Thursday, December 31, 2009

Mitch Debrowner "Tropospheres" (1/9)




Landscapes are living eco systems and environments. They have existed well before, and will hopefully be here way beyond the time we are here. When taking photographs, time and space seem hard for me to measure. Whenever I shoot a ‘quality’ image, I know it. At those moments things are quiet, seem simple again – and I obtain a respect and reverence for the world that is hard to communicate through words. For me these moments happen when the exterior environment and my interior world combine. Hopefully the images presented help communicate how I feel and what I see during those times. - Mitch Debrowner

January 9 - March 6, 2010

The opening reception is on Jan 30th. 6 PM to 8 PM

Kopeikin Gallery
8810 Melrose Avenue
West Hollywood, CA. 90069

Wednesday, December 30, 2009

W. Eugene Smith : The Jazz Loft Project






In January 1955 W. Eugene Smith, a celebrated photographer at Life magazine whose quarrels with his editors were legendary, quit his longtime well-paying job at the magazine. He was thirty-six. He was ambitious, quixotic, in search of greater freedom and artistic license. He turned his attention to a freelance assignment in Pittsburgh, a three-week job that turned into a four-year obsession and in the end, remained unfinished. In a letter to Ansel Adams, Smith described it as a “debacle” and an “embarrassment.”

In 1957, Smith moved out of the home he shared with his wife and four children in Croton-on-Hudson, New York and moved into a dilapidated, five-story loft building at 821 Sixth Avenue in New York City’s wholesale flower district. 821 Sixth Avenue (between Twenty-eighth and Twenty-ninth streets) was a late-night haunt of musicians, including some of the biggest names in jazz—Charles Mingus, Zoot Sims, Bill Evans, and Thelonious Monk among them—and countless fascinating, underground characters. As his ambitions broke down for the epic Pittsburgh project, Smith found solace in the chaotic, somnambulistic world of the loft and its artists. He turned his documentary impulses away from Pittsburgh and toward his offbeat new surroundings.
..
The Jazz Loft Project, organized by the Center for Documentary Studies at Duke University in cooperation with the Center for Creative Photography at the University of Arizona and the W. Eugene Smith estate, is devoted to preserving and cataloging Smith’s tapes, researching the photographs, and obtaining oral history interviews with all surviving loft participants. The transferred recordings reveal high sound quality and extraordinary musical and cultural content, offering unusual documentation of an after-hours New York jazz scene.”


NPR's Weekend Edition this past weekend wrapped up their 10 part The Jazz Loft : Radio Series which y'all can now hear the full series available online now.

The Jazz Loft Project was started with Sam Stephenson of the Center for Documentary Studies at Duke University spent seven years going through W. Eugene Smith's roughly 40,000 image and about 4,000 hours of tape (Smith wired the building) to cataloging, archiving, selecting, and editing together into a book called "The Jazz Loft Project"

Listening to the podcast is just fascinating so if you got some time this holiday season, check them out.

Oh, you can Friend them on Facebook too. Exhibition will start in New York at the New York Public Library for the Performance Arts in Feb 2010 and will continue to Chicago Cultural Center, the Nasher Museum of Art at Duke University and the Center for Creative Photography at the Univeristy of Arizona. Fingers crossed on a West Coast showing :)

Tuesday, December 29, 2009

Matthew Turley - Norway 2009





Matthew Turley is a Salt Lake City-based photographer

Tuesday (12/29) Linkage


+ I posted this on the PIXFeedLA twitter last week but it still cracks me up so decided to post it here.

+ Mamiya announces iPhone App
+ The Wrap : New Paparazzi Breed: More Aggressive, Connected, and Foreign
+ LA Weekly : I-405 closures hitting Westside and Valley; expect an ugly three years
+ GQ's Jan 2010 - The Digital Issue. Yup GQ issues are now an iPhone App

Monday, December 28, 2009

IRIS Nights : An Evening with Neil Leifer (1/7)




I know, and my best picture ever, in my opinion, is my Ali Cleveland Williams picture that I shot from overhead. I don’t usually hang my own photos, I collect other people’s pictures. But that picture’s been hanging in my living room as long as I can remember. I have a 40x40 print of it which is hung in a diamond shape with Williams at the top. That's the guy that’s on the canvas on his back.

