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Posts from the “Photography” Category

The Campaign

Posted on October 19, 2020

Bobby Kennedy campaigns in Indiana during May of 1968, with various aides and friends: former prizefighter Tony Zale and (right of Kennedy) N.F.L. stars Lamar Lundy, Rosey Grier, and Deacon Jones © Bill Eppridge / Monroe Gallery of Photography

“Politics is theater. It doesn’t matter if you win. You make a statement. You say, ‘I’m here, pay attention to me,’” said Harvey Milk, the first openly gay elected official in California. Invariably photography, with its paradoxical ability to convey fact and fiction at the same time, has long played a major role in shaping political messages without ever saying a word.

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The new exhibition, The Campaign, looks at how photographers have documented the race for the most powerful office in the world — that of the U.S. Presidency — over the past 80 years from the campaign trail to inauguration day. The exhibition, which features work by Cornell Capa, Bill Ray, John Leongard, Alfred Eisenstaedt, Neil Leifer, Brooks Kraft, and Nina Berman, among others, dates back to Thomas E. Dewey’s run in 1948, which resulted in one of the greatest upsets in election history.

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Irving Haberman’s vibrant crowd scene shows just how influential the photograph was, as countless members of the crowd bear placards with Dewey’s confident visage gazing intently at us, emoting the perfect blend of assurance and artifice Americans have grown to know and love.

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Read the Full Story at Blind

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1948 Republican Convention, Philadelphia, PA © Irving Haberman / Monroe Gallery of Photography
John F. Kennedy, on-set monitor at the first-ever televised Presidential debate in 1960 © Irving Haberman
Categories: Art, Blind, Photography

Martha Cooper: Taking Pictures

Posted on October 14, 2020

Dondi’s Room Brooklyn, NYC 1979 © Martha Cooper

Under the cover of night, Martha Cooper crept into train yards to document some of New York’s most legendary graffiti writers as they brandished spray cans, unfurling masterpieces on the outside of subway trains in 1981 and ‘82. The petite photographer slipped through a hole cute into the chain link fence, agilely maneuvering her way between the massive steel cars, quick to duck under one if a train worker came by, taking tremendous care not to touch the third rail, through which 600 volts of live electricity steadily coursed.

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Cooper carefully took aim as writers like DONDI, DEZ, DAZE SKEME, MIN, SHY, and LADY PINK worked feverishly through the night, painting their names on the exterior of a single subway car, a “canvas” that was 50 feet long by 12 feet high. “It was so dark they couldn’t even see what color the paints were,” Cooper says. “They were lighting matches — where the whole can could explode — to see the color of the paint.”

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To call graffiti “death defying” would not be an overstatement, for many writers have died or been badly injured in their quest to “get up.” Often teenagers, writers were willing to risk it all for what they loved. Though Cooper was nearing 40, she was no less daring. She just quit her job as the first woman staff photographer at the New York Post in 1980 so that she could have more time to document graffiti.  

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“I was ambitious and the Post wasn’t enough. I wanted to be a National Geographic photographer,” says Cooper, who was also the first woman photographer to intern for the fabled photo magazine in 1968. Cooper envisioned her portrait of New York’s artistic underground would catapult her to the top of the documentary photography scene but things didn’t work out quite like she planned. 

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Read the Full Story at Blind

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Skeme, Bronx, NYC, 1982 © Martha Cooper
Bronx, NYC 1982 © Martha Cooper
Categories: 1980s, Art, Blind, Graffiti, Photography

Alfie White x Andre D. Wagner in Conversation

Posted on October 14, 2020

Alfie White

Street photographers are in a class of their own. Working off instincts honed to precision, they are in possession of the profound gift of capturing the moment as it unfolds. Photographers Andre D. Wagnerand Alfie White are firm proponents of traditional street photography, shooting exquisite scenes of New York City and London, respectively, on black and white film to create a timeless portrait of modern life.

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Hailing from Omaha, Nebraska, Wagner moved to New York to practice social work, fell in love with photography, and never looked back. Currently a Public Artist in Residence with the NYC Commission on Human Rights, Wagner brings an understanding of the underlying political, social, and economic dynamics to his study of community, along with the knowledge that a photographer is not an “objective” observer but rather a participant with a moral responsibility to respect and support the rights of those in the pictures.

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White is a London-based photographer and long-time fan of Wagner’s. He is currently working on two projects supported by a grant from the 2020 Dazed 100 Ideas Fund in partnership with Converse: a photo essay on the experiences of people affected by the UK Government’s handling of the COVID-19 pandemic, and a collaborative document, where he will engage other young photographers around the world to create an international portrait of the lives of young people in 2020.

