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Friday Links: October 3, 2014

October 3, 2014 By Meaghan Gay

Double buckets by Tim Brown.
Double buckets by Tim Brown. (Go Nats!)

We’ll see you TONIGHT at Washington Artworks / Washington School of Photography for the big opening for our Exposed DC / InstantDC Fall Review! Come see 45 phenomenal images by D.C.-area photographers, including our fantastic prize-winners. Here’s how to get there. Then, join us next Tuesday at Brookland Pint for our monthly happy hour. And THEN sign up for one last free Knowledge Commons class taking photos of the airplanes at Gravelly Point on Saturday, October 11. Both the September classes got rained-out halfway through the session, so our teacher Chris Williams is generously offering one more class for new folks and anyone who didn’t get their fill in their half-session. Exposed DC has got you covered for all your photo event needs!

  • Let’s start off Friday Links the right way, with amazing and very wet photos of dogs by Sophie Gamand.
  • Terrifying photos of the surprising volcanic eruption in Japan.
  • The American West offers a landscape fraught with potential cliche, but Lucas Foglia’s project Frontcountry cuts through popular conceptions and shows the reality of a rapidly transforming part of America.
  • The African Art Museum is featuring the work of Chief Solomon Osagie Alonge. “As an official photographer to the Royal Court of the Benin, Alonge documented the rituals, pageantry, and regalia of the court for over a half-century.”
  • In the first decades of the 1900s, Sergey Prokudin-Gorsky traversed the length and breadth of the Russian Empire using a specially adapted railroad car as a darkroom, capturing its diverse, pre-revolution population in more than 10,000 full-color photographs.
  • The odd beauty of 60-year-old preserved brains from the Texas State Mental Hospital.
  • One of the “Outlaw Instagrammers” describes his experience climbing the tallest residential building in New York City. The 15-year old admitted that his mom was not impressed.
  • Indigenous peoples have been documented before, but the results have often been patronizing, says Jimmy Nelson. So he traveled the world to photograph 35 threatened tribes in an unashamedly glamorous style.
  • A new exhibit at the National Gallery of Art shows the work of Captain Linnaeus Tripe, and the images he made in India and Burma in the middle of the19th century. “Many of his pictures were the first photographs ever made of celebrated archaeological sites and monuments, ancient and contemporary religious and secular buildings — some now destroyed — as well as geological formations and landscape vistas.”
  • Stunning aerials of Spanish landscapes in the fall by David Maisel.
  • “Porcupines reek. Traer Scott found this out the hard way — the photographer’s way — crawling on the ground, lying on her stomach to encounter a porcupine family none too happy to see her.” Totally worth if for the resulting gorgeous, nocturnal animal photography.
  • No Man’s Job is a documentary portrait series by Anthony Kurtz that sheds light on women doing the “dirty or tough jobs” performed primarily by men. First in the series, the female auto mechanics of Senegal.
  • Photographer Marina Cano captures wild animals in their most unguarded moments. Tigers included, obviously.

Filed Under: Friday Links Tagged With: Captain Linnaeus Tripe, Chief Solomon Osagie Alonge, David Maisel, dogs, friday links, Lucas Foglia, Marina Cano, Sergey Prokudin-Gorsky, Sophie Gamand, tigers, Traer Scott

Friday Links: September 26, 2014

September 26, 2014 By James Calder

Georgetown Waterfront (Blue) by His Noodly Appendage
Georgetown Waterfront (Blue) by His Noodly Appendage

The Exposed DC / InstantDC Fall Review, featuring winning images by 45 local photographers, opens next Friday, October 3. Will we see you there? Tune in next Tuesday when we’ll announce the prize winners!

  • The U.S. Forest Service says media needs photography permit in wilderness areas, almost certainly a constitutional violation.
  • VICE presents its first photo critique show featuring Bruce Gilden “telling up-and-coming photographers if their work is transcendent, total crap, or somewhere in-between”.
  • So wrong, and yet so good. Iconic photo portraits recreated with John Malkovich as the subject.
  • iluvsturgis by Lacey Criswell and Amanda Hankerson explores love and commitment at the notorious Sturgis Motorcycle Rally held annually in Sturgis, South Dakota.
  • A photographer uses all eight generations of iPhones to take the same picture and compare quality.
  • This street artist takes photos of people tearing down his art, turns them into posters and slaps them up in place of the art they took down.
  • Seen on friend-of-Exposed Andrew Wiseman’s blog New Columbia Heights: Whoa: Google Street View cameras go into Red Derby, Looking Glass, Red Rocks.
  • Toronto-based Meera Sethi’s multimedia art project showcases the often-overlooked “Aunty” couture.
  • Austrian photographer Reiner Riedler photographs famous film reels, exploring the relationship between the cinematic object and the cinematic experience in his series “The Unseen Seen.”
  • Dubai photographer Richard Allenby-Pratt captures the impact of development on the desert.
  • Take a good look at this rare Malayan tiger – it may be one of your last.

