“Why talk about sculpture when I can photograph it?” - Constantin Brancusi Simple Pleasures is an ongoing series curated by Holden Luntz Gallery, presenting a few of their favorite pictures organized thematically. This is Form and Light : Sculpture in Photography We hope you find these photographs as a gentle reminder that there are always simple pleasures to be found! https://www.holdenluntz.com/magazine/simple-pleasures/form-and-light-sculpture-in-photography/ Holden Luntz Gallery332 Worth AvenuePalm Beach, FL 33480www.holdenluntz.com
The Eye Photography: World Photography Art History, Latest News and Photography Events
The Eye of Photography is the ultimate digital magazine where everything about photography art is published daily, highlighted, discussed and archived for all professionals and amateurs, in English and French. Its Agenda compiles the most comprehensive selection of photography events in the world (photography exhibitions, art fairs, awards, lectures, workshops…).
On May 7th, the J. Paul Getty Museum is releasing Hippolyte Bayard and the Invention of Photography, the first English-language volume about Hippolyte Bayard, one of the inventors of photography who helped transform the burgeoning medium into an art form. Hippolyte Bayard (1801–1887) is often seen as an underdog in the early history of photography. From the outset, his contribution to the invention of the medium was eclipsed by others…
Seen on the Corridor Éléphant website, this portfolio by Diane Givry, a series of self-portraits taken between 2019 and 2023 (the series is in progress). Diane Givry is a 31-year-old French photographer currently living in Haute-Savoie. She is primarily interested in analog photography, being fascinated by the process, from shooting to dark room printing. She most often uses a Rolleicord medium format camera (6x6), and recently a Toyo camera for…
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This is the funniest email of the week and we love the pictures! I have been working on this project for a long time, at a slow pace because it takes me a lot of time, energy, and it is for various reasons complex to organize. I have for the moment 9 images, which seems to me the minimum number to start calling it a series; and I said to…
For his second exhibition at the in camera gallery, the Catalan photographer Txema Salvans guides us, as usual, through a candid journey far from any artifice. Industrial areas, cargo ports, power stations and evanescent seaside resorts, the series “My Kingdom” documents with humor and light tenderness the gloomy summer adventures of the Spaniards. “I photograph my own culture, people and landscapes. I have to feel a physical connection with the…
Willy Maywald (1907-1985) was one of the most important photographers in Paris from the 1930s to the 1960s. His training at the Werkkunstschulen in Krefeld, Cologne and Berlin shaped his avant-garde formal language. In 1932 he moved on the Seine, where he made friends with many protagonists of artistic modernism. His range of subjects, which includes both commissioned and free works, extends from a spectacular collection of portrait photographs and…
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The exhibit “Castle Living” draws a style of photographic dialogue between Chambord and the Palace of Udaipur with which the residence of François Ier has been partnered with since 2015. In the continuity of its cultural program, le Domaine national de Chambord seeks to enrich the knowledge and understanding of the monument, here by creating a comparison between itself and its Indian partner and temporal twin, the City Palace of…
In his series "World Records", Kai Schaefer draws from Rolling Stone Magazine's "The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time," photographing the original vinyl records of iconic record albums throughout music history on the turntables they would have first been played on. Now numbering over 100 images, "World Records" moves through pop chart legends with Rock 'n' Roll icons like AC/DC, David Bowie and Pink Floyd; heart throbs like Elvis Presley…
Sylvie Lancrenon : Knowing how to steal the moment. Sylvie Lancrenon started her career as a photographer on movie sets. She studied with Claude Lelouch and Jean Becker, among others, with whom she learned how to set the stage for beauty and made it her artistic signature. The cinema, thereafter, will never cease to inspire her. As a photographer of the intimate, she knows how to tame the mystery, prepares…
Photographer and writer, Alain Dister (1941-2008) became known in 1966 by publishing in the very young magazine Rock&Folk a reportage on the beatniks and buzzing hippies in America. There he made surprising encounters with “beginners” named Beach Boys, Frank Zappa, Jimi Hendrix…Thus introducing a whole generation in Europe to this youth culture of which he remained more than a privileged witness, a real actor. If the beat spirit plays a…
