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Interview and Portfolios: Evan Baden

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Lauren, 2010 from Technically Intimate -- Evan Baden

We are pleased to announce that three new portfolios of photographs by Evan Baden can now be viewed on the Photographer Showcase. Evan Baden is one of fifteen photographers included in our current group exhibition The Nude – Classical, Cultural, Contemporary. The photographs in our current exhibit range from classical studies to the exploration of cultural and contemporary themes; some are playful and some investigate more existential realms, while others manage to combine multiple elements. Baden’s photographs explore contemporary culture, technology and human relationships. I have asked Baden to tell us about his background and his images. --Anne Kelly


Anne Kelly:     How were you exposed to the medium of photography?

Evan Baden:     I never had a very large exposure to photography. I’m not one of those artists that will tell you I have been photographing since I was a kid. My first foray into photography was my senior year of high school, which means that I have been photographing for exactly 10 years. I remember thinking I had to take an art course to graduate – it was one of the few things I had left to do – so photo is what I elected to take. A year and a half later, I left Luther College, where I was planning to go into chemical engineering, and enrolled in the College of Visual Arts in St. Paul. It was a drastic shift, but one I never looked back from.

Shannon with iPod from The Illuminati -- Evan Baden
AK:     To my understanding your images are staged but you consider your work to be documentary. How does your process work?

EB:     I think that the word “documentary” carries too much baggage for most people. For some reason, a lot of people feel that documentary photography has to carry with it some sort of “caught-in-the-momentness” that staged photography cannot (I actually disagree with the notion that staged images cannot seem as if they are caught-in-the-moment, as my own images are often thought to have been captured in that way–but that is a whole other argument). In the end, all photography is highly subjective. It comes down to what we as artists choose to show to our viewers in order to make a point or create the feeling we want them to have.

I feel that my images are a recording of and event or events that are happening in contemporary culture. Not singular events, but large cultural shifts. And even though the images are staged and highly constructed, they can be looked back upon some years from now and the viewer should be able to understand some of what was happening in 2007. In that sense, they are a document of the time.

AK:     Your three series The Illuminati, Technically Intimate and Under the Influence are all connected by electronic media. What was the evolution from one series to the next? When you started The Illuminati had your conceived of the future projects or did one just organically lead to the next?

EB:     The evolution of my work happened organically, with one project slowly leading into the next, as my current interests begin to fade and new ones take their place.

I began with The Illuminati really because of the light. It was a reaction to a purely visual interest at first. As I worked on it, and began to watch the people I was interested in photographing, the realization of the connection/isolation paradox of the device became more and more evident until it was hard for me not to see it anymore. I made The Illuminati with an unbiased view in mind, a simple and elegant presentation of something that might be a problem in the years to come.

Nikki with iBook, 2006 and Nick with Chrysler, 2006 from The Illuminati -- Evan Baden

After The Illuminati, I wanted to try and focus on some of the more negative aspects of technology, namely the idea that technology – especially personal communication technology – seems to come between personal relationships. I had all sorts of images that I wanted to make. I came across a website where couples were paid $1000 each for a week’s worth of footage of them “being in a relationship,” which included their sex lives. The way the couples interacted with the camera – as if it was a third person in the relationship – sparked my interest and was the perfect example of technology interrupting the most personal of acts between a couple. This was also right around the time the Sexting phenomenon was just becoming visible. Technically Intimate centers around the attempt by young people to use those same communications devices to transmit intimacy to one another. What I found was that whatever intimacy there might have been in the original act was filtered out by the technology (especially when viewed by a third party) and the acts become more pornographic than anything else.

Working on Technically Intimate and seeing the way that young people posed for the camera got me thinking about the way that they learn those poses; which is how I ended up focusing on the way that popular culture and media effect those who grow up surrounded by it. Under the Influence focuses less on the technology that transmits the images than the content of the images transmitted. And while the technology plays a part in that transmission, the work is more about the way that young people learn to express themselves in an overtly sexual manner (perhaps without fully grasping the overtness of the symbols) and the way that the media they absorb makes them crave the spotlight like never before.

