- Focus on the Story will be awarding a $2,000 grant and a Fujifilm XT-4 gear package to a single photographer to help them begin and complete a community-driven project that tells a compelling and impactful visual story. Proposals are being accepted through June 18.
- Sign up for the community celebration closing event on May 20 for “Our City, Ourselves: Women Photograph Washington,” an online exhibit organized by the DC Commission on the Arts & Humanities. You can also participate by posting pictures from across the District on social media with the hashtag #OurCityCAH; a slideshow will be shared during the closing event.
- On the B&H Photography Podcast, Gulnara Samoilova discusses street photography and the new book she edited that profiles one hundred women street photographers from around the world.
- The Portrait Gallery is hosting an online presentation, “Enduring Images: Enslaved People and Photography in the Antebellum South” on May 11 at 5 p.m., free with registration required.
- Peek inside Italy’s ghost villages and abandoned houses believed to number in the thousands.
- PetaPixel rounds up the best smartphones for photography in 2021, broken down into six categories.
- This year’s Nikon surf photo of the year award goes to Stu Gibson for his image featuring surfer Tyler Hollmer Cross taking on Shipsterns in south-east Tasmania.
- A mirrored ceiling and tile floor turn a bookstore into an immersive M.C. Escher-style illusion.
Friday Links: April 30, 2021
- Exposed alum Chris Chen’s Floating World solo exhibit opened this week and will be up through June 1 in the alley by Ellē in Mount Pleasant. Swing by to see the show and come back in June for our annual photography show in the same spot!
- A collection of 71 salt prints by William Henry Fox Talbot sold for $1,956,000 at Sotheby’s April 21 sale.
- The “anonymous” South African artist known as Xopher Wallace turns dreams into reality through photography and AR.
- Dawoud Bey retrospective at the Whitney Museum of American Art documents and explores various projects by the artist and how they came to be.
- Exposed alum Geoff Livingston shares how photography became part of his creative means to find balance, particularly amidst the pandemic, in his TEDxAtlanta talk.
- 1854 & British Journal of Photography announced the winners of the inaugural Decade of Change award that aims to harness the universal power of art and imagery to galvanise climate action.
- Steven Kovacs has spent the last eight years on blackwater dives about 730 feet off the eastern coast of Florida photographing sea creatures in a process that “entails drifting near the surface at night from 0 to 100 feet over very deep water.”
- The Apostrophe Protection Society invites people to submit photographic examples of the misuse of apostrophes in the wild. A tribute to the founder who died earlier this year can be found here.
Friday Links: April 9, 2021
- Critical Exposure is searching for a Program Director to lead youth organizing programs that train DC youth of color ages 14-24 in community organizing, photography, storytelling, and action planning. Applications will be considered on a rolling basis with a deadline of April 26.
- The “Telling Your Story” virtual exhibit opened earlier this week on Photoworks’s site, featuring 8 artists’ photo projects from a class they took with Ernesto Bazan.
- The BBC announced The Great British Photography Challenge is due to air this summer, with photography luminaries Rankin and Chris Packham at the center of the broadcast.
- Sigma Photo and Cardinal Camera invite you to a virtual session on the basics of photographing birds, from your bird feeder to the beach to the prime locations and destinations with photographer and Sigma tech rep, Brett Wells, on April 24 at 11:00 a.m.
- Speaking of birds, European starlings flock in mesmerizing swarms of thousands, but why is still somewhat of a mystery.
- PHmuseum’s curated awards guide provides info on grants and other photography applications currently open for submissions.
- Eric Pfrunder, who inherited Karl Lagerfeld’s photograph collection, plans to register the catalog on the Lukso blockchain, as well as releasing the photos over time through exhibits and books.
- Indian photographer Sutapa Roy’s “Wish My Butterfly Would Live Forever” tells the story of a young girl concerned about the health of the environment across the globe. It also shows a mother seeing her daughter mature and find her place in the world.
Friday Links: April 2, 2021
Earlier this week, we announced some exciting news! We are partnering with Focus on the Story and Lost Origins Gallery to present the 15th annual Exposed DC Photography Show in an outdoor installation in Mount Pleasant this summer. A special celebration will take place on Sunday, June 6 at 3 p.m. as part of the kickoff for the fourth annual Focus on the Story International Photo Festival. We are also exploring additional, creative ways to share the winning images to ensure increased accessibility and safe opportunities to view the show. Stay tuned for updates on our events and exhibition news!
- Join Leica Store DC for the next virtual edition of Cameras, Coffee, and Conversation featuring photographer and filmmaker Mynxii White on April 7 at 4:30 p.m.
- A U.S. appeals court has ruled in favor of photographer Lynn Goldsmith in her copyright dispute over how Andy Warhol had used her portrait photo of Prince.
- Timeless photos of a traveling circus trigger nostalgic thoughts of a long-lost time.
- Glen Echo Park Partnership Galleries issued a call for artwork for an upcoming juried exhibition to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the park’s iconic Dentzel carousel.
- Christopher Mathews celebrated his birthday near the erupting Geldingadalur volcano in Iceland with the northern lights making an appearance.
- The first annual Leica Women Summit, a tuition-free virtual gathering, will be held April 22, 24, and 25.
- Photographers often carefully light the petals of flowers, avoiding harsh bright spots, but those are just what Xuebing Du seeks in her images.
- A new show on Hulu called “Exposure” follows up-and-coming mobile photographers participating in weekly challenges.
- The “Our City, Ourselves: Women Photograph Washington” virtual exhibition opened this week, with a panel featuring some of the artists in the show. Share your photos taken around the city with the hashtag #OurCityCAH and the Ward in which the photo was taken to participate yourself.
Friday Links: March 26, 2021
- Influential women photographers discuss what it means to be a photographer in Washington, D.C. on Tuesday, March 30 at 4:00 p.m. for “Our City, Ourselves: Women Photograph Washington,” free and open to the public, pre-registration required.
- Fluorescent light, red dye, and gelatin are the ingredients of an emerging photography technique that allows scientists to better visualize the skeletons of animals.
- Art collector Daniel Wolf, who quietly amassed 25,000 photos for the J. Paul Getty Museum thereby jump-starting collectors’ interest in the medium, died earlier this year.
- The new exhibition Dreamland by Helene Schmitz opened this week at the House of Sweden. While they are currently closed to the public, virtual guided tours of the exhibition will be held on Zoom this weekend and next, and the exhibition will be on display through December.
- Join the International Center of Photography March 29 through April 2 for the online series, “The Rules Are Broken: A Year in Imagemaking,” which will explore the impact the pandemic, social movements, and a year lived through screens had on imagemaking.
- On April 1, Blake Gopnik will join author Andy Grundberg in a virtual launch celebration to discuss his new book that’s described as part memoir and part history on how photography became contemporary art.
- Photographers in the Somali Arts Foundation’s exhibition, Still Life, aim to take control of Somalia’s story and present a fuller, fairer portrayal of life in the country, as well as wanting it to become normal for women to take photos there.
- Eighteen years ago, 24 photographers agreed to document New Year’s Day for 24 years. Preview a selection of their work, which will be on display in London in one of the first exhibitions to reopen in the UK after coronavirus lockdowns.
- Karen Marshall began a project in 1985, documenting female friendship over the course of three decades, starting with the group’s junior year in high school.
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