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Posts from the “1990s” Category

Timeless: The Photographs of Kamoinge

Posted on February 9, 2016

Boy on a Swing. New York, 1976. Beuford Smith. Read more at http://www.craveonline.com/art/950635-books-timeless-photographs-kamoinge#UohGK1Rfmw0zxmMi.99

Boy on a Swing. New York, 1976. Beuford Smith.

In 1963, the Kamoinge Workshop produced their first portfolio of photographs taken by members who made up the group. The portfolio included a statement that read: “The Kamoinge Workshop represents fifteen black photographers whose creative objectives reflect a concern for truth about the world, about society and about themselves.” Accompanying that were the words of member Louis Draper, who elegantly wrote: “Hot breath steaming from black tenements, frustrated window panes reflecting the eyes of the sun, breathing musical songs of the living.”

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A collective was born. The word Kamoinge is derived from the Gikuyu language of Kenya. Translated literally, it means “a group of people acting together.” This spirit of camaraderie and family suffused the development of the group, which included Roy DeCarava, Anthony Barboza, Louis Draper, and Shawn Walker. Early meetings were held in DeCarava’s midtown Manhattan loft. The following year, they rented a gallery in Harlem on Strivers Row, where they held meetings and hosted exhibitions. When the gallery closed, they moved the meetings to other members’ homes in the city, keeping their bonds intact throughout the years.

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In 2004, founding member Anthony Barboza was selected President, and set out a course to create a photography book showcasing the group’s legacy. Together with fellow member Herb Robinson, Barboza has edited Timeless: The Photographs of Kamoinge (Schiffer). Featuring more than 280 photographs taken over fifty years, Timeless is an extraordinary collection of work that reminds us that the whole is greater than the sum of its parts.

Read the Full Story at Crave Online

Photo: Bridge on the Beach. Nassau, Bahamas, 2007. June DeLairre Truesdale.

Photo: Bridge on the Beach. Nassau, Bahamas, 2007. June DeLairre Truesdale.

Categories: 1960s, 1970s, 1980s, 1990s, Art, Books, Bronx, Brooklyn, Crave, Manhattan, Photography

Ishiuchi Miyako: Postwar Shadows

Posted on December 21, 2015

Photo: Creator(s): Ishiuchi Miyako (Japanese, born 1947) Title/Date: Yokosuka Story #73, 1977 Culture: Japanese Medium: Gelatin silver print Dimensions: Image: 43.7 x 53.7 cm (17 3/16 x 21 1/8 in.) Sheet: 45.4 x 55.7 cm (17 7/8 x 21 15/16 in.) Accession No. 2009.96.3 Copyright: © Ishiuchi Miyako Object Credit: The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles

Photo: Creator(s): Ishiuchi Miyako (Japanese, born 1947) Title/Date: Yokosuka Story #73, 1977 Culture: Japanese Medium: Gelatin silver print Dimensions: Image: 43.7 x 53.7 cm (17 3/16 x 21 1/8 in.) Sheet: 45.4 x 55.7 cm (17 7/8 x 21 15/16 in.) Accession No. 2009.96.3 Copyright: © Ishiuchi Miyako Object Credit: The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles

This year marked the seventieth anniversary of the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, which killed over 129,000 people and decimated the country of Japan. Although nearly half the people died on the first day, the other half clung to life in desperate shape, only to die from the effect of the burns, radiation sickness, and other injuries compounded by illness and malnutrition. The only use of nuclear weapons for warfare in history, the bombings destroyed primarily civilian populations.

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In the decades that followed, the bombings continued to have effect on subsequent generations born into the post-nuclear landscape. Self-taught photographer Ishiuchi Miyako was born two years after the war and stunned the Japanese photography establishment in the late 1970s with grainy, haunting, black-and-white images of Yokosuka—the city where Miyako spent her childhood and where the United States established an important naval base in 1945.

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Working prodigiously over the next forty years, Miyako has created an incredible body of work that has been collected for “Ishiuchi Miyako: Postwar Shadows”, now on view at the J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles, through February 21, 2016, and is published in a book by the same name.

