• PORTFOLIOS
  • Prints
  • Licensing
  • Books
  • About
  • CONTACT
  • Blog
  • Instagram
  • LINKS
  • TECH INFO
Menu

William Karl Valentine

  • PORTFOLIOS
  • Prints
  • Licensing
  • Books
  • About
  • CONTACT
  • Blog
  • Instagram
  • LINKS
  • TECH INFO

Photographing the Doo Dah Parade in Pasadena with Frank on 11-24-24

Frank Schlegel (who lost his home) and other photographers of the Eaton Fire

March 5, 2025

I have known Frank Schlegel for well over forty years and first met him when he was working for Mike O’Brien who owned Flag’s Photo in Pasadena. When Flag’s closed Frank went to work for Samys Camera and he has been one of my best photography equipment contacts throughout my entire career. Frank and I have photographed together, most recently the last Doo Dah Parade in Pasadena, and he did my portrait for the dust cover of my Santa Anita book. Pasadena has a wonderful history of photography. The Huntington Library has an amazing photography collection, Pasadena City College and the Art Center of Design have good photography programs and going back to Adam Clark Vroman there have been some decent photographers who have called Pasadena home. Pasadena is one of those places if you grew up there you are always connected to the city whether or not you still live there or you move away. Frank has been a fixture in the Pasadena photo community for as long as I can remember. On January 7th, Frank lost his apartment, and most of his belongings, in the Eaton Fire. His apartment was four and a half blocks away from my mom’s house/

A number of Frank’s friends have stepped up to help him and I have tried to make myself available whenever he wanted to talk. The first couple conversations he really was dealing with the loss, there obviously was some shock still, but he was positive when it came to the task of moving forward. Shortly after the fire had swept through his neighborhood Frank started to photograph the devastation and his images were good, some of his best. I think Frank’s unique perspective was the reason. We talked about his photographs, and it was amazing how Frank was able to use his camera in healing process.

I think many of Frank’s Eaton Fire images are different from of my photographs in that he has really been locating and documenting incredible small details within the devastation. His photographic style or interest often was that way, for instance he loves photographing plant details at the Huntington Library, but the fire damage images are deeper because of his experience. I know my photographs from the Eaton Fire are different, my approach is different, I am photographing in a more methodical approach, almost forensic at times, spending more time in places. Every time I am up there photographing still has an intensity and with some emotional drain. I might be biased but there just seems to be a slight difference with photographs by local photographers who knew the area and ones who have come in from the outside. I know Pulitzer Prize winning photographer Nick Ut lives in Orange County and did an amazing job going from the Palisades Fire to the Eaton Fire in the first 24 hours. Nick is incredible with how much he is able to photograph, especially considering he is retired. Nick did a good job documenting a lot of different things in Altadena, especially the firefight, but he’s a press photographer it’s a different approach. I know Ken Light came down from the Bay Area and photographed both the Palisades and Altadena, but I have only seen a couple photographs from both locations, so I don’t know what his portfolio looks like. He is a good documentary photographer so I am interested to see what he photographed. Anther photographer that has stood out to me with the Eaton Fire is retired Pasadena Star News Photographer Walt Mancini, who was an outstanding local press photographer. I don’t think Walt was out photographing during the height of the fires, which was smart, but he was out the next day and has documented so many important things. The key to his images is he knows that area better than anyone else, and it shows in his images. As a kid and young photographer, I took note of Walt’s photographs in the paper all the time, and I know his images had an impact on my development as a photographer.

I have been trying to get Frank to write something for this blog post, but I know he has been too busy out photographing whenever he wasn’t working so I am still waiting on that. I even stopped by and saw him at Samy’s yesterday and checked in on him, he is doing good. When I get some writings, I will update this post with his words. While I was waiting for my camera sensors to be cleaned, I also talked with Jason Lyman, who manages the Pasadena Samys. Jason shared some interesting insight; he said sales were noticeably higher since the Eaton Fire. He said many customers were affected by the fires and he thought many of them were photographing the aftermath as part of the healing process. Below are screen grabs of some of Frank’s recent images as well as some of the other photographers Eaton Fire images.

UPDATE INFORMATION - On March 13th The Pasadena Weekly wrote an article about the Keychain Project and interviewed Frank. The Eaton Canyon Keychain Project is an art project where they collect keys to create works to memorial the loss of the Eaton Fire. Please check out the link.

Frank Schlegel’s Eaton Fire Portfolio:

View fullsize Frank's Apartment
View fullsize IMG_3998.jpg
View fullsize IMG_4066.jpg
View fullsize IMG_2404.jpg
View fullsize IMG_4394.jpg
View fullsize IMG_4393.jpg
View fullsize Day Care across the street from his apartment
View fullsize IMG_2405.jpg
View fullsize IMG_4374.jpg
View fullsize IMG_4392.jpg
View fullsize IMG_4372.jpg
View fullsize IMG_4366.jpg
View fullsize IMG_2403.PNG
View fullsize IMG_3506 (1).jpg
View fullsize IMG_4383.jpg
View fullsize IMG_4387.jpg
View fullsize IMG_4390.jpg
View fullsize IMG_4381.jpg
View fullsize IMG_4368.jpg
View fullsize IMG_4375.jpg
View fullsize Screenshot 2025-02-16 at 11.21.38 PM.jpeg
View fullsize IMG_4371.jpg
View fullsize IMG_4388.jpg
View fullsize IMG_4389.jpg
View fullsize IMG_4382.jpg
View fullsize IMG_4384.jpg
View fullsize IMG_4370.jpg
View fullsize IMG_4378.jpg
View fullsize IMG_2406.jpg
View fullsize IMG_4385.jpg
View fullsize IMG_4377.jpg
View fullsize IMG_4373.jpg
View fullsize IMG_4369.jpg
View fullsize IMG_4380.jpg
View fullsize IMG_4379.jpg
View fullsize IMG_4367.jpg
View fullsize IMG_4041.jpg
View fullsize IMG_2409.jpg
View fullsize IMG_2407.jpg

Some of Nick Ut’s photographs are below. I am still amazed that he photographed in the Palisades and was able to make it to the Altadena while the Eaton Fire was still burning. He does am amazing job going to the hard areas to photograph and I have come to really like his selfies to prove he was there.

View fullsize IMG_3539 (2).jpg
View fullsize IMG_3546 (2).jpg
View fullsize IMG_3541 (2).jpg
View fullsize IMG_3533 (1).jpg
View fullsize IMG_3542 (2).jpg
View fullsize IMG_3544 (2).jpg
View fullsize IMG_3538 (2).jpg
View fullsize IMG_3536 (1).jpg
View fullsize IMG_3537 (2).jpg

Kyle Grillot - Photographer

Kyle Grillot is a press photographer who captured one of the most iconic images from the Eaton Fire when he photographed Pasadena PD Officer Banuelos carrying a man to safety in Altadena (See Below), I believe on the morning of 1/8/25. I was not aware of Kyle’s work before seeing this image. He is a graduate of THE Ohio State University, and he has been photographing professionally for fifteen years. He absolutely is willing to go into the danger zone, his fire photographs, when he is in the middle of ember cast or raging flames are incredible. Among others, he photographs for the New York Times. I encourage you to follow him and check out his website. On his website check out the image of a Joshua Tree during the Bob Cat Fire, it is amazing. He was on Instagram @kylegrillot but minutes ago he made a post about Meta and said he was moving to Bluesky’s Flashes so hopefully you can track down his images.

Wally Skalij - Photographer

One last mention, I know Wally Skalij was out in the Palisades Fire, I am not sure if he made it to the Eaton Fire. Wally just announced his retirement from the staff of the Los Angelses Times yesterday. Wally was arguably the best Press Photographer of his era. He is a good documentary photographer, and I look forward to the portfolios he works on going forward now that he can be selective in his topics. He is another photographer who captured amazing images when he ran into the flames.

