevailing slurs about interracial marriage. In the color image, probably taken an instant later, the man is looking at the camera, the woman’s expression has changed, and the impact is diffused by the photographer’s own obscuring shadow and a distracting crowd of passers-by.” As I stated in my other blog post I saw the Winogrand documentary film, “All Things are Photographable” where Papageorge discussed this image and shared his own photograph of Winogrand with the couple. Tod Papageorge explained he was with Garry Winogrand that day and he disputed the assumption that Winogrand was making a statement about interracial relationships with this photograph. Tod and Garry were close friends and I think Tod would have understanding of Garry’s beliefs and opinions. I researched this subject matter further and found an in-depth article, with photograph illustrations, that Papageorge had authored about the photograph for Transatlantica in 2014 on MoMA’s website.

I know I have shared this information in the body of another blog post, but I think the subject is important enough to highlight in a separate post specifically dealing with the perceived controversy with this image because it applies to other works by other people. It is wrong to apply current day feelings or cultural standards with things from the past. I am not saying we need to condone outdated beliefs or past behavior that would be wrong in our world today. I am saying things needs to be evaluated with perspective of the time of the event and without any attempt to cancel it because of the current values and opinions of a segment of society. Here is a good non-photo example of my point:

My son is a graduate of Choate Rosemary Hall, a well-known prep school in Connecticut. On one of my many visits back there I got to sit in on his English class during the events of a “parents’ weekend”. My son’s teacher was Ed McCatty who is an outstanding educator, now retired. McCatty, who is black, had the class reading Mark Twain’s 1884 classic book “The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn” at the time. In the classroom, with all these other parents visiting, McCatty called on a student to read the book out loud and the student became nervous because of the book uses the “N-word” a fair amount to describe Huck’s friend Jim who was a fugitive slave. Finally, McCatty took over reading and projected Twain’s words eloquently. Parents squirmed uncomfortably as McCatty read “that word” again and again. I had already met Ed on a previous visit, he was one of the faculty residents in my son’s dorm, I knew where he was going with the reading, so I sat back and enjoyed seeing a number of parents getting completely stressed over words written in the 19th century. McCatty eventually explained how it was important to interpret Twain’s writing based on the time it was written. He pointed out that even though Huck was using the term for Jim that it wasn’t being used in a derogatory manner for the time, and the fact that Twain wrote about a young white youth befriending a black fugitive slave it showed Twain had a progressive viewpoint. McCatty took the topic further, using examples in his own life, and ended up giving everyone a lesson that day which went far beyond literature.

Interpretations of images (and other things) can change quickly, we don’t need a hundred plus years to pass for feelings to change. The best example of this with my own work is this photograph below which is in the permanent collection at the Center for Creative Photography.

PPD-177 #23 March 1987 - William Karl Valentine

Officer Ware and Craddolph at search warrant related to a narcotics sales investigation.

When I displayed this photograph in the first couple decades after making the exposure most every viewer was compassionate for the child being raised in dangerous conditions and anger towards the parents for putting the child in the situation. Some people went on to acknowledge gratefulness for law enforcement for trying to protect the child and do something about the drug epidemic of the times. These are accurate opinions about what my image is about. But in the last decade plus a portion of our society has altered its perspective on law enforcement and I have been confronted about this image. I had an anonymous Instagram viewer question my ethics for taking the photograph when the woman was unable to defend herself. In 2020 the photograph was in a simple exhibition in Pasadena and several people demanded to have it taken down because they found it offensive, so that image was pulled from the wall by staff. I am fine with someone not liking my work or disagreeing with my interpretation of the world, but to censor me is outlandish. The First Amendment gives me as much right to express myself opinion as anyone else in this country. The fact that some people thing their feeling give them the authority to remove that right is infuriating. Most photographs are an accurate account of a fraction of a second of time, how we interpret them is another thing.

One final thing I want to get back to, the majority of Arthur Lubow’s opinion on Winogran’s color photograph of the couple at the Central Park Zoo is spot on. The image is not as good as the famous black and white image and for all the reasons Lubow points out in his description of the image. Lubow obviously knows how to look at photographs. The positioning of the subjects in the frame and Winogrand’s shadow make the color image way less impactful. If Winogrand had been using a digital camera, which obviously did not exist then, and decided to share this famous image in color I think it may have been impactful, but I can see how the bright colors could have been distracting from what was going on in the frame. I know in my own work sometimes bright colors in a color image distract the viewer from the shapes, forms, layers of meaning, and textures in the image which drew my eye. That was a big consideration I had with my Santa Anita book, I didn’t want the viewer to focus on the bright colors of the silks, the horses, and the grass, I wanted them to see the details and layers of information that came out in a black and white image. It is natural that our eyes are drawn to bright colors and when color is removed a photographer can direct the focus in an image. There are times that colors matter and for that I am thankful for the digital age where the decision can be made after the shutter was released. Knowing how many rolls of film that Winogrand exposed I can only imagine how many hard drives he would have filled and the thousands of more images he would have made.

In Photographer, Photography, Street Photography Tags Ed McCatty, Choate, Choate Rosemary Hall, Garry Winogrand, Tod Papageorge, Documentary Photography, Photographer, William Karl Valentine, Pasadena Police Department, censorship, The Center for Creative Photography
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Ave Pildas visit in Santa Monica

February 19, 2024

I was finally able to get up to Ave Pildas’s home, and studio, in Santa Monica a few weeks ago for a long overdue visit to talk about photography and some potential collaborations we are considering.

Ave designed their house and the garage (studio space) he shares with his wife Phyllis Green. It is an incredible property, perfect for a creative couple. Hopefully one day Ave does a documentary film or some reels where he showcases his space, I know a lot of people would enjoy seeing it as I did.

It was good for me to compare Ave’s studio and workspace to my own. For people who are not creative an artist’s world is a hard thing to understand, especially how artists organize things to allow for free-flowing creativity (in my case it is how I navigate my clutter). Ave’s studio design is a unique space well designed for him and Phyllis. While we were upstairs in his office looking at prints and talking, Phyllis was on her side utilizing her large worktables to create a three-dimensional project involving hats. It was fantastic how the space was both separate and connected at the same time.

Ave shared prints from his Circles Squares and Triangles portfolio and explained that photographing three-dimensional items in his studio to create images was how he kept being creative through the lockdown part of the pandemic.

Ave also gave me copies of his Nude(s) and Circles Squares and Triangles books. I have several other titles from his Small Books titles which I first discovered at Arcana Books in Culver City. These small self-published projects are fantastic. He uses El Sereno Graphics in Los Angeles to print them, and they are some of the nicest looking books I have seen in this size and unit cost. I had wanted to get this post done last week to showcase the photograph the image “Valentine” below from his Nude(s) book for Valentine’s Day, but unfortunately, I am way behind on things right now.

I encourage everyone to check out Ave’s books and his work. I am jealous of the volume of material he has photographed in his lifetime and the fact he is still out there travelling the world looking for new images. I am really enjoying our friendship and I will continue showcasing his work whenever I can.

