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Friday Links: January 29, 2021

January 29, 2021 By Ron Keith

Rivals by Rafa Aremu

Thank you to everyone who submitted to our annual photography contest! This past year or so has been like none other and is sure to make for a unique show. We look forward to seeing how you documented everything that transpired as well as captured your own personal experience through photography. We’ll be announcing the winners of this year’s contest next week and hope you’ll join us for a virtual happy hour on Wednesday, Feb. 3 at 6 p.m. as we mark 15 years of celebrating local photography! 

  • Gemina Garland-Lewis shares how she learned to love bird photography, thanks to a “competitive collaboration.” 
  • Leica asserts that the world needs witnesses in their first global brand ad campaign in 10 years. The video features images from photographers all around the world, including Exposed alum Chris Suspect.
  • ARTnews shares a list of books on photography to inspire, inform, and entertain.
  • Exposed alum Michael Ryan spent over two years walking and biking in every neighborhood of D.C. to document the murals of the city. He compiled the results into a print, with each mural in the quadrant where it is located, which is available for purchase in various formats. All of the proceeds are donated to Artolution, a nonprofit that works with children displaced by conflicts around the world to create murals in the refugee camps and cities in which they live.
  • Cornell Watson was laid off from his day job in human resources midway through 2020 and is now a full time photographer shooting for publications like The New York Times and Washington Post and pursuing personal projects with grant funding.
  • Charles McQuillan’s panoramic photographs show Belfast in lockdown, as Northern Ireland’s coronavirus lockdown is to be extended to March 5.
  • A forgotten pinhole camera made from a beer can captured what is thought to be the longest exposure ever made–eight years and one month.
  • Focus on the Story extended the deadline for entries for their new book, “Transition: The End of an UnPresidented Four Years” to this Sunday night at 11:59 p.m.

Filed Under: Friday Links Tagged With: friday links

Friday Links: January 22, 2021

January 22, 2021 By Ron Keith

Photo by Kevin Wolf

It’s the last weekend before our 2021 photography contest closes. Be sure to submit your best images of the D.C. metro area by Wednesday, January 27 at 11:59 p.m.! We look forward to reviewing all of the submissions and announcing the winners in early February.

  • Winning images from the Life in Another Light photo contest explore how things look from a different perspective and how light can expand our imagination and creative potential. 
  • Sign up for the Center for Photographic Art’s online artist talk with David Freese where he’ll discuss getting a photography book published on Friday, January 29–free for members and $10 for others. Note that times listed may be in a different time zone.
  • Focus on the Story invites you to submit images that tell the story of the end of the Trump presidency and the beginning of the Biden-Harris administration for their book, “Transition: The End of an UnPresidented Four Years,” which is being funded through a Kickstarter campaign.
  • Photojournalists documented the inauguration of Joe Biden on Wednesday as well as the related events around the city.
  • Join Leica Store DC today at 4 p.m. on Zoom for Cameras, Coffee & Conversation with D.C. based freelance photojournalist, David Butow.
  • Buffalo-based photographer Doug Levere takes viewers up close and personal with incredibly detailed shots of snowflakes.
  • The 15th Annual Washington Gardener Magazine Photo Contest closes today at midnight. 
  • Actor Jason Lee discusses his new photo book “In The Gold Dust Rush,” a collection of black and white images shot throughout the midwest from 2008-2020.
  • Flickr announced the winners of “Your Best Shot 2020” earlier this week. Ten finalists were selected from over 18,000 submissions.

Filed Under: Friday Links Tagged With: friday links

Friday Links: January 15, 2021

January 15, 2021 By Ron Keith

Protecting the Capitol by Victoria Pickering

The deadline for entries to our 15th annual photography contest is fast approaching. With so much happening since our 2020 exhibition, we are sure you’ve captured countless scenes and moments that transpired in and around this city. We look forward to reviewing all the submissions and also can’t wait to see which images catch our special judges’ attention and receive a Best in Show award along with a $100 cash prize. Will it be one of yours? Submit your best images of the D.C. metro area to our contest by Jan. 27!

  • Join Capital Photography Center to explore Antietam National Battlefield tomorrow, 2:30 p.m., $94. Or if you plan to stay in, you can sign up for Sunday’s online course for photography basics and exposure control, $140.
  • Photographer Edas Wong keeps an eye out for times when two disparate subjects come together in one scene and captures them with his camera.
  • It’s the last day to submit to Photoworks’ call for entries to “Hindsight is 2020 – Street Photography in a Tumultuous Year.” 
  • A new auction marks 100 years since the birth of Ruth Orkin who traveled the world making waves in an industry dominated by men.
  • The National Portrait Gallery is accepting entries through January 29 for its triennial Outwin Boochever Portrait Competition that celebrates excellence in the art of portraiture.
  • Women Photojournalists of Washington (WPOW) is sponsoring a Civil Unrest Training by Global Journalist Society today from 6:00-8:00 p.m. that will cover best practices for civil unrest with a focus on visual journalists covering protests and major political events, including the upcoming inauguration in Washington, D.C. WPOW also started an emergency fund to help journalists purchase safety gear.
  • In response to the violent attack on the U.S. Capitol last week, the Dart Center for Journalism and Trauma is hosting a free 90-minute training webinar for journalists today at 12:00 p.m.
  • Apostrophe is accepting applications through Jan. 29 for their second round of the Apostrophe Mentorship Program, a 12-week course focused on amplifying the voices of the BIPOC community within the photo industry. 
  • Imaging USA will be held entirely online this year, with general sessions running this Sunday through Tuesday. A 3-day all-access pass is $59 or free for PPA members.