When I began there were far fewer photographers and far more places to get published. Today there are more photographers, far more photographers, coming out of schools with degrees. Good photographers and far fewer places to work and therefore I think it’s a much tougher business to crack. But having said that, there’s always going to be another Richard Avadon. There’ll be another Annie Leibowitz. There’ll be another Walter Iooss. Who knows, there might be another Neil Leifer, you know. I would never discourage any young person from going into the field but I just think it’s a much tougher nut to crack. A much, much tougher business than it used to be.

(Interview)

Annenberg Space for Photography's IRIS NIGHTS comes back in 2010 with an evening with legendary photographer Neil Leifer on Jan 7, 2010 6:30-8 pm and as always is is free :)

Tickets become available at NOON today (12/28) here.


IRIS Nights @ Annenberg Space for Photography
2000 Avenue of the Stars
Century City, CA 90067

Christmas in Los Angeles... in the black & white.




Originally I found the top image posted over on Los Angeles' Metblogs. I see City Hall every few days in the distance (I'm usually downtown) and to see it in a black/white image from the late 1920s is pretty amazing. The building was finished in 1928 and designed by John Parkinson, John C. Austin, and Albert C. Martin, Sr.

The images from the USC Digital Library which if you haven't had a chance to check out, will definitely take hours ^^. Just for kicks, I entered keyword "christmas los angeles" .





Sunday, December 27, 2009

Mother's Christmas Present



Mother, an advertising agency in London had an interesting Christmas present....

Centered on Photography : Call for Photographers



Sponsored by the Huntington Beach Art Center Foundation and the City of Huntington Beach, the Centered on Photography non-juried exhibition is currently accepting photographers for their Jan 15th exhibit.

Please deliver on :

Sunday Jan 3, 2010
11 am - 1 pm (HBAC members only)
1 pm - 5 pm (all artist)

Monday Jan 4, 2010
Noon - 4 pm (all artist)

Fees : $15 for one piece and $25 for two pieces.

Opening reception will be Friday Jan 15, 2010 6-9 pm

More info here.

Put Your Finger On The Button : a female photography show (1/9)

Alex Prager
Amanda Marsalis
Ashira Siegel
Brandy Eve
Cheryl Dunn
Deanna Templeton
Jeaneen Lund
Kassia Meador
Laura Flippen
Susanne Melanie Berry
Taylor Brittenham

In the Project Room: Lauren Kelley


Opening reception Saturday January 9th 7 to 10pm


New Image Art Gallery
7908 Santa Monica Blvd.
West Hollywood, CA 90046

Saturday, December 26, 2009

Use it, Abuse it: How Durable is a Metro TAP Card?


Click photo to enlarge


BTW : for Angelenos unaware, starting in March 2010, Metro is replacing all paper tickets with this plastic card.


(Photos by Mario G. Reyes)




And just for kicks, here's NY's MTA card. ^^

via LAist

Instant Gratification (01/09/10)




INSTANT GRATIFICATION: Los Angeles

ISM: a community project is celebrating instant film and the Polaroid 600 Series with a gallery exhibition + limited edition book featuring over 200 professional and amateur photographers from around the world.
The special event will be accompanied by live musical performances with The Fling, Sam Outlaw and The Romany Rye.


Saturday, January 9th, 7:00 p.m. - 11:00 p.m.

Copro Gallery
Bergamot Station
2525 Michigan Ave T5
Santa Monica, CA 90404

Sponsored by Copro Gallery, The Impossible Project and For Your Art.


Oh, while we're on the topic of Polaroids, here's an iPhone App that came out in the fall of 2009 that is called "ShakeItPhoto". Yup it makes a Polaroid sound when you take a picture and you an shake it like a real Polaroid...

Friday, December 25, 2009

Do they Know it's Christmas



Wow...just look at George Michael's hair from the 80s ! Bono looks so young ^^

Happy holiday folks !