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In Artist, Photographer Tags Ave Pildas, @avepildas, El Sereno Graphics, Art Books
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Linde Lehtinen and William Karl Valentine at the Munger Research Center - The Huntington Library

Linde Lehtinen - Curator of Photographs - Huntington Library

October 28, 2023

On September 22nd, I had the amazing opportunity to meet with The Huntington Library’s Curator of Photographs, Linde Lehtinen, and explore a fraction of their Photography Collection. The Huntington has an incredible collection with over one million photographs, as well as photographic artifacts. Being born and raised in Pasadena I know the Huntington Library fairly well. I have walked the gardens numerous times, seen their famous paintings “Pinky” and “Blue Bloy”, smelled a Corpse Flower in bloom before, and I have seen a few photography exhibitions there. In fact, probably the best photography exhibition documenting Los Angeles that I have ever seen was the Huntington’s 2008 exhibition “This Side of Paradise - Body and Landscape in Los Angeles Photographs”. That show and accompanying catalogue were curated by former Huntington Curator of Photographs Jennifer A. Watts, independent curator Claudia Bohn-Spector, and Brown University Professor Douglas R. Nickel. But this was the first time I have ever had the opportunity to get an inside glimpse in to their amazing photography collection.

I was able to obtain this experience through the Los Angeles Center of Photography and one of their charity auctions. I am so thankful for the wonderful things that LACP does and I was happy to support them with my bid. I used my iPhone camera as my note taker for the event so this blog post is going to be more photos than words, which is always best with my posts. I will post gallery blocks for most items I saw. Linde chose the items to share based on our correspondence before the visit, selecting things I was interested in as well as unique pieces she was interested in seeing. In some cases, this was her first opportunity to really spend time with an item in the collection since the collection is so massive and the fact, she recently assumed her position.

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Linde started off with the above Daguerreotypes. The first was a Daguerreotype made by photographing another Daguerreotype which was highly unusual but it created a richer image and allowed for reproducing an image. The second was on a mourning ribbon for Lincoln. I loved how this artifact was both a photograph and a piece of American History. The third was the largest Daguerreotype I have ever seen and when Linde tilted it the image was so rich. The link in this paragraph is to the Library of Congress’s definition and is very informative.

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Preparing for my visit I researched the Huntington’s collection online and saw these two books and asked to see them. The red cover book was published in 1856, titled Photographs of the Most Beautiful Views and Public Buildings of San Francisco, G.R. Fardon's San Francisco Album is the earliest existing photographic record of an American city and one of the earliest of any city in the world. The dark cover book is William Henry Fox Talbot's Pencil of Nature, produced between 1844 and 1846. The Pencil of Nature was the first commercially published book illustrated with photographs. It contained twenty-four plates, a brief text for each, and text about Talbot’s invention of Photography, specifically the history and the chemical process. There are believed to only be 40 copies of this book that still exist today. As most readers of this blog will know, Talbot has been credited with discovering the photographic process in 1833, and with making the first negative in 1834. Most readers will also know that Nicéphore Niépce and Louis-Jacques-Mandé Daguerre were working on discovering a photographic process with a Camera Obcsura in France during the 1820’s and that Dauguerre had perfected the Daguerreotype process by 1839 when he announced publicly. Most scholars I believe agree the processes were discovered concurrently. It was an intense feeling to be in the presence of these two books because I realized they were connecting me back to the beginning of a medium which is such an important part of my life. When we were looking at the Pencil of Nature, I knew that book had been produced just a decade after Talbot’s discovery of photography. In reading the pages of the book, seeing Talbot’s comments about the history and detail of his photographic process I felt like I had gone back in time and was listening to him telling me this story directly. The printing press / typeset work was beautiful, and I assume he supervised the printing of all photographs placed in the book. It was a truly powerful experience, and these books are so delicate now we had to view them in subdued lighting. Fardon’s book had images in better condition being produced another ten years later. What I loved about seeing Fardon’s book was it is a photographic record of something, it was a documentary project, the first book using photographs to accomplish that. Talbo't’s book was a history and resource guide about the medium. Fardon’s book could probably be considered the father of most all photography books. It is a wonderful documentation of San Francisco in the 1850’s.

Ansel Adams - Print from Portfolio One

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I have seen lots of Ansel Adams prints in my travels, they have taught me so much about what a good print should look like, but I had never seen a copy of his Portfolio One in person before. Reading the portfolio’s accompanying documentation and seeing the general craftsmanship of the portfolio was a great reminder of what perfection looks like. It definitely helps ‘sharpen the saw’ seeing an Adams’s print. Linde also brought out a Hills Brother’s coffee can with an Adams photograph on the can. Adams had partnered with Hill’s Brothers to produce a limited edition run of coffee cans with his image Winter Morning Yosemite Valley on the side for some promotion, these can now be valued at upwards of $1,500. I am sure Ansel probably got some free coffee in the deal and was excited having one of his images get more attention and exposure. The Huntington has an actual coffee can as well as another unassembled side of the can before it was pressed. I had no idea this artifact existed, and I am happy Linde decided to share it with me.

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Being born and raised in Pasadena I am very aware of the photographer Adam Clark Vroman who lived in Altadena and founded Vroman’s Bookstore in Pasadena which still is thriving today. Although his best-known photographs are of Southwest American Indians, I also knew he had photographed the local San Gabriel Mountains extensively. Because of this I had Linde if I could see some Vroman’s photographs in the collection. Above are some of the prints Linde shared with me. The San Gabriel Mountains, and specifically Mount Wilson are right above Pasadena and Altadena. If you live there, you see them every clear day (with the exception of rainy days and bad smog days back when I was a kid). I have hiked to Mt. Lowe and Henniger Flats growing up and knew about the famed Mt/ Low railway. It was awesome seeing these photographs because I have been there. I only know the trail to Mt. Wilson as a wide fire road so to see it as a horse trail was fun. I also loved the handwriting style with these photographs. One last thing about Vroman, Vroman’s Bookstore was the first place I ever did a book signing, back when I published my Santa Anita book.

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I have always enjoyed the photographs of Edward Curtis and Karl Moon, I love the American Southwest desert and its history. The quality of the Curtis prints Linde showed me were incredible, so rich, the only problem was their surface was so shiny everything reflects in them. I was excited when I saw the Moon prints she had included Hopi Snake Dancers and a Snake Priest. As a kid I was interested about rattlesnakes and did at least one science report on them. I also remember learning about the Hopi and their tradition in grade school, and my parents took me on several road trips to the Hopi and Navajo reservations. Later on, I was lucky to get to know a couple Hopi and Navajo classmates when I went to ASU. I don’t recall ever seeing these specific images before.