AK:     In your writings about The Illuminati you describe the electronic media we carry as divinity in our pockets and purses – please expand on this.

EB:     That line is something that I have thought about for a long time. It still amazes me the amount of information and connection I receive from my phone. I really can’t imagine my life without my phone, much less the Internet in general. These devices, and the ability to have immediate access to information and connection to people around the world is really astonishing when you think about what existed 20 years ago. That ability, as odd as it sounds, to reach out and touch someone like that, is really a mystical power and is probably as close to divinity as we will ever get.

Jenna, 2009 from Technically Intimate -- Evan Baden

AK:     The images in Technically Intimate are staged based on images sourced from the Internet – and using models solicited via the internet. What was the process of selecting the images and your intensions with this project?

EB:     The images that were used for Technically Intimate were all found on the Internet, on websites that specifically trafficked in pornographic or semi-pornongraphic (if that is even a thing) images that had been taken by one person and sent to another. Through some turn of events that image, whose intention was to remain private, found its way to the Internet for the whole world to see.

As I began the project, there weren’t a lot of these sites (now there are thousands) but the imagery was still quite vast. I began to notice that there were really only a few different ‘types’ of images that were taken. I went about making my images based on the most interesting images from each ‘type’, the idea being to capture – in general – the way that these images were being made.

As for the models, most were found soliciting volunteers from Craigslist. I would post an ad for the project, explaining what I was doing and who I was. Then, with the model, would select an image from the number I wanted to make.

It was important to me that the people that modeled in the images weren’t being paid to do so. It was important that the reason they wanted to be in an image was not money, but that they really wanted to be there. That has always been important for me with any of the projects. I want the making of my images to be more of a cooperative experience than an employer/employee relationship. I actually still keep in touch with just about everyone that modeled for me.

Nicole, 2009 from Technically Intimate -- Evan Baden

AK:     Your images are quite colorful (especially in Technically Intimate) and the exhibition prints are quite large. Tell us about your use of color and scale.

EB:     The color and composition of the images comes down to me wanting to make an aesthetically pleasing image. The goal is to pull in a viewer with an image that can’t be ignored, then to have them either confront something that they are uncomfortable with or explore something they are interested in. The image has to be aesthetically pleasing to get the viewer there in the first place.

The size is important because of the small details in the image that can be overlooked when the images are smaller. In the image that is currently hanging at photo-eye (Lauren), there are Post-it notes on the floor next to the character in the image. It is important for the viewer to realize that as silly and random as the action of the character might appear, there is actually a fair amount of thought that goes into it.

There is also something about confronting a person in an image that begins to boarder on life-size. There is just a different reaction from the viewer. The viewer begins to relate to the characters in a different way.

And finally, and this is more important with Under the Influence, the expansiveness of the image actually begins to place the viewer in the same space as the characters in the images. As you step closer to the image, you are enveloped by it, and you are no longer ‘looking in’ on an image, but instead you are observing an action.

AK:     You had an exhibit of Technically Intimate in Minneapolis that was expected to cause an uproar. I am guessing there is a good story here?

EB:     Unfortunately not really. I began Technically Intimate as part of the Jerome Fellowship for Emerging Artists in Minneapolis in 2008. As part of the Fellowship, an exhibit was to be held the following year featuring the work of the five Fellows. Since this was only my second body of work and I was really unsure of myself, I didn’t show the work to anyone except the writer for the catalog and the administrator of the grant. The exhibit was to take place at MCAD in Minneapolis, and there was a great worry about the work I was going to show (there were only rumors about what I had been making). In the end, like usually happens, there was a big worry but no real controversy. Viewers were uncomfortable, which was the intent, but the images are so well composed, lit, printed, and presented that it is hard to chalk them up to ‘porn’. So, that’s the story, and it happens just about every time the work shows.

