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Friday Links

April 25, 2014 By Meaghan Gay

Charlottesville V by His Noodly Appendage
Charlottesville V by His Noodly Appendage

Happy Friday! Our links this week include more awards for Tyler Hicks, the National Zoo trying to help Sumatran Tigers, great photos of local food, and a possible ban on overly photoshopped images.

  • This week Lytro announced the Illum, a new light-field camera. Light-field (or plenoptic) cameras capture all of the light in a given scene, allowing you to make significant changes to photos, like choosing different focus points and even perspective, after you’ve taken them.
  • Local photographer, and  two-time Exposed winner, Rey Lopez has mouth-watering images of chef Matt Adler making gnocchi on Eater DC.
  • After years of clarifying that she was Indian, and not Native American, photographer Annu Palakunnathu Matthew uses the diptych to compare and contrast her Indian cultural heritage to Native American Indians.
  • Zoey and Jasper – a rescue dog and her little boy. Because adorable.
  • Terry Richardson was accused again this week of sexual harassment, after a model shared a message he allegedly sent offering a Vogue photo shoot in exchange for sex. This is not the first time someone has stepped forward with accusations against Richardson, with some of those including sexual assault. Can the photo world agree to be done with this predator already?
  • Photographer Aline Smithson has made all of your doll nightmares a reality.
  • Tyler Hicks won the Robert Capa Gold Medal Award this week for his story on the 2013 attack on a Nairobi mall. Hicks also won the Pulitzer Prize for the story, and shared behind the scenes information about it with NPR.
  • Photographer Rohan Anderson photographed a band for a publication, and the band subsequently used his photo without permission. The band did not like his request for payment, and responded like whiney five-year olds. After the story went viral, the band paid up. No word on if they apologized for posting the photo using a pseudo HDR filter.
  • Photographer Zahir Batin has revealed the private lives of Storm Troopers. This of course includes waiting at the AT-AT stop and feeding baby chickens.
  • We can agree that excessive photoshopping is terrible, but do we need a law banning it? And if we are banning things, can we at least start with selective color images?
  • The Smithsonian has created the Endangered Song project to raise money for the 400 remaining Sumatran Tigers, who are at risk of going extinct. They printed 400 lathe-cut records of a song by the band Portugal. The Man, which will degrade over time and ‘go extinct’ unless it’s digitally reproduced. You can see more tiger photos on the Zoo’s Instagram page.

Filed Under: Friday Links Tagged With: Aline Smithson, Annu Palakunnathu Matthew, dog, Eater DC, friday links, Illium, Lytro, national zoo, Rey Lopez, Robert Capa Gold Medal, Rohan Anderson, Smithsonian, Terry Richardson, tigers, Tyler Hicks, Zahir Batan

Friday Links

March 7, 2014 By Meaghan Gay

macro snowscape by philliefan99
macro snowscape by philliefan99

We have a long list of links this week including shocking news from Getty Images, a collaboration between Magnum Photos and the Smithsonian, where to get your aura photographed and much, much more.

  • In news that has shocked many this week, Getty Images announced that they will be making their images free to use. The British Journal of Photography is all over the story, including responses from ASMP and NPPA.
  • Remember what you looked like in 1987? Karl Baden does. He took a photo of himself every day for the last 27 years.
  • Dog photo booths are much cooler than people photo booths. Photos by Lynn Terry.
  • The Northern Lights have been putting on a show in the UK. Some of the images look like scenes from Harry Potter.
  • The LA Times interviewed veteran National Geographic photographer William Albert Allard.
  • The going rate for getting your aura photographed seems rather reasonable.
  • Lenscape and Shifra are two new app online photography magazines.
  • “My photographs are a more useful first draft than my attempted prose was, a richer archive than the pages of my binders.” Casey Cep explores the relationship between photography and writing.
  • Do you have $50,000 burning a hole in your pocket? If so, you can buy Andy Warhol’s Polaroid camera.
  • Learn how Time made the panoramic image atop One World Trade Center.
  • A compilation list of image libraries owned by the federal government.
  • “Khalid Mohammed, a photographer for the Associated Press, took a picture 10 years ago of two charred American bodies hanging from a bridge and surrounded by a crowd of cheering Iraqis.” Here’s the impact a single image had on the Iraq War.
  • At the Paris Exposition in 1900, W.E.B. DuBois presented an exhibit about the history and “present condition” of African Americans. The exhibit had many photographs, and 114 years later we can see them online at the Library of Congress website.
  • Magnum Photos and the Smithsonian have teamed up for an exhibit called Unintended Journeys. The exhibit “provides a glimpse into the lives of humans displaced by global climate change and some of the most devastating natural disasters in the past decade.”
  • Are your cell phone camera, DSLR, and point and shoot not enough for you? NPR did a story on a tiny camera that clips on your clothes to record everything you see.
  • And finally, the Land of the Tiger exhibit opens this weekend at the Jacksonville Zoo.

Filed Under: Friday Links Tagged With: 1900 Paris Exposition, Aura, British Journal of Photography, Getty Images, Iraq War, Karl Baden, Khalid Mohammed, Lenscape, Library of Congress, Lynn Terry, Magnum Photos, Northern Lights, Polaroid, Shifra, Smithsonian, tiger, tigers, W.E.B. DuBois, William Albert Allard

Friday Links

January 10, 2014 By Meaghan Gay

scream by jenny markley
scream by jenny markley

Guess what day it is! Yup, it’s time for your weekly slew of fab photography-related links, including Bao Bao up close and personal, a slightly delayed wedding photo shoot, and tigers galore. Happy Friday!