In Photography Tags Eaton Canyon, Eaton Fire, Frank Schlegel, Souther California Wildfires, Photography, Photographer, Wally Skalij, Kyle Grillot, Altadena, Altadena Strong, Samys camera
1 Comment

Don Norgood’s Photograph of Pasadena PD Motor Officer Tom Young on Green Street East of Orange Grove.

Appeared in Life Magazine on July 19th, 1969 - Originally published in the Pasadena Star News

LOWDOWN / SHOWDOWN Ed Norgood’s Photo of Pasadena PD Motor Officer Tom Young

January 19, 2025

Last November I was really focused on my hometown of Pasadena. I am up there a couple times a week to see my mom and check on things as it is but in November, I photographed the Doo Dah Parade again for the first time in a while and then the Pasadena Polic Department Alumni group on Facebook shared the above photograph which I remember really well from my childhood. I decided to research the image and write blog post about it. I at first thought long time Pasadena Star News Photographer Walt Mancini captured the image but after figuring out which issue of Life it appeared in, and actually purchasing a copy of it, I learned it was Ed Norgood’s photograph. Ed was another well-known Pasadena press photographer. I started writing this a month ago then all hell broke loose so I am just know trying to get caught up. As photographers I think there is value in looking at other photographer’s work. Most often that is involves examining images to understand the medium better, but in this case, I think seeing the life path that photography gave to Ed is also a valuable lesson.

Pasadena has been home to a number of good photographers, especially a number of good Press Photographers like John Lloyd, Walt Mancini, and Ed Norgood who captured the image above. For a press photographer I think Pasadena was ideal at the end of the last century because the Star News, the local paper, had great circulation, there were plenty of unique events to cover in Pasadena with the Rose Parade, Rose Bowl game, Super Bowls. Other prominent places like The Huntington Library, JPL, and Cal Tech are in Pasadena plus they got to cover events in Los Angeles because it was so close. It was the best of all worlds for a press photographer because you often had small town pace but then big-time action (and back then a paycheck). The pace allowed Ed Norgood the opportunity to see this image, photograph it, and get it published - eventually having it published in Life Magazine.

There have been other photographers come out of Pasadena like Adam Clark Vroman and myself (sorry I couldn’t resist) plus Pasadena City College had an outstanding photography program when I was there with people like Walt Girdner, “Uncle Walt”, who taught me my first photography class. I was lucky to be born and raised in the area.

The General

Often with a great image we lose sight of the people in them or at least their own story beyond the one image. Tom Young was a legendary officer at Pasadena, not only because he was a beast of a man but just because how well he controlled situations on the street. His nickname was the General and everyone loved working with him. The number of great comments about him on the Facebook post were amazing to read. I remember my dad showing me the photograph when I was a little kid and being proud that his friend, and someone from Pasadena PD, had been featured in Lide Magazine.

Interview by: Scott Swanson

Below is an interesting interview I found of Ed from the really small-town paper where he retired. I think it is an outstanding piece and gives insight in to why photographers photograph. The link is below, and I also copied and pasted the whole story because it had problems loading for me a couple of times.

The New Era - November 28, 2007

Edwin Norgord didn’t grow up intending to be a news photographer.

He actually intended to be an agricultural inspector in the citrus orchards of Southern California in the early 1950s.

But when that didn’t work out for him, he decided to take a photography class and ended up working for a Pasadena newspaper for 35 years, during which he shot movie stars, presidents, sports heroes and a lot of everyday human-interest photos, which were some of his favorites.

“The reason I love newspaper photography is because I dealt with people in all walks of life – the good, the ugly, the rich, the poor,” said Norgord, who will be 78 next month. “I’ve seen football players cry – just the emotion of people, trying to capture it on film.”

He did it well enough that he was recognized by his colleagues as the California Press Photographer of the Year in 1970.

Norgord was born and raised in Pasadena, Calif., about 10 miles northeast of Los Angeles, one of a family of seven children. He attended Marshall High School and John Muir Junior College during World War II before joining the Air Force in 1948 and serving in Japan during the Korean War.

After he was discharged in 1949, he enrolled in the Voorhis Unit of the California Polytechnic School in San Dimas, about 20 miles east of Pasadena. The college was all-male, so he and his buddies would cruise to other, all-female, campuses for social interaction.

“We had to go to the girls college in LaVerne (a few miles to the east) if we wanted to gallivant,” Norgord recalled. “When I got discharged, I bought a brand new car, a 1950 Chevy, and all the other college boys wanted to ride around in my car because it had skirts and pipes. That was my downfall because we were driving around to different girls schools and I wasn’t keeping up on my studies.”

Norgord said he also discovered that majoring in agriculture wasn’t for him.

“I couldn’t dissect leaves very well,” he said.

Transferring to Pasadena City College, he took a photography course and started chumming around with a friend, Elton Sewell, who was a photographer for the Pasadena Independent, a local tabloid newspaper.

“He got me started, really,” Norgord said. “He lent me a camera to use. I started to take pictures for the Independent – human interest, weather, accident photos.”

The editors liked his stuff and when an opening came up, they hired him to work weekends as a part-timer. He started working for the Independent full-time in 1954.

He said he particularly enjoyed working for Fred Runyon, the editor.

“He was the nicest guy you’d want to meet,” Norgord said. “A super, wonderful guy.

“One time when I was in the darkroom, I had taken a picture of my father-in-law taking a sliver out of his granddaughter’s hand. I walked into the house and saw him about ready to take the sliver out.

“I said ‘Hold it!’ and I ran out and got my Speedgraphic camera. They were under a desk lamp, so I took the bulb out and plugged a flashbulb into the lamp using this converter I had. Then I told them to go ahead and take sliver out. By the time I put the (film) slide back in, and got another negative in, he had the sliver out and the moment was past.

“I was in the darkroom printing this up, when my editor walked in and saw the print. I thought he was going to raise hell because I was doing this on company time. He said, ‘I’m going to fire you, Eddie, if you don’t enter this in a national contest.’ I did and got second place.

“He let reporters do whatever they wanted as long as they got job done.”

Norgord said he really enjoyed working with the reporters at the Independent, whom he said were “wonderful people.”

There was a lot of camaraderie and cooperation between public officials and the press, he said.

“In those days, if we all hung out in the press room at the police department, if there was a fire alarm, all of us photographers – from the L.A. Times, the Examiner, the Independent, the Herald Express, would jump in one car and follow the police car through red lights. They really worked with us in those days.

“Firefighters would urge us to go up the ladder to shoot a picture from the roof. They were very, very cooperative then.

“When one of the photographers was drunk, we’d shoot a holder for them.”

The job was enjoyable because it had challenge and he enjoyed working with people.

The whole idea of taking pictures is to try to illustrate a story, Norgord said, noting that the ability to spot situations with photo potential is key. One time, he said, he was supposed to shoot a photo to illustrate the start of spring.

“I went out and found a flower growing out of a spring sticking out of the ground in a vacant lot. You’re looking for things like that. It feels so great to go in and put a print like that on (the editor’s) desk.”

Norgord said he shot “lots of movie stars” including Bob Hope, Frank Sinatra and Gene Autry. He visited stars’ homes in Pasadena as well.

He also shot several presidents, but he particularly remembers one, Richard Nixon.

“I was really impressed by his brilliance, his speaking ability,” Norgord said. “He had an incredible memory. But I was jinxed by him.”

The first time he shot Nixon was at a hotel in Arcadia, near Pasadena. The president walked by, entering the hotel, and as Norgord was taking a photo, his Speedgraphic flash fell off and landed on Nixon’s foot.