Poppin' Bottles, 2013 from Under the Influence -- Evan Baden

AK:     In Under the Influence you are staging portraits with teens in which they emulate iconic figures that they admire — your premise being that young people are constantly flooded by imagery of iconic figures –- almost at the level of religion -- which shapes behavior. This is also a work in progress —what have you learned so far?

The most interesting thing I have seen while making the work is how seriously the people I am working with take the making of the images. To me, their level of cooperation was unexpected. The teens I am working with are really quite fantastic, no matter how ridiculous what we are doing is. They know exactly what I want them to do, can execute it exactly the way I want, and take the shoot more seriously than some professional models I have worked with. I have realized just what a ‘big deal’ the shoots are for them.

Gone Wild... from Under the Influence -- Evan Baden

AK:     The titles in Under the Influence are very important to the work – please tell us a little more about the them.

The titles for the images are important for me because they are the last remnant of the original source image. Again, the images I am making with these teens are all iconic images of pop stars or famous people important to the models. I ask them to re-perform a particular image that features one of those icons. These are usually from magazines, which often will put large text either on the image itself or just next to the image. In the end, the image I make with the model is usually somewhat removed from the original image, so the titles – which are taken word-for-word from the text that appeared on or with the original image – are the only thing that is left ‘as it was’ from the source. The notable thing about the titular text is the way that it interacts with, and informs, the actions of the characters in the images.

Evan Baden shooting Gone Wild...


View Evan Baden's Portfolios

A selection of Baden's work can currently be seen as part of The Nude on exhibit at photo-eye through April and features the work of fifteen photographers. Two portfolios of work from the show can be viewed here.

For additional information about Evan Baden's work or to acquire a photograph, please contact the gallery at (505) 988-5152 x202 or by email.

Book Review: Up and Down Peachtree

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Up and Down Peachtree. Photographs by Martin Parr.
Contrasto, 2012.
Up and Down Peachtree
Reviewed by Joscelyn Jurich

Up and Down Peachtree
Photographs by Martin Parr
Contrasto, 2012. Hardbound. 208 pp., 100 color illustrations, 8x10-1/2".


"Don't be scared of photographing a storm-out, crying fit or strop…" British photographer Martin Parr advised readers in a 2010 Guardian column about vacation photography. "I would argue that the more valuable document is the honest one." Parr's vivid documentary chronicle of Atlanta's main's street, Peachtree Street, is a provocative, pleasurable mix of honesty and hyperbole.

Originally commissioned for Atlanta's High Museum of Art's June 2012 "Picturing the South" exhibition, Parr's documentary project was exhibited at the High Museum alongside work by photographers Kael Alford and Shane Lavalette. A documentary about Parr's work in Atlanta in 2010 and 2011 has also been made into a documentary film, "Hot Spots: Martin Parr in the American South" which premiered in June 2012. Though Parr was on assignment in Atlanta rather than on holiday, he has the eye of a consistently curious and genuinely engaged outsider who wants to document even and especially the most quotidian of details. For Parr, the everyday is rich, valuable and often wryly comical.

Up and Down Peachtree, by Martin Parr. Published by Contrasto, 2012.

The book opens with a two-page close-up portrait in profile of a middle-aged man that emphasizes the saturated colors and pronounced textures that delight Parr. His stringy blond hair and a scraggly beard graze a cream shirt printed with orange and yellow tulips and he's standing in front of square turquoise structure with a red SNACK BAR sign affixed to its roof. The viewer is going where he's headed: down Peachtree Street, replete with gay rights advocates holding up signs reading I "heart" my gay sons; gay rights opponents holding up banners that read "I now pronounce you pervert and pervert;" couples ballroom dancing around a swimming pool; groups of Braves' fans drinking cans of Bud Light in a parking lot. We will also encounter a woman licking her lips in between bites of a corn dog slathered with ketchup and mustard; a woman's fake aqua and lilac striped nails digging into a hunk of roasted meat; a disembodied arm offering an oversize candy apple coated with multicolored sprinkles to a disinterested child.

Up and Down Peachtree, by Martin Parr. Published by Contrasto, 2012.

