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Friday Links: December 19, 2014

December 19, 2014 By Meaghan Gay

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Water Lilies by Leonard Jewler

Use some of your upcoming vacation time wisely by picking out the photos you want to enter in our 9th annual Exposed DC photography contest. Winners will be exhibited at our new location, Capital Fringe headquarters, next March. Get those photos in by January 7.

  • D.C. based photographer Mary F. Calvert has been photographing women who’ve survived rape in the military.
  • Photographer Nancy Genovese won $1.1 million dollars in a law suit against the New York, Suffolk County Sheriff’s office for wrongful prosecution.
  • Petapixel showcased the vintage photos found by Joel Snow at a flea market, and describes how he has started a website to share more.
  • Rahul Dhankani and Arko Datto document the arduous work life of migrant laborers constructing some of the world’s highest roads in the Himalayas.
  • “This week, with the arrival of the holidays, SEEN will feature three slideshows showcasing Oliver Wasow’s eye. First up, we present people standing next to their televisions.“
  • A collection of photographs owned by the late financier Howard Stein sold at auction for a record $21.3 million, benefiting his Joy of Giving Something Foundation. The sale also set records for photographers Alvin Langdon Coburn, August Sander, and Tina Modotti.
  • Air & Space Magazine announced the winners of their photography contest, and you can vote for a Readers’ Choice award.
  • Noor images is featuring images of fracking by Nina Berman.
  • Dupont Undergound will officially be used for arts and events. This is great news, since the Arlington County Manager has recommended the closing of Artisphere.
  • The flooding on the metro this week due to a water main break left us with some wild flooding photos.
  • ASMP has the new permitting rules by the Forest Service on their website.
  • Local photographer Joshua Yospyn has updated his photographer reading list.
  • Behind the scenes with photographer Marco Grob’s on his TIME cover shot.
  • Multiple Exposed and Fall Review prize winner Angela Napili took the cover shot of her cat for WARL’s 2015 calendar.
  • The Best of 2014 lists have started, and we roundedsome up:
    • TIME picks their top 10 most influential photos of 2014.
    • Washington Post’s favorite animal shots of 2014.
    • NBC’s The Year in Pictures.
    • The Big Picture’s Year in Photos in two parts.
    • Not be outdone, In Focus broke down the best photos of the year in three parts.
  • And finally, Putin’s tiger is still causing trouble in China. It was caught on camera eating a dog.

Filed Under: Friday Links Tagged With: Alvin Langdon Coburn, Angela Napili, Arko Datto, August Sander, Erin McCann, Flickr, friday links, Marco Grob, Mary F. Calvert, Nancy Genovese, Nina Berman, Oliver Wasow, Rahul Dhankani, tiger, Tina Modotti

Friday Links: December 12, 2014

December 12, 2014 By Meaghan Gay

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Corner by Betsy Law

Come to the closing reception for our InstantDC Fall Review at BloomBars in Columbia Heights this Sunday, 2 to 5 p.m. Buy any of these amazing framed images by local photographers for just $150 as a gift for your favorite art lover, or just yourself. Need more ideas for the photographer in your life? Consult our Exposed DC holiday gift guide. And remember to get your photographs of the D.C. area into our 9th annual photo contest before January 7!