  • NPR took a look inside food, by showing dissected edibles. The work is from photographers Beth Galton and Charlotte Omnes.
  • Yesterday the Washington City Paper announced the winners of their first ever photo contest. Congratulations to those selected.
  • If your resolution for the New Year was to improve your photography, here are ten steps to follow.
  • If you missed portrait photographer Martin Schoeller speak on “The Power of Photography to Relate” at National Geographic, you can catch it online.
  • In case you somehow didn’t hear the story this week, a family was reunited with their missing son after seeing a photo that local AP photographer, and Exposed 2014 special prize judge, Jacquelyn Martin shot.
  • After receiving a check for $1.32 for the use of one of his images, photographer Joe McNally shared his thoughts on the state of the industry.
  • The photographer scheduled for their wedding never showed up, so this couple took their themed wedding photos later. 61 years later.
  • Smithsonian Magazine has an exclusive with our most beloved D.C. resident, Bao Bao. Be very careful looking at the last photo, the cuteness may cause extreme giddiness.
  • Steve Winter’s book on tigers is out. The name of the book Tigers Forever is quite a coincidence since the entire Exposed DC tiger-loving team has “TIGERS 4EVA” tattooed on their chests.
  • Photographer Adam Magyar is creating new technology that changes the way we photograph time.
  • Attempting to step out of their normal routine, photographers Pierre Javelle and Akiko Ida created magic worlds using food and miniatures.
  • The average salary for a U.S. photographer is $36,330. The only upside is that this data does not include freelancers.
  • We had to end on a happier note, so we have a bonus tiger link this week. The polar vortex was too much for Bandar and Sukacita, so they played inside with a ball and a tub of water.

Filed Under: Friday Links Tagged With: Adam Magyar, Akiko Ida, Bao Bao, Beth Galton, Charlotte Omnes, friday links, Jacquelyn Martin, Joe McNally, Martin Schoeller, panda, Pierre Javelle, Smithsonian, Steve Winter, tigers, Tigers Forever

Friday Links

December 13, 2013 By Meaghan Gay

1600 Connecticut Avenue by Chris McDaniel
1600 Connecticut Avenue by Chris McDaniel

This week we have a follow up story to the D.C. photojournalist knocked to the ground at the Smithsonian, D.C. family portraits at Bread for the City, The Virginia State Police declaring photography suspicious, and much more.

  • Tomorrow is the anniversary of the massacre at Sandyhook Elementary School in Newtown, CT. Shannon Hicks shares the story behind her photo from that day with PDN.
  • “The White House-based press corps was prohibited from photographing Mr. Obama on his first day at work in January 2009. Instead, a set of carefully vetted images was released. Since then the press has been allowed to photograph him alone in the Oval Office only twice: in 2009 and in 2010, both times when he was speaking on the phone. Pictures of him at work with his staff in the Oval Office — activities to which previous administrations routinely granted access — have never been allowed.” New York Times Op-Ed on President Obama’s Orwellian image control policies.
  • We mentioned last week that photojournalist Kristoffer Tipplaar was brought to the ground by security guards at the Smithsonian. Petapixel got the full story, and it appears that the guards made more than one error.
  • TIME chose Muhammed Muheisen as their Best Wire Photographer of the Year.
  • Tips from Elliott Erwitt on how to make great photos.
  • Oh ThinkGeek you are killing us! Why would anyone want an oversized camera lens pillow? Isn’t the camera lens mug bad enough? Add that to the list of things that won’t make our gift guide.
  • Taking photographs can ruin your memory of an event. To avoid the “photo-taking impairment effect” we suggest hiring a professional to take your photos for you. Wedding photographers, use science as your reason to tell Uncle with the nice camera to get out of your way.
  • Here we go. The Virginia State Police have a new “crime fighting” app that allows users to report suspicious activity directly to the police. What type of activity? “Suspicious photography, vehicles or people in places that just look ‘out of place’.”
  • Lovely photos of Environmental Art on the My Modern Met blog. The eggs on the pavement are very cool.
  • The folks at the Smithsonian American Art Museum spoke to Muriel Hasbun about some of her work in the current exhibitions A Democracy of Images: Photographs from the Smithsonian American Art Museum and Our America: The Latino Presence in American Art.
  • We can be royals! Photographer Alison Jackson made images of the Royal Family at home for the Christmas Holiday. Her fantastical, made up photographs made Sandringham look like a very exciting place to spend the holiday.
  • The New York Times article on homelessness this week gathered a lot of attention. If you haven’t seen the accompanying photographs, they are worth spending some time on.
  • Bread for the City recently celebrated 5 years of helping D.C. families get a Holiday Portrait.
  • And finally, Kristin Harper created stunning images of a Bengal tiger diving for food in a pool of water.

Filed Under: Friday Links Tagged With: Alison Jackson, American Art Museum, Bread for the City, Elliott Erwitt, environmental art, friday links, Kristi Harper, Kristoffer Tipplaar, Muhammed Muheisen, Muriel Hasun, Photographer's Rights, Royals, Shannon Hicks, Smithsonian, tiger

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