Month: April 2009

  • Sports Illustrated’s Slide Show Book

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    From A Photo Editor:

    Sports Illustrated has a new book out on May 5th called Slide Show that examines the actual physical slides from the images that made it into the magazine.

    Check it out here.

  • Photocrati

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    From Photocrati:

    Photocrati is a photography blog, gear review site, and community. Our mission is to foster discussion between photographers working in diverse fields and to share resources that encourage technical, artistic, and professional growth for pros and enthusiasts alike. We offer photo news, industry commentary, gear reviews, business advice, and tips and techniques on everything from travel to weddings to corporate to nature photography. We also sponsor the Photocrati Fund, a nonprofit that provides grants to photographers working on important environmental and humanitarian projects.

    Check it out here.

  • richard mark dobson – the crest hotel

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    From burn magazine:

    32 years later, I return to the Crest.   Still entranced but for different reasons. The place has changed, the city has changed, and the country has changed.  I’ve changed.

    The Crest hotel therefore is my personal attempt to join dots, and answer pertinent questions to my own sense of failed idealism and dislocation.  Projected through the presence of others, the Crest after all is where my journey to South Africa began.  For many presented here today though, this is where their journey will end, or has ended already.  It’s where their relationship with South Africa is coming to an end too, but certainly did not begin.

    Check it out here.

  • "New York Street Advertising Takeover" Brings Art to Over 120 Illegal Billboards in NYC

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    From Wooster Collective:

    Jordan Seiler and Eastern District Gallery’s incredible ambitious “New York Street Advertising Takeover” became a reality yesterday, with over 120 illegal billboards throughout the city white washed by dozens of volunteers.

    Check it out here.

  • Danny Lyon, Stubbornly Practicing His Principles of Photography

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    From NYTimes.com:

    At a time when picture magazines were still a holy grail for young photographers, Danny Lyon, self-taught, began his career as the first staff photographer for the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee. A week after hitchhiking south in 1962 at the age of 20 he was in jail with other protesters in Albany, Ga., next to the cell of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. And Mr. Lyon’s first book, the classic “Bikeriders,” made after spending more than two years as a member of the Outlaws motorcycle gang, was not just a pioneering example of New Journalism but, as he later described it, an attempt “to destroy Life magazine” and what he saw as its anodyne vision of American life.

    Check it out here.

  • The business of video

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    From dispatches:

    Video and multimedia’s meteoric rise is getting the attention of the pro photographic community.   ASMP Seattle today hosted Paula Lerner and Gail Mooney to talk about the transition.

    Check it out here.

  • Many things I’ve been looking at (Pt. 1)

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    From dvafoto:

    Another long wrap-up post of random bits that I’ve been reading or looking at over the last few days. I planned to post this on Thursday, but the list has been growing. So much so that I’ve split this up into two posts. Welcome to part one of Matt’s crazy reading list.

    First, I just this update from photographer Ikuru Kuwajima who is living in Ukraine.

    Check it out here.

  • 5B4: Waters in Between by Lukas Felzmann

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    From 5B4:

    In the center of the Sacramento Valley two rivers, the Feather and Sacramento, flank several wetlands and marshes called the Sutter and Colusa Sinks. Much of this land has been drained and become some of the richest agricultural land for fruit orchards and various grains and rice. The photographer Lukas Felzmann has been drawn to these marshlands and especially the role water has taken to shape and transform the landscape. His new book from Lars Muller, Waters In Between is an empirical archive or as he describes the collection, “a sort of poetry of ruins.”

    Check it out here.

  • A Day on L.A.’s Skid Row by Justin Maxon (NPR)

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    From The 37th Frame:

    NPR sent photojournalist Justin Maxon to L.A.’s Skid Row for two days to produce this project to accompany an on-air series on Skid Row. There is a excellent slideshow of the images on NPR’s The Picture Show blog.

    Check it out here.

  • The Medium – Comment Is King

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    From NYTimes.com:

    Someone should be paying more attention, especially since online newspaper commenters as a whole seem to have (at least) the stamina, drive and spare time to become a cogent part of online journalism. But as it is, online commentary is a bête noire for journalists and readers alike. Most journalists hate to read it, because it’s stinging and distracting, and readers rarely plow through long comments sections unless they intend to post something themselves. But perhaps the comments have become so reader-unfriendly, in part, because of the conventions of the Web-comment form.

    Check it out here.

  • DMNcuts: A farewell worth signing off with

    From Randy Eli Grothe’s goodbye note as he leaves The Dallas Morning News:

    Now, being a writer seemed to be an admirable profession, but being a photographer seemed to be just plain cool. And being a newspaper photojournalist with a Nikon dangling from your neck as well as a press pass opening doors, whoa, that was tres cool.

    So that’s the road I took. That road led me here, and from here came all the memorable characters and exciting destinations.

    Check it out here.

    via NPPA.

  • The Burden of Memory

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    From dvafoto:

    The Blue Earth Alliance alerted me a couple of days ago, through their blog post, to this video presentation of John Trotter’s project “The Burden of Memory” put together by the The Dart Center at the University of Washington. This is a remarkable project and presentation that brought me close to tears.

    Check it out here.

  • Interview: Jürgen Chill: Zellen


    From Prison Photography:

    Jürgen Chill’s Zellen photographs are a unique perspective upon prison space. Of all the positions in the cell, this floating light-fixture-eye-view should be the least claustrophobic, and yet, the central (physically impossible) high vantage point is dizzying. How does the camera (let alone cameraman) take up such a position? From here, what is there left to do but fall?

    Check it out here.

  • Name Your Dream Assignment Winners

    From Name Your Dream Assignment:

    Following four weeks of non-stop voting and discussion, we’re thrilled to announce the Name Your Dream Assignment judges have selected a winner from the contest’s top 20 finalists.

    And the winner is:

    Picture Hope by Shutter Sisters, Jen Lemen and Stephanie Roberts

    Check it out here.

  • Training Afghan women to tell their own stories

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    From RESOLVE — the liveBooks photo blog:

    As a photojournalist I have observed an important thing, that most coverage of world events — especially in places like Afghanistan –- is done by white men between 30 and 40 year old.

    Check it out here.