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Friday Links

July 11, 2014 By Meaghan Gay

Self Destruction by Caroline Angelo
Self Destruction by Caroline Angelo

This week we’ve dug up an absorbing assortment of links for you, including a famous photographer held responsible for the recent South Korean ferry disaster, a photographer suing the Feds for being unfairly tagged as “suspicious”, and a popular photography educator stealing other people’s material. Oh, and some stuffed birds.

  • Adam Ryder writes about D.C. photographer Caitlin Teal Price and her work photographing taxidermied birds in the Smithsonian’s collection.
  • The deadline for the Emerging Photography Fund 2014 grant of $10,000 is July 31.
  • Pat Padua interviewed local photographer Mark Parascandola about his new book on the decaying Carabanchel Prison in Spain.
  • Remember the South Korean ferry that sunk and killed hundreds a few months ago? The prime suspect is the “de facto owner” of the ferry, a famous South Korean photographer. Yes, a photographer.
  • After being investigated by the FBI for taking photos, James Prigoff is one of five plaintiffs suing Eric Holder. “They seek a ‘permanent injunction’ on the current lax standards of the suspicious activity reports and to end law-enforcement training on them.“
  • “Few photos of this Underground Railroad exist, which is why Jeanine Michna-Bales has spent months following some of the known routes north, photographing the homes, forests and caves where those escaping slavery sought shelter.”
  • Doug Gordon has been accused of plagiarism for the second time, and has been one of a number of big name photography “educators” to be found stealing from other photographers. It would be wonderful if the large conventions would just ban anyone caught plagiarizing.
  • We’ve previously shared a wedding shoot with a raging wildfire as backdrop. Now, here’s one with a tornado.
  • And finally, USA Today has a list of animal sanctuaries that you should visit. The list includes a large cat sanctuary in Florida, where you can see their white tiger Zabu.

Filed Under: Friday Links Tagged With: Doug Gordon, Emerging Photography Fund, Everybody Street, friday links, Jeanine Michna-Bales, Mark Parascandola, Teal Price, tigers, tornado, Underground Railroad, wedding

Friday Links

July 3, 2014 By Meaghan Gay

Shadows and Door by Kevin Wolf
Shadows and Door by Kevin Wolf

Since you’ve all been working so hard, we thought we’d let you have Friday Links a day early. This week, we have pugs in costume, portraits of early hip-hop artists, incredible wildlife photos, and cheeky bridesmaids. Have a great Fourth!

  • This weekend you may need these tips on photographing fireworks from National Geographic.
  • Just like those who picked VHS over Beta, folks who went with Lightroom over Aperture must be feeling pretty good after the news that Apple is dumping Aperture.
  • The only thing better than pugs is pugs in Game of Thrones costumes.
  • “With his camera, Helmer-Petersen flattened space, translating into a two-dimensional medium not just the objects and scenes he shot, but perspective itself.” Explore the work of LIFE magazine photographer Keld Helmer-Petersen.
  • Here is a small sample of some of the Wildlife Photographer of the Year photos, and they are stunning.
  • Just when we thought trends in the wedding photography industry couldn’t get any worse, you have bridesmaids showing their butts? What? Why? Just say no photographers. Just say no.
  • “Prior to (World War I), because of the scarcity of press photography in general, picture desk editors from newspapers were quite happy to use photographs which were merely representative or illustrative of a point rather than showing a genuine event itself.” Lens blog explores the origins of war photography and how it connects to the way modern wars are covered.
  • Lisa Leone was still a student at New York’s High School of Art and Design in 1982 when she began photographing the burgeoning hip-hop movement.
  • Three photographers, Stephen Freskos, Scott Haefner and Jon Haeber, are risking jail to capture crumbling relics from America’s Cold War.
  • Stefanie Klavens has created a photographic series of iconic movie palaces titled “Celluloid Dreams.”
  • And finally, we are sending you off on a long weekend with this three way tiger kiss from the San Diego Zoo. Really.