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The book Photographs West of the 100th Meridian , by Lt. George Wheeler was another interesting share. Timothy O’Sullivan was the official photographer who accompanied Lt George Wheeler and the Army Corps of Engineers on an expedition documenting the American West for the war Department between 1871 and 1874 and photographs are the basis of the book. I have so much respect for O’Sullivan and what he went through to photograph in those conditions with the equipment that was available during that era. His images are beautiful as well as being important documents,

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I remember seeing Alexander Gardner’s “Harvest of Death” several times before, and I know it is one of the most famous photographs documenting the Civil War. What I either had forgotten or didn’t ever know, was the exposure was made by Timothy O’Sullivan, who was Gardener’s assistant, and that Gardner took credit for printing the image, while still crediting O’Sullivan for the negative. It was such a privilege to see this historic print with the notations on its original mounting board.

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I knew about Photographer Mike Mandel’s work especially his Photographer Baseball Cards (below) but I had never heard of his 1974 book project Seven Never Before Published Portraits of Edward Weston. With the book Mandel reached out to as many people named Edward Weston as he could find and asked them to send him photographs of themselves along with answering some questions about themselves. The book is fun but at the same time also intellectually deep.

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Mike Mandel’s 1975 Baseball Card project documenting photographers is legendary, and I just found this great video by the Worcester Art Museum of Mike talking about the project. Jim Hajicek was a professor at Arizona State University, and A.D. Coleman lectured there, while I was getting my BFA so I really liked seeing their cards. I appreciate Mike’s approach to the medium, it is healthy.

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Bea Nettles “Mountain Dream Tarot” box of 78 photographic cards distributed by Light Impressions was another item I had never seen. This 1975 12 cm x 10 cm “book” is another example of how some photographers started to think about different ways which were appropriate to share their work. I loved the fact Light Impressions distributed it. Light Impressions used to be my primary vendor for all my archival product needs, back in the hard copy catalogue days, I even visited their Rochester, NY location once, while on a trip to the George Eastman House.

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“Physogs” Facial Composit was a game released in 1939 in England. It was based on physiognomic principles, and instructed players how to read and construct facial features and character types as part of the game. When I saw this, it immediately reminded me of the Identi-kit that we used in law enforcement early in my career (1980’s -1990’s). The Identi-kit had drawings of parts of the facial features like this game but they were on clear acetate. You could stack the layers to get the final image then either photograph it of Xerox it for a suspect flier. You basically would sit there and mix and match the pieces getting input from the victim or witness to see if that part was similar to the suspect. The system was actually fairly decent and helpful for patrol officers looking for outstanding suspects. The latest versions are computerized.

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This foldout book entitled Ginza Kaiwai 1954 by Shōhaci Kimura (1893 -1958), which documents the Tokyo Ginza district, immediately reminded me of Ed Ruscha's book Every Building on Sunset Strip, that he produced in 1967. I wonder if this inspired Ruscha for his project. I absolutely love the sketch / signature of the silhouette hanging out having a smoke. Love this book concept, a great document, would love to see it rephotographed and compare the changes.

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Photographer Laura Aguilar was a key figure in the Chicanx and queer art scenes of Los Angeles. Linde shared Laura’s work with me and explained the value it brought to the collection as well as how much she personally liked Laura’s photographs. The photographs are good, I see why Linde likes the work. Laura’s images document important segments of our Southern California society, and I am thankful the Huntington is collecting artists like her. I also always value learning which artists and topics are holding a curator’s interest, that is so valuable to me as a photographer.

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Linde recognizes the power photography has in documenting diverse cultures and she is exploring several future heritage projects. One such project includes curating their collection of Filipino photographic postcards. Linde explained she feels a strong connection to the images because of her own Filipino heritage. The image quality of these postcards was incredible, and it was impressive to see how much of their culture, past and present, was documented. I loved the fact that these postcards had actually been mailed. The postage stamps, the cancellation stamps, and the handwriting of the messages and addresses really made these items complete documents with lots of value.

Conclusion

I have never had an experience before like this visit to the Huntington Library’s Special Collections Reading Room, it was incredible. Linde was a great host and did an awesome job showcasing a fraction of their incredible collection. It honestly felt like we were together on an adventure checking out one treasure after the next. Linde told me she had never seen some of the items she brought out for my visit as and admitted she used my visit opportunity to get to know their collection better, I am glad she did. I am so thankful to Linde for putting so much effort into preparing for this meeting and I am also thankful for the Los Angeles Photography Center for making the opportunity available. I apologize that this blog post is massive, but I saw so much on the visit, and this blog post is basically my diary for those memories, so there is more content here than normal. I will wrap this up encouraging everyone to visit the Huntington Library, there is so much there to experience and its absolutely beautiful. I would also suggest that you follow their exhibition calendar, Linde is just starting out the Huntington and I know she is going to do some amazing things there for years to come.

In Art Collection, Photography, Photography Collector, Museums Tags William Karl Valentine, Linde Lehtinen, Huntington Library, Pinly, Blue Boy, This Side of Paradise, Jennifer A. Watts, Claudia Bohn-Spector, Douglas R. Nickel, Los Angeles Center of Photography, Bea Nettles, Mountain Dream Tarot, Ansel Adams, Ansel Adams Coffee Can, Edward Ruscha, Laura Aguilar, Identikit, Ginza Kaiwai, Shohachi Kimura, Fox Talbot, @thehuntingtonlibrary, Camera Obscura, William Henry Fox Talbot, Nicéphore Niépce, Louis-Jacques-Mandé Daguerre, Photographs of the Most Beautiful Views and Public Buildings of San Francisco, G.R. Fardon's San Francisco Album, Pencil of Nature, Daguerreotype, Mike Mandel, Jim Hajicek, A.D. Coleman, Bill Owens, Alexander Gardener
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Published by Yale University Press in association with the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston. Author - Lisa Volpe (2023)

America and Other Myths - Photographs by Robert Frank and Todd Webb, 1955

October 24, 2023

I went into my favorite hometown bookstore, Vroman’s in Pasadena, on Monday for something and before I left, I checked out the Photography section for any new book arrivals. I was surprised to see they already had a copy of America and Other Myths - Photographs by Robert Frank and Todd Webb, 1955 so I grabbed it. I follow the author, Lisa Volpe so I knew the exhibition was opening at the Museum of Fine Arts Houston and that the book/exhibition catalogue had just been released. I thought Vroman’s might get the book in stock before the end of the year, but I never expected to see it on their shelf within two weeks of its release. I like to support Vroman’s because they are independent, and they took care of me when I released my first book.

The exhibition, and this accompanying catalogue, compare the work of photographers Todd Webb and Robert Frank who received separate Guggenheim Fellowships in 1955 to document the United States. Robet Frank’s photographs were published in book form in France in 1958 then in the US in 1960. The book, The Americans, is arguably one of the most iconic photography books of all time. Webb’s 1955 photographs were not widely seen and were basically lost for some time before being rediscovered in a collector’s basement. In 2017 Webb’s 1955 photographs were obtained by Todd Webb’s Archive which began the archiving process of the images. Curator Lisa Volpe became aware of the Webb photographs around the time they made it to the Webb Archive and then had the vision to curate this exhibition comparing Webb’s unknown work Frank’s iconic body of work.

