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Posts from the “Photography” Category

Marcia Resnick: Punks, Poets & Provocateurs

Posted on November 23, 2015

John Belushi, photo by Marcia Resnick

John Belushi, photo by Marcia Resnick

 

Marcia Resnick was there, at the center of it all, in a burst of light and flame that set New York on edge with a new movement in art, music, literature and film. Her new book Punks, Poets & Provocateurs: New York City Bad Boys, 1977-1982 with text by Victor Bockris (Insight Editions) features photographs of the enfants terribles of the time, people like Johnny Thunders, James Brown, William S. Burroughs, John Waters, and Jean-Michel Basquiat, men who did it their way like my man Frank Sinatra said. Marcia Resnick shares her thoughts and her photos in a conversation here.

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I love how you speak about creation of Re-visions as a way to demystify your past. Would you say the same is true of Punks, Poets & Provocateurs, or was the creation of the book driven by something else you wanted to explore about life?

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Marcia Resnick: In Re-visions I was confronting myself as the subject which I understood least and most wanted to understand. The next subject in line for such consideration was the male species, specifically my relationship to men, especially my attraction to “Bad Boys.”

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I like to think a portrait of the artist is always their subject: who they choose, the energy the two create, the frames they select—all of this is a story about the photographer themselves. When looking through Punks, Poets & Provocateurs I see a multi-faceted gem as filtered through the lens of the masculinity at a specific time and place. As a woman looking at men, what do you find most compelling about them? Is it something you see in yourself, something you aspire towards, or a mix of the two?

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Definitely a mix of the two. As I said in the book “Bad Boys can be at once formidable and endearing. Being ‘bad’ also makes people attractive, especially to the opposite sex.” I think most people are intrigued by danger regardless of what their sex is. Living on the edge is dangerous and Punk Rock was the new alternative music. The writers and provocateurs I photographed also went against the grain, making considerable innovations in their respective artistic endeavors.

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The Bad Boy archetype is an American ideal: the rebel driven by profound individualism—and maybe something else. In some ways it sums up the ethos of punk: fuck the system D.I.Y. style. Looking back, I’m a little shocked by how it doesn’t seem that long ago but it seems so very far away. What would you say made the era you were photographing so ripe for rebellion?

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In the late ‘70s and early ‘80s people could afford to live in NYC. Everyone was challenging what was expected of them because the counterculture was still ripe. Rock musicians and artists alike were graduating from art schools. Painters were making films. Writers were doing performance art. Sculptors were doing installations. Artists were acting in films, making music and generally collaborating with each other. People were also more sexually unconstrained. This climate ended when Aids and the atmosphere of paranoia began to stymie the nightlife.

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Punks, Poets & Provocateurs is an incredible compendium of the scene, very potent and resonant with a sense of energy that has, in some ways, all but disappeared. Looking back at your photographs, what mist resonates with you after all these years? What do you see in your photographs that you can only see now, with the benefit of hindsight?

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I realize how fortunate I was to experience NYC and life in general when I did. Though I embrace the extraordinary technological advances that have come in time, people today communicate through electronic media. Back then, the world seemed smaller, everyone knew who their friends were and people actually got together to talk and exchange ideas.

 

Divine, photo by Marcia Resnick

Divine, photo by Marcia Resnick

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

Warhol & Mapplethorpe: Guise & Dolls

Posted on November 11, 2015

Photo: Andy Warhol, Camouflage Self- Portrait , 1986. Synthetic polymer paint and silkscreen on canvas, Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art, Hartford, Conn. The Ella Gallup Sumner and Mary Catlin Sumner Collection Fund, with a partial gift of The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc., 1994.12.1. © 2014 The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc./Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York

Artwork Andy Warhol, Camouflage Self- Portrait , 1986. Synthetic polymer paint and silkscreen on canvas, Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art, Hartford, Conn. The Ella Gallup Sumner and Mary Catlin Sumner Collection Fund, with a partial gift of The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc., 1994.12.1. © 2014 The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc./Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York

Photo: Robert Mapplethorpe, Brian Ridley and Lyle Heeter, 1979. Gelatin silver print, The Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation, N.Y. © Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation. Used by permission.

Photo: Robert Mapplethorpe, Brian Ridley and Lyle Heeter, 1979. Gelatin silver print, The Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation, N.Y. © Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation. Used by permission.