Thursday, December 24, 2009

The Magical Christmas Caroling Truck

If you live in Toluca Lake or North Hollywood, California, you may already know about the Magical Christmas Caroling Truck, a local phenomenon that happens every year on Christmas Eve.

Since 1984, the sixty-two foot tractor-trailer, adorned with magnificent Christmas scenes and thousands of sparkling lights, has been spreading Yuletide cheer in the neighboring communities. Over 200 singers and dancers, accompanied by a 20,000 watt sound system, serenade local residents with Christmas carols.




December 24th, 2009, 5pm-11pm


Magical Christmas Caroling Truck

Thru (12/24) Linkage


(Photo : Ted Soqui)


+ Claremont Museum of Art to close doors on Dec. 27
+ FishbowlNY's 2009 Lists: A Timeline Of Magazine Closings
+ Rest in Peace : Photojournalism Is Dead
+ L.A. continues rebound in commercial shoots.
+ Free Night Rides on Metro Christmas Eve, New Year's Eve. Some trains will run 24 hours a day.
+ Hollywood Star Cleaner Wins Heartbreak Tale of the Year



Finally...more Canon videos :

Canon 1DmkIV at the races - test shoot from Dan Chung on Vimeo.


Seriously, what's with the Moby-sounding score ? Does everything have to sound like his music ? lol !

It's Good to Give from Chris Dealy on Vimeo.


Canon 7D

Wednesday, December 23, 2009

Bob Willoughby (1927-2009)





"I was there to make the women look as beautiful, the men as handsome and the movies as interesting as possible ... Beyond that, I photographed what appealed and was exciting to me."


Los Angeles Times obit

Scott Rhea "An Inevitable Consequence" (01/09)




The weightless environment of the underwater world and behavior of light in water set a stage for creating a world that cannot be replicated above ground. Collaboration of the many talented people, bravery of the talent, and common belief in the idea that something magical was going to happen were all components that made for the perfect alignment of events for a project like this to be created.

Exhibition Dates: Saturday, January 9, 2010 - Saturday, January 30, 2010

Opening Reception: Saturday, January 9, 7-11pm

Cella Gallery
5229 Lankershim Blvd
North Hollywood, CA 91601
(213) 291-7908

Tuesday, December 22, 2009

Brian Ach "The Photographer Project"


(shot this at a MOPLA event at the Pacific Design Center)

I call them event photographers - the guys (and gals) who get to go to Oscar parties, Emmy parties, and other high-end parties to photograph for the likes of WireImage all the way down to the paparazzi who prowl the streets of Los Angeles. For a while, a few years ago, I managed to hook up with one of these event agencies. There were book signings, charity events, party events and I would drive over to the location to take photos of celebrities - though because I was just starting out, I got the low end of it - an aging country star book signing. a Desperate Housewife doing a charity event, random parties at different nightclubs in Hollywood.

I discovered there was another world with celebrity event photographers and honestly I'm not that good of knowing who is who so I had to ask some of the other photographers who the person I was shooting was. Things were easier when there was a handler around who would spell out names to the photographer and explain who that person was. When people asked me about it and exclaim "You're a paparazzi !" I would mention I was a "legit" as the agency was notified and when I get to the location sometimes there'll be a 8x10 paper on the ground with the name of the agencies so all I had to do was look for my spot to stand. Other times, the photographers would make their own list and police themselves.

What I found most fascinating was the lives of the shooters themselves - listening to their conversations, talking shop, it was very surreal in a way. I think I knew I wasn't cut out to do event when I realized I would rather shoot the photographers than the celebrities themselves. So ended my career of about 3 months. None of my images ever licensed and I took it as a sign that celebrity event photography wasn't for me.

I still kick myself that I didn't maintain contact with some of the photographers I met. I've always thought I should do a photo series on them but like some things in life, it just slips through your hands.

I thought about that when I read Stella Kramer's blog where she talked to Brian Ach who just released a book on Blurb called "The Photographer Project" a collection of 64 celebrity photographers in New York along with their answer to 10 questions such as "Tell, please, in detail, about the most crazy, interesting, funny, odd, or touching celebrity story that you have been part of."



