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Exposed DC Photography Show Partners: Critical Exposure

February 25, 2016 By Heather Goss

Exposed DC 2016 Show Partner - Critical Exposure

We’re very excited to start telling you about some great stuff we have planned for the opening night of the Exposed DC Photography Show on March 10. We’ve always tried to make Exposed DC a conduit for photography lovers to find the many great organizations that have been working in the community for years, so we’ve invited a few of them to join us in celebrating local photography in hope you’ll discover something new. We’ll be introducing each one over the next few days.

Let’s start with Critical Exposure, a phenomenal non-profit group that teaches students in Washington, D.C. how to use photography to advocate for themselves. We hope you’ll stop by their table in the ballroom to talk to these talented students and Critical Exposure staff about the work they’re doing, and see examples of the projects they’ve pursued.

Get advance tickets for opening night soon!

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Annual Exhibit, Exposed Event Tagged With: Critical Exposure, Exposed DC 2016 Partner

Exposed DC Tickets on Sale Now!

February 12, 2016 By Heather Goss

2016 Exposed DC Photo Contest

Are you ready to celebrate 10 years of photography with Exposed DC? We’ve put together a huuuuge party for everyone with local craft beer, great beats, and partnerships with tons of local photography groups to show everyone just how awesome the D.C. photography scene is. Get your tickets now!


Exposed DC Photography Show – 10th Anniversary Exhibition

– Featuring 47 images of the Washington metro area
– Opening reception: Thursday, March 10, 6 to 10 p.m., Carnegie Library, 801 K Street NW
– Exhibit hosted by the Historical Society of Washington, D.C.
– Local photography groups will provide entertainment and activities in the ballroom
– Exhibition Magazine and Poster: 10th year commemorative editions available for purchase
– Best in Show Awards chosen by a panel of distinguished local photographers
– Beer provided by Bluejacket Brewery; Beats by DJ Neville C.
– Advance tickets: Adult $35 / Under 21 $20 / 12 and Under FREE
– Door tickets: $45 / Under 21 $30 / 12 and Under FREE
– Cocktail attire suggested
– #exposeddc #xdc


Exposed DC is excited to announce its 10th annual Exposed DC Photography Show hosted by the Historical Society of Washington, D.C. from March 10 to April 1, 2016, on the second floor of the Carnegie Library.

These 47 winning photographs were chosen from a contest for their unique view of the Washington area – not as a political venue or tourist destination, but as a place where we live and work and love every day. Five of those photographs will be awarded our Best in Show prizes, each one chosen by a panel of distinguished metro-area photographers: Lucian Perkins, Susana Raab, Lauren Stockbower, Yodith Dammlash, and Carolyn Russo.

To celebrate a decade of amazing local photography, the Exposed DC opening reception will be held throughout the Carnegie Library; cocktail attire suggested. We’re showing our commitment to fostering photography for all skill levels and pursuits by partnering with local photography groups to provide entertainment and engaging activities throughout the Library. We’re delighted to be joined by Critical Exposure, Capital Photography Center, Leica Store DC, The Exposure Group African American Photographers Association, IGDC, HOIST Studio and the American Photographic Artists DC Chapter (APA|DC) to help us celebrate the big occasion.

D.C.’s own Bluejacket Brewery will provide their original brews at an open bar; complimentary wine and snacks will also be available. DJ Neville C. will provide dance tunes in the Carnegie Library’s fantastic D.C. Map Room.

A full color 10th Anniversary Exhibition Magazine with the last 5 years of winning photos be available at the opening, and online soon. The companion 5th Anniversary Magazine from 2006-2011 will also be available. Designed by Johanna Ostrich.

 

Buy Advance Tickets Now

Ticketing with Ticketleap

 

Exhibit hours: **Please note dates have been updated
Monday-Thursday: 10am-4pm
Fridays: 10am-8pm
Saturday, March 12: 10am-4pm
Closing day: Friday, March 25

All photographs displayed will be for sale. High-res images available upon request.

For more information or media passes, please contact:
Heather Goss at info@exposeddc.com

The Exposed DC Photography Show is a Ten Miles Square production.

