Main

March 30, 2008

On Flickr Stigma

A letter to Aphotoeditor

Rob

Very interesting thread.

I agree that the right marketing materials are needed for the segment you are looking to get work in, as in Rome, well you know the saying …. I think from the reaction here this is experiment you are running is something that “pros” feel for most part valuable and certainly they respect your leadership.

However, I get the feeling in this line “It’s not that difficult to see why I would think you’re an amateur if you put your images on Flickr. That’s what it was created for and that’s who primarily uses it.” that you may be missing something of value. I would argue that by focusing on the “amateurs” and not the audience we will be overlooking a valuable and sustainable marketing opportunity. You own an audience.

This audience of “amateurs” are the same people who consume a photographer’s images in mass magazines. They are the audience. They are the consumers. The photo editors are gate keepers and curators. They are powerful filters but they are not in the case of mass magazines the audience. By perpetuating the stigma, we are keeping photographers from an audience, from the audience.

I think by not encouraging some kind of long term involvement in a photographer’s body of work that a site like Flickr can offer through the mass audience platform it provides, we diminish a fantastic opportunity to connect with the very people who consume the photographs. I am not sure if magazines can make it happen themselves they have a vested interest in their brand - not in establishing a long term connection with broadest possible audience and enhancing the value of the photographer as recognizable.

By dismissing the vernacular aesthetic of Flickr with the audience we dismiss “the audience”. I think photographers coming into the business over the next few years will have this in their DNA. A few top tier photographer’s will have other methods of direct to audience marketing. The more intimate an audience is with a photographer, the more valuable the photographer becomes to the properties that hire them.

I am not an editorial photographer but have learned much form the readers contribution here over the last few months. Thanks for this valuable resource.

February 02, 2008

Perpetually running out of gas .......

From 5B4

Photography for me is a medium that seems to propel along like a car that is perpetually running out of gas. In fits and starts, surges of energy and inertia, I will have a year where I am one and Zen-like with the world and then the next year I am out of sync like someone who has spent all of their karmic savings in one moment. This is a year when I am out of sync.

This is not a phenomena that is entirely my own. If you look through any artist’s work you will see good and bad years of production. For photographers who venture out into the street in which to mediate their experiences, a bad year may mean always being one step away from where you think you need to be standing before your prey decides they need a Starbucks and betrays your intuitive moment. These difficulties in navigating the world compounded by its non-cooperation with your needs as an artist is the simplest explanation as to why there are not many photographers still working in that manner. Revelation requires spending lots of shoe leather and depending on how big the revelation, possibly even knee surgery.

January 06, 2008

Indie or outsider

I read John Haber's "Learning to love photography" with some interest as you know I am about to open my first solo show here in NY at Peter Hay Halpert Fine Art. My work has benefited in the the digital space as I have spent the last four years evolving a body of work in public on Fotolog and Flickr.

No MFA, no commercial work, no editorial work just the time and space to work through awkwardness of the movement from technique to craft to style. Making this journey doubly interesting is that in my day job I have been able advocate reader participation and contribution rather than comment and rant because of my experience.

In the article there is a reference to the Hollywood "indies". This got me thinking. What makes sense to me in that the audience gathering power of blogs and social networks has allowed an artist like myself to develop a value far beyond what could have been done even 7 years ago. Not sure that is exactly what John meant but I think that this builds on the notion of an outside the system. I am not sure if I am the first photo artist to move from Flickr to a one man show in Chelsea, I know I won't be the last.

And that is a good thing.

January 03, 2008

A slippery and unstable idea

A photograph is a slippery and unstable idea — it never has only one meaning. In capturing the face of a loved one, it's a hedge against loss. As a document or a formal record, it's dependent on the political, economic and propagandist impulses of the photographer. It can provide evidence of what has been — if we understand the various institutions from which it emerges.

DANA SELF
A Long View

October 28, 2007

ModernPainter

Luc Tuymans in ModernPainter

"Photographs are akin to the way I paint. They aren't really photographs; they're liquid in which an image appears. It's precisely their inherent element of loss and possible failure that I value."
- Luc Tuymans


"Paintings are akin to the way I make photographs. They aren't really paintings, they're pixels in which an image appears. It is precisely their inherent element of loss and possible failure that I value."
- Ron Diorio


Evening news

August 13, 2007

After reading ( a selection of a selection) of John Berger's essays

Discovery. Looking at the image and putting it together again in the rendering: seen - remembered - imagined.

Less direct but more comprehensive, a question of imaginative vision.

A view of the visible, prolonging a moment - neither geometric or photographic.

Orgainized seeing: a personal deformity of vision.

