From the monthly archives:

March 2010

_Robbie_Augspurger

Robbie Augspurger was born in Peoria, IL in 1977, and currently lives in Portland, OR. He got his first camera for his twelfth birthday, held at Showbiz Pizza Place, where there were animatronic animals wearing suits and playing in a band. He didn’t immortalize that rare vision on film that night, but ever since he can remember, he was interested in taking pictures.

_Robbie_Augspurger4

_Robbie_Augspurger3

_Robbie_Augspurger1

_Robbie_Augspurger2

_Robbie_Augspurger7

Briony_Ridley

Briony Ridley is a Melbourne-based photographer. She describes her work as an adventure or a fairytale, and says that her lack of organization on set helps lends her work an element of chance. Her series ‘Somewhere In Between’ has recently appeared in Antler Magazine.

Briony_Ridley3

Briony_Ridley7

Briony_Ridley6

Briony_Ridley5

Huang_Qingjun_Ma_Hongjie6

Huang Qingjun and Ma Hongjie decided to collaborate on this project, ‘Family Stuff’ in 2005. They have visited a number of areas in China for this project looking for typical Chinese homes to photograph by bringing the domestic objects used in everyday life outside.  ‘Huang and Ma work as independent partners, Huang covering the North, Ma the South of the country. Convincing families to expose themselves to their cameras is the major challenge that both face on their respective expeditions. Building trust and laying the groundwork for the shoot can take months, again and again Huang and Ma have to explain why they want the families to empty their houses and let the artists decoratively arrange their belongings outside. Once they have agreed to participate, most families are happy to display their possessions, even more so since they receive financial compensation. In some cases, not all belongings are permitted to be shown, in others not all furniture fits through the doorways; but generally, the artists confirm, their portraits depict average Chinese reality as it is today: simple, unpretentious and compared to 20 years ago, strikingly void of political paraphernalia. In 2011 this project is scheduled to end with a total of 50 pictures and a book’. You can read more about this project on a mesa de luz.

Huang_Qingjun_Ma_Hongjie8

Huang_Qingjun_Ma_Hongjie7

Huang_Qingjun_Ma_Hongjie

Huang_Qingjun_Ma_Hongjie1

Huang_Qingjun_Ma_Hongjie3

Huang_Qingjun_Ma_Hongjie9

martin-klimas

Martin Klimas was born in 1971 in Lake of Konstanz, Germany. He received his degree in Visual Communications from Fachhochschule Dusseldorf and has had many exhibitions in Germany and abroad. He is represented by Foley Gallery in New York and Bransch for commercial assignments.

martin_klimas1

martin_klimas2

martin_klimas9

martin_klimas3

martin_klimas5

Jesse_Frohman7

While earning a degree in economics at the University of Michigan, Jesse Frohman picked up a camera and never put it down. When he returned home to New York, he did not have any formal professional experience, but he did have a portfolio of platinum prints, which caught the interest of legendary photographer Irving Penn, who hired Jesse to manage his studio. It was an incomparable apprenticeship. Jesse has added his own touches of strength, dignity and quiet energy to the techniques and aesthetics he learned from Pennn, all of which are evident in his pictures. Jesse has photographed countless celebrities and still lifes. In addition to his work for magazines, advertising, and recording companies, he has been commissioned to create two award-winning photographic books. His work is also in many private collections. Jesse currently lives and works in New York.

Jesse_Frohman2

Jesse_Frohman6

Jesse_Frohman

Jesse_Frohman1

Jesse_Frohman3

Jesse_Frohman5

Jesse_Frohman10

Song-Shimin1

Song Shimin was born in 1983 in Shandong Province, China. Before she studied at Beijing Film Academy in 2008 she was a middle school teacher in Shandong. She was recently awarded Top Prize in concept during Canon College Photo Competition and she has also been selected as “80 reGeneration Photographers of Tomorrow” sponsored by the Elysee Museum in Lausanne, Switzerland. This series is entitled ‘Between Reality and Fantasy’. She is represented by 798 Gallery in Beijing.

Song-Shimin2

Song-Shimin

Song-Shimin4

Song-Shimin9

Song-Shimin6

Vee Speers, Paris

by Alison Zavos on March 5, 2010 · 4 comments

Vee_Speers4

Vee Speers was born in Australia and has been living in Paris since 1990. Her portraits have been exhibited and published world-wide. Speer’s most recent work ‘The Birthday Party’ is a series of short stories linked by the theme of an imaginary birthday party. In a conceptual and technical departure from her previous work it is partly a self portrait, sometimes woven with threads from her own childhood. Speers also wanted to use the imaginary birthday party backdrop to address both our collective human experience of war and our need to retreat from it into fantasy.