This exhibition at Keith de Lellis Gallery highlights Anthony Barboza's ability to use the camera as a tool for establishing an empowering narrative of hope for the Black community in America during a historic time of inequality and adversity. Beginning in the 1960s and continuing into the present day, Anthony Barboza (b. 1944 New Bedford, MA) has enjoyed a long career in photography. One of the most important African American…
After receiving the Henri Cartier-Bresson Award in 2011, Vanessa Winship traveled for more than a year across the United States, from California to Virginia via New Mexico and Montana. She dances on Jackson is a dialogue between landscape and portrait that explores the immensity of the United States and the inextricable link that unites a territory and its inhabitants. Depending on the people the photographer met and her own experiences,…
Athênai, In Search of Home expands Niko J. Kallianiotis’ first monograph America in a Trance, and the work produced in Pennsylvania, which for two decades became his second home. If 'America in a Trance' was about his departure from Athens and the exploration of a new personal and social condition, 'Athênai, In Search of Home' is about coming back to his roots, eager to assimilate within a place that over…
Everyone in the world has their own Madeleine de Proust. Mine looks like a hilly landscape that gluttonous quarries are gradually eating away at. At the very least, the area must be 3 square kilometers. It's not much, but enough to preserve a host of childhood memories. First there are these fields, carpets of gray and green shades, stretching as far as the eye can see and which, in the…
The 19th Century Rare Book & Photograph Shop presents their new catalogue of books, manuscripts, and photographs representing humankind's greatest achievements. Catalogue 195 features major books and manuscripts by Emily Dickinson, Benjamin Franklin, Frederick Douglass, Albert Einstein, Abraham Lincoln, Walt Whitman, Charles Darwin, Louisa May Alcott, William Shakespeare, Caroline Herschel, Baruch Spinoza, and more, as well as outstanding manuscript and photography collections. Available on request. Catalogue 195 Magnificent Books, Manuscripts…
Hamiltons Gallery presents Blaze, a new series by the Australian photographer Murray Fredericks. This astonishing body of work has fire as its central theme whilst transporting you to the vast regions of the Australian salt planes and wetlands. Hamiltons has represented Murray Fredericks for over a decade. His atmospheric photographs border on the sublime – giving rise to the emotional and physical sense of an overwhelming awe of nature. These…
The first major survey of photographs by acclaimed Indian artist Jyoti Bhatt will be one of the inaugural exhibitions to open at MAP Museum of Art & Photography on February 18th, 2023. Housed in a new state-of-the-art building in Bangalore, also known as India’s ‘Silicon Valley’, MAP will be the first new museum to open in India in a decade. Jyoti Bhatt (b. 1934), who is best known as a modernist printmaker and painter,…
Daughter of .........! , wife of ......! grandson of ..........!. : The heirs are not often popular in the world of photography: Fiammetta Horvat is the daughter of Frank Horvat, she is omnipresent in all the events linked to her father. We wanted to know more about this task of being in charge of. This report by Fiammetta of the symposium on the rights holders of photography which took place…
The Island is a new book published by British artist-photographer Robert Darch. Originally conceived as a response to Brexit, the poetic black and white photographs convey the heaviness that he felt and reflect Robert’s anxieties and fears about a decision that will affect younger generations for years to come. The Island draws on formative memories and past emotions to realise a sense of place that reflects the times we are…
Thierry Maindrault's Monthly Chronicle We have already come to the end of an important year for photography as a whole. Photography has clearly passed a point of no return in many aspects of its evolution. I have shared with you throughout this year my findings and my questions about the new positions of this particular image and the microcosms that surround it. I am not going to tarnish this end…
Rice Professor of Photography Geoff Winningham has published his book, A Trail of Marvels/Sendero de Maravillas, A Memoir of Mexico and Days of the Dead. Winningham spent four decades documenting Day of the Dead festivals across Mexico, from Pátzcuaro, to Puebla, Michoacán, to Oaxaca. In the book, Winningham contrasts these celebrations, which vary dramatically by region and include diverse Day of the Dead rituals, “when the spirits of those who have…