I became familiar with the Lisa Volpe, who is the Associate Curator of Photography at the Museum of Fine Arts - Houston, a year ago when she selected two of my photographs for an exhibition in Atlanta. During the submission process I researched Lisa online and found a couple videos of her talking about photography. Lisa has so much passion for photography and that energy comes across when she talks about the medium. I have followed her ever since.

I have seen Lisa’s recent posts about the exhibition America and Other Myths and the pending release of book/exhibition catalogue. The concept and images looked so fantastic that I have even been considering a trip to Houston to see it. I don’t know if I will make that happen but at least I have a copy of the book know so I know how good this exhibition probably is. But this post is a book review so let me get on with that.

Review of the Book:

The book was published by Yale University Press in association with the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston. As stated above the author is Lisa Volpe - Associate Curator of Photography at the Museum of Fine Arts - Houston. The book was released this month and contains 184 Pages, is 10.00” x 10.70”, has 115 duotone images, and was printed in China. Directors’ Forwards were provided by Gary Tinterow - Director, The Margaret Alkek Williams Chair - The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston and Betsy Evan Hunt - Executive Director of the Todd Webb Archive. Novelist and Professor Susan Straight provided the afterword.

The book is outstanding in every aspect. The design is obviously the first impression with any book. I love the cover image; it represents what it to come well and I like the font selection. The book is a really good size, you can hold it easily if you are lounging, so it has intimacy, but the book is also a little bigger than some other books which allows the images to be bigger so you can see more details in the image reproductions. The duotone printing is very good, the images are beautiful, and the printing quality also helps with seeing the image details. I absolutely love the page design where the image information is on the same page as the photograph, in a font that is easy to read but does not interfere with the experience of looking at the image. I made a point to do the same thing with my Santa Anita book because I always hate hunting through the back of the book to find the information about an image. With the writings, the text spacing is good, the font size is easy to read, and it has a nice font style.

There is an incredible amount of written information in this book. I don’t mean there is page upon page of reading to do to get through before seeing the photographs, that would have been a negative for me. What I mean is everyone who contributed text wrote in a way to share interesting facts about the photographers and their journeys in a wonderfully entertaining, clear, and concise manner. I obviously just brought this book home and have only read the introductions and skimmed the other text, but even with that I have learned so much about both photographers that I never knew. The story of how Webb’s 1955 photographs were rescued from a basement and preserved before ultimately being shared with the world now is amazing. The in-depth examination of both photographers and how they approached their Guggenheim projects is incredible. I look forward to spending a lot more time with this book to learn even more. Volpe’s writing style conveys her passion for the project and Susan Straight’s afterword is a nice compliment to the images and is very appropriate. Normally I wouldn’t pay a whole lot of attention to the Bibliography, Index, and Credits but again there is so much good information here about the images and the exhibition it is worth noting. Lisa and her team documented everything about this project, she could have been a good Detective with her skillset.

The image selection and the sequencing in the catalogue are again, outstanding. I have really started paying attention to how curators edit then hang their exhibitions over recent years. The curator’s process is often far more creative than the average museum visitor realizes. The pairings in the book are interesting, they work, and again I like being able to glance down to see which photographer created each image. Like most photographers, I was well aware of Robert Frank’s work in the exhibition, and I always find value in revisiting it. Like the rest of the world, except those involved in this project, I had never seen this body of Webb’s work before. In reading the descriptions in the book it appears that most all of Webb’s prints in the exhibition are Inkjet Prints printed this year. I assume that means Lisa and Betsy had to go through negatives and digitize images as part of the curatorial process. If so that makes the accomplishment of this exhibition even more impressive.

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Image Showcase:

This photograph above of a barber in New Mexico has been on my mind ever since I saw it. The light in this image is amazing, as was Webb’s ability to capture it. I don’t know if there are words good enough to describe the quality of this image, this image doesn’t need words. Thank you, Lisa, for including it.

Two of my photographs compared two images from the book:

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Todd Webb - 1955
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William Karl Valentine - CA-087 #17 5/29/95
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Robert Frank - 1956

I had learned from Szarkowski’s book on Garry Winogrand that both Winogrand and Robert Frank had photographed the Father Serra statue in Los Angeles, even though all of them thought the statue was of Saint Francis. Because I knew they both had photographed something close to home, in 1995, I decided to search for the statue and also photograph it. I have written a previous blog post about all that whole process and how the statue had been moved. In September of 2000, almost exactly one year before the attack on the World Trade Center, I was in New York and captured the image above from the Empire State Building. At the time the person looking up at the claw railing had good value but after the attacks the the image became more powerful, and deeper for me. I don’t ever recall seeing Webb’s photograph from my exact same vantage point before, so I was excited to discover this image in the book this week, immediately realizing we had been in the same spot, just 45 years apart. I always find it interesting when I have the opportunity to photograph somewhere, or something, that a great photographer has. There is a unique connection and I like comparing the changes over time, or the lack of changes; it can be fascinating.

Conclusion:

If you like photography books you will love adding this book to your collection. For the $50 price, it is a great value. Every time you revisit this book you can come away with new experiences and knowledge, it truly is outstanding.

Additional Information:

Yale Press had links to a half hour podcast of Lisa Volpe being interviewed about the book which was fantastic as well as a half minute You Tube video of page turns showing off the book. Links are below.

Lisa Volpe - Yale podcast interview about the exhibition

Yale Press - You Tube book reveal (less than 30 seconds)

In Photography, Photography Books, Street Photography, Museums Tags Gary Tinterow, Betsy Evan Hunt, Susan Straight, Yale University Press, America and Other Myths - Photographs by Robert Frank and Todd Webb, 1955, Lisa Volpe, Museum of Fine Arts - Houston, Robert Frank, Todd Webb, Atlanta Photography Group, @lisamvolpe, Vromans Bookstore
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Dr. Rebecca Senf - Center for Creative Photography - “Ask a Curator” life webcast

Recent Photography Webcast Worth Viewing - Becky Senf & Joel Meyerowitz

October 23, 2023

I have been able to watch a number of great live web events recently about photography and I want to quickly mention them in a post. With all the material out there today, I feel like I was lucky to have found these. The first two I discovered because I follow Dr. Rebecca Senf at the Center for Creative Photography and the last one was an Instagram alert about a live broadcast starting because I follow Joel Meyerowitz.

The first webcast was four weeks ago and was the Center for Creative Photography’s “Ask a Curator” event where Rebecca Senf (Becky) answered questions about being a curator for an hour. I thought this was outstanding and I encourage photographers, or anyone interested in fine art photography, to follow the “Ask a Curator” link and listen to her talk. I have really focused on getting to know curators and other photography professionals lately, just to deepen my understanding of the medium and the direction it is going. I have met Becky several times, have heard her lecture, and read her writings. She shares content in a way that every person who receives the information will gain a better level of understanding of the topic. I love listening to Becky talking about photography, her knowledge of, and passion for, the medium always comes through.

