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This blog is intended to showcase my pictures or those of other photographers who have moved beyond the pretty picture and for whom photography is more than entertainment - photography that aims at being true, not at being beautiful because what is true is most often beautiful..

>>>> Comments, commentary and lively discussions, re: my writings or any topic germane to the medium and its apparatus, are vigorously encouraged.

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BODIES OF WORK ~ PICTURE GALLERIES

  • my new GALLERIES WEBSITE
    ADK PLACES TO SIT / LIFE WITHOUT THE APA / RAIN / THE FORKS / EARLY WORK / TANGLES

BODIES OF WORK ~ BOOK LINKS

In Situ ~ la, la, how the life goes onLife without the APADoorsKitchen SinkRain2014 • Year in ReviewPlace To SitART ~ conveys / transports / reflectsDecay & DisgustSingle WomenPicture WindowsTangles ~ fields of visual energy (10 picture preview) • The Light + BW mini-galleryKitchen Life (gallery) • The Forks ~ there's no place like home (gallery)


Entries from November 1, 2008 - November 30, 2008

Tuesday
Nov182008

civilized ku # 128 ~ the Art world explained

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Mural and red moving truck~ East Village, NYCclick to embiggen
Right from the get-go, let me be perfectly clear - I can no more define / explain the Art world, Photography Division, any better than the next person. Considerable caution should be exercised in attempting to use this brief treatise as a basis for cracking into the Art world. However, that said, I have had some inside-the-ropes experiences and peeks into that world from which I can proffer a few accurate observations.

First, a definition - by Art world - Photography Division, I mean the NYC version of that world (and its derivatives throughout the rest of the planet), some of which is closely aligned with the Academic Lunatic Fringe. Most of the photography-only galleries in the city are part of this Art world as are the many museums that have Photography Departments. It is not unreasonable to say that NYC is the birthplace and epicenter of photography-as-Art thanks in no small measure to Alfred Stieglitz and his efforts through various enterprises - the New York Camera Club (now, The Camera Club of New York) and its newsletter Camera Notes, American Amateur Photographer magazine (as editor), the invitation-only group Photo-Secession, and his gallery - the fabled 291.

That said, this entry is in response to Matt's persistent questioning, re: "...how does one do that? I mean in terms of finding others who find your work interesting, along with the gallery representation?". A question that was spawned from my answer to his intitial question, re: catching a collector's interest enough to keep them coming back for more prints. I stated that to do that is simple - just make interesting pictures and have really good gallery representation.

So let's talk about the Art world, Photography Division.

1.) making interesting pictures - The Art world, Photography Division, is interested in many types / genres of pictures as long as they are "interesting", by which they mean conceptually interesting. Visually interesting is good but not necessarily a prerequisite and, by itself, visual interest is not enough to raise a picture to the status of Art.

Most often, I have no real problem with this except, of course, when a picture is entirely concept-driven and has no visual interest. What I have noticed relative to this is that most of the pictures that make the grade tend to be both conceptually and visually interesting, a duality that I have been calling illustrative and illuminating for quite some time - a quality that I try to vest in my pictures.

BUT, here's the rub -

2.) getting good gallery representation - Let's assume that you are making pictures that many find "interesting". The fact remains that the "many" are not gallery directors, AKA, the Gate Keepers. What one needs to do is to find one Gate Keeper who finds your pictures interesting.

While that doesn't seem like such a daunting task, in fact, the hurdles are many because the Gate Keepers rarely tend the gate. They are most often well hidden behind the gate, walled-off by minions and attitude. They never answer their own gallery phone or open their own gallery mail. Forget getting yourself through to them, it's your portfolio that needs to get in and in most cases portfolios are accepted by invitation only.

How to get an invitation? What it basically comes down to is the age-old who-you-know.

Ever notice that in the bios of most of the "chosen ones" there is a long list of academic achievements and credits? Without diminishing the value of those credits too much, it really is safe to say that the primary benefit of that education is "contacts", AKA, who-you-know. Remember that aforementioned Academic Lunatic Fringe? Many of the chosen ones - and a liberal sprinkling of those who wish they were - are in fact teaching photography in various towers of higher learning (don't give up your day job).

So, if an enterprising student polishes enough apples, a phone call here - a named dropped there from a professor to a Gate Keeper or one of their minions is the ticket in. That is not to imply that there is no other way to get your ticket stamped - tireless schlepping and self promotion (not for the faint of heart or weak of will and self-confidence) have been known to work - BUT, once the portfolio is in the door there is absolutely no guarantee, even with an invitation, that the work will penetrate the attitude(s) of the Gate Keeper.

Now, to be fair, not all Gate Keepers are ruthless self-serving, pompous, jaded, and arrogant assholes. Some seem to be reasonable human beings. Some do not. Again, to be fair, they have reputations to build and protect so they are, one might say, rather savage and ruthless in their judgment. Most seem to give a portfolio about 20 seconds to capture their interest or else it's "next". BTW, the last thing you should expect in the event of a rejection is any feedback.

Gate Keepers are, in fact, very important people, especially so to those clients who spend outrageous amounts of money on pictures based on the word/nod of the Gate Keepers. As one ascends to the upper reaches of the Art world (any division), the prices one needs to fetch for a piece rises dramatically. So, the Gate Keepers not only hold the key to the gallery representation, they also hold the key to the money.

