Contemporary Fine Art Photography Tip: Attend Photography Auctions, Phillips 2012

Contemporary Fine Art Photography Tip: Attend Photography Auctions

A great tip for contemporary fine art photographers is to attend auctions, such as Phillips de Pury & Company photographs auction on 4 April 2012 at 450 Park Avenue in New York.

Why?

First, its our job as photographers to know about our business.  Also, auction houses have a great range of work and often can be like mini-museum shows.

But most importantly, I think its great to witness the act of selling work.

Auction sales can be mostly numbing, punctuated with moments of excitement.   But in minutes, thousands of dollars or more are traded for great photographs, and to sit in the same room is important to see.  As an contemporary fine art photographer, its necessary to be a part of sales, to know that it happens, to see that people sell their work, and to note that what we do has value–both as an art object, and monetarily.

So, visit Sotheby’s, Christies, Philips, Swanns, or other auction houses occasionally for contemporary fine art photography.

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Contemporary Fine Art Photography at AIPAD 2012 in NYC Highlights

Contemporary Fine Art Photography at AIPAD 2012 in NYC Highlights

Contemporary fine art photography seems well represented at AIPAD 2012 this time around at the Armory (the building–not to be confused with the show held a few weeks earlier) in New York.  Crowds seemed to be more plentiful too.

Some highlights for me where:


Some nice vintage Harry Callahan’s at Lee Gallery–yes, I know, not exactly contemporary photography but its classic.


It was great to see Nancy Rexroth, an interesting artist from the 70′s, being presented by Weinstein Gallery.


A few nice David Goldblatt photographs were at Howard Greenberg Gallery


I dont remember David Zwirner being at AIPAD before but I noticed the gallery is a member, and devoted the booth to Philip-Lorca diCorsica.


I liked George Georgiou’s photographs at MoMA, and some where on display by Atlanta’s Jackson Fine Art.


Some beautiful prints by John Gossage at Chicago’s Stephen Daiter Gallery


Yossi Milo’s booth greeted you as you entered AIPAD, and a few Lise Safari prints.

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New York Foto Fest 2012: Featured Artists and Curatorial Themes

Featured Artists and Curatorial Themes for NYPH’12

March 27, 2012

Amy Smith-Stewart
What Do You Believe In

This select group exhibition of sixteen artists— Jen DeNike, Hank Willis Thomas, Leah Beeferman, Stuart Hawkins, Yamini Nayar, Fay Ray, Luke Stettner, Anissa Mack, Kenya Robinson, Xaviera Simmons, Nicole Cherubini, Nyeema Morgan, Sara Greenberger Rafferty, Matthew Spiegelman, Daniel Gordon, Ignacio Lang—explores how photography shapes our ideas—who we are, why we do the things we do, how our thinking happens, and where it evolves. Works in the exhibition will range from collage, installation, video, sculpture, and photography and span the mystical, ideological and political. Many of the works explore self-perception from an existential or spiritual perspective to popular culture’s impact on personal development. But what all of the artists attempt to show us is where we are and where we might be heading.

Glenn Ruga
The Razor’s Edge: Between Documentary and Fine Art Photography

All artists walk a razor’s edge between form and content. It is the core struggle all artists must resolve with their work. By its very nature though, documentary leans heavily toward content. But the marketplace creates an environment that is uncomfortable with the emphasis on content and demands an emphasis on form.

The core concern of documentary photographers is the subject matter, and the photographer, as an artist, uses the formal language of visual art to communicate this context to their audience. But when documentary photography enters the fine art world of commercial galleries, the connection to the subject matter is downgraded and the formal values of the work, manifest in the print, is elevated. Gallery sales, though potentially lucrative, can substantially change the nature of the work.

There has always been an uncomfortable relationship between documentary photography and fine art photography. Even “fine art” photographers who work primarily in the documentary genre often will not admit to the term. The elephant in the room in the fine art world is that tendentious work—work that has a motive beyond pure “artistic” pleasure—is tainted and beneath work that is purely fine art.