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Read the Full Story at Crave Online

Photo: Creator(s): Ishiuchi Miyako (Japanese, born 1947) Title/Date: Yokosuka Story #58, 1976 - 1977 Culture: Japanese Medium: Gelatin silver print Dimensions: Image: 45.5 x 55.8 cm (17 15/16 x 21 15/16 in.) Framed: 54.4 × 65.7 × 4.5 cm (21 7/16 × 25 7/8 × 1 ¾ in.) Accession No. EX.2015.7.76 Copyright: © Ishiuchi Miyako Object Credit: collection of Yokohama Museum of Art Repro Credit: Photo © Yokohama Museum of Art

Photo: Creator(s): Ishiuchi Miyako (Japanese, born 1947) Title/Date: Yokosuka Story #58, 1976 – 1977 Culture: Japanese Medium: Gelatin silver print Dimensions: Image: 45.5 x 55.8 cm (17 15/16 x 21 15/16 in.) Framed: 54.4 × 65.7 × 4.5 cm (21 7/16 × 25 7/8 × 1 ¾ in.) Accession No. EX.2015.7.76 Copyright: © Ishiuchi Miyako Object Credit: collection of Yokohama Museum of Art Repro Credit: Photo © Yokohama Museum of Art

Categories: 1960s, 1970s, 1980s, 1990s, Art, Books, Crave, Exhibitions, Japan, Photography, Women

Art Basel Miami Beach 2015 Edition

Posted on December 11, 2015

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Check Out
Art Basel Miami Beach 2015
Coverage at Crave Online

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A few highlights from the week include:

Incas wallpaper panel, 1818, Joseph Dufour et Compagnie (founded Mâcon, France, 1801–23), manufacturer, Block-printed on handmade paper, Courtesy of Carolle Thibaut-Pomerantz

Incas wallpaper panel, 1818, Joseph Dufour et Compagnie (founded Mâcon, France, 1801–23), manufacturer, Block-printed on handmade paper, Courtesy of Carolle Thibaut-Pomerantz

“Philodendron: From Pan-Latin Exotic to American Modern”
Wolfsonia-Florida International University
© Lorna Simpson. Direct Gaze, 2014 (detail)

© Lorna Simpson. Direct Gaze, 2014 (detail)

Top 5 Highlights at
Art Basel Miami Beach

 

Amarillismo by Wilson Diaz

Amarillismo by Wilson Diaz

Wilson Diaz: Amarillismo
at Instituto de Vision at Art Basel
© James Rieck. Flared Bell Bottoms, 2015.

© James Rieck. Flared Bell Bottoms, 2015.

Top 5 Highlights at
PULSE Contemporary Art Fair

© Guy Richards Smit

© Guy Richards Smit

Guy Richards Smit: Mountain of Skulls
Charlie James Gallery at PULSE

Categories: 1960s, 1970s, 1980s, 1990s, Art, Crave, Exhibitions, Latin America, Painting, Photography

Jamel Shabazz: Tour of Duty on Rikers Island

Posted on December 1, 2015

Photo: Jamel Shabazz

Photo: Jamel Shabazz

Despite the surging growth of the prison industrial complex, very little is known of what goes on inside prisons and jails aside from what is shared with us by the people who have actually done time or worked in them. Photographer Jamel Shabazz worked as a Corrections Officer for the New York City Department of Corrections. He joined the force in 1983, just as the crack epidemic hit the streets, and worked inside the belly of the beast for 20 years. Shabazz spoke with Crave about the complexities of life inside the prison industrial complex.

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Miss Rosen: Why do you think this subject is kept, for the larger part, out of the mainstream media? Why is it important to you to speak about your experience as an NYC corrections officer?

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Jamel Shabazz I think that the mainstream media has been mute for far too long on this issue primarily because, the overwhelming majority of those who are incarcerated are young black and Hispanic males. It is a known fact that the prison industrial complex is a multi-billion dollar corporation and Wall Street investors have gained great returns in their ventures regarding prisons. In all actuality, numerous businesses and organizations have profited from mass incarceration. As a witness to this, I feel the need to offer a different perspective about the system, as all too often Correction Officers are viewed in a negative light.