Then, a few years later, he was at Nixon’s alma mater, Whittier College, about 15 miles south of Pasadena. Air had gotten into one of his flashbulbs, but as he reached into his bag to grab a bulb. he didn’t notice that the indicator dot on the bulb had turned pink, an indicator that the bulb was defective.

“I took a photo of him and Pat on the football field as he was giving a talk and my flash exploded and made a loud noise, flame shot out, and it sent glass all over him and Pat,” Norgord said. “I was so embarrassed by that. If it had been today, I would have been shot before I could explain.”

The last time Norgord photographed Nixon was at the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles. He and reporter Lou Spear went to Nixon’s room and after they were searched by a Secret Service agent, they entered the room where Nixon was sitting in a swivel chair.

“He swiveled around and looked at me and pointed his finger at me. ‘I know you, I know you,’ he said.

“I said, ‘Sir, do you want me to leave?’

“He said, ‘No, come on in.’

Norgord wanted to shoot the photo with available light but he had to avoid shooting a profile of Nixon’s nose, by the president’s request.

“He is one president who uses hand language. He speaks with his hands,” Norgord said. “I got some tremendous shots of him. When I went back, they were on deadline. They ran a one-column mug with no hands or anything. That upset me a little bit.”

One of his more exciting experiences was during a forest fire that he covered soon after starting with the Independent. He drove into the mountains north of Pasadena and found a camp full of firefighters who were sleeping after working on the fire line.

“I was taking pictures when the fire captain told me I had to leave because they were evacuating because the fire was coming toward them,” Norgord said.

As he left, he made a wrong turn on the dirt road and drove for miles on a road that was too narrow to turn the car around. Suddenly, embers started raining down on him and the car began overheating because the air temperature was about 115 degrees due to the advancing flames. Norgord was also almost out of gas.

Finally, he came upon a highway patrolman who was blocking the road.

“He said, ‘I thought the road was burned out back there,'” Norgord recalled. “I couldn’t talk because my throat was so dry.”

The police officer let him through and he made it to a nearby ranger station where he was able to beg a couple of gallons of gas. He also got a ride on a water tender to the fire.

“I ended up getting some of best fire photos of my career there,” he said. “They ran in our paper and in a magazine called ‘Stag.'”

The assignments he “dreaded” were “high-society” shots.

But, he said, even they sometimes turned out to be less than onerous.

“The people who had the money didn’t have to prove it,” Norgord said, relating a story of the time he was on an assignment in which he and a “society lady” drove up a long, brick driveway.

When they got to the mansion at the top, the woman went into the house and Norgord started talking with a man who was pruning roses nearby.

“When we left, the lady said, ‘Ed, do you know who that was?'”

Norgord said he assumed it was a gardener. Turns out, he said, it was the vice-president of Standard Oil.

Sometimes, he said, news photos didn’t come easily even when they were easy to get to.

That happened on June 6, 1968 after Robert F. Kennedy was shot by Sirhan Sirhan in the kitchen of the Ambassador Hotel. Sirhan’s mother worked at a local Roman Catholic church and Norgord went to try to get a photo of her.

“I went to the church where his mother worked and the priest asked me what I was doing there,” he remembered. “I said, ‘I’d like to take a picture of Mrs. Sirhan Sirhan if you haven’t told her yet.’

“He said, ‘We haven’t told her yet but we don’t want you to take a picture when she finds out. ‘

“I said, ‘I respect your wishes, but this is not local news, this isn’t even national news. This is an international story. I’d like to record this for history.’

“The priest said, ‘You know, you’re right.’ He said he’d let me take one picture when they told her.

“Sometimes you have to talk your way into news photos.”

Norgord worked at the Independent until the Knight-Ridder company bought the newspaper in 1988 and merged it with the Star-News. He was 58 and he decided to retire.

He and his wife moved to Mono Village, a resort outside Bridgeport in the eastern Sierras. He worked at the boat dock and in the grocery store and stopped taking photos for a while, he said.

“I loved my work while I was at the newspaper, but I had to get out,” he said, adding that his departure was hastened by a change in management.

After a divorce from his first wife, Norgord married a “long-time acquaintance” and they moved to Sweet Home in 1992.

“I loved the country, the outdoors and I wanted to get away from the big city,” he said.

His wife, Sherry, works for the Linn-Co Credit Union.

“She’s quite a bit younger than I,” Norgord said. “That’s what keeps me young.”

Now that he’s retired, he still has an interest in photography. He’s been drafted as the official photographer at the Evangelical Church and he’s still a member of the Los Angeles Press Photographer’s Association, so he enjoys seeing the work of photographers he knows who are still in the business.

The technology has changed drastically since he stopped taking news photos – news photographers have switched to digital and the darkrooms at most newspapers are obsolete.

“I have a digital camera now,” he said. “I’m still learning about it. Today I’m so blessed to have a self-focused, automatic camera now because my eyes are bad.

“Photography has gone a long way – It’s a lot easier to cope with than back in my day, especially with a Speedgraphic.

Photography was fun, mainly because of the people he worked with, he said.

“To me, it was a God-given great job that I had,” Norgord said. “I worked with wonderful people. Most people don’t have a job that they enjoy that much. I got an awful lot of prestige in my job. It was quite a reward to open up the paper and see your work in it. “

Photographer Ed Norgood (featured photograph for this blog post is visible behind him.

View fullsize Web1 CA DSC_6215_ 11292024  _1.jpg
View fullsize Web1 CA DSC_6217_ 11292024  .jpg

Technology today is in many ways wonderous. First I was able to be reminded about this image I remember from my childhood by a Facebook post on the Pasadena PD’s alumni group’s page that I am a member of. From there I was able to research the Life issue more, find multiple vendors across America selling copies, and I was able to order one in very good condition to add to my photography collection. Finally, from there I was able to search the web for more information the photographer Ed Norgood. I found a needle in the haystack by locating the above article from 17 years ago (almost to the day) by a small-town paper in Oregon where Ed had retired. Those are all the cool things. But the pace of today’s world has pretty much killed, or permanently changed, all the big print media like picture magazines and major newspapers. I grew up with the Pasadena Star News, it somehow still survives but it is a shell of what it once was. Multiple small papers have been condensed into it, so it covers a massive era in less depth and the staff is a fraction of what it once was. I touched on this with my Doo Dah Parade blog post that will follow this post. Old magazines and newspapers are amazing documents well beyond the individual story you are referencing back to today. these publications allow us to have a more complete picture of the moments in time they documented and that is something we are losing now with or instant gratification look and swipe world of digesting information. Another thing we are losing is in this era you knew your news source and over time you could develop a trust of, or a distrust, of your source because it was mostly consistent. Today we see so much information from so many different sources many of which we have no idea how reliable they are. It is truly a double edge sword that I fear will do more damage than good over time unless there are fresh ideas on how to improve how we vet today’s sources. This is going to get especially had soon because of all the AI content that is and will be generated in the coming days.

Below are six images from the same Life issue that I found interesting. 55 years ago they were reporting on Presidents and global warming which we are still talking about but look at the products being advertised! The country was aware of women’s rights but related it to cigarettes which now have limited advertising and less users. Every cellphone now produces better video quality that Kodak’s movie camera. Then finally we are now moving to electric and hybrid vehicles instead of this gas hog Continental Mark III (which is amazingly gorgeous beast).