An honest image for Parr is a close-up of a person or object that possesses discomfiting, tantalizing details, like the portrait of an African American woman wearing a platinum wig with nylon hairs poking out around her forehead; her heavily eye shadowed eyes are half-open and her mouth partially agape to reveal a wide gap between her two front teeth. Or it may reveal the dynamics of social interaction at a fancy garden party, a Pentecostal church service or a dog show. One of the collection's most evocative group environmental portraits is of four female wait staff standing behind the Formica counter at their classic diner, the Silver Skillet. Each of the women's expressions is revealing and distinct; their backdrop is a wall decorated with hand-lettered signs advertising Roast Beef Sandwiches, Country Grilled Ham Steaks, Chicken Salad Cold Plates, Fruit and Ice Box Pies. Parr relishes the repetition of commercial signs and products: stacks of jumbo plastic football shaped jars of pretzels on a supermarket shelf, rows of bright red and white flips flops printed with the Coca Cola logo. And he delights in droll, bold juxtapositions: one page we see a photograph of a church deacon holding a palm leaf; on the facing page, we see a panda at the zoo munching a bamboo leaf. He also revels in showing how an image differs as a cropped close up and as a larger print that reveals the original context. One page shows a full size image of a fried corn dog in all its phallic grandeur; on the next page, we see a blond hair woman at a street fair biting into it. 

Up and Down Peachtree, by Martin Parr. Published by Contrasto, 2012.

The collection's prints almost all take up a full page, published without any captions or identifying information. Parr's photographs are large in scale and personality: they are flashy, brash, whimsical and garish and much less subtle than Garry Winogrand's work, one of Parr's most revered photographers. His style and subject matter is almost akin to Tom Wolfe's early journalism: performative, opinionated and exaggerated. But his curiosity, energy and delight in his subject matter is palpable and infectious for the viewer, who enthusiastically becomes the photographer's fellow traveler down Peachtree Street. "Life is weird. If only we could see it," said Parr in a 2003 interview. Thankfully, he is here to show us.—JOSCELYN JURICH

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JOSCELYN JURICH is a freelance journalist and critic whose work has appeared in numerous publications, including the New York Times, Bookforum, Publishers Weekly and the Village Voice.

Audio and Slides from David Carol's Artist Talk at photo-eye

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David Carol speaking at photo-eye Gallery

It was our pleasure to host an artist talk and book signing on March 23rd at photo-eye Gallery and we are happy to be able to share with you audio and slides from the presentation.



Signed copies of the three books that Carol mentions during the talk, 40 Miles of Bad Road, All My Lies Are True and This Is Why We Can't Have Nice Things, are available through the photo-eye Bookstore. See all of them here.

Book Review: Return to Sender

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Return to Sender. By Sipke Visser.
Self Published, 2013.
Return to Sender
Reviewed by Colin Pantall

Return to Sender
By Sipke Visser.
Self Published, 2013. Hardbound. 512 pp., illustrated throughout, 6x8-1/4".

The idea of Return to Sender is very simple. Photographer and retoucher, Sipke Visser sent envelopes containing a picture, a stamped addressed envelope and a handwritten letter asking for people to respond to the picture; 'Write whatever like something about the letter, yourself, the weather. About where you are, who you are, or where you'd like to be. Or send me a picture, anything...'

The book consists of three parts; the pictures Visser sent out, the responses he got, and the correspondence he entered into as a result of these responses. The first thing you notice is how Visser's pictures recede into the background; they become a kind of visual muzak that is secondary to the responses that are made. Instead, the responses are what make the book, a vernacular critique of Visser's vernacular snapshot photographs.

Return to Sender, by Sipke Visser. Published by Self Published, 2013.

Picture 93 is a fox dressed in bling and surrounded by gold handbags. Visser's first attempt to send it out failed and it was returned to sender due to insufficient postage. The next attempt did not fail. The one word message Visser was sent was 'Disgusting!' and the picture was ripped into tiny little pieces. So we are getting an added layer here, a vernacular response that ends up being reinterpreted as a kind of found photography.