But quite the opposite is true. Documentary has twice the pressure as art based in formalism. Not only must documentary excel in formalism, it must then channel this honed skill to create a meaningful message. Documentary can tell us truths about our relationships to other people, to nature, and to ourselves. Isn’t that what we want from art—truth?

Fundamentally our culture does not want to face difficult or complex truths about our world. Is it that we don’t care? Or that the truth is too painful, or that our guilt is too great, or just that the truth is too enormous for the average human psyche to fully grasp. It is much easier and safer to parse the subtleties of form than it is to grapple with the complexities of a world wrought with poverty, disease, hunger, exploitation, and war, or to explore dissonant gender and family relationships, or radical ideas about relationships to power and commerce—in other words the fare of documentary photography.

The dictates of the marketplace don’t help us answer this question; for markets to flourish, they must present a never-ending optimism and conformity, warranted or not. Photographers grappling with complex social issues are thus persona non-grata in the marketplace of art unless they turn their discourse to formal values that are more palatable to buyers of art.

The landscape documentary photographers face is both a culture that avoids facing difficult issues and a marketplace that rewards obfuscation. But luckily we have artists who demand truth, explore far beyond the measure of normality and the pedestrian, and who grapple with complex issues. But they want—and need—some measure of success in the marketplace, as we all do in contemporary society. They therefore must walk a razor’s edge fraught with these contradictions.

This show—featuring Bruce Davidson, Reza, Platon, Rina Castelnuovo, and Eugene Richards—is about that tension, and exploring where these artists stand on this edge and how they grapple with these contradictions.

Claude Grunitzky
the Curse and the Gift

Henri Cartier-Bresson once famously said that, “to take a photograph is to align the head, the eye and the heart. It’s a way of life.” In this age of iPhones and Android digital photography, where Instagram and Picasa allow for easy photo editing, with endless retouching and sharing options, the art photographer’s perspective has been sacrificed at the altar of instant gratification. Photography is a way of life, and as we all become touch-screen photographers, emailing and Facebooking away, art photography takes on an entirely new meaning in its role in helping us to understand the way we live now. With our modern societies in flux, and many forms of cohesion in jeopardy, it helps to reflect on those changing human dynamics by looking at images that were composed calmly, away from the pressure of instant delivery. The three photographers I chose for this exhibition approach image-making in very different ways, but they share a nomadic sensibility that often translates into sharp social commentary. It comes out in the tones and undertones.

Evangelia Kranioti is from Athens, but she has been living in Paris, on and off for the past decade. Her work deals with the endless human journey, with the sea and maritime voyages as her great inspiration. Venturing into the Mediterranean to Italy or the Atlantic through the docks of Rio de Janeiro, she is constantly searching for dignity and humanity, seeking tangible traces of beauty in this world. In doing so, she often finds herself in borderline situations, in zones where others might feel personal and social discomfort. But, whether she is photographing downtown prostitutes or wayward sailors, the tension feeds her lens and the result is a series of unvarnished testimonies about human weakness, where vulnerability is the common attribute, courage is viewed as a currency and desire becomes the equalizer.

Irmelie Krekin lives in Stockholm, but her parents came to Sweden from the Russian border, a place called Karelia. The images shown in the exhibit are the result of a personal exploration of her childhood memories, when she would travel to the forest, carrying her secrets in her backpack and watching the world unfold before her young eyes. In the summer of 2009, she began to revisit her childhood summers and recreated, through her observations of her own children, the personal stories that she had once constructed from those fleeting moments, from the hidden experiences of innocent youth. The faded memories and unspoken family secrets are finally shared, reconstructed and turned into a road movie of sorts: a road movie with no car and no sound, just the melancholy of silence.