New York City in the 1970s and ‘80s was a deliciously decadent time and place where art, gender, and sexuality came together in a miasma of creative energies. As the gay rights movement ushered in a new era, a new sense of expression took hold as gender became an area ripe for exploration. The ideas of masculine, feminine, and androgynous began to capture the imagination of visual and performing artists. Musicians lead the way, as crossdressing came out of the closet and groups like the New York Dolls took advantage of it’s curious effect on their female fans. It was an era of gender fluidity and sexual freedom which held to a deep abiding sense of “anything goes” as bath houses and clubs like Plato’s Retreat flourished in the city.

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Andy Warhol and Robert Mapplethorpe were two of the most significant artists in New York at this time. As portrait artists, both engaged with gender, identity, sexuality, beauty, performance, and disguise in their lives and their work, revealing the intricacies and nuances of the many-splendored personalities that populated the city then. Each artist focused on their subjects as a means to discovering their truth in a complex series of questions that directly and comfortably challenge the viewer.

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Read the Full Story at Crave Online

Andy Warhol, Ladies and Gentlemen, 1975. Acrylic and silkscreen ink on linen, The Andy Warhol Museum, Pittsburgh; Founding Collection, Contribution Dia Center for the Arts, 2002.4.22. © 2014 The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc./Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York

Andy Warhol, Ladies and Gentlemen, 1975. Acrylic and silkscreen ink on linen, The Andy Warhol Museum, Pittsburgh; Founding Collection, Contribution Dia Center for the Arts, 2002.4.22. © 2014 The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc./Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York

Categories: 1970s, 1980s, Art, Crave, Exhibitions, Painting, Photography

Joseph Rodriguez: Mi Gente

Posted on November 10, 2015

Photo: Friday night at the Dominoe Social Club, 1987 © Joseph Rodriguez

Photo: Friday night at the Dominoe Social Club, 1987 © Joseph Rodriguez

Spanish Harlem. It’s an attitude, a mood, a way of living that is open, emotional, and warm. It is dominoes on the street as the sun sets as the music of Tito Puente and Eddie Palmieri wafts through the air from passing car stereos. It’s a place where open bottles and open fire hydrants are welcome in equal measure. Spanish Harlem is the city’s oldest barrio, dating back to the 1940s, when Puerto Ricans first established themselves in this little corner of upper eastside New York. Home to 120,000 people, half of which are Latino, the neighborhood has been forced to confront some of the city’s endemic problems of crime, drugs, AIDS, and chronic unemployment, many times as a result of systemic racism. Yet, like most true Yorkers, the people have a spirit and a will to survive.

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For photographer Joseph Rodriguez, Spanish Harlem is sacred ground, a place he has returned to throughout his life to engage with the community. Born and raised in Brooklyn, Rodriguez first went uptown to visit his uncle who had a candy store in el barrio. Then, in 1984, as a student at the International Center of Photography, he was given the assignment of documenting the gentrification of East Harlem.

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Read the Full Story at Crave Online

Photo: Vietnam Veteran, 1988 © Joseph Rodriguez

Photo: Vietnam Veteran, 1988 © Joseph Rodriguez

 

Photo: Night scene, 1988 © Joseph Rodriguez

Photo: Night scene, 1988 © Joseph Rodriguez

Categories: 1980s, Art, Crave, Exhibitions, Manhattan, Photography

Adriana Teresa Letorney: The Book That Changed My Life

Posted on November 3, 2015

Charles Harbutt, photograph by Joan Liftin

Charles Harbutt, photograph by Joan Liftin

The Co-founder and Creative Director of Visura.co, Adriana Teresa Letorney has dedicated her life to building a global community to connect photographers, editors, curators, and organizations. Dedicated to the formation and implementation of economic development through art and cultural initiatives, with a focus on photography, online media, international festivals and tourism, Adriana Teresa’s love for photography resides deep in her heart. She speaks about the book that changed her life: Travelog by Charles Harbutt, first published in 1974 by The MIT Press.

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Can you please talk about Charles Harbutt’s Travelog: How did you discover this book? Can you remember the first time you saw it? What was your experience of the book?

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Adriana Teresa: The first time I learned about Charles Harbutt‘s Travelog was during a dinner at a dining restaurant with Sylvia Plachy, who introduced me to my now dear friend and extended family member, photographer Jeff Jacobson. They both spoke about Charles Harbutt and recommended Travelog. I will be forever grateful to them.

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What was the impact of the book? How did the book change your life?