Vee_Speers1

Vee_Speers

Vee_Speers6

Vee_Speers2

Vee_Speers3

Singles

by Alison Zavos on March 4, 2010 · 0 comments

akasha_rabut Photo by Akasha Rabut

Jean-Luc_Brouard Photo by Jean-Luc Brouard

Nick_Korompilas Photo by Nick Korompilas

claudia_goetzelmann Photo by Claudia Goetzelmann

Nikki_Toole Photo by Nikki Toole

michel_mazzoni Photo by Michel Mazzoni

michael_massaia1

Born in New Jersey in 1978, Michael Massaia Is a fine art photographer and printmaker whose work focuses on New York City, and New Jersey life and landscape. Massaia specializes in large format black & white photography and large format Platinum/Palladium printing. All of his images are true “one shot” candid scenes that have been pushed to their limit via film developing and printing techniques to reveal the true way each moment was felt. These photos are from his series, Afterlife, which he has spent the last few years working on.

michael_massaia4

How did you get into platinum and palladium printing? And how long did it take you to perfect this technique?
‘After exploring many different printing processes (both color and black & white), I found platinum printing to be the best fit for what I was trying to accomplish with my prints. I wanted to create a print I knew would last forever (a platinum print is a truly permanent print, which separates from almost all other photographic printing processes) and I wanted it to be a truly handmade process. It took me about three years of printing every week (a tremendous amount of failure) to come up with a technique that allowed for a rich and dense print’.

michael_massaia9

Can you briefly walk me through the process of making an image from start to finish? Why does it take up to two weeks to make a print?
‘Well, first, it all starts with capturing the image. I will usually spend a few days walking around the area prior to taking the images. I try to find areas I can sneak into where I won’t be noticed. I still only use large format black & white film because of its superior resolution and dynamic range (especially in highlights). I try to capture most of my images on days when there is little to no wind. I also prefer days that are overcast, so I can get more of an even tonality throughout the entire negative.

‘I never composite or combine multiple images. Every image is created using one shot/piece of film.

‘After the image is captured, I develop the negative so it’s fairly low contrast, so I keep that even tonality intact. I then have to create an enlarged negative from the original negative because a platinum print can only be made through a contact printing process.

‘No enlargers can be used, so your negative must be the size of your final print.

‘After I create a decent enlarged negative, I then start to work on the paper in which the print will be made on. Finding a good 100 percent rag paper to make a platinum print on can be tough because of the different acidity levels, and different sizing that varies from paper to paper.

‘After you’ve found a good batch of paper, you then have to mix your chemistry, which you will eventually have to hand-coat onto the paper using either a high quality paint brush or coating rod.

‘After I coat my paper (I do multiple coatings), the paper is forced dried using a print dryer and the enlarged negative is placed onto the platinum/palladium coated paper and then placed in a device called a vacuum frame which firmly presses the negative and paper together.

‘The print is then exposed, using a multi-spectrum metal halide lamp. Exposure usually takes 3-5 minutes. I do a large amount of “light dodging and burning” which is a common printmaking technique that allows you to selectively control the lighting throughout the entire print.

‘Some of this is done on the actual negative, and some is done while the print is being exposed. After the print is finished being exposed, it is developed in different developers, depending on the look you’re going for. After the print is developed, it then has to soak in a series of acid baths (hypo-clearing agent, citric acid, etc.) to remove the excess metal.

‘Finally, the print is washed for about an hour’.

michael_massaia

Your latest series, Afterlife, documents the final days of Jersey Shore amusement parks. When is the best time generally to shoot these locations?
‘I always find that the early dawn is my favorite lighting.They are fairly difficult images to take because most of the images were taken on wooden piers that shake slightly every time the waves crash into it. Using large format cameras and long shutter times made it very frustrating at times to capture the images because of all the vibrations in the pier and on the boardwalk. I tried to take all the images during low tide to minimize the vibrations from the waves hitting the pier’.

michael_massaia3

Have you received any commercial inquiries or assignments due to your unique style and technique? Is this something you are actively exploring?
‘I’m so involved in the technical aspects of what I’m doing, and always attempting to think of the next idea, that I tend to forget to show people the work. I’m trying to get better at that’.

michael_massaia5

Yu_Xiao5

Yu Xiao was born in 1984 in Zi Bo, Shandong, China. She received her M.A. in Photography from China Central Academy of Fine Arts in 2009. She has won many awards and has exhibited in China and America. In this work, ‘Never grow up’, Yu Xiao digitally creates child versions of herself as a commentary on China’s one child rule and the intense focus on childhood that results.

Yu_Xiao3

Yu_Xiao8

Yu_Xiao

Yu_Xiao1

Yu_Xiao6

Yu_Xiao7