View fullsize Web1 CA DSC_6229_ 11292024  .jpg
View fullsize Web1 CA DSC_6227_ 11292024  .jpg
View fullsize Web1 CA DSC_6219_ 11292024  .jpg
View fullsize Web1 CA DSC_6223_ 11292024  .jpg
View fullsize Web1 CA DSC_6225_ 11292024  .jpg
View fullsize Web1 CA DSC_6231_ 11292024  .jpg
In Photographer Tags Ed Norgood, Pasadena Star News, Pasadena Police Department, Life, Life Magazine, Scott Swanson, The New Era, Photography, Press Photography, Photographer, Walt Mancini, Walt Girdner
Comment

George A. Tice - Photographer October 13, 1938 – January 16, 2025

January 19, 2025

I have a limited number of other photographer’s work in my collection, something I should probably be better about. One print I do have is the above George Tice print Ferry Slip, Jersey City, NJ 1979. I purchased it over 25 years ago, can’t remember the cost, it was reasonable because he produced large editions, but I added it because I loved the composition and tonality of the print plus I also like New York City a lot. The number one rule in buying any work of art is you have to enjoy it, its never solely about investing.

Sadly, George A. Tice passed away on January 16th at 86 and I just heard about it.

George A. Tice - Country Road Landcaster PA 1961 - One of his most well-known images.

Gallery Gadcollection has an excellent webpage dedicated to Tice including an embedded video interview of him from 2019 where interestingly the last of six questions they aske him is about when he meets God. The page details most of Tice’s highlights and nice because it is so clear and concise. I also loved the fact that Tice chose a print of Ferry Slip to be in the video right behind him which suggests that is one of his favorite images too. There is also an interesting image on this page that Tice captured in 1959 of an explosion on the USS Wasp while he was in the Navy. He was no more than 21 years old at the time and I find this image incredible because it immediately reminded me of the Steerage by Stieglitz.

Tice’s work is in numerous permanent collections and for me it is sad every time our medium loses another icon. I am thankful for the work he left us with.

In Photographer Tags George A. Tice, Documentary Photography, Photography, Photographer, obituary
Comment

Eaton Fire - Origin Point and Observations

January 14, 2025

My observation of the Eaton Fire, before, during, and after.

Read More
In Photography Tags Eaton Fire, Eaton Canyon, Pasadena, Altadena, Souther California Wildfires, Pasadena Police Department, William Karl Valentine, Eagle Rock - Gould Line, Documentary Photography
1 Comment

Exhibition Announcement - APG Story Telling 2024 - Now through December 7th

November 29, 2024

I am happy to announce that I have another print being exhibited at the Atlanta Photography Group gallery now through December 7th. This year’s Storytelling juror was Sara Ickow who is an Associate Director of Exhibitions at the International Center for Photography in New York City.

My photograph in the exhibition is from this past June, and it is being exhibited for the first time. The image is titled “Rambo” and was from the West Hollywood Pride Parade in Southern California. Since 2020 I have been focused on documenting as much of Southern California as possible and I have now twice photographed the WeHo Pride Parade. This year’s parade was the first day I had ever encountered a “Leather Pup” and I found they were very willing to be photographed. I also like this image because the person in the lower left of the frame is also photographing “Rambo” with their cell phone which adds another layer of information to the documentation of the moment.

I want to thank Sara for selecting my image as well as congratulate the other photographers in the exhibitions. Thank you to everyone at the Atlanta Photography Group for such an amazing space and all the work you do. Finally, I want to thank my Atlanta area printer and framer Barry at Digital Arts Studio for producing another amazing framed print for me, your lab is one of the best in the county.

Other Work in the Exhibition:

Lisa Miller’s photograph above is one of my favorites in the exhibition. It is a great document; I love the lighting, the composition, and I especially like the reflection in the mirror which brings more depth of information to the image.

View fullsize williams-storytelling2024postcard.JPG
View fullsize coyt-storytelling2024postcard.JPG
View fullsize summerlin-storytelling2024postcard.JPG
View fullsize murphy-storytelling2024postcard.JPG
In Photography Exhibitions Tags William Karl Valentine, Tara Coyt, Atlanta Photography Group, Storytelling 2024, Sara Ickow, ICP, International Center for Photography, Digital Arts Studio, Amanda Summerlin, Angelica Perez, Cindy Konitz, Debra Barnhart, Dennis Luckenbill, Eric Bladholm, Gabriel García, Geoving Gerard, Isabel Chenoweth, Jamie Hopper, Jennylyn Pawelski, Joshua Williams, Kathy Sumardi, Lawrence Manning, Lisa Miller, Marcela Verschoor, Marla Puziss, Niki Murphy, Quintavius Oliver, Richard Greene, Ryan Jensen, Sabrina Samuel, Sally Cowart, Shaina Moultrie, Tevin Johnson, Timofey Abel
Comment

Exhibition Announcement - APG Selects 2024 - Opening September 17th

August 27, 2024

I am honored that the above print is included in the Selects 2024 exhibition which will open next month at the Atlanta Photography Group gallery.

The exhibition was curated by Aline Smithson who is a photographer, educator and founder of Lenscratch.

The Atlanta Photography Group describes Selects 2024 as an open-themed showcase that celebrates the diverse world of fine art photography, encompassing a wide range of subjects, cultures, and the global landscape. In the selection process, Smithson considered how the images worked in conversation with one another. She worked through 634 images submitted by 125 artists to choose 50 for Aline Smithson Selects 2024. 

All work in this exhibition will be considered for the APG/Museum of Fine Arts, Houston Purchase Award, a $3,000 prize which is made possible through a generous grant from Edwin Robinson and Julin Maloof, in honor of Gloria and Ted Maloof. Lisa Volpe, Curator of Photography at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston will make the decision for the museum purchase award.

The Opening Reception will be a hybrid event on September 28, 2024 6:00-9pm ET, with Ms. Smithson and Ms. Volpe in attendance, and featuring a juror/artist talk beginning at 7:00pm ET.

The Image

This is the first time I have exhibited this image which I photographed this past March in Chicago.

I first traveled to Chicago to photograph in 1987. In the past 37 years I have photographed in Chicago more than any other city outside of Southern California. On my trip to Chicago this year, I encountered a noticeable population of recent migrants from South and Central America, something I had never seen there before on such a big scale. 

I learned that since 2022, ~38,000 mostly South American immigrants have arrived in Chicago, from our southern border. The people I saw all had new winter wardrobes, and many were asking for money or selling candy.  I usually don’t interact with people I photograph on the street, but in this case, I knew it would be wrong to assume their situation and I needed to know the truth.  The people were reluctant to speak at first, but luckily my limited Spanish knowledge was enough to gain some trust.  They said they had arrived from Venezuela and Ecuador three months before.  I saw resiliency in the eyes of the kids, while the parents seemed completely unprepared for their new environment.

Photojournalists have documented the situation at the US/Mexico Border in great depth, but I think the story of the migrant population assimilating into our communities across the US is even more important and also needs to be told.  Hopefully this image, along with more of my images, will help spark further conversation on these people and their situation.

The Print:

The exhibition print has an image size of 24” x 16” which is the largest sized exhibition 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 31” x 27”. The print has an edition of 9 for this image size.

The print was made, and framed by, 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.

In Photography Exhibitions, Photography Tags Digital Arts Studio, Barry Glustoff, David Clifton-Strawn, Atlanta Photography Group, Aline Smithson, Lisa Volpe
Comment

Lulu Conner 1997-2024

Images can Live Forever even though We cannot.

July 26, 2024

When I heard my daughter’s voice on the phone this week, I immediately knew something was terribly wrong.  As a parent, as long as you hear you kid’s voice there is some relief because your kid is good enough to talk with you, but you instantly brace for what the bad news is.  In this case my daughter called to tell me that her best friend from college, Lulu Conner, had died of an apparent embolism after going to Paris to watch her sister-in-law (Maggie Steffens USA Water Polo) at the Olympics. 