July 22, 2007

Other people's questions

The first in a series of posts where I will take on the answering of questions posed at other people. These questions come from an interview with Magnum photographer Martine Franck at ArtInfo.com (from Personism)

I am very struck by how often you return to images of people who are either alone or who are different in some way. Do you see photography as a tool for describing difference?

RD: Photography appropriates the world. I present an imagined context. Ambiguity and anxiety from outside the border of the image is an editing choice.

Let me put it another way, do you see photography as a means of exploring the differences that one encounters in the world?

RD: No. Photographers want to be something else - a witness, too often a witness that can't be cross examined. If anything I am trying to explore the lies we tell oursleves. Or at least the lies I tell myself.

Someone once said that taking someone’s photograph is rather like meeting them on a train.

RD: I encounter alot of people on the New York subways that I would not want to meet. So that is true for me to the extent that it is in passing and I will tell my own stories about them. I am not interested in telling theirs.

Your work portrays both sadness and happiness, but it seems to me that there’s always something melancholic about your portrayals of happiness.

RD: I was an altar boy for many years when I was younger and witnessed the cylce of life - baptisms, weddings and funerals. I think that there must have been some days that I served at all three. In looking back I have come to understand how melancholy and hapiness can attend the same events. It must have had some effect on me and ultimately my work.

Would you say that your work is about the fragility of the human spirit then, or about its strength?

RD: I would rather say that the work speaks to how we get on with what we have to do. We live most of our lives in the middle. In these ambiguous and indecisive moments we find ourselves.

What would you say to the suggestion that the key balance in your work is between curiosity and compassion?

RD: Compassion is a big word better to be applied in smaller circles than society at large. Curiosity yes - but the kind of curiosity that make people rubber-neck - watching people consume themselves and then get indigestion. I think the balance lies in the contradictions. I am a man of many contradictions and in those contradictions I hope I find a truth.

May 27, 2007

Cornered

Every image has two sides. First of course is the the trace of what once was or what maybe never was. The image can transform reality to what can be imagined, dreamed or conjured.

Jan Morris in her book Manhattan '45 observed that Manhattan seems to reinvent itself every dozen or so years. With very few permanent reference points our memories become fictionalized and the fictions of the screen become fact. I think that has made it easier for me to mock the documentary veracity of photography in my work. NY isn't that real.

I think that there is a quality of incompleteness in my images that to me gives them a sense of spontaniety. I know that the original capture is not my final word on the subject so I am willing to take chances when shooting. They are not technically perfect or well composed at capture. These captures are a cue to recall visually from my own emotional recollections something that can't be known only from what is photographed.


Cornered

March 04, 2007

Criteria for commercial success

From Remove the price tags and take your pick

Is there a link between a painting's artistic merit and its market value? John Windsor thinks not

Here is a tick-list of criteria for commercial success: a reasonably prolific oeuvre (beans or Blochs, dealers need a constant flow of stock); membership of an art movement; recognition in art history; artwork in public galleries; backing from powerful collectors such as Charles Saatchi. One might add: high quality art. But the market does not judge art; it merely rides the reputation merry-go-round. Good art is art that sells.

Certianly the most succint expalnation of market forces and teh quality of art.

February 16, 2007

Hollywood Weighs Copyright Protections

From WSJ.com

Apple Inc. Chief Executive Steve Jobs's recent open letter urging that digital music be distributed free of copyright protections was aimed at the recording industry. But it made waves in another key constituency Mr. Jobs does business with: movie makers.

Executives at Hollywood studios believe it is only a matter of time before the debate over removing copyright protections spreads to movies from music. Until now, the studios have steadfastly asserted that copy protections -- known as digital rights management -- are essential to preventing piracy of films.

The studios are increasingly engaged in internal debate over the right course ..

January 30, 2007

Feeling in my heart

from The World’s a Mess, and It’s All Your Fault

“My feeling in my heart a sympathy for the poor does not change the life of the poor,” our narrator unsurprisingly says toward the play’s conclusion. At least Mr. Shawn displays a self-knowledge to match his narrator’s when he has him continue, “And artists who create works of art that inspire sympathy and good values don’t change the life of the poor.”

January 27, 2007

Revolutionaries turn reactionary once they seize control

From Reality Check for a Generation That Knows Best

Revolutionaries turn reactionary once they seize control; the generation that prided itself on freedom and nonconformity keeps Generations X and Y walking behind it in lock step, weaned on reruns of “M*A*S*H” and remakes of “Charlie’s Angels” and each new lunar phase of Madonna. Like the youngest children in a large family, the post-boom generations are living on hand-me-down pop culture, and don’t seem to mind.