Read the Full Story at Crave Online

Photograph by Jamel Shabazz

Photograph by Jamel Shabazz

Categories: 1980s, 1990s, Art, Crave, Photography

Girls on Film: Michele Quan X Guzman X Geoffrey Beene

Posted on December 1, 2015

Michele Quan, photo by Guzman

Michele Quan, photo by Guzman

Fashion designer Geoffrey Beene was an American pioneer, challenging the industry at every turn. He had his own way of doing things, breaking and rewriting the rules. He created new seasons, Summer/Winter, and designed brilliantly crafted pieces accordingly. “Design is a revelation to me. It’s like taking something that is not alive and giving it form, shape, substance, and life,” Mr. Beene observed.

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While his clothes reflected his intuitive understanding for women’s desire to be comfortable and glamorous at the same time, Mr. Beene also understood the power of the photograph to communicate this understanding to consumers. Mr. Beene observed, “Clothes should look as if a woman was born into them. It is a form of possession, this belonging to another.” And if the clothes belong to the woman, the photograph is the perfect invitation to the viewer to participate.

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From 1988–1995, Mr. Beene partnered with Guzman, the husband/wife photography team of Russell Peacock and Connie Hanson, to produce a series of photographs of Michele Quan modeling the clothes. As Guzman recalls, “Mr. Beene introduced us to Michele. She was a good choice for his designs during that period. Both were elegantly streamline! Mr. Beene always played with contrasts. He would juxtapose an androgynous jumpsuit with a provocative layer of sheer lace. He would mix refined fabrics with quotidian materials like cashmere with metallic lame. He was thinking about the approaching millennium (2000) and what women should wear. For the modern woman comfort and simplicity were essential. Michele represented the modern woman in that not to distant future. Her personality matched his objectives. Elegant yet understated, feminine but powerful.”
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Read the Full Story at Crave Online

Michele Quan, photo by Guzman

Michele Quan, photo by Guzman

Categories: 1980s, 1990s, Art, Crave, Fashion, Photography, Women

Mandana Towhidy: Arcadia

Posted on October 29, 2015

Mandana Towhidy by Amy Davis

Mandana Towhidy by Amy Davis (amydavis.com)

I used to think of writing a novel as one of the most noble acts on earth. There was something about the ability to create a world on the page that spoke to my soul. Perhaps it came from all the reading I had done, the places I had been, the people I had met, they were so real and yet… they were a reality that only existed in the mind. And to my heart, there is a beauty in this, in living in another world that exists only in the written word. Mandana Towhidy, author of Arcadia, talks about her experiences writing a novel about teen girls living their dreams in the Hollywood Metal scene during the late ’80s-early ’90s.

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Miss Rosen: Please talk about the inspiration to write a novel? Where did the idea, desire, and drive come from ?

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Mandana Towhidy: I think, especially as a child who loves to read and as a teen who uses reading/writing to escape, it does most def transport you into places maybe you couldn’t get to in real life. Whatever “real life” is. I have always been writing and have always wanted to write a novel…just to write it. Check it off the list. Say I did it. And figuring out where or how to do it was maybe daunting for a while. And with the pressures and the busy-ness of life, it was a challenge. But I read something someone wrote, maybe it was Joseph Campbell. I think he said something like once he decided to write, he would renounce all fun, work, obligations, visits, everything and focus on it and it alone. This struck a chord with me. I soon followed suit…telling my editors and creative heads that I couldn’t take on any work for a while. Was very hard at times (I ate one donut a day for a little while due to lack of funds). But the result was voila! I had a novel. I also had a great agent already and I didn’t take that factor for granted. Finding an agent can be hard enough. I had one and he is a great one and that also pushes me to keep writing books. I wrote four books before Arcadia. But it really felt like Arcadia should be the first one out of the gate.

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I had been talking about this book for years before I actually wrote it. I grew up loving Heavy Metal and lots of crazy girl rockers that were around before my time like The Runaways and Suzi Quatro. I loved high school films like Fast Times, etc. I knew I had a story to tell about a time in Los Angeles where very young people could get away with scandal on the Sunset Strip. And, I thought it could be fun.