The next live webcast I saw was also promoted on Rebecca Senf’s Instagram. This event was the Photographic Arts Council - Los Angeles’s A Picture a Minute where well-known photographers, collectors, and curators each selected a single photograph and spoke to why the image was important to them, ideally for just one minute. You can see with my screen shot above the list of participants was impressive.

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With the picture in a minute webcast, speakers were moving fast and my note taking was not perfect, but here is what I got down – I researched as much as I could to prevent errors, my apologies if I missed anything.

The concept for the event came from a project Agnes Varda had done for French television where she did 170 episodes called “un minute for un image”.  Agnes wanted to how a single photo could impact people. Agnes felt that viewing photographs gave her space and time to think and wanted to share that with others.

Here are a selection of the presenters and their chosen photographs:

Alia Malley shared the photograph “Earth rise over the Moon” taken on 12/24/68 by Apollo 8 astronaut Bill Anders and spoke about how incredible that moment was for all of mankind and how important the image was capturing it.  She also mentioned how intriguing it is to think the camera only captured 1/250th of a second in time but how powerful that fraction of time was.

Andrea Liss highlighted Carry Mae Weems photograph “Moody Blue Girl”

Arpad Kovacs’s photograph was David O. Alekhuogie’s 2015 image “Bandana Hearts”.

 PAC LA’s Director, Bayley Mizelle, talked about Alvin Baltrip’s 1975-80 series “The Piers” documenting the gay cruising spots in New York City before the Aids epidemic.

Cesar Rueda showcased a photograph by Magnum’s Yael Martinez.

Paula Ely shared Vik Muniz’s “Ecstasy of St. Theresa after Benini” 2015

Clare Kunny and her husband Colin Westerbeck spoke about a photograph in their personal collection which is a dual portrait of Colin by Joel Meyerowitz.  They spoke about how the image was photographed and how special it is to them (There is more about this image below including Joel’s comments about it which I heard in a separate web cast).

Dan Solomon spoke about Deborah Turbeville’s American Vogue editorial in the 1970’s and mentioned there was a ‘sense of decay, Photos are about memories”.

Gallerist Douglas Marshall paid tribute to Lawrence McFarland, who passed this year by talking about the power of his photograph “Wheatfields Nebraska/Kansas border 1976”.

Elena Dorfman’s choice was an 1872 Eadweard Muybridge print.

LACMA’s Eve Schillo chose Yan Wang Preston’s 2017 image Egongyan Park.

Hiroshi Watanabe didn’t understand the “one-minute” aspect of the event, but he gave an interesting talk about a Robert Frank print he had owned once, “New Orleans Trolley 1955”.  Hiroshi paid $8,000 for the print in 1992 and when he decided to sell it a few years later, because it had started to fade slightly, it sold at auction for $36,800. 

Jeanne M. Connell showed a 1948 print of Solarized Calla Lillies by Carlotta Corpron.  I was not familiar with Corpron, who a teacher at Denton College in Texas, but this image was beautiful.

Jo Ann Callis shared Daido Moriyama’s famous 1971 photograph “Stray Dog”.

Rebecca Senf chose a photograph by Ansel Adams which was printed early in his career, a 1927 print of Mount Galen Clark.  I found her selection interesting because I have seen exhibitions of Adams’s photographs where multiple prints of the same image, from different stages in Adams’s career, are hung together to show the evolution of his technique.  I also found it interesting to see which Adams image Becky chose since she has expert knowledge of most all his work.

Robert Berman selected a Julian Wasser image that I know and like of Duchamp playing chess with a nude model. I did a blog post earlier this year when Wasser passed away. I have seen video of Wasser talking about his life and photography before, he definitely lived life to the fullest and made some great images. I also liked the fact this particular image was made in Pasadena, California in 1963, because I was born there that year.

Former gallerist Stephen White shared a Bill Brandt nude.

Virginia Heckert, who is the curator of photographs at the J. Paul Getty Museum talked about Shigemi Uyeda’s 1925 photograph “Reflections on the Oil Ditch” from their collection.

Michael Hawley, Chairperson of the Getty Photographs Council, chose a Graciela Iturbide photograph, titled “Angelita” 1979.  Listening to Hawley, he obviously has great insight into the medium and he said a couple good things worth sharing: “The art of photography are pictures that offer more questions than answers” and he reminded people to get to know their artists who are still here.

Long time Los Angeles gallerist Paul Kopeikin shared a vernacular photograph of a cowboy and a girl from his collection and spoke to how anyone can collect photographs which I thought this picture was an awesome share.  Paul’s words reminded me of some of Bill Jay’s lessons on the value of a photograph back when I was studying at Arizona State.

I am thankful the Photographic Arts Council - Los Angeles put this event on, it had a lot of value.

Darius Himes - Christie’s

Interviewing Joel Meyerowitz along with Alejandro Cartagena

The final live webcast I saw was Darius Himes and Alejandro Cartagena interviewing Joel Meyerowitz about his recent venture into the NFT market. I follow Joel on Instagram and got notification that the live video was starting, and at that time I was able to watch it. Alejandro is an artist in his own right, but he is collaborating with Joel, helping his go through his massive archive to find images from the past. Darius is the International Head of Photographs for Christie's. The conversation between these three was interesting enough but then Alejandro brought up the fact he had participated in the Photographic Arts Council - Los Angeles’s A Picture a Minute and mentioned one of Joel’s photographs had been featured in the event. The photograph was a dual portrait of Colin Westerbeck, one image in the morning and the second image in the afternoon in his apartment, I believe in Chicago. In the pre-digital age, it was a slightly complex image to compose so the frame edges lined up correctly. During the PAC LA event Colin and his wife, Clare Kunny, spoke about the print which still hangs in their house and how important it is to them because of their relationship with Joel. When Alejandro brought it up in this webcast Joel then talked about his photographic process for the image. It was fascinating hearing the perspectives from the three people involved in making the image. Colin is the former Curator of Photographs at the Art Institute of Chicago and an educator. Clare Kunny specializes in education programs within the museum environment. Colin and Clare have lived in Los Angeles for some time now. Joel Meyerowitz is another photography icon that is always worth listening to. He is one of the best image makers of all time and has such incredible energy.

There is so much content online now and it’s hard to navigate through it all, but when you do you often find some amazing content. Hopefully you will find the time to explore some of the links I have shared here.