January 23, 2007

My New York

From Crazy Love

“My New York is a small place,” he said. “It’s not Fifth Avenue. It’s not the Thanksgiving Day Parade. It’s people in gray, and it’s working class people. It’s a different New York, and it always was. ”

Going down

Francis Ford Coppola circa 1980s

From Robin Good

"To me the great hope is that now these little 8mm video recorders and stuff have come out, some... just people who normally wouldn't make movies are going to be making them, and - you know - suddenly, one day, some little fat girl in Ohio is going to be the new Mozart - you know - and? make a beautiful film with her little father's camera...corder - and for once the so-called professionalism about movies will be destroyed. Forever. And it will really become an art form.
That's my opinion."

Francis Ford Coppola

January 18, 2007

On a good editor

From Notes from nowhere

Having spent a considerable part of my life in editing, both photography and text, I do believe in the grueling necessity of it. This obviously includes my own photography. The editing may be even more important than taking the images in the first place. I am convinced that no matter how good you may be, if you choose the wrong images, the result will be mediocre at best. Hence, although I have edited roughly two million images of other people over the past ten years, I don’t ever do the final edit of my own work - you just can’t edit your own images with a 100 percent success rate. But you can choose people who are good at it (and avoid those who are not).

I am looking for a an editor to work with, so if you are out there .... call home

Our still picture world.

Mindy McAdams reports on an interview with Rob Finch of A photo a day and she quotes him:

There are two specific camps of people in our still picture world. There are people who love photography and there are people who love to tell stories. People who love photography only for the act of photography might have some trouble in the future assuming they want to work at a media outlet.


I think that photography by its own nature is very "elastic" in practice. For image driven news media that elastcity is an opportunity to diversify the use of photography. The challenge is being very transparent about what is illustrative and what is documentary.

January 15, 2007

Ubiquity is the new exclusivity

from the NY Times Anywhere the Eye Can See, It’s Likely to See an Ad

“We never know where the consumer is going to be at any point in time, so we have to find a way to be everywhere,” said Linda Kaplan Thaler, chief executive at the Kaplan Thaler Group, a New York ad agency. “Ubiquity is the new exclusivity.”

January 03, 2007

Photography is like sex

I contributed this to a conversationon on Art & Perception

My old Nikon FM collects dust on my dresser becuase the digital darkroom transformed what I had come to know as photography. It moved me from picture taking to image making. Now the only real "photographic" moment is the end stage of the manufacturing process when a Digital C-print is pulled. For me it has been important to have the "photographic" in the making of the object while disregarding the "photographic" in the image making process. So in a traditional sense, for me, there's not much photography in my process to enjoy.

What I do enjoy is where image making intersects with storytelling - you frame the world - frame a point of view. In some ways "view finder" better describes what it is. The really emancipating thing has been to find/seek/uncover the authentic - the essence of the emotional connection in the image without the "view" being my truth or something close to me. I'm always chasing that both in my own work and when I'm looking at other's work.

When I first posted on Fotolog in June 2003, I called my page "A photographic imagination". I had just read Sontag's On Photography and I wanted to put a marker down that these images should not be viewed as documents - they were manipulated and as such the images were not representative but representational.

I was also beginning to undestand how pixel based display was a great democratizer - all these screen images were made of the same substance. A Picasso painting, a DaVinci drawing, a deep space image form the Hubble Telescope or an Ansel Adams photograph were certainly different objects in the real world but on the screen they were just a collection of pixels. The playing field was leveled, the image content would be judged on it's own aesthetic and against every other image that could be displayed. The eye would decide.

From the start I wanted to give people something to think about - but not as a message or a lesson or a meaning. I think I lacked the confidence to articulate that early on. But it is there like the manipulation is as part of my whole apporach. I want the viewer active to "look into the image" rather than just looking at the image.

I am not an equipment geek. If the device captures images without a flash, has a memory card I can read and a charged battery I'd probably use it. I don't need a perfect capture, I want to make a capture perfect. I need raw materials so I "harvest" images, hundreds per day. I'll capture till I drain my battery. I hardly look at the LCD when I am shooting, I try never to stop moving. I capture everything at. low res 640 x 480. I have lost any connection to the preciousness of any individual snap.

I use Flickr to post my images because it is a distribution point and provides a publication platform and an audience. I want an audience. Of course this serves two masters because I can move easliy from presenter to an audience to being part of the audience.

At the point where I was searching for a way of working - first Fotolog and then Flickr gave me a daily production and publishing structure and a format to see a body of work developing.

It allows me to be prolific without purpose and organically find threads in the work. The dark side is that there is such a need to get the next image - almost an obligation. I realize this is a product of my own need for immediate gratification. I tend to ration the published images to one per day. The sheer volume of images posted on both of these services is a stark reminder of how insignificant any single image can be. It is quite intimidating.

I am always surprised by what people connect to in an individual image, what they are moved by. I am starting to sense a bond. It is not that I said something nice about their picture or made them a contact so they say something nice about mine. There is something we have in common, something they know and I know.