Christian Witkin, who lives in Brooklyn, New York, was born to an American artist father and a Dutch mother. Like many of the great twentieth century documentarians, he is interested in discovering the world through a series of surveys where the images are created through spontaneous street experimentations. The portraits shown here are telling us something about the people he met in India, Thailand, Ethiopia and the hometown boroughs of New York City. Although these characters seem detached from their surroundings, in reality they are completely absorbed in their cultural environments. The stories that are told through the gaze in their eyes end up pointing to a world where imagination subverts reality. Because of his preference for classical compositions that leave room for the spontaneity of chance encounters, he is able to embrace both the tradition in ancestral cultures and the modernity of assumed eccentricities.

Paul D. Miller aka DJ Spooky, That Subliminal Kid
Sinfonia Antarctica (The Book of Ice)

The Soviet architect, graphic designer, and collage artist Gustav Klutsis once said of his music-staging loudspeaker arrays: “Fantastic work. Looking for new media. Surface. Space. Construction.”

For the New York Photo Festival, Paul D. Miller aka DJ Spooky takes a look at how the role of the “archive” of Antarctic history—in photography, graphic design, and contemporary composition—has shaped some of the ways we think about contemporary digital media aesthetics. In conjunction with NYPH’12, Miller will present material from his recent Book of Ice project through the prism of an intersection of sculpture, architecture, live performance, moving image, and digital media installation. From the molecular structure of ice to the composition of atmospheric pollutants as they color the night skies, the material for Miller’s installation with NYPH’12 will explore the linkages between the physical realm of beautiful remote places like the ice fields of Antarctica, and the ethereal realms of digital media portraits of a rapidly changing world.

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Search Engine Optimization for Photographers at ASMP NY

I’ll be talking on search engine optimization for photographers next Wednesday at 6:00pm at 379 Park Ave. South for ASMP NY.

Date:     Wednesday, March 21, 2012
6:00pm-8:30pm
Where: 379 Park Ave. South (26th Street)
3rd floor. Rod Goodman Studio
ASMP NY, American Society of Media Photographers
Cost:      ASMP member – Free
RSVP:    rodgoodmanphoto@gmail.com
212-929-1654
Sites:     www.sgseosocialmedia.com
http://asmpny.org/2012/03/15/asmpnys-big-brain-meeting-wednesday-march-21st-2012/

The talk focuses on search engine optimization for photographers, and will cover:

  • How to optimize your site to get more clients.
  • Ways to find effective keywords to drive traffic and add them to your site, images, blogs.
  • Hands-on optimization of facebook, Twitter, and other important sites.
  • How to preserve, protect and expand your online reputation.

I hope to see you there and spread the word! Best, Steve

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Hey Hot Shot! Photography Competition for Contemporary Fine Art Photography

Hey, Hot Shot! is one competition that I recommend for contemporary fine art photographers.  Its part of Jen Bekman Projects—which also includes Jen Bekman Gallery and 20×200.  Each year, one photographer will receive a $10,000 honorarium.

Apply now. The $80 entry fee will increase incrementally. The deadline for submissions is March 14th, 2012 at 11:59 p.m. (EDT).

+ A $10,000 cash prize
+ A solo exhibition at Jen Bekman Gallery in New York City
Representation from Jen Bekman Gallery for two years, commencing with his/her selection

 Panelists include:

Jen Bekman, Aperture Foundation publisher Lesley A. Martin and Chronicle Books chairman and CEO Nion McEvoy, as well as Assistant Director of Fraenkel Gallery (San Francisco), and co-founder of Radius Books, Darius Himes.

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Armory Show 2012: Review by Art Fag City

I like this review of the Armory Show 2012 by Art Fag City‘s Paddy Johnson.

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Volta NY Art Fair 2012, Contemporary Fine Art

Volta, in its 2012 New York version, is perinatal a favorite fair in the March art circuit.

And whats not to like: one artist, one booth–simplicity itself.  Each gallery presents a mini portable one person show, unlike 95% of most booths at most of the other fairs (although there are more two person booths at ADAA than in the past), allowing the viewer/collector to get a range of an artist’s work rather than a one-off jammed next to a bunch of other pieces that end up looking like “merch”.

