Shibuya–Adam Hinton
This is “Shibuya–Adam Hinton” by This is Real Art on Vimeo, the home for high quality videos and the people who love them.
via Vimeo: http://vimeo.com/40997390
This is “Shibuya–Adam Hinton” by This is Real Art on Vimeo, the home for high quality videos and the people who love them.
via Vimeo: http://vimeo.com/40997390
Photographer Carlos Miller, owner of the Photography Is Not a Crime blog, has learned that the Miami-Dade Police Department is watching him like, well, police states watch dissidents, just looking for reasons to arrest him. Miller, who has been a tireless
via PDNPulse: http://pdnpulse.com/2012/05/police-intimidation-watch-miami-dade-police-monitoring-activist-photographer.html
This rumor comes from the French website lesnumeriques.com claiming that Leica will be releasing a new medium format SLR camera (S3?) during the Photokina 2012 show. The Leica S3 will feature a new medium format CMOS sensor produced by the European semico
As photographers, we sometimes get trapped in the technicalities of photography, thinking only about where to position the strobe or what ISO to set our cameras on. We obsess over gear and critique each other’s setup. We might even forget what we love abo
via PhotoShelter Blog: http://blog.photoshelter.com/2012/05/how-to-take-your-landscape-and-nature-photography-to-the-next-level/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+PhotoshelterBlog+%28PhotoShelter+Blog%29
APE contributor Meaghen Brown interviews Howard Bernstein about the most often asked question we get. Considered among New York’s most respected photography agents, Howard Bernstein, has been keeping an eye on talented photographers for over 25 years now,
via A Photo Editor: http://www.aphotoeditor.com/2012/05/01/how-does-a-photographer-land-an-agent/
“There is no normal in cancer-land,” writes New York-based Angelo Merendino on the website for his photo documentary, “The Battle We Didn’t Choose.” Just five months into married life with “the girl of [his] dreams,” she was diagnosed with cancer. This began a challenging four-year journey of remission and relapse, an emotional roller coaster which completely changed their lives. In an effort to cope with the reality of the disease and show others what it’s like to struggle day to day, Merendino chronicled his wife’s battle with cancer and the effect she had on others.
Link: British Journal of Photography
“[Agence France-Presse got caught with a hand in the cookie jar and will have to pay.” This statement, written in 2010 by an AFP photo desk editor, could become reality if a judge finds in favour of freelance photographer Daniel Morel in his two-year-long case against the French photo agency and its partner, Getty Images. Olivier Laurent reports
Rouleur is to bike magazines what National Geographic is to nature photography. Though it has a modest readership of only 10,000, it has become a must-read for both fans of the sport and fans of photography.
via WIRED: http://www.wired.com/rawfile/2012/05/british-bike-mag-redefines-the-art-of-covering-cycling/all/1
Last week, Asakawa contacted the Boulder Daily Camera, which had agreed to pay Duann $250 to use the photo, and insisted CU Independent be credited; the Camera does not pay for photos from other news organizations, so City Editor Matt Sebastian agreed with Asakawa to run the photo with a courtesy credit and not pay Duann
Read the latest stories about LightBox on Time
via Time: http://lightbox.time.com/2012/04/30/day-of-action/#1
Although everyone has an opinion on Facebook’s purchase of Instagram for $1b, I think we can all agree: Instagram is terrible for photographers. (gotcha) Why? Let’s count the ways. Why Instagram is Terrible for Photographers… The rights grab Let’s look
via PhotoShelter Blog: http://blog.photoshelter.com/2012/04/why-instagram-is-terrible-for-photographers-and-why-you-should-use-it/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+PhotoshelterBlog+%28PhotoShelter+Blog%29
Monika Bulaj Behind The Great Game. Central and Western Asia Project. ESSAY CONTAINS EXPLICIT CONTENT What lies behind the conflicts and power struggles vying for control of the oil resources of We…
Tim Rasmussen expects your best work. And he’ll push you until he gets it. Rasmussen’s drive for excellence resulted in a Pulitzer prize for his team at The Denver Post this year, his second since 2010.
via WIRED: http://www.wired.com/rawfile/2012/04/photo-director-takes-no-prisoners-in-pursuit-of-pulitzers/all/1
Link: British Journal of Photography
A new camera app – 645 Pro – has been released for the iPhone, offering lossless and uncompressed output
For half a century, Larry Fink has captured unguarded moments in often highly orchestrated events: a wayward glance amid a star-studded Hollywood party; …
via The New Yorker: http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/photobooth/2012/04/newt-by-larry-fink.html?currentPage=all
“They did not pay me even a penny,” he said. Duann, 22, is a native of Taiwan who’s been in the United States for five years. He’s about to graduate with a degree in electrical engineering; photography is his hobby and passion. “We did not sign any contract,” Duann said.
“Burn My Eye” is an international collective aiming to show the extraordinary within the ordinary using candid photography. They use a fresh and new perspective when it comes to street photography, and are comprised of twelve members from all over the globe. Burn My Eye will be holding their first exhibition at the prestigious London Photography Festival this June. Eric Kim had the chance to interview the members of the collective and find out what Burn My Eye is all about.
Andi Schreiber is what one might coin as a domestic Martin Parr. She turns her camera on her life, her children, family and friends with a glaring lens that is full of color, reality, and the details of our humanness. There is humor and pathos in her seei
via LENSCRATCH: http://www.lenscratch.com/2012/04/andi-schreiber.html
During a photo shoot, photographers working with Art+Auction magazine picked up an irreplaceable 2600-year-old terra cotta statue from Nigeria’s Nok culture so they could move it into a bette…