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Until Travelog, I had always envisioned photography as images. It was after I experienced the images in the book and read the epilogue “I don’t take pictures, pictures take me” that I started to see and approach photography as a language of its own—filled with possibilities, layers, depth and weight. Since, I relate the work of photographers with other arts, especially literary novels, music and film. More importantly, I see images as interpretations, perspectives and even at times, reflections of the truths, not the truth.

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Think about it—since, I do not seek for an answer when I look at an image; instead, I allow myself to dive into the world of questions—endless questions: The how, why, when, where and with what purpose. Questions like: how is that image a reflection of you or what drew you to that image or did the image come to you? This is the roots of Visura when I think about photography: an open dialogue filled with questions that lead to discussions, at times the peeling of an onion with the hopes that we can find, touch, describe a universal truth; and, in doing so, bring about positive change to society.

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I know Charles Harbutt was very special to you. Can you talk about what he was like? How did knowing him shape your relationship to his work?

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Charlie was very kind to me. He was brutally honest, which at times was hard to digest. He was the real deal: the photographer who remained a photographer throughout his entire life. Listening to him was a lesson on the history of photography, only that his version was a first-hand account.  Head on, he experienced the changes and challenges that the industry faced for most of the 20th century; he also faced the impact for taking a stand when he did not agree with the direction the industry was taking in regards to photography. I will always admire his strength and courage to stay true to his voice as a photographer, a leader, a writer, a teacher and a journalist.  Throughout his life, he remained truthful to his values, belief and above all love for the realm.

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Charlie became a photographer at a very young age during his teens, and he passed away at the age of 80. He had seen many come and go, and I will never forget, when he told me: “In our 20s, we were many; in our 30s, we were half that number; in our 40s, we were half that number, and so on…. by now, we are around five photographers. BOOM.”

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When I think of a photographer, I think Charles Harbutt: little to do with the awards, cool factor, social life and covers; everything to do with purpose, perseverance, focus, hard work, love, dedication and, most importantly, photography. From time to time, when I think of giving up—I think of Charlie…and his love for his wife Joan.

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It’s true. It was all real. I saw it with my own two eyes. And his images were a reflection of it all.

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Looking back now at the book, do you see something you hadn’t seen before? How has your knowledge and understanding of Charles’ work deepened and developed over time?

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Now, when I go back to the book or when I re-read his column with Visura Magazine, I hear him. It was an honor to have met him. Even more, I am so grateful that he allowed me to fail so many times, yet he always gave me another chance.

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I think that is a big lesson to learn….no matter how many times you fail, it is worse to do nothing.

 

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Categories: 1970s, Art, Books, Photography

Lorraine O’Grady: Art Is…

Posted on November 2, 2015

Art Is… (Girlfriends Times Two), 1983/2009 Chromogenic color print 16 × 20 in. Courtesy Alexander Gray Associates, New York

Art Is… (Girlfriends Times Two), 1983/2009 Chromogenic color print 16 × 20 in. Courtesy Alexander Gray Associates, New York

Quiet as kept, the annual African-American Day Parade attracts millions of people each year as it arches through the heart of Harlem, beginning at Central Park North, and marching up Adam Clayton Powell Jr. Blvd to 136 Street. Founded in 1968 as an independent organization, the parade does not accept contributions. Instead, it was developed with the sprit of volunteerism and honoring the community. Featuring fire, police, and corrections departments, veterans associations, grand lodges, fraternities and sororities, step and drill teams, the African-American Day Parade is like Harlem Homecoming to the nation.

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It was with in this spirit that conceptual artist Lorraine O’Grady stages a performance piece, “Art Is…”, which she entered her own float into the September 1983 African-American Day Parade with fifteen collaborators dressed in white. At the top of the float was a gilded gold frame, enormous and ornate, like the type you’d find in a museum around a masterpiece. As the float went up the boulevard, it framed everyone it passed, providing a moving snapshot of the treasures of life. The words “Art Is…” were emblazoned on he float’s skirt, offering an open-ended point of view. “Art is anything you can get away with,” said Andy Warhol.

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“Art is the only way to run away without leaving home,” said Twyla Tharp. “Art is the most intense mode of individualism the world has ever known,” said Oscar Wilde. Art is any possibility you can imagine, even the idea that those two words could inspire countless ideas from all points of view. Just try it at home. Ask yourself to fill in the blanks. What is art to you?