In the end to me photography is like sex, the intersection of what interests you and what you can get. This is what I can get.

December 30, 2006

The charade of creativity

How did ‘Art bollocks’ become the default way of writing about visual culture? Could Mao have the answer?


The results of this conceptual approach are not so much art as a commentary on art – and, inadvertently, a commentary on the shortcomings of art education. And one should not discount how readily egalitarian assumptions and economic influence can be brought to bear in this realm. Whereas creative genius is, by definition, unequally distributed and often expensive to develop, theoretical facility is cheap to disseminate and all too easy to regurgitate. While very few of us can hope to create things of extraordinary beauty, rather more of us can learn to ‘reference’ things of beauty or, better yet, to say why beauty doesn’t matter. Interviewed in The Guardian last year, artist Gavin Turk said: ‘My work is full of quotations – as though I’m a dj recycling other people’s work. I’m just doing what everybody else does, but more explicitly. What really interests me is the charade of creativity.’

Every artist is now the star of his or her own movie.

Whatever Happened to Art Colonies?

To have art colonies, you have to have artists as outcasts, which, of course, really didn't happen until Romanticism. But now, because of the lifestyle revolution, artists aren't outcasts anymore. Mothers and fathers used to weep when their offspring announced they wanted to be artists. Now the folks just send their kids to Yale and put a down-payment on a loft.

But why would artists want to hang around with one another? The past is a weird place. Artists used to cluster. Certainly, a common belief-system would explain a lot, along with mutual protection, sharing information, hopping on to one or another stylistic train, mate-swapping, binge-ing, philandering and the thrill of hand-to-hand competition. Artists learn from each other. And, according to Romanticism, they need inspiration: a muse, a myth, a drug, or a landscape.

There are no more art colonies because we no longer need them. We fly here; we fly there. We form our own little art networks. There are no art colonies for the same reason there are no art bars. Where is the Cedar Bar or the Max's of yesteryear?

Young artists used to pray for Pollock, de Kooning, or Barney Newman sightings. Nowadays, I don't think anyone would blink an eye at spying Jeff Koons or Matthew Barney. Every artist is now the star of his or her own movie.

No one wants to talk. If you go out, you go to a club to dance your brains out. Art now is serious business; you cannot risk being seen drunk in public, being heard saying something passionate -- or saying something really, really stupid. Groupies might be carrying guns. Your image is all.

December 20, 2006

Play to the system

Maybe play to the system ...

John Szarkowski on playing the gallery system


So that’s the big change. Now you go to schools like Yale and — [the students] would deny it, but they’re lying — their real ambition is to be stars in the gallery system. And I wouldn’t want those young people to know this, but there is actually a substantial market for new people doing something that might look flashy for a moment, because of the fact that there are, you know, a million new billionaires in this country, and they or their wives want to be on the boards of museums. And you can’t collect Jasper Johns anymore. I mean, forget collecting Matisse or Picasso. You can’t collect Rauschenberg or those people — all the good stuff is already in captivity! So you’ve got to find a new guy.

"there's a new kid in town..."

December 19, 2006

An entirely nonverbal medium

In one of Time's features on "You" they write:

Even more than blogs or video-sharing sites, Flickr has the power to forge international bonds because it works in an entirely nonverbal medium.

They mention two Flickr users Ali Khurshid and Lavannya Goradia but don't provide links to their work. How lame is that!

A flip book style

From Teaching online jounralism

Between You and Me.
A film by Patry Krebisz

A friend recently bought the Canon EOS 20D. I tried its burst mode and was in seventh heaven. In this mode we could record at five frames per second (as opposed to film’s 24). We could shoot for about 12 seconds before the camera’s memory buffer would fill up, so our takes had to be really exact -- no long, hypnotic shots. I did a series of tests beforehand to find the best setup ...


I have been working on some still image based products for the last few months. I have a created a few prototypes and a couple of small films of my own photographic works.

This flip book style is an interesting approach that I hope to incorporate in the next interations.

December 18, 2006

Francesca Woodman

Francesca Woodman's haunting vision

Francesca Woodman explored the ephemeral realm between what is/isn't

Woodman probed the nature of photography and its uneasy relationship with reality. She relentlessly explored what Townsend calls the "spatial and temporal mismatches" between image and object.

She wanted to evoke the elusive, transient realm between what is and isn't, constantly depicting herself as a kind of specter, disappearing into or emerging from floors and walls, depending on the viewer's perception.

On of my favorite's. She seems to capture the "duration of time" in every frame. An uneasy yet formal approach.

December 17, 2006

The rise of the "citizen artist"

The revolution's question is Amateur v. Professional where are the boundaries, what makes it so and does it matter.