  • We start off this week with very sad news, “Michel du Cille, a Washington Post photojournalist who won the Pulitzer Prize three times for his dramatic images of human struggle and triumph, and who recently chronicled the plight of Ebola patients and the people who cared for them, died [from an apparent heart attack] Dec. 11 while on assignment for The Post in Liberia. He was 58.” The Post also has a piece about his long career, and the Guardian has a selection of some of his best images.
  • Photojournalist Luke Somers was killed this week by al-Quada militants in Yemen after a failed rescue attempt by U.S. special forces. Some of Somers work can be seen on the Corbis website.
  • One of the most talked about stories this week is the sale of the $6.5 million photography by Peter Lik. But don’t worry, two Guardian columnists are debating if photography is actually art. Yawn.
  • Time Magazine highlights the most popular Department of the Interior Instagram shots from 2014.
  • When soldiers come home from war: “For many, reintegration is coming to terms with those two halves: the veteran and the civilian made anew.” Photos by Devin Mitchell.
  • Photographer Georgine Benvenuto lost the tip of his nose to a drone inside a TGI Fridays.
  • See the ArtDC show Density open tomorrow night in Hyattsville, and Frank Hallum Day’s show at Addison/Ripley Fine Art tonight.
  • So you’d think Baltimore police would have learned from their very public mistakes in depriving photographers (and videographers) of their constitutional rights. Well you’d be very wrong.
  • Vice interviewed Jim Saah about his work covering the early D.C. hardcore music scene.
  • The AP has announced the summer paid internships, including those for photographers.
  • Editors at PDN, Rangefider, and Emerging Photographer selected the work of eleven photographers they believe are rising in the industry.
  • Victoria Sambunaris has spent more than 15 years taking solo road trips across the United States. Armed with her 5-by-7 wooden field camera, she captures the American landscape in an attempt to understand the world and our place in it.
  • It may not be legal, but many pilots are taking photos in the air and posting them to Instagram.
  • The City Paper explores which pieces of art D.C. galleries brought to two Miami Art Fairs, and it includes plenty of photography.
  • Magnum Photos photographer René Burri died in October. This is a short documentary in which he discusses six of his most iconic images.
  • “Legendary photographer Danny Lyon’s photographs of commuters in the ’60s are on view for the first time at a Brooklyn subway station.”
  • And finally, Phevos the tiger is leaving neglectful conditions in Greece for a better life in California.

Filed Under: Friday Links Tagged With: Danny Lyon, Devin Mitchell, friday links, Georgine Benvenuto, Jim Saah, Luke Somers, Michel du Cille, Peter Lik, Rene Burri, tiger

Friday Links: December 5, 2014

December 5, 2014 By Meaghan Gay

Corgis Like Ice Cream
Corgis Like Ice Cream by eschweik.

In case you missed it, the ninth annual Exposed DC Photography Contest opened for entries this week; get those entries in before January 7! And don’t forget to stop by Bloombars in Columbia Heights to check out the extended run of our Instant DC Fall Review – it closes December 14. Meanwhile, links are a go:

  • The Washington City Paper has compiled a gallery of Darrow Montgomery’s photographs of D.C.’s Mayor-for-Life Marion Barry, who died Sunday aged 78.
  • Cab driver Mike Harvey has been photographing his passengers, and the results are very interesting.
  • Brian Shul, an SR-71 Blackbird pilot and photographer, describes the day he took his favorite picture.
  • Richard Koci Hernandez, a prolific Instagram photographer, has decided to delete all of his photos.
  • The nerve-wracking process of shooting the very last space shuttle launch.
  • And here’s veteran NASA photographer Bill Ingalls shooting today’s Orion launch. Nice lens, brah!
  • Photographer Tim Matsui documented the sexual exploitation of children, and painful cycle of drug addiction.
  • Ten National Geographic photographers give thanks for the photos that changed them.
  • If you printed every Instagram photo uploaded in a year, the results would reach very, very, very high.
  • Photographer Stuart Pilkington paired photographers together to see how they would photograph each other. The portraits are an interesting look at the people typically behind the lens.
  • Brazilian surfer and photographer João Pedro takes still photos with a GoPro either mounted to his surfboard or in hand without a surfboard at all. And they’re phenomenal.
  • The Boston Globe has started a new photo page which showcases images from their archives called the Globe Collection. The photos span from local to international news, and are a good place to spend some free time perusing images.
  • Riding along with Norway’s Hells Angels.
  • This drone video of the area around Chernobyl is haunting.
  • A major exhibit of the New York Public Library’s vast photo collection is a reminder that photography has always been a social medium.
  • What do we want? Incredibly detailed photos of brains in jars! When do we want them? Brains!!
  • Berlin-based photographer Patrick Morarescu captures performance artists right after they finish their shows.
  • This labrador retriever is an abandoned tiger cub’s new mom.

Filed Under: Friday Links Tagged With: Bill Ingalls, Boston Globe, brains, Brian Shul, Chernobyl, Darrow Montgomery, drone, friday links, Instagram, João Pedro, Marion Barry, Mike Harvey, NASA, National Geographic, New York Public Library, Patrick Morarescu, Richard Hoci Hernandez, SR-71, Stuart Pilkington, tiger, Tim Matsui

Friday Links on Wednesday: November 26, 2014

November 26, 2014 By James Calder

The Three Bears' house by Tim Brown
The Three Bears’ house by Tim Brown

It’s that time of year again when we give thanks for intriguing photography-related links on Wednesday instead of Friday. It’s also nearly the time of year to get excited about the next annual Exposed DC Contest! Join us on Wednesday December 3 for our contest launch happy hour at Bluejacket. Also don’t forget to stop by the extended run of our Instant DC Fall Review at Bloombars through December 14. Meanwhile, we hope you have a wonderful Thanksgiving!