In Photography, webcasts Tags Darius Himes, Alejandro Cartagena, Clare Kunny, Colin Westerbeck, Joel Meyerowitz, Photographic Arts Council - Los Angeles, Picture a Minute, @beckysenfccp, @joel_meyerowitz, @alexcartagenamex, @fellowship.xyz, #photography, The Center for Creative Photography, The Art Institute of Chicago, Virginia Heckert, J.Paul Getty, J. Paul Getty, Stephen White, Bill Brandt, Julian Wasser, Robert Berman Gallery, Daido Moriyama, Robert Frank, Lawrence McFarland, Elena Dorfman, Eve Schillo, LACMA, Yan Wang Preston, Marshall Gallery, Deborah Tuberville, Cesar Rueda, Bayley Mizelle, Alvin Baltrip, Arpad Kovac, Andrea Liss, Carry Mae Weems, David O. Alekhuogie, @dariushimes, @ joel_meyerowitz, Paula Ely
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Me and Ave on York Boulevard

Photographing with Ave Pildas - September 22, 2023

October 8, 2023

On Friday September 22nd I spent the afternoon photographing and hanging out with legendary Los Angeles street photographer Ave Pildas. 

I discovered Ave’s work, when I found a copy of his book Street People at Arcana Books in Culver City five years ago.  I liked his work so much I bought a copy of the book. I authored a blog post about Street People and how his photograph “Cop Salute” really stood out to me.  I loved the fact Ave was apparently self-publishing small edition books, promoting his work, making his own opportunities.  Los Angeles is a hard town to photograph in and it was obvious Ave has been out there documenting Los Angeles for a long time.  I followed Ave on social media and when Deadbeat Club Press released Ave’s Star Struck book last year, I went back over to Arcana for the signing to meet him; I also authored a blog post about that.  We had a great talk and I suggested going out photographing on the street together.

Ave and I had talked a few times this year trying coordinate our schedules to go out and photograph.  When we figured out September would be good for both of us, Ave specifically told me he wanted to find new areas in LA to photograph.  The light in September is also usually better than the summer months which I thought would be a plus, but of course the day we went out it was oddly overcast for September here. Ave lives in Santa Monica and is probably best-known for his Hollywood street photography.  When we were planning the day Ave told me he was interested in exploring two Los Angeles neighborhoods: Liemert Park and York Boulevard in Highland Park.  Because I knew I would be coming from a morning meeting with Photography Curator Linde Lehtinen at the Huntington Library I chose York Boulevard which was closer. I also liked how he described York Boulevard as a gentrified neighborhood with plenty of foot traffic and people out and about to photograph.  I love an image rich environment.

We met at Avenue 50 and York which was perfect.  There is also a bench there which allowed us to talk for half an hour before we started walking and photographing. I also got a good feel for the area watching the people pass us.

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Ave and I are very different in a lot of ways, first and foremost I am 6’5”, Ave is not.  I was born in the 1960’s, Ave was “living life” in the 1960’s and 70’s; and he still attacks life today.  But I quickly discovered we are very similar when it comes to photography even though we work in different styles.  We both constantly look for images in our travels, framing things in our mind when we don’t have a camera in hand, and we both have a strong desire to document our world.  We also both feel the pressure of fleeting time and its impact on our efforts to preserve our work, so our images live on long after we are gone.  We also have a similar geek side, like where we both got excited with the visit to Galco’s Soda Pop Stop.  I bought some PEZ and Ave asked for a handful of eclectic bottle caps.  I also loved listening to Ave and Ernestine at Leaf & Spine talk about succulents for ten minutes. We discovered her shop while adventuring around York Boulevard. 

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Street Photography Styles:

When it comes to photographing people on the street, Ave talks to people more, and likes to engage with his subjects.  I like to move anonymously through crowds while photographing.  I don’t want people to be aware that I am photographing them because I want to document the world as it is, without interfering with it; but I always do get incredibly powerful images when I get suspicious stares directly into my lens.  We talked about our different approaches and during the conversation I referenced Bruce Gilden who photographs in a very confrontational style, on the street of NYC with a wide-angle lens and a flash.  There is never a doubt when Bruce has taken your picture, he’s in your face.  The confrontation Bruce creates is an important part of the image.  Ave and I both like Bruce’s photographs but agreed we would never want to work in that style; we also agreed that style would not go over well in Los Angeles.

I think Ave photographs in a more methodical manner.  Granted he is 84 years old, but he is in great shape still and could move along the street faster.  He just really likes to examine everything around him and often photographs details from multiple angels to get exactly what he wants.  I like to do that as well with static subjects but when I am photographing on the street I am usually moving and reacting to the people I see.  I often “Shoot from the hip” literally, with a Sony RX100 vii with the rear screen tiled up so I can glance down and see it.  I miss some things in the frame with this approach but with it I can move about better, and people are more natural.  Missing an image is just part of the process, some things aren’t meant to be.  When I see something that is amazing I will frame it regardless of whether people will notice.  Often I have a Nikon D850 around my neck and will transition to that for those images.  I also use the DSLR camera for all the static subjects.  A DSLR camera body around the neck often helps me photograph surreptitiously with my Sony RX 100 vii.  Suspicious people focus on the DSLR body, and they don’t even look at my hands.  Good Life Lesson from my Law Enforcement days, always look to see what’s in people’s hands.

William Karl Valentine - York Boulevard Portfolio

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The Experience of Photographing with Ave

The afternoon photographing with Ave was one of the coolest times I have had in a while.  I almost always photograph alone or if I am with other people I am the only photographer.  After leaving ASU I have never really had a mentor photographer.  I have had outstanding advisors like Mary Virginia Swanson but no one I went out photographing with.  Ave and I photographed well together, each discovering different things to photograph and moving at a pace that didn’t hinder either of us.  The pace was also good because it gave us the opportunity to discuss so many different things.  We meshed well, I did not set the day up looking for a mentor, I was looking to exchange ideas with an experienced peer, and I got that.  I know we both got something out of the day and developed a good friendship.  Ave even called me last week to tell me about photographing Liemert Park the weekend after we were on York Boulevard.

We discussed so many things there is no way to list everything here, and some things were just between us.  Ave life has been an adventure.  He was a successful designer in Cincinnati and when he wanted to get to the next level he followed the advice of his mentors and went to study design in Switzerland.  He met his first wife in Switzerland and has two granddaughters who are Swiss.  He taught in Philadelphia and ended up in Los Angeles because one of his former students worked at Capitol Records and introduced him to management when he had been in town on a road trip.  He had to fly back to Philadelphia to get a portfolio to show them and was hired.  We talked about some of the legendary photographers of our time, and it was interesting learning how Ave had met Danny Lyon in Milwaukee once and had seen Garry Winogrand photographing around Los Angeles on several occasions. 

I look forward to getting back on the street again soon with Ave and could see somehow collaborating with him one day.  His schedule is crazy, with pending trips to New York and Morocco coming up soon, but that also means I get to see more new images from him.  I encourage everyone who reads this post to check out Ave’s website and follow him on Instagram, you won’t be disappointed. There is also a recently completed documentary film about Ave called Ave’s America that I am looking forward to watching once the release is complete.