In Amateur v. Professional Coxsoft art writes:

Many people find art an agreeable hobby and produce good quality work. And there are many professional artists who make a living selling junk: rusty bicycle parts cobbled together as a "profound statement" on our throwaway society! So what makes the difference between a talented amateur and an untalented professional who has the cheek to sell rubbish? Art School. At the end of it, the "artist" has a diploma.

It seems that the writing is on the wall for most forms of expression and the "arts" are not an exception. However, the world of the "collector" still has a way to go to be transformed by the disintermediation that most other areas of free exchange are evolving to.

Your audience should be in conversation with you not just the gallerist.

It takes a masterful artist ....

I was reading on Alec Soth's blog on "The Sentence"

But while photographers can help shape their sentence, they can’t control it. No matter how many times Cartier-Bresson called himself an anarchist it would never make the sentence. And if Paul Shambroom ends up taking a picture of George Bush’s assassination, that will be his sentence. Unless you change your name, the sentence can only be shaped, not controlled.

and then ran into this

From Mark Mothersbaugh, 2002 with Andy Spade

It takes a masterful artist to have his art embraced by popular culture and not turn to shit. You have to be really clever or really subversive. Target used the Devo song "Beautiful World" in a commercial last Christmas. That was one of my favorite moments for us as a band, even though they didn't include the punch line of the song, which is, "It's a beautiful world for you, for you, but not for me." That song was basically a diatribe against mindless consumerism. It's very ironic but also very satisfying that they'd use it.

Makes me wonder if it is better to have a hand at writing your sentence and have if forgotten or embracing the open source nature of one's own reputation and go with the flow.

December 09, 2006

Citizen artist

Much has been said how the new digital technologies are rehaping the face of news gathering, presentation and distribution.

In Doom and gloom for photojournalism? Mindy McAdams discusses a slideshow from Yahoo! News -- In the Wake of the Coup -- is wholly composed of photos from Flickr.

Reports of the death of painting, however, were an exaggeration. Painting did not die, but it was certainly transformed. You might think of the work of Jackson Pollack and react with distaste and displeasure (if abstraction offends you, that is); you might also think of Picasso, De Chirico, Magritte, or Cézanne. I'm not attempting an art lesson but rather advancing the idea that change is not bad, and what might seem to be a death in one person's view might be a rebirth in someone else's eyes.

I'm not ready to acknowledge the death of photojournalism -- but I am scanning the horizon for signs of its new forms.

December 02, 2006

Better off dead?

Being dead helps: the 'found' photos of Jerry Shore
From Tim Connor (colorstalker) on Flickr

Sure, it’s sad that a man of such talent & drive died unknown, believing himself a failure, that his work almost disappeared. But of course such things happen all the time. The real tragedy, the morbid joke, is that in the end the publicist, the curator and the collector are more important than the art. Without a collector/archivist like Daniel Wolf to buy up his prints after he died & a writer of Gopnik’s stature to analyze them in a major publication, we wouldn’t know anything at all – nada forever -- about Jerry Shore.

Blogging is probably bad for one’s reputation in the art world

An interview with Alex Soth
Via Conscientious

The one caveat is that blogging is probably bad for one’s reputation in the art world. The art world is built on exclusivity. Blogs are built on availability. Most art stars don’t even have websites for fear of appearing pedestrian. But photography, for me, is a pedestrian art. It is democratic and accessible. So I participate in the blogosphere knowing full well that it probably hurts my art-world reputation.

This maybe true, but more and more artists may find a "direct to consumer" approach another path which opens doors to opportunity and audience. There is tangible value you have having people involved in your body of work over time even as you are striving for other things - gallery and books.

What do you think?

December 01, 2006

The link between blogs and photography

I am so often convinced the blogs, vlogs, pods are linked to the very modern tradition of photography.

Does this statement ring true?

Blogging is a modern invention—one that, from its inception, inspired a host of conflicts and anxieties. Indeed, when we talk about blogs we are talking about modernity; the doubts that blogs inspires are the doubts that modernity inspires. Blogging is a proxy for modern life and its discontents.

What are some of these troubles? From the first, the essential nature of blogging was puzzling. It tended to blur categories—which can be both exciting and unsettling. Was blogging a kind of art? of commerce? of journalism? of science? of surveillance? Was it a form of creativity, a way of bringing newness into the world, or was its relation to reality essentially mimetic or, even, that of a parasite?

The original:
The Treacherous Medium

Photography is a modern invention—one that, from its inception, inspired a host of conflicts and anxieties. Indeed, when we talk about photography we are talking about modernity; the doubts that photography inspires are the doubts that modernity inspires. Photography is a proxy for modern life and its discontents.

What are some of these troubles? From the first, the essential nature of photography was puzzling. It tended to blur categories—which can be both exciting and unsettling. Was photography a kind of art? of commerce? of journalism? of science? of surveillance? Was it a form of creativity, a way of bringing newness into the world, or was its relation to reality essentially mimetic or, even, that of a parasite?