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While writing my novel I discovered the strangest thing. I didn’t quite have control over what was happening. I had an idea, in as much as an image came to mind, and I had a sense of direction, but in a lot of ways, I was discovering something I knew and did not know at the same time. Please talk about the milieu for Arcadia, the space and places you wanted to explore, and what you found—or did not find—there as you made your way across the landscape of this inner world.

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YES! My dear friend and someone I also consider a mentor, Amy Davis (who also did the portrait of me for this interview) used to tell me, “You can’t force the muse…”. She was right. You, too, are right on. I think maybe for a lot of writers, we know the roundabout of the story but once we sink our teeth into it, other branches and people and feelings and occasions show up unexpectedly. We get awakened in the middle of the night with inspiration to write something we had never thought of or could ever know in a wakened state. Perhaps. I think for a lot of books, especially older books, there are many layers. I always say for Arcadia, there is a superficial layer of hair and clothes and beer and partying. But, depending on where you are in your headspace, that deeper layers will become very clear. At its core, Arcadia is about something that is totally unrelated to its story, if that makes any sense (probably not). Also, whatever you’re experiencing in your everyday life will seep into the words, characters, situations, chapters, voice. How can it not?

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There is something very very magical that happens once you commit to going down that road in novel writing.

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Talk to me about the era in which Arcadia is situated. You return us to this era that has long since disappeared. Please talk about its importance at the time and in retrospect. What was gained? What was lost?

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Arcadia is set in the late 1980s/early 1990s Los Angeles/Hollywood/Sunset Strip/suburb of LA. Pre-cellphones, pre-internet, pre-DUI, pre-social media, pre-everything that we have now. A time of super partying and DIY and a time when very young people could go virtually anywhere with a fake I.D. Los Angeles was ruled by kids then, not real estate developers and tech heads turning every cool neighborhood into Silicon Hell. It’s a high school narrative, a coming-of-age story of a girl in this world who is trying to navigate through all the crap and the good and the confusion. I think when you are experiencing things or back then when we were experiencing things, we took for granted that EVERYONE was experiencing the same thing. But they weren’t. Now everyone and everything is homogenized. They are all on the same page. You know what’s going on in every nook of every city and it’s all the same, pretty much. Back then…we were isolated. Which made it even more special. I hadn’t seen or read anything from the viewpoint of a teenager on the Strip into Metal and going to high school in a suburb of LA. There is a lot of detail, maybe in some cases too much. But, at the very least, it’s all there. For everyone for all time. Wanna know what they drank. It’s in there. What they thought? Drove? Ate? Wore? What color lipgloss they used or who the most popular bands were…it’s all in there. Plus, all the deeper stuff. Which I think has to do again with the reader. What they need to know/see, they will. I also wanted something from the perspective of a young girl, as that era seems to be run by boys. But that’s not true. Yeah.

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The symbolic importance of Arcadia, especially today, it is highly relevant. With IG and all the social media bullshit, there is so much fake and faux and just plain illusion, how do you know what’s real and what’s not? How do you decide who is really who they say they are based on their posts? Everything is so histrionic and narcissistic now, how does one get through it? Forget the forest, no one even cares about that anymore because they’re too busy posting selfies. The main character in the book, Ronnie, is looking for answers to all of these same questions…what is the meaning of existence? It’s not driving a Beamer or posting a photo of your ass online to get attention. The meaning of life may have been confusing back then, but it’s got to be even more diluted now with what’s going on. So it’s highly relevant in today’s world. And hopefully somewhere in the midst of all the shallowness, there might be some people who step back and listen and look…and question. And hopefully, one day, on a day they didn’t see coming, they finally get a glimpse into the reason why everything is the way it is.

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Categories: 1980s, 1990s, Books

Glenn Ligon: A People on the Cover

Posted on October 19, 2015

Lorrie Davis with Rachel Gallagher, Letting Down My Hair: Two Years with the Love Rock Tribe – From Dawning to Downing of Aquarius. Published by Arthur Fields Books, New York, 1973.