Stella asks how Brian got started with this project :

The project was started because a friend of mine and fellow photographer, Paul Hawthorne, had become sick. No one really knew how serious it was at the time, but the medical bills were mounting for him and his family .... Paul (and I) belong to a small group of entertainment photographers in NYC. We shoot all of the red carpets, concerts, and parties for agencies like Wireimage and Getty. Not having Paul around every night was kind of sad.
The reason the project seems personal, is because it is.

Paul was a mentor to me when I broke into this business over 4 years ago. ... I started the project in December of 2008, shooting it out of my Brooklyn studio. The call went out to all the photogs in NYC who do this type of work- from the big names like Kevin Mazur to the street paps. I was going to shoot full-length portraits of them, have them fill out a questionnaire, and put the end product together in a book. The book would then be sold to raise money for his family.....

Sadly, Paul passed away right before Christmas. The shock was palpable, no one really knew how sick he was. I vowed to go ahead with the project and see it through to the end, for Paul. It has taken me a year, while working for my agencies and doing other work.



Read the rest of the interview here




A percentage of the sale benefits to the family of the late Paul Hawthorne.

Monday, December 21, 2009

Monday (12/20) Linkages


+ Catherine Opie on "New Topographics: Photographs of a Man-Altered Landscape " @ LACMA currently on exhibit till Jan 3, 2010.

+ For Photo LA 2010, the Center will once again organized Review LA, an event for photographers to meet gallerists, editors, agents and others. There's spaces still available here. Reviewers include Mary Virginia Swanson, Virginia Heckert, Associate Curator of J. Paul Getty Museum, Andy Adams, Founder and Editor of Flak Photo and Sara Terry, Founder and President of Aftermath Project. Check out the full list here.

+ A&I Santa Monica closed their doors their weekend and moved their operation to A&I Hollywood.

Our Santa Monica location will be closing Saturday, December 18th, and moving to our Hollywood location. Our entire staff from both locations will now be available in one location to better serve you. All orders filed or scheduled to route to Santa Monica will be held in Hollywood for pickup.


+ 115 Magazine and Media Predictions for 2010
+ LA photographer Scott Nathan gets his ad pulled by Facebook.
+ Q&A: How does a photographer’s location affect their career?
+ MSNBC : Decade in Pictures
+ Custom wood portfolio cases
+ The Onion : Internet Archaeologists Find Ruins Of 'Friendster' Civilization
+ Time : The Top 10 Magazine Covers of 2009

Sunday, December 20, 2009

Anima - The Photography of Jean-François Spricigo (1/9)




Jean-Francois Spricigo, the 2008 Laureate of the Prix de Photographie de l’Académie des Beaux-Arts, may well be the most articulate animal advocate on record. His critically acclaimed photographic series ‘anima’ documents the psychological complexity of the animal kingdom. Spricigo’s extreme sensitivity to the physical reality of each animal creates images, shot entirely in black and white, that transmit the emotional insight of movie stills.


His work will be shown here in Los Angeles in January and after rummaging through the web, I found a slide show of his images done for his exhibition at the Académie des Beaux-Arts in Paris back in November '09. In conjunction with FLAX (France Los Angeles Exchange), we Angelenos have a chance to catch it on Saturday Jan 9 through to Feb 13, 2010


Opening Reception Saturday Jan 9th 5-8 pm

Louis Stern Fine Arts
9002 Melrose Avenue
West Hollywood, CA 90069

LA Times article

Saturday, December 19, 2009

Smashbox Pop-Up Photo Shoot w/ Ryan Schude



One of the things about working at PIX for close to a decade is you see many people come and go. Some work for years, others just for a few months. We get folks from all over the US come work for us. RIT folks, Brooks folks, even Cornell folks. In these years I've seen a lot of books and websites but I can honestly say that when I first saw Ryan's work - I knew he wouldn't be at PIX long. When I heard he got a show in Paris, I knew he was on his way.

So when he ended up doing Smashbox's Pop-up Photo Shoot, I said to myself, yup, makes sense. I can't wait to see how far Ryan will go in the next decade.

Check out his interview and some of his images from the shoot at Smashbox Yello and check out Ryan Schude's work over here.