At 27 my daughter should be going to weddings and showers, not memorial services.  I know loss happens at every age and we all must deal with grief at one point or another, it is common to everyone.  Sadly, some people must endure way more grief than others for some reason, it is just part of the plan.  It sucks, but we need hard times to appreciate good times and to grow and to appreciate the gift of life.

Alyssa Valentine, Ramsey Hufford, and Lulu Conner

Lulu and my daughter Alyssa were assigned to be roommates as freshmen at UC Davis, they had never met before.  Miraculously it was a perfect pairing, their bond was immediate, and they lived together their entire four years of college.  They became the nucleolus of an incredible group of diverse friends. Lulu laughed, lived, and loved more in her brief time on earth than most people do who live decades longer.  Her loss has left an incredible void for all her friends and family. I am so thankful that Lulu was so important to Alyssa and Ramsey, they loved each other so much, and I am grateful I was also blessed with so many good times with Lulu too.

When I got off of the phone, I got on my computer and looked up some of my photographs of Lulu to help me reflect on her impact and process the loss. I know what I am going to write is obvious, but I still think there is value in saying it. One of the greatest powers a photograph has is it documents and memorializes a fraction of a second in time and preserve that memory for as long as we want to maintain it. It is heartbreaking to know I will never be able to see my daughter and Lulu just laughing together again. But because I photographed them when they were together, I have something to hold on to, something to remind me how boldly Lulu lived and that helps with the loss.

I experience life by photographing my world. This usually annoys my family, but that is who I am, it is often uncomfortable for me to experience something without photographing it. I constantly frame the world in my mind as I look around and I hate missing opportunities to capture good images with a camera. I am a romantic, I don’t like change, I want to maintain the moment; I don’t know, maybe that is a big reason why I am a photographer. At this moment in time these traits are a blessing because I have a number of good images of Lulu that I can spend time with while I keep her spirit close.

We live in a Selfie world, with too many shallow self-portraits whose sole goal is to brag to our friends what we are up to (Group selfies do have more value).  I just want to remind people to actually photograph your loved ones, ideally with a camera, as well as your cellphone.  I know we are inundated by images online today but make sure you photograph to document some of the important things in life that will be cherished years from now.  Make prints of those photographs and save files to external drives, don’t rely solely on the cloud.

A Bill Jay Lesson to Wrap Up this post:

I know I have told this story more than once, but it’s worth repeating and still is one of the greatest things Bill Jay taught us while I was at Arizona State University. We were in class one day, in Matthews Hall, when Bill put two slides up the screen next to one another (yes back then you looked at prints or slides in class and there were real blackboards). One image was Ansel Adams’s Moonrise Over Hernandez, New Mexico which had just set the record for the most expensive print ever sold (I think it sold for around $40K). In the other projector Bill put up a good snapshot quality photo of a child in an inflatable wading pool. I can’t recall but it may have even been a photograph of one of his daughters, doesn’t matter. So, with both images side by side he asked the class which photograph was more valuable. Lots of my classmates spoke up with reason why it was Adams’s photograph; because of composition, because of the author, and many noted how important the sale was for the medium in general because of the price it sold for. After everyone willing to take the bait had their say, then Bill gave us more information. He said what if this print is the only photograph that this mother has which documents her child at that time in their lives. Maybe all the family albums had been lost in a fire, maybe she had even lost the child, and that simple snapshot was the only visual reminder she had of her child. He then asked us which print would the mother say is more valuable? Would she even consider selling the simple photograph of the child for any price? That simple example was almost forty years ago, and it is still so vivid to me. The viewer sets the value based on their own experiences and tastes. The photographs I shared in this post always meant something to me, and unfortunately now they have become more valuable because I’ll never have those people together again for another photograph.

In Photography, Photography Collector Tags LuLu Conner, Ansel Adams, Bill Jay, Arizona State University, Value of a Photograph, Maggie Steffens, UC Davis
Comment

"Photoganda" - the attempt to censor Evan Vucci's iconic photograph

July 19, 2024

I saw the term “Photoganda” for the first time yesterday and when I heard what it was referring to, I felt compelled to write about it here on my blog.  “Photoganda” is related to an apparent upswing of support Donald Trump has gained after Saturday’s failed assassination attempt in Butler, Pennsylvania. It specifically identifies the powerful images from the event by photographers Evan Vucci and Doug Mills as the reason for the upswing.  From what I can find Axios used the term “Photoganda” three days ago when they wrote an article about the photographers who documented the incident (It is a short but good read). Axios reported that unidentified photo editor(s) were calling for media outlets to stop sharing the images of a defiant and wounded Trump because they felt the images are giving Trump an unfair advantage in the Presidential campaign right now. From there other new outlets starting using the term. The term is very attention getting but problematic in concept. If there are certain individuals trying to devalue the importance of the photographs from the assassination attempt for the benefit of their own political interests, and they actually coined the term “Photoganda” then I have a serious problem with them. It is a dangerous term especially as we are entering an era of more AI imagery where people may already be starting to question the authenticity of documentary images.

When I heard of the assassination attempt, I immediately turned on the TV and most channels were showing the same 3 minutes of tape just before the shooting until Trump was driven off.  Being a photographer with several decades of law enforcement experience I focused on lots of different details in the video.  First the security tactics and response but then I noticed the two photographers who moved forward immediately after the volley of shots to document the incident.  Early on I thought about authoring a post about the photographers based on their movement during the event and when I saw the images they captured I wanted to showcase them as photographers because it was obvious that these images would become iconic and most likely Pulitzer worthy.  Those photographers received immediate media recognition so the need for post became less of an issue. Then the “Photoganda” dialogue yesterday motivated me to pick up the pace to author this post.

I’ll address the newly created term “Photoganda” first.  It obviously refers to Propaganda which is defined as: Information, especially of a biased or misleading nature, used to promote or publicize a particular political cause or point of view.  Everyone agrees that Evan Vucci’s photograph of Trump with blood running down his cheek, raising his fist, with the flag in the background is factually correct; There are no claims of AI elements or manipulation. Most people also realize the image is a huge gift to the Trump campaign.  The image instantly became iconic and no matter what your political beliefs are I think everyone can agree that Vucci and the other photographer were in the right place, at the right time to document something historical, but none of the photographers in Pennsylvania crafted images with the intent of creating propaganda.  Even if they wanted to, they didn’t have time; they couldn’t prepare their shot (excuse the term) because none of them knew what they were about to witness, and they had limitations on their positions where they could photograph from, plus they all captured the same events just from different vantage points.  If you look back to World War II there are plenty of great examples of Propaganda, the evil Nazi Joseph Goebbels was a master propagandist who comprehended the power of images, especially newsreels, to manipulate public opinion. US General Douglas MacArthur was aware of the power images had too, producing news reels of him returning to the Philippines and preferring photographers to photograph him from a low vantage point to visually increase his stature.  We can also examine Joe Rosenthal’s photograph of the flag raising on Mount Suribachi on Iwo Jima, which at different points in history has been accused of being carefully crafted, or possibly staged. Rosenthal earned a Pulitzer for the image which has become an unofficial second logo of the United States Marine Corps and is recognized worldwide still to this day.  I heard TV commentator Jesse Watters have a humorous take on the “Photoganda” issue when he said “They take the photographs, we disseminate them, the public consumes it. If you don’t want to be part of the process, make pottery and sell it by the side of the road”. The images we are seeing in the media of the attempted assassination of Trump are just outstanding press or photojournalistic photographs. Sure, they could eventually be used in a propaganda form, most likely an unlicensed item, but as they are being shared now, they are not propaganda.