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William Kart Valentine on York Blvd – photograph © 2023 Ave Pildas

Ave Pildas at York and Avenue 50

Ave’s Bio from his website:

Born and raised in Cincinnati, Ohio, Ave Pildas worked early in his career as a photo stringer for Downbeat Magazine in the Ohio Valley and Pennsylvania in the 1960's.

In 1971 Pildas began working as the Art Director at Capitol Records in Hollywood and designed and photographed album covers for the label's recording artists. He launched a career as a freelance photographer and designer soon after, specializing in architectural and corporate photography. His photographs have been exhibited in one man shows at the: Contemporary Arts Center, Cincinnati, Photographers Gallery, London, Janus Gallery, Los Angeles, Gallerie Diaframma, Milan, Cannon Gallery, Amsterdam, Gallerie 38, Zurich and numerous group shows.  His photographs are in the permanent collections of the Museum of Modern Art, New York; the Bibliotheca National, Paris; the University of Arizona as well as numerous other public and private collections. He is a Professor Emeritus at Otis College of Design. 

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In Artist, Photographer, Photography, Street Photography Tags Ave Pildas, William Karl Valentine, Garry Winogrand, Danny Lyon, Bruce Gilden, Los Angeles, Street Photography, @avepildas, Nikon, Sony RX 100 VII, Ave's America, Mary Virginia Swanson, Nikon D850
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William Karl Valentine and Mark Hilbert at the Hilbert Museum’s temporary gallery space in Orange, California. 9/23/23

Hilbert Museum - Catching up with Mark Hilbert

September 30, 2023

I had a chance last week to catch up with Mark Hilbert, who with his wife Janet, founded The Hilbert Museum of California Art at Chapman University in Orange, California. The Musem houses their collection of 1,000 20th century paintings documenting California and one of my first blog posts documented a private reception I went to when it opened in 2016. The original space, at 7,000 square feet, was beautiful and it is currently being expanded to 22,000 square feet due to open early next year. The Hilbert collection includes works by Maynard Dixon and many of my favorite California Painters. They opened the Hilbert Temporary gallery off The Circle in Orange to stay engaged with the public as they prepared for the unveiling of their beautiful new museum space.

Mark Hilbert explaining the expansion of his museum which will be completed early in 2024.

The temporary gallery space is obviously only a fraction of the size of the coming new museum, but the space is still decent and located right off the Circle in Orange. The area has great restaurants, eclectic shopping, and is a great place to spend a few hours on a weekend. I’m hopeful that someone maintains this space as a gallery after the new Hilbert Museum opens. I also encourage everyone to visit the Hilbert Temporary while it is up because the works on display are worth the trip to see them.

My Favorite Painting in the Exhibition

Dean Cornwell (1892-1960) “Mission San Antonio de Padua - 1949 Oil on Board

I have heard many photography scholars talk about how a viewer’s past experiences influence how they perceive a photograph. People will connect, or not connect, with a photograph often because of their past experiences, their understanding of the subject matter, or even their believes. Every viewer’s experience is unique, so their response is also unique and that is a good thing. Every person’s opinion has value, even if only just to that person. In talking with Mark he expressed frustration with political viewpoints impacting viewing experiences and an increasing lack of tolerance for differing opinions, I completely agree with him. As in the world, the art world also needs to be inclusive to differing points of view, including conservative ones. The First Amendment is important for all of us.

Dean Cornwell’s 1949 painting Mission San Antonio de Padua really stood out to me and I think may be of value to my blog post readers to explain why so I can expand upon what I wrote above about a viewer’s past experience influencing their reaction to an image.

I have written blog posts before about the Father Serra statue that was in downtown Los Angeles. For me it was an important monument because both Robert Frank and Garry Winogrand had photographed in the 1950’s. I searched for the statue and photographed it on May 29th, 1995, and returned again 25 years later to the day and rephotographed it. Two weeks after photographing the Father Serra statue a second time Indigenous activists invited Los Angeles Times reporters to the statue to witness them tear it down as part of the George Floyd protests. I don’t get how it was connected other than tolerance was being shown to civil unrest at the time.

I am respectful of the opinions that Indigenous Americans have towards colonization and the influence that Catholicism had upon their culture, they have a right to be upset with injustices of the past. But that shouldn’t give them the right to destroy public property or cancel things they don’t believe in. We need to remember history, not erase it. Cancel culture is a slippery slope and should never be tolerated. For me when they tore down the Father Serra statue for that minor LA Times article, they took away my connection to two of my favorite photographers, they destroyed an artifact of California history. They did it all for a soon forgotten moment of attention that was quickly overshadowed by so many other events with the pandemic. Having that experience impacted my thoughts when viewing this painting. I was drawn to the graphic shape of the cross and the stylization of the people in the painting. I took note how the priests were supervising (ordering) the indigenous people doing all the labor to accomplish their task. I also noticed how the indigenous people were colorful and bright and the priests were ashen and less dynamic. I saw elements in this painting supporting the outrage of the indigenous people who tore down my Father Serra statue. For someone of strong Catholic Faith they might see the impact the church had bringing the ministry to the new world. Both viewpoints are valid. No matter what opinion a viewer has the painting is an amazing piece of artwork, wonderfully crafted, and is something to be enjoyed by all. Hopefully it will inspire various dialogues for years to come.

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Father Serra Statue two weeks before being torn down by indigenous protestors in 2020 - William Karl Valentine

Selected images in the exhibition at the Hilbert Temporary

View fullsize Anton Otto Fischer "Peach Harvest"
Anton Otto Fischer "Peach Harvest"
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Phil Dike "California's Best"
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Charlie Dye "Big Catch"
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Arthur Saron Sarnoff "Supervised and Unsupervised"
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View fullsize Steven Dohanos "Mutually Beneficial Friendship"
Steven Dohanos "Mutually Beneficial Friendship"
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Maurice Logan "Ghirardelli's Pioneers"
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View fullsize John Phillip Falter "Schlitz tastes so good"
John Phillip Falter "Schlitz tastes so good"
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John William Walter "I own this dream"
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Pruett Carter "Depression Kid"
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Walt Disney Productions
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In Art Collection, Museums Tags William Karl Valentine, Mark Hilbert, Hilbert Museum of California Art, Chapman University, California Scene Painters, Painting, Illustration, Maynard Dixon, orange County, Orange, California, #california-art, Dean Cornwell, Arthur Saron Sarnoff, Maurice Logan, John Phillip Falter, Anton Otto Fischer, Phil Dike, Steven Dohanos, Charle Dye, Pruett Carter, @HilbertMuseum, Father Serra, Garry Winogrand, Robert Frank
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Atlanta Photography Group - Storytelling 2023 Exhibition - Opening September 19th

September 21, 2023

I am honored that the above print is included in the Storytelling 2023 exhibition which opened this week at the Atlanta Photography Group.

The exhibition celebrates street and documentary photography and was curated by Alyssa Coppelman.