Erik Fischer "LA and What Comes After" (1/8)




"LA and What Comes After" is the inaugural solo exhibition of photographer Erik Fischer. It will be held at The Doheny, a members-only club downtown on January 8, 2010 from 8PM - 2AM. To RSVP, please contact Alexx Shaw at whitecubephilosophy@yahoo.com. This is an one night only event.

Having been a gourmet chef since the age of sixteen, Fischer’s photographic motivation comes from his travels and residencies throughout the world. Referring to himself as “The Chef in Exile,” the German-born artist pulls inspiration from places such as Nantucket, Southern France, New York, Virginia, his hometown of Aachen, Germany, and finally Los Angeles where he has resided for the past five years. Working as a private chef in some of the finest mansions in America, Fischer’s photographic compositions are inspired by the light and flow of interior architectural lines and decor. The aesthetics of the images are created parallel to his intimate knowledge of French cuisine where flavors and textures are synonymous with the details in his macro photography.

Opening reception Jan 8, 2010 8 pm - 2 am.

The Doheny
714 W Olympic Blvd
Los Angeles, CA 90015

INFO

Friday, December 18, 2009

Douglas Kirkland Seminar - Canon Explorer of Light (01/9)





Photography was very different then from how it is now ... you really had to learn your craft very carefully just to get a consistent exposure, and you had to focus your camera very carefully yourself ... and since it was film, there was always the black magic of what happened.

Author/Photographer Mark Edward Harris sits down with Douglas Kirkland for a chat about his incredible career at Pier 59 West on Jan 9, 2010. Jan 19, 2010.

7:00pm for a light reception
7:45pm - Introduction of Douglas Kirkland
9:15-10:00pm - Meet and greet with Mr. Kirkland

Sponsor by Samy's & Canon.

RSVP here

Pier 59 West
2415 Michigan Ave.
Santa Monica, CA 90404

Thursday, December 17, 2009

Todd Gray "Michael Jackson : Before He Was King" book signing (12/22)




I first met Michael in 1974, when I was sent on an assignment to photograph Stevie Wonder at the Record Plant studio in Hollywood. Stevie was recording the single “You Haven't Done Nothin',” which featured backing vocals by the Jackson 5, so Michael and his brothers were there. I had been photographing rock groups since 1971, while I was still in high school, and kept on to help pay for college and later, art school. When I got to the studio that evening I walked into the engineering booth and saw a young man with a huge Afro. He was wearing ill-fitting slacks and hovering around the mixing board, watching Stevie's hands intensely as Stevie was adjusting the sound of the playback. I realized he was Michael Jackson. I had no idea that the pictures I took of him then would be the beginning of a decade-long journey.

Between 1974 to 1983, Todd Gray was Michael Jackson's personal photographer. Gray is currently a professor of art and photography at Cal State Long Beach and lives in Los Angeles.

This upcoming Tuesday (12/22), Steve Turner Contemporary will be exhibiting some of his photography and Todd will be available to sign copies of his book "Michael Jackson : Before He Was King"

Tuesday December 22, 2009 7-9 pm

Steve Turner Contemporary
6026 Wilshire Blvd
Los Angeles CA 90036

* Right across from BCAM/LACMA.
Vanity Fair : I'm With Michael !

Yousuf Karsh's Esquire 2010 cover



Esquire's Jan issue just pop into my mailbox and was surprised to see Karsh's images of Kennedy brothers though this time three of his individual images were put together into one image. Yup, although he has passed on, his images still makes a magazine cover.

"In photography there is always an opportunity to develop your talent and yourself. There is always discovery, and the use of light is an elusive medium to express the human face. You can understand it, but you rarely master it....Yes, it's light, but it's also understanding your subject. To make a significant photo of someone, you have to know a great deal about them - their accomplishments, station in life or contribution to their fellow man. All this information and observation plays an important part so that the photographer can make a sensitive image. I always read a great deal about the person I'm going to photograph. I imbue myself with their contribution to the world."

Karsh currently has an exhibition over at the Central Library that is due to end Jan 23, 2010. Below is one of my favorite Karsh image - one of Hemingway used in this 1961 edition of "Portrait of Hemingway" as written by Lillan Ross.


