LACMA to Exhibit Vanity Fair Portraits

Thursday, October 30th, 2008

Nickolas Muray, Douglas Fairbanks, Jr and Joan Crawford, Santa Monica, 1929, Vanity Fair, October 1929, © Condé Nast Publications Inc./Courtesy Condé Nast Archive.

Starting on October 26 the Los Angeles County Museum will open it’s Vanity Fair Portraits: Photographs 1913-2008 exhibit. The exhibition will showcase “portraits from the magazine’s early period (1913-1936) displayed in conjunction with works from the contemporary Vanity Fair (1983–present)”. You can see work by Cecil Beaton, Harry Benson, Julian  Broad, Imogen Cunningham, Annie Leibovitz, Man Ray, Mary Ellen Mark, Steven  Meisel, Helmut Newton, Herb Ritts, Edward Steichen, Mario Testino, and Bruce  Webe.

Don’t miss it, this will be the only US stop on it’s international tour!

Digg This!   Tweet This!   Share on Facebook   Stumble It!

Super Hero Renaissance

Wednesday, August 13th, 2008

Currently on view at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City is an exhibition titled “Super Heroes Fashion and Fantasy.” It is a look at comic book fashion trends that illustrate technological extensions or advancements of the human body from the mid 20th century to today. Even in the light of the current trend toward authenticity in the creative marketplace, there will always be a place for the idealized human form. From Greek to Roman times to Spiderman, Superman and Wonder Woman, we see archetypes for strength, courage, speed, sexuality, fortitude and good.


Dara Torres models the new LZR RACER along side a hologram of Michael Phelps during the new Speedo Swimsuit Launch at Espace on February 12, 2008 in New York City. (Photo by Mike Stobe/Getty Images)

For example, the D.C. comic book character “The Flash” was an inspiration for current Olympian Michael Phelp’s aqua suit made by Speedo as he is smashing world-records and becoming the most decorated Olympic athlete in history. Comic books and superheroes give children a way to dream and channel their imaginations into fantastical realms. Even after adolescence, superheroes remain part of our collective cultural history as they are passed down from generation to generation as evidenced in the fashion on display here.

Digg This!   Tweet This!   Share on Facebook   Stumble It!

Radical Advertising

Wednesday, August 13th, 2008

We’re all exposed to a huge amount of advertising everyday, things that are seen as challenging and shocking one day are passé the next (or at least the following week). What consumers want and how they relate to the world around them is now more than ever driving brands to think more laterally, be more inventive and demand more interactivity from us all.
The Radical Advertising exhibition http://www.radicaladvertising.de/ currently on show in Dusseldorf’s NRW Forum explores the visual and social conditions that have dictated the direction of advertising over the last 3 decades

The nineties: radical shock – advertising as a means of attack

The noughties: radical life – advertising as a means of making contact 

2010 onwards: radical moral – advertising as a means of co-operation

Along side this drive by consumers is the influence that digital technology has had on how image makers approach making pictures. For a long time the technology has dictated the visual look of the image, but I think now, there’s a shift towards a much more creative attitude of ‘just because you can do something, doesn’t mean you should’

This animation could have been created the obvious way using computer animation but instead it was painstakingly rendered one frame at a time by hand, I think it’s the imperfections that give it it’s humanity.  

http://www.blublu.org/sito/video/muto.htm 

Digg This!   Tweet This!   Share on Facebook   Stumble It!

Calling All Entries for the PCNW 13th Annual Photographic Competition Exhibition

Wednesday, April 16th, 2008

10193402.jpg
Rosanne Olson/Getty Images

Getty Images is proud to support and sponsor many photographic organizations such as the International Center for Photography, World Press Photo, Visa Pour L’Image, New York Photo Festival and the Eddie Adams Workshops.

We also like to recognize our friends in the fine art world and are happy to sponsor the Photographic Center Northwest’s (PCNW) 13th Annual Photographic Competition Exhibition. The competition draws entries from across the US with jurors whom are nationally known, including Paul Kopeikin, Mary Virginia Swanson, Anne Wilkes Tucker, Charlotte Cotton, Michael Kenna and Keith Carter. This year’s juror is Rod Slemmons, the director of the Museum of Contemporary Photography at Columbia College Chicago.

Entries to the 13th Annual Photographic Competition Exhibition are due May 9. Click here for additional details and good luck!