Lorrie Davis with Rachel Gallagher, Letting Down My Hair: Two Years with the Love Rock Tribe – From Dawning to Downing of Aquarius. Published by Arthur Fields Books, New York, 1973.

While doing a residency at the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis, artist Glenn Ligon began collaborating with the Givens Collection of African American Literature at the University of Minnesota. Without a clear plan for the partnership, Ligon began wandering the stacks, perusing their holdings, and looking at books he randomly pulled off the shelves. As he did so he discovered the project he would create, the telling of the history of black people in the United States as represented on the covers of books. The result is an intimate white paperback quietly titled A People on the Cover (Ridinghouse).

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The book begins with an introduction by Ligon, in which he recounts a brief history of his readings from 1960-1978. He begins with the formative memory of the day a white man came to his South Bronx home, going door-to-door trying to sell the Encyclopaedia Britannica in the housing projects. Ligon’s mother, who worked as a nurse’s aide at a psychiatric hospital, purchased that set of books that was the equivalent of almost an entire month’s rent, believing that education was the best way to get her children out of the hood.

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Ligon, who was subsequently transferred to a private school, remembers the way that books became status symbols of white culture, and reinforced their ideals, and found himself in a precarious position of being a young teenage boy living in two worlds. In his earlier years, he recounts an interest in the pretenses of white culture, but grew out of that pose on his first trip to the Eighth Street Bookshop in Greenwich Village. He spotted James Baldwin’s The Fire Next Time in the store window, and became transfixed by the red, black, and orange cover of the book. As Ligon writes, “I felt, in that moment, that in those four words on the cover, I had found myself.”

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Read the Full Story at Crave Online

Categories: 1960s, 1970s, 1980s, 1990s, Art, Books, Bronx, Crave

Jamel Shabazz: The Book That Changed My Life

Posted on October 14, 2015

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In the Brooklyn home where Jamel Shabazz grew up, his father kept a signed copy of Leonard Freed’s book, Black in White America, on the coffee table. The book, which was first published in 1968, opens with a photograph of an African American solder standing in front of the Berlin Wall in 1962. Freed was struck by the fact that the solder was willing to defend America abroad while back in the United States, they were subject to systemic racism, oppression, and exploitation under Jim Crow laws.

 

Freed returned to the United States and began to document the everyday black life during the battle for civil rights in New York, Washington, D.C., and throughout the South.  The result of his efforts was a landmark book that changed the life of photographer Jamel Shabazz when he was nine years old.

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The original edition of the book did not have a photo. It just had the words: BLACK IN WHITE AMERICA. Shabazz remembers opening the book, and stopping at the first image of the solider taken in 1962. His father and two uncles were military, on of who was still stationed in Germany. From the very beginning, Freed’s work became a profound source of knowledge, wisdom, and understanding for Shabazz.

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He recalls, “The book moved me to time travel outside of my community. It allowed m to escape the projects to North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, and Mississippi. I was seeing the places for the first time. After I looked at the pictures, I went back to read the book. There were so many words I didn’t understand. I saw ‘nigger’ for the first time in my life, so I went to a dictionary to look it up. I looked up ‘segregation’ and ‘integration.’ The first time I saw the word ‘rape’ was in this book. I didn’t understand what that word meant. It goes beyond the photos. I was learning horrible new words and it set my mind in a way that school wouldn’t.  I was rereading the book, imaging myself at nine and ten years old, trying to decipher what is going on. I fell in love with photography and used the dictionary to unlock the mystery of this book.”