  • The FAA is reported to be planning new commercial drone rules that will require a conventional pilot’s license.
  • Robert Sturman believes in the universality of yoga and has traveled the world photographing yogis across physical and cultural divides.
  • “Batman and Robin posing defiantly in Elizabethan-style uniforms, a forlorn Hulk looking introspective in Tudor-esque short baggy trousers…” French photographer Sacha Goldberger re-imagines superheroes as Renaissance figures.
  • Lewis Baltz, a significant figure in the New Topographics landscape photography movement, died aged 69.
  • Photographer Ernie Button got interested in the “art” at the bottom of his whiskey glass.
  • NASA released a spectacular new “realistic color” image of Jupiter’s moon Europa.
  • You know we love tigers, but these black-and-white studio portraits of goats and sheep are something to behold.
  • Photographer Susan Copich realized she was “missing from every family photo,” so she decided to fix the problem.
  • Gray Malin makes images of items you would normally associate with summer. Only he shoots them in the Arctic landscape.
  • Taylor Swift crashed a young fan’s photo shoot while jogging in a Nashville area park.
  • Forget Caller ID – tiger stripe ID is a lifesaver in one corner of India.

Filed Under: Friday Links Tagged With: Europa, friday links, goats, Gray Malin, Lewis Baltz, Robert Sturman, Sacha Goldberger, sheep, Susan Copich, Taylor Swift, tiger, wednesday links, whiskey art

Friday Links: November 21, 2014

November 21, 2014 By Meaghan Gay

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U & 14th Sts., NW, Washington, D.C. by Chris Suspect
  • A Navy veteran in Missouri said he was fired from his job and called a terrorist for posting pictures to Facebook of Homeland Security vehicles amassing near Ferguson.
  • The Metropolitan Museum of Art has released a vast archive of 400,000 (mostly) hi-resolution digital images that you can download and use for non-commercial purposes.
  • Exposed winner Victoria Pickering will have one of her images on display in Times Square.
  • Photographer Bieke Depoorter has been asking strangers if she can spend the night in their homes. “She’s interested in building a relationship, however brief, and learning about the people she’s staying with… If she finds herself trying to make a good picture instead of experiencing and embracing the moment, she stops.”
  • The sale may have ended, but the photos from the Magnum archive are still great.
  • Julia Christe took awesome photos of many dogs and one cat flying mid-jump. The expression on the face of the boxer is priceless.
  • The smog in Beijing is really, really bad and there are photos to prove it. “Zou Yi has been taking photos of the Beijing sky every day and uploading them to his personal Weibo account.“
  • A short but interesting photo essay by photographer Phil Moore of what it’s like to live at the base of Nyiragongo, DR Congo’s very deadly volcano.
  • Before there was a subdivision there was a farm. Photos by Scott Strazzante, who spent 20 years documenting the transition from farm to ticky tacky.
  • Scientists have created artificial intelligence software able to recognize the content of photos and videos with such accuracy that it can sometimes mimic humans.
  • In case you didn’t hear, there was a lot of snow in Buffalo this week. A lot.
  • Remember way, way back in 2007 when Exposed DC (then DCist Exposed!) held the very first annual photography show at Warehouse? Owners Molly and Paul Ruppert are inviting everyone who’s exhibited there over the years to toast a final goodbye to the venue on December 6. (The art gallery has been closed for a few years, but now the Warehouse Theater and Passenger are joining it.)
  • And finally, there was a large cat roaming near Disneyland Paris this week that turned out not to be a tiger. No word yet on if it was a Tigger.

Filed Under: Friday Links Tagged With: Beijing smog, Bieke Depoorter, Buffalo snow, friday links, Julia Christe, Magnum sale, MOMA, Phil Moore, Photographer's Rights, Scott Strazzante, tiger, Victoria Pickering, Warehouse

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