Thanks to GalleryHopper for the pointer

What do you think?

November 28, 2006

New metrics for the arts

If we want to measure the arts, we'll need new metrics
The Artful Manager


The challenge is in applying existing metrics (dollars, headcounts, activity, test scores) to such complex and hazy goals (truth, beauty, pleasure, wisdom). To this task I humbly submit the following metrics, already spinning around the world for other purposes.

* hedon
a single unit of pleasure, already used in ethical mathematics (don't ask, I don't know)
* milliHelen
the amount of physical beauty required to launch one ship
* warhol
a unit of fame or hype lasting exactly fifteen minutes. Some useful multiples from the Wikipedia include:
o kilowarhol -- famous for 15,000 minutes, or 10.42 days. A sort of metric "nine day wonder."
o megawarhol -- famous for 15 million minutes, or 28.5 years. The type of person your parents talk about all the time, but of whom you've never heard from anyone else.

If we really hunker down, we could suggest a USRDA for each of the above (U.S. Recommended Daily Allowance). And each cultural production could publicly post the detailed value of its contents: ''Tonight's performance of Romeo and Juliet contains 250 hedons, 950 milliHelens, and 14.9 megawarhols.''

November 27, 2006

A dying breed..

A dying breed..(paid) movie critics
Orlando Sentinel Communications

The movie-obsessed have migrated to the Internet, where ethics can lead to co-opted opinions, phony "buzz" and bought-and-paid-for exposure. Are these honest opinions, are have the studios finally gotten their fondest wish, turning reviewing into just part of their PR machine?

And career-wise, the fickle nature of the Net means that sites come in and out of style. How can you build a living out of that, unless you live in your mom's basement? The ones drawing traffic and turning profits today will be old news and off your "favorites" list faster than you can say "Whatever happened to Borat?" or "Ain't it what news?"

Ironically enough, posted to Sentinal Movies Blog.

November 26, 2006

Made truer still?

Amid Shadows of War, a Cultural Decadence
NY Times

Regardless of style, the Verists were not objective. They were prejudiced and bitter, and more interested in peeling away surfaces than in depicting them. The main question seems to have been: How many ways can the truth be twisted and be made truer still? Nearly every artist has a different answer, and often more than one.

Same could be said of political blogs these days.

However closer to home, this twisting of truth particularly in the manipulation of the photographs I work on, toying with the veracity of the documentary nature they arrive with is one of the more fufulling aspects of the process. How far can the image go in losing specificity and turn into something different and revealing something other than what was orignally captured. In these contradictions you can find a truth. Prejudiced and bitter, hmm, only before my first coffee.

November 23, 2006

Global Creative Leadership Summi

Insights into the clash of art in a networked world.
from ArtInfo

Quotes from Chuck Close & Francesco Clemente at the Global Creative Leadership Summit for

Chuck Close:

“artists are notoriously poor organizers; we normally don’t join groups, and when we do, it’s a disaster. We work alone in our studios. The stand-in for an organization for us is the [artistic] community: We send what we produce into the world and that’s how we exchange ideas with other artists.”


“I try to remove anxiety,” he said “It’s almost like raking gravel in a Zen monastery—when I commit to a painting, I know it’s a four-month project, and I tell myself, today I’m going to do what I did yesterday and tomorrow I’m going to do what I did today. ... You have to back yourself into a corner where you are asking questions that no one else has asked, so no one else but you has the answers. That forces you to be more creative.”

“a contrarian attitude is key to rising to the top. If money is your end [goal], you’ll make all the wrong decisions; you’re doomed to failure.”

Close continued that if money had been his aim, “I wouldn’t have painted a nine-foot painting of someone else; I would have painted CEOs or college presidents, at a size that fits over the couch. If I’d done anything [career-wise] that made ‘good sense,’ I wouldn’t be sitting here.” The irony, Close concluded, “I don’t care about money and [that’s why] I’ve made a whole hell of a lot of it.”

“Inspiration is for amateurs; the rest of us just show up;”

“The trouble with living in New York City is that there is a light at the end of the tunnel, but the light at the end of the tunnel is New Jersey.”

Francesco Clemente

“If I have to be honest, I have to bring bad news,” Clemente said. “The bad news is that I believe that an artist is an artist because he chooses not to tamper with reality; he chooses not to better reality. The creative mind comes at a price, so ultimately, an artist makes an ethical choice—he deals not so much with the world of ideas, but with the world of forms. And the world of forms does does not make deals.