Wednesday, December 16, 2009

PIX Holiday Hours

Mon - Wed (12/21 - 12/23) 6 AM - 8 PM

Thur & Fri (12/24 & 12/25) CLOSED

Sat & Sun (12/26 & 12/27) 9 AM - 5 PM



Mon - Wed (12/28-12/30) 6 AM - 8 PM

Thur & Fri (12/31 - 1/1) CLOSED

Sat & Sun (1/2-1/3) 9 AM - 5 PM


We resume regular schedule on Jan 4th.


BTW : We have the following on sale :

Crumpler, Multi-Cart - 40% off
Tenba, Pelican cases- 15% off
Storm cases - 20% off
Rimelite softboxes, Induro tripods - 25% off

Wed (12/16) Linkage



+ Old Wim Wender / Leica ad
+ + I.D. Magazine, a Design Icon, Folds After 55 Years in Print
+ Car Plows Into Fashion Photog On Shoot Downtown LA , Killing Him
+ Jay Loprz, owner of drkrm gallery is now the new executive director of the Downtown Art Walk
+Local blogger Blackburn & Sweetzer checks out Assouline's newest outpost here in Los Angeles.


Random note : I spoke to a friend who directs music video (Queens of the Stone Age, Muse, Those Crooked Vultures) who just got a French rep and one of the things they asked him was did he have a blog ? Interesting.......

Urban Crude: The Oil Fields Of The Los Angeles Basin





If you've lived here in Los Angeles for a number of years you probably already know the oil wells of Los Angeles. Hidden ones such as the one behind the Beverly Center, or the one covered by a wrapping of painted flowers over on Olympic Blvd and not-so-hidden ones such as the ones you see on La Cienega Blvd on the way to LAX.

Currently on exhibition at Center for Land Use Interpretation in Venice is : "Urban Crude: The Oil Fields of the Los Angeles Basin."

Urban Crude describes, in photographs and texts, the past and present of the 41 active oil fields of metropolitan Los Angeles, from which about 28 million barrels are extracted annually (down from the peak of 133 million barrels, in 1969). The exhibition pays particular attention to the myriad efforts to camouflage the petro-infrastructure — to suppress awareness of the fact that about 5,000 oil wells remain active in the midst of the second most populous city in the United States.

BTW : A few weeks ago, I watched a VBS video called "Uneven Terrain : Oil of Los Angeles". Thought y'all might enjoy learning a bit about oil here in this city. I had no idea there were actually pumping oil at the Farmer's Market over on Fairfax.



Open 12 noon to 5pm every Friday, Saturday and Sunday, or by appointment. Admission is free.

Center for Land Use Interpretation
9331 Venice Boulevard
Culver City, CA 90232
(310) 839-5722

Tuesday, December 15, 2009

Help-Portrait LA

Over 6,000 photographers across the world took part of the Help-Portrait event that just happen in this past Sat. CNN covers one of the event in this video :



Here in our neck of the woods, there's already a video online from the Saturday's Help Portrait LA event up in Studio City.



On the rainiest day in L.A. 85 volunteers showed up to give of themselves through photography. Special thanks to Kodak and Ketchum who rocked it with their printing service and Torn-up-Tees who made so many custom shirts. Thanks to the documentary team who were on top it, the make up artists who encouraged beauty with their words and brushes, the photo stations who produced beautiful portraits, the greeters and check-in team who withstood the rain with resilient spirits, and all the folks who donated plenty of refreshments, supplies, & tents and umbrellas.

Interviews from guests and volunteers and more footage to come soon.

Follow us at: twitter.com/HelpPortraitLA

Free cases from PIX

Hmmm, got an email from Robert, the rental manager at PIX :

Free 12x frame Cases, some complete, some just missing a strap. Free head cases. Some missing a strap, some needing new handles or minor repair. All Free. Come and take on or all. First come, first take.




Come on by and pick them up. PIX is open from 6 am to 10 pm Mon to Fri.

PIX
217 S. La Brea
Los Angeles, CA 90036