 

Photo: Leonard Freed

Photo: Leonard Freed

 

Photo: Jamel Shabazz

Photo: Jamel Shabazz

 

Shabazz recalls, “Growing up, there was only one television in the house, so I only got bits and pieces of what was going on in the outside world, especially regarding the civil rights movement. I saw a beautiful photograph of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. for the very first time in Freed’s book, thus helping me better understand what was happening in both the northern and southern cities. Through the artistry of Leonard Freed, I was introduced to the power of documentary photography and the art of visual story telling. Freed’s book enlightened me to the harsh world of inequality, segregation, and struggle.  In essence, Black in White America, became an essential study guide introducing me to the real world I would soon have to face, as a boy growing into manhood.“

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Shabazz picked up a camera while he was in high school during the 1970s, but it wasn’t until he came home from a tour in the military in 1980 that his passion was revealed. His father, a military photographer himself, saw the that fire in his son, and gave him Freed’s book as an instrumental guide. Shabazz recalls, “He gave me the book so I could study lighting, composition, and black and white photography. Some of the most compelling photographs I made were shot almost right away. The seed had been planted in my mind at nine years old. I see things that people have a tendency to walk by. I take my time to observe what is going on around me.”

 

Photo: Leonard Freed

Photo: Leonard Freed

 

Photo: Jamel Shabazz

Photo: Jamel Shabazz

 

Freed taught Shabazz how to be a storyteller by virtue of mastering the craft. The greatest teachers lead by example and Freed was no exception to this fact. In the spirit of revolution, the circle spins round once again. Now on the cover of the book is a photograph of a young boy, flexing his bicep. Shabazz observes, “He’s the same age I was when I first picked up this up this book. I was building my mental through this book.”

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In the works of Leonard Freed and Jamel Shabazz, we can see the way in which the commitment to truth, justice, and honor is more than a career, it is a spiritual quest, a calling to honor the people of this earth through the creation of the book. I am honored to present the works of Leonard Freed and Jamel Shabazz side by side here.

 

Photo: Jamel Sbahazz

Photo: Jamel Sbahazz

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For More Information, Please Visit
Black in White America
Leonard Freed
Jamel Shabazz

Categories: 1960s, 1970s, 1980s, 1990s, Art, Books, Brooklyn, Manhattan, Photography

Beauté Congo – 1926-2015 – Congo Kitoko

Posted on September 1, 2015

JP Mika, Kiese na kiese, 2014, Oil and acrylic on fabric, 168.5 x 119 cm, Pas-Chaudoir Collection, Belgique © JP Mika/Photo © Antoine de Roux

JP Mika, Kiese na kiese, 2014, Oil and acrylic on fabric, 168.5 x 119 cm, Pas-Chaudoir Collection, Belgique
© JP Mika/Photo © Antoine de Roux

 

Since 1987, André Magnin, chief curator at Fondation Cartier pour l’art contemporain in Paris, has had a passion for the Congo which stirred his soul to travel the country and experience the people and their arts firsthand. In response to his thirty-year journey, he has organized Beauté Congo – 1926-2015 – Congo Kitoko, a survey of paintings, photographs, sculpture, comics, music, and films now on view at Fondation Cartier, Paris, through November 15, 2015.

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Organized chronologically, the exhibition begins in the 1920s, at the birth of modern painting in the Congo, when the nation was still a colony of Belgium. Having just survived the genocidal regime of King Leopold II, under which 10 million Congolese lost their lives, the art of this era had been in the shadows. Magnin obsessively search for work, drawing together pieces that reveal the way of life in the village, the natural world, the dreams and legends of the times.

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Read the Full Story at CRAVE ONLINE

Djilatendo, Sans titre, c. 1930, Gouache and ink on paper, 24.5 x 18 cm, Musée royal de l’Afrique centrale, Tervuren, HO.0.1.3371 © Djilatendo/Photo © MRAC Tervuren

Djilatendo, Sans titre, c. 1930, Gouache and ink on paper, 24.5 x 18 cm, Musée royal de l’Afrique centrale, Tervuren, HO.0.1.3371
© Djilatendo/Photo © MRAC Tervuren

Categories: 1960s, 1970s, 1980s, 1990s, Africa, Art, Crave, Exhibitions, Painting, Photography

Danny Clinch: Still Moving

Posted on July 17, 2015

Photograph: Bruce Springsteen, 2007 (©Danny Clinch).

Photograph: Bruce Springsteen, 2007 (©Danny Clinch).

“Still is still moving to me,” Willie Nelson said, a beautiful sentiment befitting the photograph itself. A fraction of a second frozen in time, forevermore, is the ephemeral made eternal. This is a kind of magic, something more than art. It is an artifact, a document, witness to history as it unfolds. The photograph must stand the test of time; it must endure so that it can speak to future generations.