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Read the Full Story at Crave Online

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Art Is… (Girl Pointing), 1983/2009 Chromogenic color print 20 × 16 in. Courtesy Alexander Gray Associates, New York

Art Is… (Girl Pointing), 1983/2009 Chromogenic color print 20 × 16 in. Courtesy Alexander Gray Associates, New York

 

Art Is… (Line of Floats), 1983/2009 Chromogenic color print 16 × 20 in. Courtesy Alexander Gray Associates, New York

Art Is… (Line of Floats), 1983/2009 Chromogenic color print 16 × 20 in. Courtesy Alexander Gray Associates, New York

Categories: 1980s, Art, Crave, Exhibitions, Manhattan, Photography

Thomas Roma: In the Vale of Cashmere

Posted on October 22, 2015

Photo: Thomas Roma, “Untitled (from the series In The Vale Of Cashmere), 2010. Gelatin silver print, 11 x 14 in.

Photo: Thomas Roma, “Untitled (from the series In The Vale Of Cashmere), 2010. Gelatin silver print, 11 x 14 in.

 

With In the Vale of Cashmere, Thomas Roma brings us into a little known Eden, one that has been quietly thriving for decades in the New York underground. The Vale of Cashmere is a secluded section of Prospect Park where black gay men cruise for sexual partners. Roma’s portraits of men set in an uncanny urban wooded landscape carry a history of New York and Brooklyn that predates and parallels the gay rights and civil rights movements.

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A bard of Brooklyn, Roma is a poet-photographer who has been making profound images of the people of his native city since 1969. The founder and director of the photography program at Columbia, Roma works in a studio which he hand built in his Prospect Park South home, overseeing all aspects of production, from the development of the photographs to the design of his books.

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In the Vale of Cashmere (powerHouse Books), Roma’s fourteenth monograph, will release to time with his inaugural exhibition at Steven Kasher Gallery, New York, from October 29–December 19, 2015. This is Roma’s first major New York exhibition of new photographs since his acclaimed solo exhibition Come Sunday at the Museum of Modern Art in 1996.

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In the Vale of Cashmere was created as a memoriam to Carl Spinella, one of Roma’s closest friends, who died in Tom’s arms of AIDS in 1992. Roma first met Spinella in 1974; a year later they were roommates living on Dean Street in Brooklyn. Spinella had been instrumental in bringing Roma to his native Sicily in 1978 so that Roma could discover his ancestral roots. (These images were later published as the book Sicilian Passage.) Their bond was so close that Tom often would drive Spinella to the Vale of Cashmere and sometimes pick him up at the drop-off site, an act of faith in a time before cell phones, when who knows what could happen in the woods.

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Categories: Art, Books, Brooklyn, Crave, Exhibitions, Manhattan, Photography

Nicola Lo Calzo: Obia

Posted on October 18, 2015

Photo: Banai Meklien, from Kourou in French Guiana, with a parrot, participant in Gaama’s funeral in Asindoopo, Suriname. © Nicola Lo Calzo/L'agence à paris.

Photo: Banai Meklien, from Kourou in French Guiana, with a parrot, participant in Gaama’s funeral in Asindoopo, Suriname. © Nicola Lo Calzo/L’agence à paris.

 

Nicola Lo Calzo has dedicated himself to Cham, a long-term photographic project exploring the living memories of colonial slavery and anti-slavery struggles around the world. From this larger undertaking, Lo Calzo has just released Obia (Kehrer Verlag), a powerful study of the Maroon peoples of Suriname and French Guiana.

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Maroons (from the Latin American Spanish word cimarrón: “feral animal, fugitive, runaway”) were African refugees who escaped from slavery in the Americas and formed independent settlements on both continents. The Maroon people of Dutch Guiana (now Suriname) escaped plantations and settled in the forests, surviving against the odds. They defended themselves against armed troops sent by the government, defying colonial order and the system of slavery. Maroons who were captured suffered dire consequences, yet despite the repression, the Maroon communities retained their sovereignty and signed their first treat in 1760.

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The history of the Maroon peoples remains one hidden from public view, yet they flourished across the Americas with communities in Louisiana, Jamaica, Cuba, Haiti, Colombia, and Brazil. The word Obia is originally an Akan word, specifically attributed to the Fanti, and points to a belief system of the Maroon peoples since their arrival from West Africa. With Obia, Lo Calzo considers the relationship between the past and the present, exploring the magical-religious legacy of the culture and the new challenges that stem from modernity.