Places on the edge of language

Only Disconnect
Places on the edge of language that the world can't strip away
by Jerry Saltz

Despite what's happening in the outside world, in our studios or in front of artworks we experience moments of genuine stillness, intensity, and meaningfulness—places on the edge of language that the world can't strip away. These aren't just imaginary flights of fancy or retreats into aestheticism. In this imperfect realm we experience the undeniable, elemental truth that sometimes, just by making or looking at art, we might discern the full range of human possibilities.

There is no doubt that amongst all the networked connections and endless inputs of information, that I find an outpost from "my" mind in that time spent alone creating the image. A very basic impulse staisfied. How about you?

November 20, 2006

On appropriation: the art of the long tail

When worlds collide

From Publishing 2.0

The widely-used and much reviled term “user-generated content” implies that somebody is making something. But the dirty little secret of “user-generated” sites like YouTube and MySpace is that much of the content is not made by the users themselves — it’s appropriated from someone else.
At the end of the day, whenever anybody uploads or posts something to the web, it’s just a form of publishing. What’s radical about the new digital reality is that I can publish anything that I made — and I can publish anything that anybody else made.
Basic common sense tells you that if I were to take all of the content from another blog, publish it here, and then run ads against it, that would be wrong. Much of the tangled web we now face results from the euphemistic obfuscation of terms like “user-generated content.” If we call it what it is — for example, people streaming music from their MySpace pages while MySpace runs ads on those pages — then we can have a clear debate about the right and wrong of it.

In a great tradiion, MySpace and You Tube is the home of appropriation art. In that sense we have contemporary and modern traditions that as Wiikipedia says of Duchamp: "Duchamp's "creativity" as an artist lies in the gesture of selecting the urinal as an art piece and displaying it in an artistic context." So MySpace and You Tube "artists", if they can prove the transformative nature the "long tail" on the appropriated work on their page they can sit at ease. .

October 21, 2006

The ultimate arrogance of artists

from Why Has Maya Lin Retreated From the Battlefield of Ideas?

The ultimate arrogance of artists is the belief that they control the meaning of their work, the shape of their career, the pattern of their own biographical narrative -- and their importance in the larger history of art. Composers dismiss their juvenilia from consideration. Novelists decide they're poets, and churn out mediocre verse. Yet very few artists ever exercise any ultimate power over how they're evaluated by posterity.

I guess the ultimate arrogance of Philip Kennicott and other journalists is that they know better.

For both artists and journalists the Fox News rule should apply: They report. I decide. Well maybe that is the ultimate arrogance.

All meaning accrues in duration

"all meaning accrues in duration — sometimes you have to just slow down and look"

What a great quote.

Jerry Liebling
NY Times feature

In teaching, he said, he tried mostly to impart a deep suspicion of dogma, of piousness and of the compromises that can lie just beneath the surface of American culture. “I wanted them to see that there are no shortcuts,” he said. “It’s too easy if everything is soft, and you can just buy your way and live well.

August 28, 2006

Photographer Focus: Interview

Photographer Focus: Ron Diorio
from PositiveFocus.org

Each month, Positive Focus highlights a photographer from the Portfolio section of the website. In a featured interview, we ask the artists about their work, their inspirations, their processes for developing their portfolios, and where they want to go next. This month, we are pleased to call your attention to the work of photographer Ron Diorio.

Q. I think you've developed a very clear signature style as a digital photographer, what do you attribute it to?

A. My "style", I would say ridicules the documentary veracity of photography. The images are fictions. They are images of images. In their deconstruction, exaggeration and manipulation the images become objects. This reveals forms and gestures which appear to me truer than the real thing because they are a reflection of the imagined and the dreamt. They are filled with memory. I'd hope over time in this ongoing conversation with the viewer it will not be just one of style but of coherence in the body of work.

The term "digital photography" is a pet peeve of mine. I think "digital" is a ghetto. This is either photography or it is not. I don't want the work to be put into a category over in the corner like some weird little kid at school.

Photography's history is filled with the proficient who fetishize camera formats and f-stops and produced for the most part technically fine, sometimes beautiful, but more often than not mechanical and soulless work. I surprised and disappointed that those who use "digital" as a critical or dismissive characterization of work which they see as created by button pushing - ie. "the computer makes the picture". They are using the same basic criticism leveled against photography by those who say the camera does all the work. It is really disingenuous and at least for me, far from the truth.

Today, we should focus on how the darkroom, both chemical based and software based can empower creative photographers to show their hand at mark making. I predict that photography's first 150 years will be remembered like the first cave paintings - historically important as documents but artistically just very early days.

Where digital is important to me is in distribution. Certainly the Internet and for me sites like Fotolog and Flickr provide an audience which allows me to do things that I might never have a chance to show in a gallery or even make a print of. It empowers you to take chances, do it faster and get immediate satisfaction. This can fill you up with encouragement. It allows me to be prolific without purpose while getting this instant feedback. In some ways this may be better than something bigger that is too far in the future or maybe never comes. For me it has confirmed a sense, a self image, and a persona - this can be a strength, as you try to get attention for your work elsewhere. It has allowed me the opportunity to develop an audience slowly. It is an audience that I share a history with and is involved with the work over time in an intimate manner.