The truth of the matter is that it is hard to imagine just how many pictures a gallery director can sell, sight unseen, to clients with just a phone call but, suffice it to say, it's a lot. Just think of this as another higher-up-the-ladder example of who-you-know. These sales are made possible based on the reputation of the Gate Keeper because, ironically, so many of the buyers are not buying just Art, rather, they're buying investments and status symbols that they can hang on their walls.

I know that in addition to the irony that statement sounds rather cynical. I don't mean it to be so. I'm just trying to tell it like it is. Many gallery clients do buy Art, Photography Division, because they like what they see (literally and figuratively). The Artist who uses photography has genuinely connected with an audience.

BUT, there is no denying the fact that Art, Photography Division, is BIG business. And much woe will be unto those who attempt to crack it while thinking it is something else.

Tuesday
Nov182008

civilized ku # 127 ~ Liberty's face

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Wandering around Lady Liberty's islandclick to embiggen

Tuesday
Nov182008

civilized ku # 126 ~ the huddled masses yearning for lunch

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Hugo eats a pizzaclick to embiggen

Tuesday
Nov182008

civilized ku # 125 ~ have some fun

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On the ferry to the Statue of Liberty ~ NYCclick to embiggen
I think that it would stating the obvious to say that a picture with people in it is different from one without people. But, beyond the obvious visual content, it seems to me that the underlying dynamic of a picture is radically changed, especially so considering this characteristic of the medium:

The advantage photography has over any other art form is its ability to free a moment in time, allowing the viewer to see things which would otherwise remain hidden. ~ Lician Perkins

If one is inclined to believe that the medium of photography is capable of "allowing the viewer to see things which would otherwise remain hidden", and I place myself firmly in that camp, then a picture with people in it has so much more potential to unmask the "hidden" than say your typical landscape picture. Not that the best of landscape pictures don't have much to reveal, it's just that potentially, to my eye and sensibilities, each and every person depicted in a picture has something "hidden" to reveal.

Consider today's diptych. IMO, a talented writer could easily write a very involving short story from the wealth of "revealed" information in those two pictures. One could easily spend a considerable amount of time getting to know each and every person depicted therein.

Of course the "knowing" that one intuited and the short story would be completely fictitious. But, once again to my eye and sensibilities, that's one of the great beauties of the medium - that a picture is both true and false.

That is to say that on the purely visual level, the picture is very true. It depicts a moment in time with a great deal of clarity and precision. An attuned viewer can feel the weather and the gentle roll of the boat. One can see a potpourri of nationalities and ages as well as some apparent relationships. There is an obvious and almost singular air of focus on the part of the crowd. And then there is the object of attention, the Statue of Liberty. The very attuned viewer might also notice what is missing in the righthand picture - near the left side of the skyline, the World Trade Center buildings are not where they are supposed to be.

All of that is true and the stage is now set for the fun to begin.

Now, I am not about to tell you what fun you can have, but I will say that amongst the many story possibilities to be "seen" that affects me is the one that this diptych mimics from approximately 120 years ago - the huddled masses yearning to be free entering NY harbor and being greeted / welcomed by Lady Liberty. What a sight, what a moment, repeated over and over again, that must have been.

Monday
Nov172008

a f***ing idiot ~ moose are returning update

Last week I made an entry about attempting to picture a moose in the wild. In that entry I mentioned the idiots who shot a moose in our area.

Well, those jerks still have the honor of being the worst, but the moron pictured here (from the front page of today's Lake Placid News) is running a close second.

The thing that makes this all the more idiotic is the fact that several onlookers were yelling at and imploring the woman to back off and leave the moose alone. To which she replied, "I know what I'm doing."

The one thing that makes this incident incomplete is that the moose kept her cool and didn't get violent. Not that I want anyone to get hurt (well maybe I really do want that), but if that happens, I certainly hope that the horse doesn't get injured.

Monday
Nov172008

civilized ku # 124 ~ even more NYC trees and foliage

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Even more NYC trees and foliage ~ Battery Park, NYCclick to embiggen

Monday
Nov172008

civilized ku # 123 ~ more NYC trees and foliage

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More NYC trees and foliage ~ Battery Park, NYCclick to embiggen

Monday
Nov172008

civilized ku # 122 ~ soft and hard

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No. 38 E. Houston with morning newspaper ~ East Village, NYCclick to embiggen
As mentioned, I'm back from 3 days in NYC. As per my usual wont, there are many pictures to share. At times I feel like Dominic Rouse who stated ...

Images ooze out of me like puss from a running sore.

... although, I am not certain that I would express the idea with that degree of implied affliction.

Nevertheless, it does seem that I just can't help myself when it comes to making pictures. I've said it before - it seems like every where I go and every place I look, I see something to picture. Not that a place like NYC is lacking for picture possibilities. In fact, I would imagine that whatever your picture-making bent, there is subject aplenty in NYC.

One NYC subject that has captured my attention is that of the trees and foliage which are to be found throughout the city. Setting aside those trees/foliage planted and nurtured by public works, it's rather amazing what private citizens are doing with trees and foliage. It seems that they are engaging in a well organized attempt to "soften" the sea of concrete, brick, and glass which forms the visual makeup of the city.

But, I really doubt that it is an organized activity. Rather I would suggest that it is a reaction to the "cold" nature of the seemingly endless environment of "hardness" by individual actors who unwittingly act in concert. The net result, at least to my eye and sensibilities, is a very visually, emotionally, and intellectually engaging idea which would make for a great body of work.

Like I need another idea.