Where are NFT ‘s today? – Kaptur
It was on everyone’s lips and digital wallets, Fortunes were to be made. It was the future of photography. Where are NFT s now?
via Kaptur: https://kaptur.co/where-are-nft-s-today/
It was on everyone’s lips and digital wallets, Fortunes were to be made. It was the future of photography. Where are NFT s now?
via Kaptur: https://kaptur.co/where-are-nft-s-today/
He was providing a live video signal of the air strikes.
via PetaPixel: https://petapixel.com/2023/10/16/reuters-videographer-killed-by-israeli-shelling/
In her debut photobook, Dormant Season, from Charcoal Press, Erinn Springer returns to her roots in rural Wisconsin to photograph a familiar but evolving agrarian landscape. Set against the stark winter terrain, Springer leads us to witness the raw contrasting realities of modern Midwest life, a realm where past and present intertwine with fleeting moments
via LENSCRATCH: http://lenscratch.com/2023/10/erinn-springer-dormant-season/
The image of two runners was reportedly removed online because it included numbers related to the Tiananmen Square massacre.
via Hyperallergic: http://hyperallergic.com/849175/did-china-censor-a-photo-of-two-women-athletes-embracing/
This week, we will be exploring projects inspired by place. Today, we’ll be looking at Edwin Averette III’s series The American Family Cemetery. Edwin Averette III was an undergraduate photography student while I was at East Carolina University. He was one of the most hardworking and dedicated students. I heard a story where, during a hurricane,
via LENSCRATCH: http://lenscratch.com/2023/10/edwin-averette-iii-the-american-family-cemetery/
Today, Leica has announced the Sofort 2, a hybrid instant compact camera. Combining digital capture and analog output, the Leica Sofort 2 offers the fun and spontaneous aesthetic of the original Sofort introduced in 2016, but with far more more flexibility. The camera can take an image and print it out instantly just like the original, shoot and store to a microSD card without printing like a point-and-shoot digital camera, or be used as a portable wireless printer for outputting instant prints from other Leica cameras via the FOTOS app.
via Red Dot Forum: https://www.reddotforum.com/content/2023/10/leica-sofort-2-hybrid-instant-camera/
A film by Ed Ou and Will N. Miller uses a fictional narrative based on investigative reporting, and real footage, to capture gritty work at sea.
via The New Yorker: https://www.newyorker.com/culture/the-new-yorker-documentary/squid-fleet-takes-you-into-the-opaque-world-of-chinese-fishing
Tamara Reynolds is a documentary photographer born and raised in Nashville, Tennessee who exhibits her work nationally and internationally. She will be returning as a visiting Lecturer to Vanderbilt University in Nashville for the spring semester of 2024. Reynolds began her career as a commercial photographer for 25 years. Although very successful, over time she
via LENSCRATCH: http://lenscratch.com/2023/10/tamara-reynolds-xx/
The Center for Photographic Art, in conjunction with PhotoLucida, is pleased to announce the 2023 Critical Mass Solo Exhibition Award. This year’s recipient is Landry Major. The artist will be exhibiting a large selection of gelatin silver prints from her long-term project, Keepers of the West and will be on the walls of CPA through
via LENSCRATCH: http://lenscratch.com/2023/10/landry-major-keepers-of-the-west/
Hiroshi Sugimoto: Time Machine at the Hayward Gallery, London, marks the largest retrospective to date of the internationally renowned Japanese artist. 1000 Words Editor in Chief Tim Clark speaks with Director Ralph Rugoff about the exhibition making process, stretching and reshaping our notions of time in photography, the artist’s affinities with other art forms and why Sugimoto’s approach can be framed through a ‘lens of doubt’.
via 1000 Words: https://www.1000wordsmag.com/hiroshi-sugimoto-time-machine/
For 75 years, the workshop has drawn photographers from around the world to tell the visual story of a community.
via Columbia Missourian: https://www.columbiamissourian.com/news/local/missouri-photo-workshop-aims-to-show-truth-with-a-camera/article_6e9c89b2-5d52-11ee-a49d-a36a74459788.html
Moises Saman’s new book “Glad Tidings of Benevolence” attempts to unwind 20 years of covering war in Iraq.
via Washington Post: https://www.washingtonpost.com/photography/2023/09/27/this-work-is-haunting-haunted-by-ghosts-history-its-casualties/
The esteemed photographer has spend more then a decade in places such as Bosnia and Liberia, remembered in a powerful new book
via the Guardian: https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2023/sep/26/corinne-dufka-war-photographer-book
This week, we will be exploring projects inspired by place. Today, we’ll be looking at Anna Reich’s series This Land: Landscape, Memory, and Identity on the Plains. Sioux Falls, South Dakota, has a small but spirited art community. Anna Reich is one of th
via LENSCRATCH: http://lenscratch.com/2023/09/anna-reich-this-land/
The jarring juxtapositions of Jamie Lee Taete’s collection showcase the sometimes fine line between gimmickry and genuine belief.
via The New Yorker: https://www.newyorker.com/culture/photo-booth/the-playful-and-provocative-images-of-christian-tourism
Benjamin Briones Grandi‘s sleek series of photomontages, Memories, transforms Chile’s awe-inspiring geography into surreal dream works that speak to the profound spiritual essence of the natural world. From lush forests to arid deserts, the Chilean photog
via LENSCRATCH: http://lenscratch.com/2023/09/benjamin-briones-grandi-memories/
Danny Cortes was at rock bottom when Covid hit. Then a craft hobby to stay sane during lockdown blew up on social media — and in auction houses.
Link: https://www.nytimes.com/2023/09/08/nyregion/ice-box-model-nyc.html
This week we are looking at the work of artists who submitted projects during our most recent call-for-entries. Today, Mark Kitsawaeng and I discuss Forgotten Space. Phanuphan (Mark) Kitsawaeng is a photographer from Thailand, currently living in Los Ange
via LENSCRATCH: http://lenscratch.com/2023/09/mark-kitsawaeng-forgotten-space/
The fate of a significant portion of the photographic collection of the Sygma news agency is uncertain. Where is it, and who owns it today?
via Thoughts of a Bohemian: https://blog.melchersystem.com/where-have-the-archives-of-sygma-photographers-gone/