Digg This!   Tweet This!   Share on Facebook   Stumble It!

Is Appropriation Appropriate?

Thursday, December 13th, 2007

bank1.jpg
Photo: Erik Dreyer

As an interesting follow-up to the last post about the copyright issues surrounding the Pop Art show in London, is an article in the NY Times a couple of days ago about appropriated photography in fine art. Included are quotes from photographer Jim Krantz, whose work has been appropriated (with much success – the piece in question sold at auction a few years ago for upwards of $300,000) by the most famous ‘appropriationist’ of them all – Richard Prince. Mr. Krantz’s photography is currently on display at the Guggenheim Museum by way of Mr. Prince’s well-received 30-year retrospective exhibition there currently.

Mr. Prince’s canny insouciance is captured nicely in a quote from 1993, where he off-handedly compares his series of appropriated Marlboro Man imagery to bank robbery: “No one was looking. This was a famous campaign. If you’re going to steal something, you know, you go to the bank.”

Despite what one thinks of the means used, Prince’s selection of the Marlboro Man imagery is appropriate in more ways than one – for years the now legendary Prince has been carefully cultivating his own image as one of a cowboy or outlaw of the art world. What could be ‘cooler’ than a successful bank robber? Images of cowboys (from advertising no less), biker chicks, inane one-liner jokes painted on canvas, seedy pulp fiction book covers reproduced as large paintings, actual hot rod hoods as sculpture – it all glows with the “aren’t I a bad-ass”, James Dean-meets-King Midas aura that surely is the unspoken base appeal at work behind Prince’s success. It operates like a cultural pheromone, luring everyone from the bookish critics, curators and academics who have steeped themselves soggy with arcane theory and hope some of the cool will rub off, to the uber-rich and listless collectors of uber-priced art, for whom the promise of an injection of life-blood from the netherworldly cultures of the American hoi polloi is irresistible, to young art students (who in a former era may have gone to Hollywood), who find reassurance in the Prince story (for themselves and their parents as well, who initially balked at the art school price-tags) , sensing that it augurs well for their own future success – after all, looking cool is what they’ve done so well their whole life.

But these more sordid motives are rarely if ever mentioned, indeed perhaps taboo, though easily discernable beneath the kind of intricately coded veil of mystifying sophistry that seems to have become the sole function of art writing (or perhaps always has been?). To wit (from the Guggenheim’s introduction to the current show): “[Prince's] deceptively simple act in 1977 of rephotographing advertising images and presenting them as his own ushered in an entirely new, critical approach to art-making—one that questioned notions of originality and the privileged status of the unique aesthetic object”.

But I admit to being a bit incendiary here, perhaps betraying the influence of Prince, provocateur par excellence, on myself as well. I do feel Prince to be an important and influential American artist, but also wonder if that importance might not rest at least partially on what he has revealed about the inner workings of the art world in contemporary society (intentionally or unintentionally? yet more fodder for the art sophists) . Whether it’s his influence or not is arguable (certainly not his alone), but when perfect recreations of grunge and gutter-punk get-ups from barely a decade ago sell for thousands of dollars in high-end fashion boutiques, I wonder if we’re any the wiser for it.

Digg This!   Tweet This!   Share on Facebook   Stumble It!

Information Serfs

Wednesday, November 28th, 2007

warhol.jpg

Insightful take on the Pop Art Portraits show up at London’s National Portrait Gallery by Notable Internet Personality Cory Doctorow on Guardian Unlimited online. It is interesting to think about the evolution of Intellectual Property, especially the activity in that arena of late and since the advent of the internet, against the backdrop of cultural production within that same period (coincidentally up to and including the work of Paul D. Miller – see previous post). The ironies in this instance are particularly sweet (or sour perhaps), as Cory points out. My hunch is that we’ve many more such ironies in store, even more absurd, before this issue blows over – if it ever does…

Digg This!   Tweet This!   Share on Facebook   Stumble It!

Tokyo contributor honored by Art + Commerce

Friday, October 12th, 2007

Motoyuki Kobayashi, a Getty Images contributing photographer in Tokyo, is included in the 2007 Art + Commerce Peek Festival, which recognizes outstanding emerging photographers.
The Peek website has video clips relating to each of the selected artists’ work. On the Peek site, click on this part of the collage of images to see the video for Motoyuki:

motoyuki.jpg

Digg This!   Tweet This!   Share on Facebook   Stumble It!