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“Andre’s work was what really opened photography to me as an art form and tool,” White says. “(His) work is beautifully intimate, thought provoking, and political. But most importantly, it’s real. In a photographic world (that often) leads the viewer away from reality, Andre takes you straight there, showing life for what it is through his lens, with an emphasis on the nuanced moments (that) not only mark the current time, but will stand the test of it.”

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As part of his Dazed 100 takeover week, White speaks with Wagner for the first time in a conversation about the importance of staying true to your vision through thick and thin, the power of social media to build your own platform, and what to do when you see Beyoncé at a star-studded Hollywood party.

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Read the Full Story at Dazed

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Alfie White
Categories: Art, Dazed, Photography

Meryl Meisler: 1970s New York Go-Go Bars

Posted on October 2, 2020

Meryl Meisler

In spring 1978, photographer Meryl Meisler accompanied her friend Judi Jupiter to an interview to work the bar at the Playmate, a new go-go bar opening on 49th Street and Broadway in New York.

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“It was a topless-bottomless bar,” Meisler remembers. “There was disco music playing and girls were dancing on stage. It was fascinating. I asked if I could get a job there as a hostess, and was hired.” 

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During the late 1970s, Meisler led a double life. By day she worked as a CETA photographer documenting Jewish New York for the American Jewish Congress, exploring her ethnic roots. By night, she was partying at nightclubs like Studio 54 and working at the Playmate, where she soon began making photographs, a selection of which have been published inPurgatory & Paradise SASSY ‘70s Suburbia & The City (Bizarre).

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Meisler was required to wear a bathing suit or leotard, stockings, high heels, and makeup, and as hostess, she’d greet customers at the door, seating them by the stage, and serving them $4 “near-beers,” as the bar didn’t have a liquor license. She received a dollar tip for every drink, plus a $10 tip whenever she brought customers to the back rooms for private dances and a $40 bottle of “champagne” (Martinelli’s sparkling cider).

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Read the Full Story at Huck

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Meryl Meisler
Meryl Meisler
Categories: Art, Huck, Manhattan, Photography

Mimi Plumb: The White Sky

Posted on October 1, 2020

Mimi Plumb

Growing up beneath the shadow of Mount Diablo in the 1960s, photographer Mimi Plumb witnessed the explosion of strip malls and tract homes with raw dirt yards lining treeless streets of Walnut Creek, a suburb of Berkeley, California.

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“To me and my teenage friends, they were the blandest, saddest homes in the world,” Plumb recalls of the predominantly white middle-class hamlet set amid the rolling hills and valleys of Northern California. “The town had a mixture of conservative to liberal adults. My parents were progressive, but I often felt like we were outsiders – tolerated but not embraced by the community. I never understood why we lived there.”

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With the Haight Ashbury counterculture scene flourishing less than 20 miles away, Plumb decamped for San Francisco in 1971 at the age of 17. “By then, the idealism of the early to mid-60s was eroding, particularly with the assassinations of Martin Luther King and Bobby Kennedy in 1968. There was no longer the belief within the youth movement that we could change the world.”

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Read the Full Story at Huck

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Mimi Plumb
Mimi Plumb
Categories: 1970s, Art, Books, Huck, Photography

Sunil Gupta: Lovers – Ten Years On

Posted on September 30, 2020

Sunil Gupta. Dylan and Gerald.

In summer 1978, New Delhi-born, Montreal-raised photographer Sunil Gupta arrived in London. “I was following a guy,” Gupta tells AnOther from his home in south London. The two had first met in Canada while enrolled in business school. After graduating, Gupta’s boyfriend took a job that required him train in New York City before sending him to London to work.

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Just entering his twenties, Gupta went along for the ride, thinking he would get a job when he arrived. Things didn’t quite work out as he had planned. “We started out at a similar footing as students but working at the bank he got settled quickly and became relatively well off,” Gupta says. “I had gone the other way. I made no money at all and had become completely dependent. It didn’t seem to matter. We were together and in the gay world, ten years seemed like a long time especially back then.”

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After Gupta received him MA in Photography from the Royal College of Art in 1983, the Home Office sent him back to Montreal until he as able to get a visa to live and work in the UK. Once things had finally stabilized, the relationship came to an end – much to Gupta’s surprise. “My life changed quite dramatically: not only was I single but I had to fend for myself. I left with a suitcase. I had no rights at all. Although the UK legalized the sex act in the late 60s, they didn’t legalize [gay] marriage until the 2010s. It took them 50 years to get around to that part of things,” he says.

