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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

Friday Links: April 24, 2015

April 24, 2015 By James Calder

oops... by John Benevelli
oops… by John Benevelli
  • This year’s Washington Post Squirrel Week Photo Contest was won by Exposed regular and animal photographer extraordinaire, Angela Napili. Bravo Angela!
  • Excellent photography non-profit Critical Exposure has launched a Kickstarter to create a mobile digital gallery that will showcase social justice photography created by D.C. youth.
  • Capital Weather Gang highlighted some striking photos of Monday’s huge lightning storm. Kevin Ambrose stacked 42 different lightning shots into one image that seems to portray the end of days for D.C., while Exposed alum Gary Silverstein used the lightning to frame the Iwo Jima memorial beautifully.
  • The Pulitzer Prizes were announced on Monday. The St. Louis Post-Dispatch photography staff won the Breaking News Photography award for their “powerful images of the despair and anger in Ferguson, MO”, while New York Times freelancer Daniel Berehulak took Feature Photography “for his gripping, courageous photographs of the Ebola epidemic in West Africa.”
  • With this week’s presentation of the World Press photo awards, the New York Times Lens blog presents a conversation with photographers, curators and photo editors on the struggle between photojournalistic ethics and evolving visual storytelling strategies.
  • The Hubble Space Telescope turned 25 this week. NASA celebrated by releasing a gorgeous image of a 3,000 star cluster. Over at Air & Space magazine, Exposed’s Heather Goss interviewed 10 scientists about the Hubble images they worked with and how each one helped usher in a new age of astronomy. The New York Times also jumped on the bandwagon.
  • The 27th annual National Geographic Traveler Photo Contest opened this month with some tremendous prizes up for grabs. Submit your best travel photos in any of four categories, and check back weekly to see galleries of the top entries.
  • Chile’s Calbuco volcano erupted Wednesday without warning. The first imagery to do the rounds was a time-lapse of the eruption. Then came a series of incredible individual photos followed most recently by striking shots of the ash fall.
  • Davide Monteleone’s “In the Russian East” is a tribute both to Richard Avedon’s “In the American West” and to the lure of the Trans-Siberian Railway.
  • In the remote village of Mawlynnong in northeast India, the Khasi tribe follows a rare tradition of women running the show.
  • Two friends sent each other selfies every day for a year, and only communicated through those photos (no calls or texts).
  • Artsy, ad-free social network Ello recently launched its own photography community – @ellophotography
  • A rare and gorgeous quadruple rainbow was spotted in Long Island.

Filed Under: Friday Links Tagged With: Calbuco, Critical Exposure, Ello, ethics, Hubble, India, lightning, Nat Geo Traveler, Pulitzer Prize, quadruple rainbow, russia, selfies, Squirrel Week, volcano

Friday Links

April 11, 2014 By Meaghan Gay

Poor Horse by Diriki Rice
Poor Horse by Diriki Rice

This week’s exciting fare includes developments in Calumet’s bankruptcy case, lunar eclipse photo ops, the death of the White House selfie, and the announcement of an enormous photo exhibition space.

  • In huge museum news, The San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA) announced Wednesday “the creation of the John and Lisa Pritzker Center for Photography, which will be the largest exhibition space for photography and among the most advanced photographic arts centers of any art museum in the United States.“
  • 100 photographs taken by Irving Penn have been donated to the Smithsonian American Art Museum by his foundation. They’ll go on display in a retrospective opening in 2015.
  • Local photographer Susana Raab is documenting life East of the River: “Hidden behind the public face of its great monuments and political imbroglios, lies another Washington which situates the District of Columbia as the United States’ poorest state, second only to Mississippi.” This work can be seen on her website, as well as in a photo gallery on POLITICO.
  • Is there hope for a return of Calumet Photographic? Possibly. CalPhotoUS is buying up some of their assets, but there is no word yet on whether any stores will reopen.
  • Stars and Stripes has excellent photographs in their Military Photographer of the Year awards. You know you are in for some lovely images when the first of the series resembles the Pieta.
  • It is not too late to use this, but you should act fast. A Photographer’s Guide to the Cherry Blossoms, including locations that are not on the National Mall by Kat Forder.
  • Photographer Robert Dawson has been photographing public libraries across America for 18 years, and has released a book of the images. The photographs say so much about our culture.
  • Tickets are now available to the opening reception of Critical Exposure’s 9th annual exhibit of youth photography. The event is May 21, from 6:00-8:30pm.
  • Smithsonian Magazine announced the winners of their 11th annual photo contest.
  • On April 15 the tax man and the moon man will collide in a lunar eclipse. If you’re going to photograph it, check out our Night Sky Photography for Beginners guide.
  • “If you’re modeling light settings and defining the meter readings about a balanced image against white skin, the contours and shape of a white face, you’ve immediately erased 70% of the world’s population.” Interesting analysis of the racial bias built into camera and film technology.
  • Photographers – the industry may be shrinking, but know that you can always find work as a meerkat lookout post.
  • Photos of some the dogs Michel Vick owned and tortured. These are among a handful of the dogs who have been rehabilitated, and are in loving homes.
  • Oh Big Papi. You may be one of the greatest hitters of all time, but you may go down as the man who killed the White House selfie.
  • Ectoplasm and spirit photography? We don’t know either, but the results are pretty cool.
  • He may be Mr. Spock to most of us, but Leonard Nimoy is also a photographer.
  • The InFocus Project, based in Montgomery County, brought their autistic adult students to the Tidal Basin this week to photograph the cherry blossoms. You can see their work on their website.
  • The Library of Congress celebrated Eadweard Muybridge’s birthday yesterday, and showed off the work of the early photographer.
  • Public “surprised” at the sight of a tiger being walked on a rope leash in Xuzhou, China. We might have chosen a different word.

Filed Under: Friday Links Tagged With: CalPhotoUS, Calumet, Critical Exposure, Eadweard Maybridge, friday links, InFocus Project, Irving Penn, John and Lisa Pritzker Center for Photography, Kat Forder, Leonard Nimoy, Library of Congress, Lunar Eclipse, Meerkat, Michael Vick, Military Photographer of the Year, Robert Dawson, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Smithsonian Magazine, Stars and Stripes, Susana Raab, tiger

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