APG shared the following about Coppleman on their website:

Alyssa Ortega Coppelman is an independent photo editor and photobook consultant based in Austin, Texas. She is Art Researcher for the Oxford American magazine; and Archival Researcher on the Emmy-nominated, PBS NewsHour series, Brief But Spectacular. Previously, she was Deputy Art Director at Harper’s Magazine.

About Oxford American

The Oxford American is a nonprofit arts organization and national magazine dedicated to exploring the complexity and vitality of the American South through excellent writing, music, and visual art. Billed as “A Magazine of the South,” it has won four National Magazine Awards and other high honors since it began publication in 1992. The Oxford American is published in partnership with the University of Central Arkansas.

The Image

This is the first time I have exhibited this image which I photographed in June 2022 at the First Annual West Hollywood Pride Parade. I have been concentrating on photographing more aspects of Los Angeles the last few years, partially because I think is important to document where I am from and partially because of the constraints related to the pandemic. I have always found it difficult to photograph in LA, it is not like New York or Chicago or even San Francisco. Los Angeles has so many diverse communities, and is geographically massive, it is really hard to capture everything about this place. People also don’t move around here like in the other big cities, in LA most people drive to where they were going, they don’t walk. Although this is changing some, as a photographer I still find that I have to search for the areas where people are congregating on the street. Hollywood and West Hollywood have always had more foot traffic than other areas and I knew the Pride parade would bring out lots of people for me to photograph so I went to it. I felt it was important to document the LGBTQ+ community because of its population size in Southern California and I was also interested to see how people would interact with each other at one of the first large post pandemic events.

When I saw this person in drag, and the people with them, I knew I was going to have the opportunity to capture a good image. I was first thinking my images would only be of the entourage but as this woman in in the tan hat started to fumble to get her cellphone camera up, I recognized that having her in my frame could take the image to a different level. The woman was so excited by what she saw approaching her that she stepped right in front of me to get her shot. Normally I would say something if someone did this while I was photographing but I wanted her in my frame. I stepped to my left and took my time framing the image. I made a number of exposures and worked to make sure the person in drag was featured, was in focus, and that I could see their image in the woman’s phone. Normally when I photograph on the street I am moving, often photographing from the hip (literally with a Sony RX100 vii), and when I frame an image, it’s quick. The parade setting obviously allowed for a more traditional photographic approach, framing in a viewfinder, but with this image I spent even more time than normal to perfect the frame.

For me, the interaction between the woman and the person in drag is key. The stare down of a dominatrix, the desire of the woman to capture the image and maybe even a desire for other things. The stare was so intense it seemed to single them out from the crowd, like a scene you might see in a movie, where all other noise is silenced and it’s just the two of them alone, albeit in the middle of a crowded parade. The other elements of the image work well too: the laughter of the other woman witnessing the scene, the contrast between the muscular man and other woman crossing the street, and the how the majority of the crowd isn’t even taking notice of their connection. With many of my street photographs I look to document relationships between individuals, and relationships between a person and the whole of a group or society. I love that this image has lots of layers to it, which allows each viewer to have their own experience of seeing it. The image is also a solid document of the event and a segment of the Angelino population.

The Print:

The exhibition print has an image size of 24” x 16” which is the largest sized print I have produced so far in an edition (I have produced some larger prints for commercial clients). This print is on a sheet of 26” x 18” Hahnemȕhle Photo Rag Ultrasmooth paper, framed with a window matt to an external size of approximately 33” x 25”. The print in the exhibition is #4 in an edition of 9 for this image size.

The print was made by Digital Arts Studio in Atlanta who I have been using to produce all my large print editions. Owner Barry Glustoff is fantastic to work with and his lab is one of the top certified printers of Canson and Hahnemȕhle papers in the world. I had Barry produce editions of 19 other images this summer at this size, and he has printed and framed all my photographs for every one of my APG exhibitions. His work is outstanding, and the staff is professional.

The Exhibition:

I have had a chance to see the other images in the exhibition and some early photographs of the installation. The exhibition looks great, some outstanding images, and I am pleased to be showing work with Gwen Julia, Joe Hoyle & Peter Essick again.

The List of Photographers in the exhibition:

Betty Press
Blake Burton
Caren Winnall
chilingo
Cindy Konits
Dennis Church
Dwain A Vaughns II
Eric Burkard
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In Galleries, Photography, Photography Exhibitions, Street Photography Tags William Karl Valentine, Peter Essick, Cindy Konits, Joe Hoyle, Betty Press, Atlanta Photography Group, Alyssa Coppleman, The Oxford American, PBS, Documentary Photography, Storytelling 2023, Digital Arts Studio, Hahnemuhle Photo Rag ULTRASMOOTH, LGBTQ, WeHo, West Hollywood, California
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Clint Woodside, Taylor Galloway, and William Karl Valentine - LAABF 2023 at The Geffen Contemporary at MoCA

"I Can Feel You Dreaming" - Taylor Galloway

September 9, 2023

The Deadbeat Club publishers have been crushing it lately with some amazing titles. I have a few of their books in my collection so when I went to Printed Matter’s Los Angeles Art Book Fair one of my top priorities was to find their booth, introduce myself to Clint Woodside - the founder, and see what new titles they had out.

Once I got to their booth, I was immediately drawn to Taylor Galloway’s book “I Can Feel You Dreaming” (Deadbeat Club publication #85). The book looks simple at first, but it so well printed and has a handcrafted feel to it. The images are wonderful, they allow the viewer to have their own interpretations of them, and they allow for unique experiences every time you revisit the book. The copy on display was a special edition with a small print from one of the images in the book which I loved. I like trains to begin with but the way the image is framed is absolutely perfect, I dig it. Taylor’s book gave me the opportunity to introduce myself to Clint.

Clint made a solid first impression, he knows his craft and is passionate about it. I told him how much I enjoyed owning a copy of Ave Pildas’s book Star Struck and I told him how I met Ave and Ian Bates at their book signing at Arcana Books. We started talking about Taylor’s book and how the Special Edition version was editioned to only 30 copies. Clint was showing me an artist proof and the other person in their booth said that AP copy was all they had left, that the edition had sold out. I guess I made a good impression on Clint because when I said I would still buy an AP copy because I liked it that much, he turned around and pulled out #30 of 30 which he had apparently set aside. I like to think Clint wanted to find a good home for the last copy of the special edition. If that’s the case, I am thankful I struck up that conversation. I am still pumped up about adding this book to my collection.

I have had a number of conversations with publishers over the last few years, Clint definitely stands out. I know I will be adding more of Deadbeat’s titles to my collection over time and I understand why Ave decided to publish one of his most important books with Clint.

The Archival Pigment Print included with the Limited Edition book.

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In Artist, Museums, Photographer, Photography, Photography Books, Photography Collector Tags Deadbeat Club, Clint Woodside, Taylor Galloway, Ave Pildas, I Can Feel You Dreaming, Geffen Contemporary, MOCA, Los Angeles Angels, Los Angeles, #deadbeatclub, @clintwoodside, #deadbeatclubpress, #independentpublishing, #photobooks
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