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Read the Full Story at AnOther

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Sunil Gupta. Eddie and Jeff.
Categories: 1980s, AnOther, Art, Books, Photography

Grace Before Jones: Camera, Disco, Studio

Posted on September 30, 2020

Richard Bernstein, Grace Jones photographs for On Your Knees, 1979. Eric Boman courtesy of The Estate of Richard Bernstein

Hailing from Jamaica, Grace Jones is a true iconoclast: a rebellious pioneer who set the worlds of music, fashion, and film ablaze with aesthetics that defied categorisation, appropriation, or co-option by industries that have long cannibalised marginalised communities.

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In the new exhibition at Nottingham Contemporary, Grace Before Jones: Camera, Disco, Studio, curators Cédric Fauq and Olivia Aherne offer a multifaceted portrait of the renegade who turned the mainstream upside down with her refusal to be pigeonholed by any singular quality.

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Featuring 100 works by some 50 artists including Anthony Barboza, Antonio Lopez, Keith Haring, Robert Mapplethorpe, and Jean-Paul Goode,Grace Before Jones is organized into 13 sections that explore her approaches to gender, sexuality, performance, race, and cybernetics throughout her career. 

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“The incredibly poignant thing about this exhibition is that everything she was doing in the 1970s, ‘80, and early ‘90s is still relevant today,” says Aherne. “It stills feel so fresh and experimental, even though Grace was thinking about things like Afrofuturism back in the ‘80s, at a time when these ideas were first being developed and hashed out.” 

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Read the Full Story at Huck

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Antonio Lopez, Personal Study, Angelo Colon, 1983 © The Estate of Antonio Lopez and Juan Ramos
Categories: 1970s, 1980s, Art, Exhibitions, Fashion, Huck, Photography

Jeff Mermelstein: #nyc

Posted on September 25, 2020

Jeff Mermelstein, from ‘#nyc,’ (MACK, 2020). Courtesy the artist and MACK.

Over the past 40 years, Jeff Mermelstein has been documenting the streets of New York with his distinctive blend of humor, verve, and tenderness. His finely attuned ability to see and preserve the compelling yet nonsensical qualities of existence have made him what can be best described as an “anthropologist of the absurd.”

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Mermelstein’s inimitable gift to discern the unlikely and unusual amidst the sea of humanity is the result of an impressive work ethic that borders on obsession. A humble man, he shies away from using the word “master” to describe his prowess with the 35mm camera honed over decades. Yet his command of the medium he loved was simply not enough. Although Mermelstein had resisted digital photography in 2011, he made the switch when New York magazine commissioned him to photograph Fashion Week in New York, Milan, and Paris.

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In 2016, Mermelstein made the leap to cell phone photography and now works exclusively with the iPhone 8. “I’m looking at a Leica that’s right next to me and I haven’t touched it in four years,” he says from his Brooklyn home. “I’ll never say, ‘No, I’m not going back,’ but it’s definitely not calling me right now.” 

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Read the Full Story at Blind

Categories: Art, Blind, Manhattan, Photography

Sunil Gupta x Nick Sethi in Conversation

Posted on September 24, 2020

Courtesy the artist and Hales Gallery, Stephen Bulger Gallery and Vadehra Art Gallery © Sunil Gupta. All Rights Reserved, DACS 2020
Sunil Gupta, Untitled #9, 2010. From the series Sun City. Courtesy the artist and Hales Gallery, Stephen Bulger Gallery and Vadehra Art Gallery © Sunil Gupta. All Rights Reserved, DACS 2020

Photographers Sunil Gupta and Nick Sethi use the camera as a compass on their journey through life, using it to create connections that allow them to explore the complex intersections of identity, family, race, migration, and sexuality in the East and the West. Transforming photography as a tool of liberation, their vivid portrait and documentary work fuses the personal and political into a mesmerising mélange of places and faces.

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With the October 9 opening of From Here to Eternity. Sunil Gupta. A Retrospective and the publication of Lovers: Ten Years On (Stanley/Barker) coming on the heels of the landmarkexhibition and catalogue Masculinities: Liberation Through Photography, Gupta’s work is being widely celebrated in his adopted home of London, nearly 40 years after the Delhi-born, Montreal-raised artist emigrated to the UK. Gupta’s retrospective will showcase works from 16 series over the past 45 years that reveal how he has used photography as a form of activism to address his experiences as a gay Indian man living with HIV, while also exploring ethical questions of documentation and representation that helped bring abut the formation of Autograph – the Association of Black Photographers, an organisation devoted to fighting discrimination in the UK.