Filed Under: Friday Links Tagged With: 15th annual contest, Annual Contest, best in show judges, friday links

Announcing the Best in Show Judges for the 2021 Exposed DC Photography Show

January 13, 2021 By Ron Keith

We’re excited… The 2021 Exposed DC Photography Contest is here and open for entries through January 27. Residents of the D.C. metropolitan area: we invite you to submit the best images you’ve taken that showcase your personal experience living and working in our nation’s capital.

Don’t wait. Enter here.

Winners will be announced in February, and we’ll host a virtual happy hour to celebrate and commemorate our 15th annual contest and show–can you believe it?

The 2021 Exposed DC Photography Show will feature the winners of this year’s contest. Additionally, we have invited five distinguished local photographers and creatives to serve as special judges. They will study all of the winning images, and each judge will choose one image to receive a Best in Show award, which comes with a $100 cash prize. 

We are happy and honored to announce the special judges of this year’s show.

Adriana Mendoza

Adriana is the Creative Director and Operations Manager at Femme Fatale DC, a dynamic community that supports and amplifies womxn in business and in life. Her background includes a Master in Landscape Architecture focused in the design of public space in underserved communities. She worked at Floura Teeter Landscape Architects, bringing communities together through designing attractive and functional places for public gathering.

Deveney Williams

Deveney is a D.C. based visual storyteller and designer. Her photography work focuses on portraiture and editorial work. She aims to dismantle beauty standards and inspire people through her subjects.

Jamie Davis Smith

Jamie is a documentary and family photographer living in Washington, D.C. She is a former photography ambassador for Manfrotto, and her work has been featured in HuffPost, The Washington Post, and various other publications. Jamie has written extensively about photography. 

Kirth Bobb

Kirth is a FujiFilm ambassador, and his photographs have been published in several major publications including The New York Times, Washington Times, and HuffPost, and featured in several galleries across Europe, the Caribbean, and the Americas.

Steve Bosak

Steve is an amateur photographer who’s lived in D.C. for 20 years. He is a design thinking consultant and trainer who helps companies and agencies use a human-centered approach to innovation. He has a keen interest in photographing nature, buildings, and macro subjects.


The contest and the annual photography exhibition are an integral part of how Exposed DC supports and celebrates local photographers and their work. We also love seeing the images you share with us on Instagram and in our Flickr group, curating Fotowalk exhibitions, creating opportunities for us to gather together to share our love for all things photography (more virtually than in person these days), and keeping you informed of photography news through our newsletter.

Filed Under: Announcement, Annual Contest Tagged With: 2021 Exposed DC Photo Contest, 2021 photography contest, best in show, best in show judges

Friday Links: January 8, 2021

January 8, 2021 By Ron Keith

Conflict by thegirlwholeftthefridgeopen

There is so much more to Washington, D.C. than the federal government, but there are times when we can’t escape having history go down in our own backyard. When rioters broke into the Capitol building on Wednesday, photographers put their lives at risk to report out what was really happening on the ground. We know many of you were out this week and will continue to be through the Presidential Inauguration, and we want you to know how much we appreciate your documentation of these unprecedented times. Stay safe and keep pressing on, D.C.

  • Our annual Exposed DC Photography Show contest deadline is coming up on Wednesday, January 27. Send in your images that highlight life in D.C. over the last, very strange year.
  • Four years ago, Focus on the Story documented the Trump inauguration in a photo project that resulted in the book, “UnPresidented.” This week, they launched the follow-up project “Transition,” which will document the final days of the Trump presidency and the inauguration of Joe Biden and Kamala Harris.
  • Join the Library of Congress on Wednesday at 11:00 a.m. for an online exploration of the work and accomplishments of John Wood, the first United States’ federal government photographer.
  • The 15th Annual Washington Gardener Magazine Photo Contest is accepting entries through January 22 in four categories: garden views, garden vignettes, small wonders, and garden creatures. The fee to enter is $20, or $15 for magazine subscribers, and includes up to 10 images per entrant. 
  • Join the Analog Photography Fireside Chat this Saturday at 1:00 p.m. EST for a free 1-hour webinar where participants can also ask questions of panelists. 
  • Richard Silver captures space in unique and unexpected ways, as seen through the work in his upcoming “Vertical Churches” book which he talks about on My Modern Met’s Top Artist Podcast this week.
  • Paul Cupido’s Japan photo series finds beauty in emptiness.
  • Award-winning aerial photographer Brad Walls’ new series “Ballerine de l’air” was inspired by Olive Cotton’s 1935 photograph, “Tea cup ballet.”

Filed Under: Friday Links Tagged With: friday links

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