Donal Trump after failed assassination attempt. Photograph by Evan Vucci - AP Chief Photographer in Washington DC

Evan Vucci is AP’s Chief Photographer in Washington DC, and he captured the above image of a bloodied Trump the flag in the background (In the video of the incident I believe Evan is wearing a plaid shirt and a baseball hat).  I assume he will win another Pulitzer for this image.  New York Times Photographer Doug Mills, who was wearing a grey sun hat in the videos is another Pulitzer Prize winning photographer that captured some incredible images including the one below.  Both these two photographers were moving about immediately after the shooting positioning themselves to get their images.  Doug was directly below Trump photographing when the Bullet struck Trump’s ear.  Doug told CBS News he made a burst exposure with his Sony camera and that one of the frames captured the bullet.  He mentioned his camera was capable of 30 frames per second, so I assume the camera body was an Alpha 1, unfortunately he didn’t state what his shutter speed was for the exposure.  I would expect his shutter speed was over 1/800th of a second so if the bullet was travelling around 2000 feet per second at that point the length of the line in his image would be consistent with how far the bullet traveled while the exposure was being made.  It is an incredible capture one that Harold Edgerton would be jealous of.  Doug said an FBI Forensic Specialist inspected the RAW image file and confirmed it documented the bullet in flight immediately after it had struck Trump.  In watching the CBS interview of Doug Mills he spoke about former New York Times Photographer Ron Edmonds who photographed the attempted assassination of Ronald Reagan in 1981.  Doug said they worked together for 15 years and that he had talked with Ron several times about photographing the Reagan event.  Ron told Doug in situations like that “to go forward don’t go backwards” to get the best images.  Ron was also a Pulitzer Prize winning photographer and he unfortunately passed away last month.

Donald Trump as gunshots are fired at his campaign rally in Butler, Pennsylvania, on July 13, 2024. This photo appears to show a bullet in the air near Trump. DOUG MILLS/THE NEW YORK TIMES

As I talked about above the motivation for this post was the creation of the term “Photoganda” and the suggestion that some people with political agendas were trying to censor outstanding press images solely because those photographs were not beneficial to their political goals.  Censorship is a violation of the 1st Amendment of the Constitution, and it angers me when anyone tries preventing someone else from expressing themselves, in this case especially since these photographers were just sharing factually correct images of an historic event.  Another thing I want to mention is I hope Evan and Doug are somehow able to receive some compensation from all the people who I know are all marketing their images in a variety of products.  Copyright is also an important thing, unfortunately with so many people using Evan’s image already it will be a big task to track down every one of them.  I know both photographers were on a paid assignment but hopefully they can monetize their images beyond their salary that day because I am sure their images are generating thousands of dollars for others. I also want to share Evan’s quote after capturing such an iconic image: “I haven't had a chance to really think about any of that stuff. But apparently, the photo is pretty viral.”

Anna Moneymaker’s photograph Donald Trump after he was shot.

There were other photographers at the rally as well. Anna Moneymaker from Getty captured the incredible photograph of Trump on the ground after being shot through the legs of a Secret Service Agent who is shielding him. In an incident with an adrenaline spike like this, I suspect many photographers would have missed that image; their cameras probably would have focused on the agent’s rear end not Trump. She captured a hard image, in a dangerous environment. Gene J. Puskar who is a Pittsburgh based AP photographer also captured some solid images. Unfortunately for all the photographers who captured great images out that day, the world is most likely only remember the big three images by Vucci, Mills, and Moneymaker images.

We live in a world of reels and video content now, and a biproduct of that I think is often a short attention span for content.  We have so much video and still image content from this event, but I love the fact people are focused on the still image.  The still image allows the viewer to exam and reflect at our own pace and we need to be reminded of that fact.  The capability of today’s cameras to capture detail is incredible.  We have never been able to dissect an historic event like this with so many highly detailed images of the event.  When I saw the photographs of Trump after he was shot there was no question to the location and extent of his injury, I am still in awe of the detail in the images.

I mentioned above how Ron Edmonds had told Doug Mills to go forward in critical incidents and it reminded me of some of the best advice I ever received studying at Arizona State University. When one of my professors, Bill Jenkins, saw the first few rolls of my Pasadena PD series he gave me similar advice when he suggested I change from a 50mm lens to a wide-angle lens to force myself to get closer to my subject matter. The suggestion was outstanding, and I have used it with most of photographs since. There is an edge you get being in close that takes most photographs to another level. Tactically, from a law enforcement perspective, I was taught early on that often the best way to handle a threat if you are out in the open is to go right at it instead of retreating. I worked with a number of Vietnam veterans in my career including a Green Beret and a Seal, both had incredible insight on how to survive. Obviously a completely different objective but an interesting parallel.

Finally, from a law enforcement perspective I saw some good things that officers and agents did and some bad things.  From the protection perspective it was inexcusable to allow the suspect to have gained access to the roof location, and then for the counter sniper team to allow the suspect to fire, especially multiple rounds.  After being shot Donald Trump should not have stopped to raise his fist in defiance because it exposed himself it there were multiple threats beside the first sniper.  Maybe Trump had gone in to shock by that point, if so it was a strong reaction on his part, but the security detail should have covered him and whisked him to the car.  Luckily for Evan that didn’t happen, and he captured the image he did.  I will leave it there because there are so many other people scrutinizing what happened there and my primary focus here is on photographs.  I am concerned that more press photographers will be able to document similarly chaotic events in the coming months, I hope they won’t have those opportunities, because I know we all need a break from the tension of the last eight years.

 Related Articles

AP - Images altered to make them look like Secret Service Agents were smiling after the assassination attempt.

Evan Vucci's Trump Image Is a Legendary American Photograph - The Atlantic

In pictures: Trump injured in shooting at Pennsylvania rally | CNN Politics

Time Magazine interview of Evan Vucci

In Civil Unrest, Photography, Photographer Tags Photoganda, Evan Vucci, Doug Mills, Ron Edmunds, Trump assassination attempt, Press Photography, Photojournalism, Photography, A, American History, Sony Alpha 1
1 Comment

Curator Rebecca Senf leading Maine Media’s workshop on Building the Curator - Fine Art Photographer Relationship

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

July 19, 2024

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

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

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

Photographers who Participated in the Workshop:

Diana Nicholette Jeon

Website: http://diananicholettejeon.com

Instagram: @diananicholettejeon

FB http://facebook.com/diananicholettejeon

 

Anne McDonald

Website: AnneArdenMcDonald.com

Instagram: @anneardenmcdonald

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

 

Chris Leventis

Website: www.chrisleventis.com

IG:  @chrisleventis.artist

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

 

Susan Keiser

Website:  https://susankeiserphotography.com/

IG: @susankeiser 

 

Sara Silks

Website: https://www.sarasilks.com

Instagram: https://instagram.com/sara_silks

 

Ken Karagozian

Website: https://www.kenkaragozian.com

Instagram: @kenkaragozian

 

Lydia Panas

Website:  http://www.lydiapanas.com/

IG @lydiapanas     

 

William Karl Valentine

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

Secondary Site: WILLIAM KARL VALENTINE 2020

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

 

In Photography, Photography Workshop Tags Diana Nicholette Jeon, Anne McDonald, Chris Leventis, Susan Keiser, Sara Silks, Ken Karagozian, Lydia Panas, Becky Senf, Center for Creative Photography, Maine Media
Comment

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.

Chicago Photographs - March 2024

June 21, 2024

Both of my kids played travel ice hockey growing up. It was time consuming and expensive, but it was some of the best times of our lives. A nice biproduct of them playing was I got back to the East Coast a lot and was able to photograph and see lots of amazing exhibitions. My daughter now lives in Chicago after getting her master’s degree from Northwestern and she started playing hockey again last year with joining a women’s league. When her team qualified for the payoffs, she told me that I needed to come back to see her play again. The last time I had been in Chicago was March of 2020 when I was driving across country with her brother trying to outrun the pandemic shutdown of the country. I acknowledged I was long overdue to visit so I agreed to a long weekend. The playoffs were up near Madison, Wisconsin but I was able to bookend days around the tournament to get three days to photograph in Chicago, museum hop, and eat at my favorite restaurants.