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Sethi, a first-generation Indian-American, who is currently based in New York, also uses photography to connect and explore the space where empathy creates understanding beyond the spoken word. In 2018, he released Khichdi (Kitchari), his first major monograph that comprises a ten-year documentation of the changing face of India, to much acclaim. One of photography’s most exciting new voices, he has since undertaken commissions for Another Man, Dazed, Louis Vuitton and more.

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Here, Gupta and Sethi discuss navigating the complexities of coming of age in adopted cultures, the role photography can play in examining social structures and communities, and the restorative power of returning to the motherland.

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Read the Full Story at AnOther

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Sunil Gupta, Untitled #9, 2010. From the series Sun City. Courtesy the artist and Hales Gallery, Stephen Bulger Gallery and Vadehra Art Gallery © Sunil Gupta. All Rights Reserved, DACS 2020

Categories: AnOther, Art, Photography

Styling: Black Expression, Rebellion, and Joy Through Fashion

Posted on September 22, 2020

Margaret Rose Vendryes, Kwele Betty – Betty Davis, 2010

Style is an expression of self that weaves together our aesthetic sensibilities with the time, place, and culture in which we live. But for Black Americans, style has long been more than a means of self-expression: It’s also been an essential way to survive systemic racism.

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As Lewis Long, founder and owner of Long Gallery Harlem, told Artsy in a conversation, “Style, for Black people in America, began as a point of survival and liberty.”

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Many Black Americans who escaped slavery created garments that typified the appearance of free men and women, giving them the ability to hide in plain sight as they built new lives from scratch. After the Civil War, style became a means to chart a new path in society at a time when segregation limited access and mobility. The Black church offered a safe space for the devout to show out every Sunday. “In spite of oppression in the broader society, Black people were leaders and were completely free to express themselves in a grand way,” Long said.

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By 1920, Black American art, culture, and style reached new heights as the Harlem Renaissance brought a generation of artists and intellectuals to the world stage. In celebration of the Harlem Renaissance’s 100th anniversary, Long Gallery Harlem and Harlem-based curator Souleo have partnered with Nordstrom to create “Styling: Black Expression, Rebellion, and Joy Through Fashion,” a multi-venue exhibition that includes an installation at Nordstrom’s flagship New York store and an online viewing room with Artsy.

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Read the Full Story at Artsy

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Yelaine Rodriguez, Afro-Sagrada Familia (Mawan Zahir Ajam), 2020.
Categories: Art, Artsy, Painting, Photography

Ella Snyder x Collier Schorr

Posted on September 22, 2020

“Jennifer (Head)”, 2002-2014 Photography by Collier Schorr, courtesy of 303 Gallery, New York

For anyone with a marginalised identity, being absent in and erased from mainstream imagery can be painful. Each fighting for that visibility in their own ways are photographers Collier Schorr and Ella Snyder, whose work goes beyond the confines of cisheteronormativity to provide perspectives on gender and identity that have rarely been centred in the worlds of fashion and art. 

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Schorr, who got into photography when she recognised the need for a lesbian voice in the art world of 1980s New York, has blazed a decades-spanning trail, inspiring generations of young artists to be the change they wish to see in the world. Her images have created an established space for queer voices to speak truth to power through art. 

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Snyder, meanwhile, is a New York-based model, photographer, YouTuber – and long term superfan of Schorr’s. She is currently working on her first photography book, supported by a grant from the 2020 Dazed 100 Ideas Fund in partnership with Converse. The book focuses on the transgender community and her place within it – a process of restoring a vital connection lost after she began transitioning at the age of 11 and subsequently lived stealth. A decade later, Snyder openly embraces her full identity and uses her talents to create powerful connections within the trans community and the world writ large.

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As part of her Dazed 100 takeover, Snyder speaks to Schorr for the first time – in a conversation that captures the innovative, nonconformist spirit that bridges Generations X and Z, the two discuss the ways in which photography can be used as a tool of liberation to reimagine a world where the full spectrum of selfhood can be celebrated.

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Read the Full Story at Dazed

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Collier Schorr. Self portrait from ‘8 Women’
Categories: 1980s, 1990s, Art, Dazed, Fashion, Photography, Women

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