 

Filed Under: Friday Links Tagged With: Amanda Hankderson, aunty, Bruce Gilden, desert, film reels, first amendment, friday links, Google Street View, iPhone, Lacey Criswell, Malayan tiger, Meera Sethi, motorcycle weddings, Photographer's Rights, Reiner Riedler, Richard Allenby-Pratt, roundup, street art, Sturgis, tiger, US Forest Service, VICE

Friday Links: September 19, 2014

September 19, 2014 By Heather Goss

Jano Silvo by Paolo Nutini
Jano Silvo by Paolo Nutini
  • The Washington Post has launched a new photo blog.
  • These photos of the fire in the Sierra are intense.
  • At Photokina, Panasonic has announced a new pocket-sized camera featuring an f/2.8 Leica  lens, with 28mm equivalent field of view, and a 1 inch sensor. Oh, did we mention it’s also an Android phone?
  • Faceplants and apples: A Visual History of Kids Being Unimpressed with President Obama.
  • Eric Kim experienced the Magnum Workshop in Provincetown, since you couldn’t be there.
  • Australian photographer Ashley Gilbertson photographs dead soldiers’ rooms to highlight the costs of war.
  • Andrew Ward takes photos of discarded couches around Los Angeles.
  • Long-lost photographs depict the first black people to ever be photographed in Britain. The portraits of the African Choir, a South African musical group that toured the U.K. between 1891 and 1893, were last seen in a London newspaper in 1891.
  • Newsha Tavakolian returned a 50,000-Euro prize rather than see her work about contemporary Iran be controlled — distorted, she says — by the financier whose foundation selected her.
  • And how about some more volcano photos? The eruption of Mount Mayon is causing the evacuation of thousands of people in the Philippines.
  • The Royal Observatory just announced their annual photo winners.
  • This is how photographers capture those slick photos of military jets.
  • And finally, photographer Lara Hawker can help you find the tiger in yourself.

Filed Under: Friday Links Tagged With: Andrew Ward, Ashley Gilbertson, Eric Kim, friday links, kids, Lara Hawker, Magnum, Newsha Tavakolian, Obama, Photokina, Royal Observatory, volcano, Washington Post, wildfire

Friday Links: September 12, 2014

September 12, 2014 By Meaghan Gay

Water Dreams, Yards Park by Chris McDaniel
Water Dreams, Yards Park by Chris McDaniel

Our last free photography class through Knowledge Commons DC opened for registration today. Sign up now to learn street photography techniques from professional instructor Gerry Suchy next Saturday, September 20 at 10 a.m. Gerry will have one more class on September 27. UPDATE: The Sept 20 class is full! You can still sign up for the waitlist. Get ready early NEXT FRIDAY when registration opens for the Sept. 27 class.

Join us TONIGHT for our Photobook Happy Hour at WeWork Wonder Bread less than a block from the Shaw metro, 6 to 8 p.m. The event is free, and you can browse great books by Chris Suspect, Mambu Badu, Adam Ryder, Michael Andrade, and Keith Campbell — and talk to the artists about how they went about publishing their work. Everitt Clark will also be there with his soon-to-be-published prints and the 4″x5″ large format camera he uses.