Chicago has been my favorite city to visit since I first went there in 1987 to photograph Wrigley Field, before they installed the light. I have been to Chicago at least twenty-five now. Chicago became our go to vacation spot, it was an easy flight, there was lots to do, and we just liked the city. Chicago had everything a big city should have but there is a Midwest atmosphere which is just nice. It is an amazing sports town, the museums are amazing, and the city has the best steaks of anywhere in the world.

Photographing on the street in Chicago is amazing I always find good images there. Like in New York there are usually lots of people walking about the city and there is plenty of interaction which usually adds layers of meaning to an image. I have also found that most of the time I have been in Chicago the quality of light in Chicago has been outstanding, which is not the case other places. I think part of it has to do with the way the streets are laid out, there is more room between the buildings there than most cities. I think part of that is by design since architectural design is so important in the city and there may have been a conscious plan to allow some buildings to have room around them to be showcased. The Chicago River and lake front also allow more light to fall in the city. The beauty of the architecture in Chicago is also lends itself to more interesting backgrounds of images. I also think the way some of the buildings are constructed that they improve the bounce light. The city also has that Midwest atmosphere most places which is nice. Michigan Avenue is a wide street with wide sidewalks and planter boxes; the street was designed for shoppers and heavy pedestrian traffic. With Michigan Avenue’s sidewalks being so wide not only does that allow more light into the area but it also has always given me room to maneuver and get in position to frame my images better than anywhere else. I have become so familiar and comfortable with the city I always do well with a camera there.

It was amazing on this trip in March how quickly I was back in the zone while photographing on the street. At times it felt like images were coming to me and I wasn’t having to search as hard as I do in Los Angeles sometimes. I especially found that interesting because I spent more time on this trip than ever before photographing South of the river, especially around Daly Square where I don’t usually go.

My Chicago portfolio is special to me, and I envision having an impact on others in book form and as part of a permanent collection. The Chicago Historical Society already has some of my photographs in their collection and hopefully I can find more homes in the city for my work soon.

This trip also inspired me to start digitizing more Chicago negatives and I have added some of those recently scanned images to my Chicago Portfolio here on my website.

Below are some of the images from my March 2024 trip:

View fullsize CHI DSC 6514  3-26-24
CHI DSC 6514 3-26-24
View fullsize CHI DSC 6263  3-26-24
CHI DSC 6263 3-26-24
View fullsize CHI DSC 3359  3-22-24
CHI DSC 3359 3-22-24
View fullsize CHI DSC 3410  3-22-24
CHI DSC 3410 3-22-24
View fullsize CHI DSC 03958  3-25-24
CHI DSC 03958 3-25-24
View fullsize CHI DSC 6257 3-26-24
CHI DSC 6257 3-26-24
View fullsize CHI DSC 04315  3-25-24
CHI DSC 04315 3-25-24
View fullsize CHI DSC 3234  3-22-24
CHI DSC 3234 3-22-24
View fullsize CHI DSC 3159  3-22-24
CHI DSC 3159 3-22-24
View fullsize CHI DSC 6181  3-26-24
CHI DSC 6181 3-26-24
In Artist, Photographer, Photography, Street Photography Tags Chicago, The Art Institute of Chicago, William Karl Valentine
Comment

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
Comment

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
Comment

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.

View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_3266 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute GEN 22B.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_3266 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute GEN 22.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_3266 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute GEN 22A.jpg

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.

View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_3266 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute GEN 23.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_3266 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute GEN 23A.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_3266 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute GEN 23B.jpg

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.

View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_3266 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute GEN 7A.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_3266 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute GEN 7.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_3266 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute GEN 7B.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_3266 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute GEN 6.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_3266 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute GEN 6A.jpg

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.

View fullsize WEB CHI 5532 3-25-24 William Karl Valentine Art Ins   C.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI 5540 3-25-24 William Karl Valentine Art Ins.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_3266 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute GEN 21A.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_3266 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute GEN 21B.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_3266 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute GEN 21.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_3266 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute GEN 21C.jpg

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

View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_3266 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute GEN 10.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_3266 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute GEN 10E.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_3266 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute GEN 10B.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_3266 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute GEN 10D.jpg

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.

View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_3266 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute GEN 1.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_3266 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute GEN 1A.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_3266 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute GEN 2.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_3266 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute GEN 4.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_3266 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute GEN 3.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_3266 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute GEN 8.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_3266 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute GEN 5.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_3266 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute GEN 5A.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_3266 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute GEN 5B.jpg

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

More things I found interesting below.

View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_3266 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute GEN 13.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_3266 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute GEN 13A.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_3266 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute GEN 19.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_3266 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute GEN 19A.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_3266 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute GEN 18.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_3266 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute GEN 17.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_3266 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute GEN 14.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_3266 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute GEN 15.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_3266 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute GEN 16.jpg

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
Comment

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.

View fullsize WEB CHI IMG 03-22-2024 iPhone MoPA 26B.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI IMG 03-22-2024 iPhone MoPA 13.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI IMG 03-22-2024 iPhone MoPA 9.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI IMG 03-22-2024 iPhone MoPA 25.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI IMG 03-22-2024 iPhone MoPA 26A.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI IMG 03-22-2024 iPhone MoPA 25A.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI IMG 03-22-2024 iPhone MoPA 25B.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI IMG 03-22-2024 iPhone MoPA 1.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI IMG 03-22-2024 iPhone MoPA 14.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI IMG 03-22-2024 iPhone MoPA 2.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI IMG 03-22-2024 iPhone MoPA 3.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI IMG 03-22-2024 iPhone MoPA 10.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI IMG 03-22-2024 iPhone MoPA 12.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI IMG 03-22-2024 iPhone MoPA 18.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI IMG 03-22-2024 iPhone MoPA 11.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI IMG 03-22-2024 iPhone MoPA 15.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI IMG 03-22-2024 iPhone MoPA 17.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI IMG 03-22-2024 iPhone MoPA 16.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI IMG 03-22-2024 iPhone MoPA 21.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI IMG 03-22-2024 iPhone MoPA 20.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI IMG 03-22-2024 iPhone MoPA 27.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI IMG 03-22-2024 iPhone MoPA 22A.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI IMG 03-22-2024 iPhone MoPA 22b.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI IMG 03-22-2024 iPhone MoPA 24.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI IMG 03-22-2024 iPhone MoPA 23.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI IMG 03-22-2024 iPhone MoPA 24B.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI IMG 03-22-2024 iPhone MoPA 24A.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI IMG 03-22-2024 iPhone MoPA 8.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI IMG 03-22-2024 iPhone MoPA 7.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI IMG 03-22-2024 iPhone MoPA 5.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI IMG 03-22-2024 iPhone MoPA 4.jpg

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.

View fullsize WEB CHI IMG 03-25-2024 iPhone CCC 6.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI IMG 03-25-2024 iPhone CCC 3.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI IMG 03-25-2024 iPhone CCC 1.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI IMG 03-25-2024 iPhone CCC 2.jpg

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.

View fullsize WEB CHI IMG 03-25-2024 iPhone CCC 11.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI IMG 03-25-2024 iPhone CCC 9A.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI IMG 03-25-2024 iPhone CCC 7.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI IMG 03-25-2024 iPhone CCC 8.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI IMG 03-25-2024 iPhone CCC 10.jpg
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
Comment

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.