Filed Under: Friday Links Tagged With: Aperture, fireworks, friday links, Game of Thrones, Jon Haeber, Keld Helmer-Petersen, Lisa Leone, pugs, Scott Haefner, Stephanie Klavens, Stephen Freskos, tigers, Wildlife Photographer of the Year

Friday Links

June 20, 2014 By Meaghan Gay

Sunday Afternoon by Melodius
Sunday Afternoon by Melodius

Can you believe it’s the end of the week already? If not, here are some Friday Links to help it sink in: there’s a former inmate revisiting his old prison, emotive portraits of Kiev protesters and mourners, the 2013 iPhone award winners, and Neil Armstrong as you’ve never seen him before.

  • Renowned photo agency Magnum is using Instagram to sell prints for $100 a pop.
  • Photographer Antoine Bruy has been photographing people living off the grid in Europe.
  • Anastasia Taylor-Lind took poignant photographs of Kiev protesters and mourners in a makeshift studio next to the barricades on Hrushevskoho Street.
  • Saturday night is the opening of East Coast Rock and Roll Photography at Hill & Dale Records in Georgetown.
  • Neil Armstrong is the subject of one the most iconic photos of all time, but you’ve probably never seen him like this. The university has additional photos in the Neil Armstrong archive.
  • Former inmate Nick Brooks had trouble finding work, so he took up photography. He never felt truly free until he returned with his camera to the now abandoned jail that once held him.
  • Heading to New York City this summer? Running through the beginning of September, the Met has an exhibit of the photography of concealment.
  • Photographer Ksenia Yurkova gives us a rare glimpse into Zarechny, one of Russia’s last “closed cities”,
  • Want to see some great iPhone shots? The 2014 iPhone Photography awards were announced this week.
  • Zun Lee set out to make images that would break the stereotype of the absent black father, and has done just that.
  • The deadline for the APA Awards Photo Competition is next week, so get your photos in.
  • “Anthony Friedkin: The Gay Essay” documents the gay communities of LA and San Francisco from 1969 to 1973, a pivotal time in gay culture.
  • Photographer Eilon Paz captured the proud owners of the largest record collections in the world in his photo project “Dust and Grooves”.
  • And finally, three bengal tigers were born at an animal sanctuary in Maine. Two of the cubs are rare white tigers.

Filed Under: Friday Links Tagged With: Anastasia Taylor-Lind, Anthony Friedkin, Antoine Bruy, Eilon Paz, friday links, iPhone Photography Awards, Ksenia Yurkova, Magnum Photos, Neil Armstrong, Nick Brooks, tigers, Ukraine, Zarechny, Zun Lee

Friday Links

June 6, 2014 By Meaghan Gay

Netting by Victoria Pickering
Netting by Victoria Pickering
  • Today marks the 70th anniversary of D-Day, and the Atlantic has many amazing then and now photos from that day and current times.
  • “Whether or not your compositions are compelling depends not on some magic recipe, but rather on a thorough understanding of lens choice, point of view, elements of design, and final arrangement, or composition.” Great post by Brian F. Peterson on the Capital Photography Center blog on perspective.
  • Our friends at the Leica Store DC are hosting a street photography workshop this weekend.
  • Photos of abandoned buildings and some creepy dude in an owl costume. Really.
  • Photographer Jacob Riis captured many of the people living in the slums of New York City during the Gilded Age.
  • PDN reviewed the new Nikon D4S.
  • If you haven’t seen it yet, this weekend is your last chance to see the Gary Winogrand exhibit at the National Gallery of Art.
  • The Women Photojournalists of Washington are launching a new website next week, and are hosting a party to celebrate on June 10.
  • Instagram is rolling out new photo editing tools. Could this be the end of terrible filters? Please?
  • And finally, online dating profile pics with tigers are all the rage and an excellent way to automatically know who you should never, ever go on a date with.

Filed Under: Friday Links Tagged With: Capital Photography Center, friday links, Garry Winogrand, Instagram, Jacob Riis, Leica Store DC, Nikon D4S, tigers, Women Photojournalists of Washington

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

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