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The Historical Society of Washington, D.C., is a community-supported educational and research organization that collects, interprets, and shares the history of our nation’s capital. Founded in 1894, it serves a diverse audience through its collections, public programs, exhibitions, and publications.

Washington is known throughout the world as a monumental federal city. Less well-known are the stories of Washington’s many diverse and vibrant communities. The Society helps make this local history easily accessible to the public to promote a sense of identity, place, and pride in Washington and to preserve this heritage for future generations.

Filed Under: Announcement, Annual Exhibit, Exposed Event

Friday Links: January 29, 2016

January 29, 2016 By Heather Goss

Photo by Caroline Angelo
Photo by Caroline Angelo
  • Next week, the National Cathedral hosts Seeing Deeper – they’re taking out the chairs, and the scaffolding will be gone, so you can feel (and photograph) a cathedral that looks “a lot like it would have during medieval times.”
  • Rest in peace, Concepcion Picciotto, and thanks to Biketripper for adding this great photo of her to our Flickr pool.
  • We told you about the National Park Service opening a position for a new Ansel Adams last December; now NPR interviews the agency about what the photographer will do. (The lucky person will be announced in a few months.)
  • Photographer Kevin Abosch just sold a photograph of an Irish potato for 1 million euros to an anonymous European businessman.
  • Finding Vivian Maier, the crowdsourced documentary about the street photographer whose work was unknown until hundreds of thousands of her photos were discovered a few years ago, is coming to Netflix on February 28.
  • This cat sticks his tongue out for concentration while taking his selfies.
  • To some, it was as if she had met a celebrity rock star. To others, this woman looked pretty terrified. In fact Robin Roy is one very eager supporter of U.S. Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump.
  • “A picture is worth a thousand words. The Soviet Photobook reminds us how many of those words can be lies, handsomely delivered” – an interesting review of this nine pound propoganda photobook by Exposed-alum Pat Padua.
  • When Electrolux closed its factory in a small Iowa town, residents learned how globalization is more than just a buzzword tossed about during presidential caucuses.
  • Renowned for her photographs of jazz and rock legends of the 1960s and 70s, Leni Sinclair has been announced as the Kresge Foundation’s Eminent Artist of 2016.
  • A Norwegian chain of Arctic islands is seeking to turn numbing cold and total winter darkness into a draw for visitors who usually only venture north for the midnight sun during fleeting summers.
  • From pinstriped suits to sporting successes – and life on the farm in wartime – images from the Bank of England’s photo vaults.
  • Photographer Corinne Botz takes us inside the bizarre world of simulated doctor-patient relationships.
  • The “Postcards from Home” project, run by Kotryna Ula Kiliulyte, features nine Glasgow-based artists’ photographs of their homeland, printed as actual postcards.
  • For more than 2,500 out-of-service New York City subway cars, the bottom of the Atlantic is the final destination after they were enlisted for the Metropolitan Transportation Authority’s artificial reef program.
  • A fashion photographer takes these clever subversive selfies (though the gif bits are a little creepy).
  • This adorable sloth tried to cross a road In Ecuador, but got stuck half way.
  • A wonderful gallery of the piglet saved from the snowstorm by a Chevy Chase family, and then adopted by the Poplar Spring Animal Sanctuary where he’s now a warm and snugly pig in a blanket.

Filed Under: Friday Links

Friday Links: January 15, 2016

January 15, 2016 By Heather Goss

Photo by Julian Ortiz
Photo by Julian Ortiz

Congrats again to all of the winners of our 10th annual photo contest! We are busy planning the best party we can possibly throw you on March 10 and hope all of you will join us. Let’s get to the links:

  • Hop on it: Staff photographer positions don’t open very often these days. Washingtonian Magazine wants YOU.
  • The Washington Post has a special feature about D.C photographer Chris Earnshaw, and his Polaroids of the devastated city in the 1970s.
  • The New York Times Lens blog published a two-part story with new research on the life of Vivian Maier.
  • David Bowie died this week at 69; Al Jazeera America has one of the better photo galleries from his life. Made all the more sad because AJA shuttered its entire division this week, laying off hundreds. The Guardian, meanwhile, covers Alan Rickman’s life in pictures. RIP, you brilliant men.
  • “If you were there when the Hindenburg caught on fire, and you took a picture of it, that’s a great photograph. But you’re not a great photographer, because you can’t repeat that in everyday things. What a great photographer does is, they are consistently able to make something in a style that’s personal to themselves.” PBS talks to photographer Ken Van Sickle about what makes a photographer now that everyone can take pictures.
  • An Instagram “power user” took a video of what his notifications look like (when he has them on).
  • Photo editor Elizabeth Krist is retiring after 21 years and editing over four million photos at National Geographic. See her top ten favorite stories from over the years.
  • In the upcoming publication “Notes for an Epilogue,” Tamas Dezso photographs the vanishing world of old Romania.
  • Scroll down the list of finalists for the annual American Society of Magazine Editors awards to see the Feature Photography picks in The California Sunday Magazine, Politico, New York, Vanity Fair, and W.
  • Gloria is cute as hell and probably does more on three legs than you do on two. You can adopt her from the Washington Humane Society, Georgia Avenue location.

Filed Under: Friday Links

Friday Links: December 31, 2015

December 31, 2015 By Heather Goss

Martin's Tavern by Mike Maguire
Martin’s Tavern by Mike Maguire

Here’s your last edition of Friday Links for 2015. At Exposed DC, we’ve spent a wonderful year enjoying the images from so many talented photographers living in the D.C. area. We threw a big party at the new Capital Fringe headquarters last March for our 9th annual Exposed DC Photography Show, met up to watch the once-in-a-lifetime flyover of World War II aircraft, worked with some generous volunteer teachers who taught many of you some new skills at our Knowledge Commons DC photography class series, and have gotten to know tons of you through our monthly happy hours. We look forward to 2016 and celebrating our 10th anniversary exhibit with you all — submit your photos by January 6 to have your work featured in the exhibit — and doing whatever we can to foster and encourage local photographers.

  • The City Paper’s Louis Jacobson picks his top nine photographic images (plus one video project) exhibited in the D.C. area in 2015.
  • National Geographic revealed the winners of their 2015 photo contest, with the grand prize going to James Smart for his shot “Dirt” which shows an anti-cyclonic tornado touching down in open farmland in Colorado.
  • Aperture looks back at a selection of their 2015 features, from in-depth conversations with William Klein and Miyako Ishiuchi to a secret history of Japanese photography.
  • A collection of some of the best books of photography from this year, as selected by Teju Cole and editors of The New York Times magazine.
  • “Each photograph selected for TIME’s Top 10 photos of 2015, carefully culled from thousands and presented here unranked, reflects a unique and powerful point of view that represents the best of photojournalism this year.”
  • The Guardian takes a closer look at five fake photos that went viral in 2015.
  • “Trees and bees confused in Washington, D.C.” Capital Weather Gang’s Kevin Ambrose headed for the Mall to document the effects of the recent spring-like weather.
  • SFGate has a photo gallery of this elephant seal determined to cross North Bay Highway in California. She DGAF.
  • Quit taking images of beautiful sunsets. You’re better off looking for the bizarre. Scientists have uncovered exactly what makes a photo memorable.
  • A Siberian tiger and a goat that was supposed to be his lunch became best friends instead.
  • Fans of Vladimir Putin can now spend “the whole year with the Russian president” as a new 2016 limited edition calendar is released in Russia. Make sure not to miss November’s photo, captioned “Dogs and I have very warm feelings for one another.”
  • Behind the Lens: 2015 Year in Photographs. By Pete Souza, Chief Official White House Photographer. Make sure you’re sitting comfortably and have time to spare before feasting your eyes on this post which features over 100 incredible images.
  • “The National Zoo’s small mammal house features an eclectic collection of wacky hairstyles and odd visages.” Stunning photographs by habitual Exposed DC alumna Angela Napili.

Filed Under: Friday Links

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