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Read the Full Story at Crave Online

Photo: Ndyuka Maroon girl shows off her Marilyn Monroe t-shirt. Maroon Day celebrations, October 10, 2014, Albina, Suriname. © Nicola Lo Calzo/L'agence à paris.

Photo: Ndyuka Maroon girl shows off her Marilyn Monroe t-shirt. Maroon Day celebrations, October 10, 2014, Albina, Suriname. © Nicola Lo Calzo/L’agence à paris.

Categories: Art, Books, Crave, Latin America, Photography

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

Girls on Film: 70s Punk Legends by Jim Jocoy

Posted on October 7, 2015

Photo: Debbie Harry by Jim Jocoy

Photo: Debbie Harry by Jim Jocoy

Picture it: San Francisco, late 1970s. The punk scene was in full swing and Do It Yourself was in the air. It was a time of youthful ingenuity and rebelliousness that was one part F the system and one part self-indulgence. It was at this time that photographer Jim Jocoy came upon an ingenious plan that resulted in some of the most iconic photographs taken at the time.

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The 1970s was a time of Quaaludes. Inhibitions slipped and bold actions were taken without thought to consequence. Jocoy made regular trips to the 7-11 for Kodak color slide film. He loaded his camera, then headed on out to the clubs where he photographed everyone from Debbie Harry, Iggy Pop, and Patti Smith to Darby Crash, Exene Cervenka, and Sid Vicious. He also photographed the habitués of the scene, the young men and women that shined brighter than life, each radiating with some much pure and wild energy.

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Read the Full Story at Crave Online

Muriel Cervenka, photographed by Jim Jocoy

Muriel Cervenka, photographed by Jim Jocoy

Categories: 1970s, Art, Crave, Music, Photography, Women

Training Days: The Subways Artists Then & Now

Posted on October 5, 2015

Photo: Bil Rock, Min, and Kel in the City Hall lay-up at night, 1983 ©Henry Chalfant

Photo: Bil Rock, Min, and Kel in the City Hall lay-up at night, 1983 ©Henry Chalfant

Graffiti is like a virus of the best kind. It resides deep in the heart and it makes its presence known in ways large and small. It travels from writer to writer around the world, bringing different handstyles, letterforms, color combinations, and placements to life. It is here today, gone tomorrow, one of the most ephemeral of all the arts.

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Were it not for the photograph, some of the greatest masterpieces of graffiti would be unknown, and so it is with great fortune that Henry Chalfant began taking pictures of New York City trains between the years of 1977-1984. In total he amassed of 800 photographs of full trains from some of the greatest writers working during those years. “I have always been attracted to youthful rebellion and mischief,” Chalfant observes with a gentle laugh.

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In order to photograph a full car when it arrived in the station, Chalfant stood on the platform on the opposite side, so that he could have enough distance to get 15-foot sections of the train inside his viewfinder. Using a 50mm lens, Chalfant took four or five photographs of each car, and then spliced them together using a razor and adhesive tape. As a sculptor, Chalfant’s hand was flawless, as he was able to translate the scale of each train to the photographic image. But the skill needed to get these shots? That was like stalking big game.

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Read the Full Story at Crave Online

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

NY Art Book Fair: Best of the Zines

Posted on September 23, 2015

Sean Maung, Photo by Miss Rosen

Sean Maung, Photo by Miss Rosen

“Freedom of the press is guaranteed only to those who own one,” observed journalist A.J. Liebling, his years in the media serving him well with the knowledge that the publisher is the king or queen of a domain that may or may not be based in fact or any other kind of objective reality. As a result, the Constitution offers rights and protections for any man or woman willing to pay their own way. Liebling wrote at a time that predated the zine, thus unable to foresee that a day would come when Do It Yourself would become a publishing ethos that reigned supreme.

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Zines have existed in one form or another since the days of the American Revolution, when people like Thomas Paine self-published his 1775 pamphlet, Common Sense. But it was not until the 1970s that zines emerged as a movement of their very own, as the punk scene incorporated the highly advantageous ability to use the photocopier to reproduce visual and literary work.

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The New York Art Book Fair presents some of the most exciting and innovative zine publishers working in a variety of formats, papers, and genres. Highlights from this year include 8 Ball Zines, Jennifer Calandra, La Chamba Press, Sean Maung, and WIZARD SKULL (New York); Hamburger Eyes (San Francisco); 4478ZINE (Netherlands), among many others.

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Categories: Art, Brooklyn, Crave, Photography

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