Highlights for me at Volta 2012 in NY were:

  • My favorite paintings are the smallish psychological paintings of Domenico Piccolo at Frederco Bianchi at Milan
  • Jason Gringler complex broken mirrors at Stefan ropke.  His works on paper were my favorites, and were memorable from fairs past in Miami.
  • Great dark works on paper of fires by Raquel Maulwurf at Frederieke Taylor
     
  • Contemporary fine art photography by Timotheus Tomicek at Jenkins Johnson , some moving, some not

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Contemporary Fine Art Photography at the Armory Show 2012

Contemporary fine art photography was around at the Armory Show 2012, but seemingly less so than usual.  Some or most of the blue chips galleries were absent this time around, and are perhaps waiting for the Frieze Art Fair in May.  Some fine art photography highlights include:

  • Roe Ethridge’s oddly diverse photographs of well made casual nothingness at Andrew Kreps.
    Roe Ethridge Armory Show 2012 Andrew Kreps Gallery
  • Yossi Milo has military troops in repose by photographer Tim Hetherington, as well as others Pieter Hugo’s photographs of Africa.  
  • Bruce Silverstein, on the Contemporary side of the Armory had  a few night photos by Todd Hido including one of an array of cars parked in front of an eerily normal but moody suburban house, and a wall of Philly photographs by Zoe Leonard.
  • A great vintage corner at Howard Greenberg with Robert Frank, Bruce Davidson, and Weegees.
  • Canadian photo dealer Corkin Gallery made it to main floor with some vintage and some contemporary photos including Bernice Abbot.
  • Kang Houng-Goo at One and J Gallery quietly intriguing landscape photos.
  • There were a few Cindy Sherman’s too, as might be expected given her recent show at MoMA.
  • Kiki Smith dominates Galleria Lorcan O’Neill’s booth.

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SCOPE Art Fair 2012 Disappoints

This year’s SCOPE Art Fair, 2012, is a relaxed affair, especially when strolling–running for your life actually– across Twelfth Avenue from the demure Armory Show.  Its a show in the past that I found to be a respite from the larger Armory where a few surprises could be found. Yet this time around, I am disappointed.  SCOPE 2012 seems lacking a direction and is mired in mediocre work by lessor galleries, I’m sorry to say.  Only a few galleries are recognizable from years past.  Where did they all go?  Rare gallery, a steady participant, was there but few others.  And more importantly, galleries represent art and artists, of course, and many were just lacking. Pulse has decided to skip the March marathon and pair with London’s Frieze Fair in May (which oddly is setting up at Randall’s Island, beating the Armory for the most inappropriately located fair) .

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Call for Papers Museums of Cities Conference, Vancouver, BC, October 2012

Call for Papers Museums of Cities Conference, Vancouver, BC, October 2012

City Museums: Collisions | Connections, CAMOC/Museum of Vancouver, Vancouver, Canada, October 24-26, 2012
CAMOC, the International Committee for the Collections and Activities of Museums of Cities of the International Council of Museums (ICOM), in collaboration with the Museum of Vancouver, invites papers for “City Museums: Collisions | Connections”, a conference on city museums and their engagement in city life to be held at the Museum of Vancouver, October 24-26, 2012. We are soliciting panels, presentations (15 minutes in length), virtual exhibitions/apps, films, and other presentations about city museums.

The conference will bring people together to talk about how city museums are reconsidering their role in civic life due to the enormous pressure cities face in terms of aging infrastructure, the need for urban regeneration, economic and environmental crises, and social issues such demographic shifts, global diasporas, increasing immigrant and urban Aboriginal populations. The conference will look at city museums under development, urban/suburban city museums, and city museums in large and small cities.

For further information of to submit a proposal (300–500 words accompanied by a 200-word biography by April 15, 2012), contact CatherineC.Cole@telus.net ; 1-780-424-2229

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