  • Printing your mobile photos just got a lot easier with Mpix Tap To Print app.
  • The deadline for the DC State Fair annual photo contest is approaching fast. Get your photos in by Sept 15. (There’s not much submitted right now, so your chances of winning are pretty good!)
  • “I would love for people to care about young talented photographers before they are killed.” The New York Times takes a look at the dangers facing photojournalists.
  • The Library of Congress opened a new online photo archive that contains thousands of images of life during the Great Depression.
  • If you have an extra $26,000 lying around, the new Mamiya Leaf looks pretty amazing.
  • Scientists from the University of Surrey explain how to take a decent selfie. Among their tips, taking a photo from arm’s length can make portraits look “bulbous” with a “big nose and vanishing ears,” like the famous “monkey selfie.”
  • Faceplanting into the couch is so much more fun in the Oval Office.
  • The latest D.C. arts commission public art project seems to be neither local, nor remaining public art very long.
  • China has the best photo trends, and this one is no exception. Nothing says ‘I Love You’ like posing together in expensive clothes while swimming underwater.
  • Photographer Angela Castillo caught all the sad dads at a One Direction concert.
  • Cool photos of people playing with clouds and forced perspective.
  • Washington Photo Safari is offering a photo class at Mount Vernon this fall.
  • Opening tonight at Vivid Solutions is Jared Soares photo series of a basketball court at Barry Farms.
  • And finally, baby tigers getting along with Bluejays? Anything is possible.

 

Filed Under: Friday Links Tagged With: Angela Castillo, DC State Fair, friday links, Library of Congress, Mpix, tigers, Vivid Solutions

Friday Links

September 5, 2014 By Meaghan Gay

All we are saying... by number7cloud
All we are saying… by number7cloud

Don’t forget to register for our initial set of free photography classes through Knowledge Commons DC, including sessions on street photography and street portraits from the accomplished Jim Darling and Gerry Suchy respectively. Stay tuned for a whole new slew of classes coming up in October! And mark your calendars for our Photobook Happy Hour at WeWork Wonder Bread on September 12 from 6 to 8pm. Happy Friday!

  • Congratulations to STRATA‘s Chris Suspect, whose D.C. hardcore music show images will be among those on display in the Leica Gallery at Photokina in Cologne, Germany.
  • The APA announced the winners of their 2014 Annual Awards Competition.
  • Russian Photographer Andrei Stenin was sadly found dead this week in Ukraine.
  • Oliver Blohm finds out what happens when you put your instant film in the microwave.
  • The International Space Station got a new 800mm lens, and the photos are pretty great.
  • Where every dog is a weiner: Photos from the annual Labor Day Weiner Dog Race.
  • DC Focused is a new blog “Chronicling Life in the District.”
  • Iceland is erupting, and the photos are so damn cool. It’s also not the only place erupting this week. In case you were wondering what it is like for people living near volcanoes, Eric Lafforgue has been capturing their day to day lives.
  • “Looking back, working conditions back in the day were a dream. We got great salaries, flew business class and were given the time to do the job right. There were even occasions when the photo editor would say: ‘the images aren’t quite right yet. Travel back there and get some more.’” Interview with long time Magnum photographer Thomas Hoepker.
  • Who do you want to be? Or, more accurately, who could you have been? Czech photographer Dita Pepe takes these musings quite literally, re-imaging (their word) her life in a hundred different scenarios in her series “Self Portraits with Men”
  • Peng Yangjun has been capturing the beautiful face-kini trend in China.
  • “Chinese photographer Fan Ho spent the ’50s and ’60s photographing street life in Hong Kong. His work, to be published in his new book “Fan Ho: A Hong Kong Memoir,” reaches back through time and space to connect us to the everyday sights of this bustling metropolis in a way that many of us have never seen before.”
  • REI is offering local photography classes.
  • Do you know when you need a model release? The Capital Photography Center breaks it down for you.
  • It is not the work for which he is most know, but the Met has a large collection of Walker Evan’s locomotive photos.
  • Indonesian photographer Yudy Sauw’s stunning macro pictures of insects look as though they were taken by a scientist in a lab. Turns out he “likes bugs” and that it’s “just a hobby.”
  • Photographer Danila Tkachenko won the 2014 World Press Photo contest for his pictures of hermits. Tkachenko spent three years locating and photographing people who live in the wilderness of Russia and Ukraine.
  • And finally, an Australian Zoo celebrated the first birthday of their two tiger cubs.

Filed Under: Friday Links Tagged With: Andrei Stenin, APA, awards, Capital Photography Center, Chris Suspect, Danila Tkachenko, DC Focused, Dita Pepe, Eric Lafforgue, Fan Ho, friday links, Oliver Blohm, Peng Yanguin, Photokina, Thomas Hoepker, tigers, Walker Evans, Yudy Sauw

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