Q. Did you always have a clear vision of what you want to produce?

A. I came to this with all the prejudices that one can have over a lifetime playing with the camera. I love noise - the artifacts of fast film as well as the color cast of the available artificial light. I do not believe I consciously or conceptually set out to any visual end. I had already worked though the new tools available to create audio programs online, I spent 17 years working for a theatrical producing organization and now I wanted to do a storytelling project. I had no idea what that meant except that I had a working title for the project: "A photographic imagination". I wanted to put my marker down at least to the notion that what I was creating was not a document. I wanted the intellectual property not be burdened by the need for model releases - so things needed to be more anonymous. I also knew that at the end of the process, I wanted the object to be produced by photographic means and chose the Digital C-print.

Q. Was there a period of experimentation?

A. Yes, in every image my mistakes are always available to see. I think that each capture device has a learning curve and I have only entry level skills with the software based darkroom tools so every day there is experimentation. But that only deals with the work on a technical level. I am always searching, always experimenting - whether for a style, for what is essential - for a way to express myself in a personal and authentic way.

Q. You shoot a tremendous amount of images on a daily basis. Do you know when you have a great image in the camera?

A. No. I hardly look at the LCD and never through viewfinder when I capture images. I have a sense of what I am trying to capture still I am often surprised by what I have to work with on the screen. Because I have other ends in mind, I don't know or even care except in the most general sense what I have or what elements I might use from any individual image. I am sometimes jealous that I don't share the preciousness of the snap that other photographers seem to get lost in. I capture images by glance but when I am creating the work, when I am constructing the images, it is then that I am seeing. In this "aesthetic of the glance", in the manipulation things become refocused, revealing what I look at everyday without really seeing it at all.

Q. Does the image change so drastically?

A. Every image tends to emerge on its own terms in its own time. I go back over my images again and again - perhaps I learned something new - sometimes what I see changes - maybe I think I may have missed something. As to drastic, to the extent that a polarizing filter can may a bland sky dramatic while shooting in BW or hand toning prints for effect or sitting with toxic chemicals bathing paper in a dark room for hours or hanging studio lights to enhance the contours of a nude model are drastic, then I'd say yes.

Q. What kinds of alterations do you make to the image beyond the stripping of the details? Color bump ups or downs? Compilations of several images?

A. Like all creative people I use the available tools to translate my vision. I do this by transforming the setting, the gestures, the atmosphere as well as anonymizing the people and places. Whatever serves my imagination and the image. The software based darkroom allows me to do all that you mentioned. For me, cropping and resizing for printing are the most frequent and important alterations I make.

Q. Each image seems to come out with a definitive mood. Some of that is driven by the actions of a singular image featured in the photo. Is there something that draws you to that type of image or does is change?

A. I have to think that this is because my two earliest visual influences were the Catholic Church and comic books. I was an altar boy for about seven years starting at age six. This was at St. Anthony of Padua on Houston Street in New York City. I spent many hours around the iconic posed gestural choreography of the statues, the episodic frames of the Stations of the Cross and the stained glass windows which on the south side were sun blocked at some parts of the day by the tenement next door, creating a more ominous, dark, less glorious experience. From the comic books I could disappear into a world of my own - with these superheroes in dramatic poses. In my images, perhaps subconsciously, I am drawn to and lean too heavily of these memories of my youth.


Q. The images always seem to bring out a dreamy atmosphere that you can almost touch before it evaporates. Is there an image out there that you want to capture but it's eluding you?

A. Nearly all of my work to date is based on images captured in public spaces. The characters in the images are mostly strangers. I would like to move inside to more intimate locations. This presents a problem in that I find that if I know someone that is in an image capture I have difficulty applying my imagination to the picture in a three dimensional way. When the person is known to me, the image is just a two dimensional photo. Since I can not just appear in the living room or bedroom of a total stranger I feel that I am missing an articulation of my imagined world. I would like to work with sets with and maybe people wearing masks.

That is what is eluding me.

Q. How is your current work changing from the place you started at with this style?

A. I have come to think this whole process is like sex. It is the intersection of what interests you and what you can get. The rest is up to your imagination. On the craft side I feel more adventuresome. I have added three new cameras in the last few months and that has opened up some of what I can get to and breaks up the routine. I need to be a better editor, create tighter sets. As to how this impacts the style, I try to continue to a simpler more direct approach in each image.

Thank you for the opportunity to be interviewed and to Positive Focus for its support of emerging photo-artists.

As interviewed by Lorrie Palmer