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Music photography is a beautiful paradox: the silence is deafening, yet enveloping. That which is sound is now purely visual, distilled in a single moment that delivers all the highs and lows, all the rhythm and blues, as the crowd goes wild and we becomes one. It is this intensity that the photographer seeks, this moment when we are lost and found that we are truly present.

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Danny Clinch is a master of the form, seamlessly moving on and off stage with his instrument, the camera guiding his way. More than 200 of his seminal photographs are collected in Still Moving (Abrams Books), along with an essay by Bruce Springsteen, who explains, “When Danny Clinch and I clicked as photographer/subject, it was because somewhere deep inside we had he same points of reference—the same songs and movies dancing in our heads. With each click of the shutter he was scrolling through my record collection, referencing my influences, searching for the same magic. I could feel he’d been mesmerized by the same images of our heroes that made me want to be a musician and that made me, during our shoots, tilt my head down a little (like Elvis), or move to the left into a half shadow (like Dylan) or out into light (like, like…?).”

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Read the Full Story at CRAVE ONLINE.

Categories: 1980s, 1990s, Art, Books, Crave, Music, Photography

Arlene Gottfried: Mommie

Posted on July 3, 2015

Screen shot 2015-07-03 at 9.55.18 AM

Photograph by Arlene Gottfried

Photograph by Arlene Gottfried

Photographs by Arlene Gottfried

Photographs by Arlene Gottfried

 

Last summer I had the great pleasure of speaking with Arlene Gottfried at length, well, listening mostly, listening and asking questions and then listening again as Arlene spoke of her life behind the camera. A second generation New Yorker, Arlene has born witness to the people that have made this city one of the greatest places on earth. Her photographs never fail to delight and astound with their distinctive blend of compassion, style, and grace, with a knowing nod, a giggle, and a wink. This is New York, after all.

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Arlene is unassuming yet powerful. The intensity of her presence can best be felt when looking at her photograph or listening to her sing gospel. I remember hearing her in church on several occasions, overwhelmed and overjoyed by the spirit she channels. It is this spirit, this very soul, that makes Arlene one of the most compelling artists I know. And so it was with great honor that last summer I interviewed Arlene about her life, her family, and her work for her forthcoming book, Mommie (powerHouse Books).

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I remember seeing the mock up for Mommie at powerHouse years ago, once again overwhelmed by the depth and profundity of her work. To be honest, I was not ready for this level of truth, this intense bond between generations of women, all flowers from the same root. Mommie is Arlene’s fourth book with powerHouse, and perhaps the most personal of an incredibly intimate body of work.

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As I listened to Arlene speak, I realized she was a woman who has kept a great many private matters just so, and with Mommie she was sharing more than her memories, she was baring witness as the family historian. As time passes, we come to terms with the eternal circle of life and death and birth once more. With Mommie, we quietly observe, we feel, and we think; Arlene’s photographs have the cumulative effect of softly sinking into your body and changing the very nature of your being.

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In that same way, the book is an object unto itself, an object to be held, much like a family album. powerHouse would like to use real upholstery fabric to wrap the book’s boards (the front cover, spine, and back cover) and has decided to create a Indie GoGo account to support the production costs. In order to share Arlene’s story, they asked me to interview her a couple of months ago, and this time, Arlene sang “Amazing Grace,” a moment that be stilled my soul.

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The video is now live, and the Indie GoGo campaign has begun. We invite you to visit the campaign at MOMMIE, and support the project. Among the rewards offered are Arlene’s first three powerHouse Books: Bacalaitos & Fireworks, Midnight, and Sometimes Overwhelming, each one a treasury of New York City history, street photography, and style, each one a love letter from the bottom of her heart.

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Screen shot 2015-07-03 at 10.24.35 AM

Photograph by Arlene Gottfried

 

Screen shot 2015-07-03 at 10.24.15 AM

Photograph by Arlene Gottfried

Categories: 1970s, 1980s, 1990s, Art, Books, Manhattan, Photography, Women

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