View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_Goldblatt 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute 61.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_Goldblatt 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute 56.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_Goldblatt 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute 50.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_Goldblatt 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute 52.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_Goldblatt 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute 52A.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_Goldblatt 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute 53.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_Goldblatt 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute 54.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_Goldblatt 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute 55.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_Goldblatt 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute 57.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_Goldblatt 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute 58.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_Goldblatt 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute 58A.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_Goldblatt 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute 60.jpg

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.

View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_Goldblatt 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute 1.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_Goldblatt 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute 1A.jpg

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.

View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_Goldblatt 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute 31.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_Goldblatt 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute 31A.jpg

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)

View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_Goldblatt 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute 14A.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_Goldblatt 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute 14.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_Goldblatt 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute 15.jpg

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.

View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_Goldblatt 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute 3.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_Goldblatt 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute 3A.jpg

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.

View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_Goldblatt 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute 9.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_Goldblatt 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute 24.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_Goldblatt 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute 20.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_Goldblatt 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute 21.jpg

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.

View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_Goldblatt 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute 38B.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_Goldblatt 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute 38A.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_Goldblatt 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute 38.jpg

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.

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

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).

View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_Goldblatt 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute 47.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_Goldblatt 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute 37.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_Goldblatt 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute 10.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_Goldblatt 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute 26.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_Goldblatt 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute 26B.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_Goldblatt 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute 48B.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_Goldblatt 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute 48.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_Goldblatt 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute 48A.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_Goldblatt 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute 27.jpg

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.

View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_Goldblatt 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute 18A.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_Goldblatt 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute 18.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_Goldblatt 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute 2.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_Goldblatt 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute 4.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_Goldblatt 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute 5.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_Goldblatt 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute 32.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_Goldblatt 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute 28.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_Goldblatt 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute 11.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_Goldblatt 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute 19.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_Goldblatt 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute 30.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_Goldblatt 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute 37A.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_Goldblatt 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute 34.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_Goldblatt 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute 8.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_Goldblatt 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute 22.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_Goldblatt 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute 12.jpg

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
Comment

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

View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_Rad Clay 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute 14.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_Rad Clay 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute 14A.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_Rad Clay 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute 14B.jpg

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.

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

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

WEB CHI DSC_Rad Clay 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute 1.jpg
WEB CHI DSC_Rad Clay 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute 1A.jpg
WEB CHI DSC_Rad Clay 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute 2.jpg
WEB CHI DSC_Rad Clay 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute 2A .jpg
WEB CHI DSC_Rad Clay 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute 3.jpg
WEB CHI DSC_Rad Clay 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute 3A.jpg
WEB CHI DSC_Rad Clay 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute 4.jpg
WEB CHI DSC_Rad Clay 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute 10.jpg
WEB CHI DSC_Rad Clay 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute 7.jpg
WEB CHI DSC_Rad Clay 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute 5.jpg
WEB CHI DSC_Rad Clay 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute 9.jpg
WEB CHI DSC_Rad Clay 03-25-2024 Chicago Art Institute 8.jpg
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
Comment

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.

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

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.

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

View fullsize WEB CHI Art Ins   3-25-24 William Karl Valentine 15.jpg
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)

View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_5350  3-25-24 William Karl Valentine.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI Art Ins   3-25-24 William Karl Valentine 17.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI Art Ins   3-25-24 William Karl Valentine 16.jpg

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

View fullsize WEB CHI Art Ins   3-25-24 William Karl Valentine 7.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI Art Ins   3-25-24 William Karl Valentine 17 A maybe.jpg

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

View fullsize WEB CHI Art Ins   3-25-24 William Karl Valentine 1.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI Art Ins   3-25-24 William Karl Valentine 2.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI Art Ins   3-25-24 William Karl Valentine 4.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI Art Ins   3-25-24 William Karl Valentine 5.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI Art Ins   3-25-24 William Karl Valentine 6.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI Art Ins   3-25-24 William Karl Valentine 8.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI Art Ins   3-25-24 William Karl Valentine 11.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI Art Ins   3-25-24 William Karl Valentine 10A.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI Art Ins   3-25-24 William Karl Valentine 10.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI Art Ins   3-25-24 William Karl Valentine 9.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI Art Ins   3-25-24 William Karl Valentine 9A.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI Art Ins   3-25-24 William Karl Valentine 14.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI Art Ins   3-25-24 William Karl Valentine 18.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI Art Ins   3-25-24 William Karl Valentine 19.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI Art Ins   3-25-24 William Karl Valentine 20.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_5354  3-25-24 William Karl Valentine.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_5356  3-25-24 William Karl Valentine.jpg
View fullsize WEB CHI DSC_5376  3-25-24 William Karl Valentine.jpg

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
Comment

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
Comment

© 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).

View fullsize Attachment-1 (44).jpeg
View fullsize Attachment-1 (43).jpeg

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:

View fullsize f/4 1/500  ISO 900
f/4 1/500 ISO 900
View fullsize f/4.5 1/1000  ISO 400 @ 24mm
f/4.5 1/1000 ISO 400 @ 24mm
View fullsize f/4 1/800  ISO 2200 @100MM
f/4 1/800 ISO 2200 @100MM
View fullsize f/5.6 1/800  ISO 5000 @400mm
f/5.6 1/800 ISO 5000 @400mm
View fullsize f/4 1/250  ISO 16000
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
View fullsize f/7.1 1/1000  ISO 8000 @104mm
f/7.1 1/1000 ISO 8000 @104mm
View fullsize f/4 1/1000  ISO 5600 @30mm
f/4 1/1000 ISO 5600 @30mm
View fullsize f/4 1/250  ISO 16000  @50mm
f/4 1/250 ISO 16000 @50mm
View fullsize f/4 1/320  ISO 16000  @24mm
f/4 1/320 ISO 16000 @24mm
View fullsize f/4 1/25000  ISO 4500 @120mm
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.

View fullsize Attachment-1 (38).jpeg
View fullsize Attachment-1 (42).jpeg

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
Comment
View fullsize web NB DSC_1420_ 01122024 _2.jpg
View fullsize web web NB DSC_1446_ 01122024  .jpg

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:

View fullsize web CA DSC_9211_ 05252024 .jpg
View fullsize web NB DSC_1423_ 01122024 .jpg
View fullsize web CA DSC_9225_ 05252024 .jpg
View fullsize web CA DSC_9212_ 05252024 .jpg
View fullsize web NB DSC_1425_ 01122024 .jpg
View fullsize web NB DSC_1428_ 01122024 .jpg
View fullsize web CA DSC_9215_ 05252024 .jpg
View fullsize web CA DSC_9214_ 05252024 .jpg
View fullsize web NB DSC_1439_ 01122024 .jpg
View fullsize web CA DSC_9213_ 05252024 .jpg
View fullsize web NB DSC_1429_ 01122024 .jpg
View fullsize web NB DSC_1430_ 01122024 .jpg
View fullsize web NB DSC_1432_ 01122024 .jpg
View fullsize web CA DSC_9217_ 05252024 .jpg
View fullsize web CA DSC_9223_ 05252024 .jpg
View fullsize web CA DSC_9219_ 05252024 .jpg
View fullsize web CA DSC_9224_ 05252024 .jpg
View fullsize web CA DSC_9218_ 05252024 .jpg
View fullsize web CA DSC_9226_ 05252024 .jpg
View fullsize web CA DSC_9220_ 05252024 .jpg

 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
Comment
← Newer Posts Older Posts →
Blog Index

Instagram

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


Twitter

@Valentinephotog

 

Powered by Squarespace