Return to Sender, by Sipke Visser. Published by Self Published, 2013.
Visser's ninety-second picture (a power station) received a conversational reply from a cock-breeding fisherman, a man who clearly enjoyed nothing more than sharing his life story with whoever would listen. And in this case, it was Visser who was doing the listening. Visser and the fisherman got into correspondence and next thing you know, the fisherman is sending over pictures of a fishing boat and fighting cocks to add to Visser's eclectic collection. Again, a new kind of album is being made organically, one where snapshot meets snapshot, where Visser takes us on a journey to the centre of the vernacular earth and back again.

What people see in the photographs or want from the photographs also forms part of the project. One correspondent asks that if Visser were to send another photograph it should be '…anything but foliage, for example maybe a piece of fruit that resembles a human face or a meerkat.'

Return to Sender, by Sipke Visser. Published by Self Published, 2013.


There are responses from other photographers, from a designer (who Visser invites out for a drink), fast car aficionados and a person who writes 'I am afraid I could not accept pictures of Boxing.' Many of the correspondents make the assumption that Visser is a student and the project part of his studies, others analyse the pictures in isolation. 'But I hope you don’t think it is art,' writes G.S. 'I cannot understand how an unmade bed, or half a dissected cow, or a pool of urine could ever be considered art.'

Religious propaganda, Lovefilm vouchers and other tokens are sent to Visser. He gets a hyperactive note from a correspondent who asks, 'Sipke are you an angel?...... Or perhaps a friend of the mysterious Bad Person?' --> No xxx mmm who knows your secret?'

Return to Sender, by Sipke Visser. Published by Self Published, 2013.

And that is the question to ask of the book? What is its secret? Does it have a secret? It's not in the pictures (he sent out 500 of them) which never quite gel and come second to the responses he got. But at the same time, it's not in the responses he got; there aren't enough of them, though the ones he does have are immensely charming and engaging. However, there is something interesting happening in Return to Sender and it is to do with how people see and understand photographs, something that can be extended into broader visual culture. It's that 'something' that makes Return to Sender interesting despite its excess.—COLIN PANTALL

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COLIN PANTALL is a UK-based writer and photographer. He is a contributing writer for the British Journal of Photography and a Senior Lecturer in Photography at the University of Wales, Newport.http://colinpantall.blogspot.com.

In-Print Photobook Video #18: A Portrait of the Artist As a Young Mother by Katharina Bosse

Interview and Portfolio: Ronald Cowie

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Where There Is No Boat, I Will Put A Boat -- Ronald Cowie

Ronald Cowie's Leaving Babylon is a portfolio of beautiful Platinum/Palladium images. His enigmatic scenes have a special ambience; they are dreamy and poetic, places of contemplation. Cowie says of this body of work, “I made the images in Leaving Babylon to understand the question of how to live with faith and fear. Leaving Babylon is the visual record of a landscape that exists inside and among us.”

We are pleased to announce an update to Ronald Cowie's Leaving Babylon portfolio on the Photographer's Showcase, which now features a selection of new images. We've taken this opportunity to ask Cowie a few questions about his work, inspiration and craft.

Ulysses -- Ronald Cowie

Sarah Bradley:     How did you get started in photography?

Ronald Cowie:     When I was six years old, my family moved to Janesville, Wisconsin. We lived across the street from Nan Lewis, a photographer. I called her “Mrs. Lewis”. She was the first person I saw with a camera. At the same time, I found the photobook of Alfred Stieglitz’s portraits of Georgia O’Keefe. I didn’t make a connection between what Mrs. Lewis was doing and what I saw in the Stieglitz book, but most journeys start quietly.

My parents gave me a Canon AE-1 for Christmas when I was a freshman in high school. I photographed friends, pets, and classmates. That camera was stolen. I assumed it was a sign that I wasn’t supposed to be a photographer. I was mistaken.

I attended the University of Cincinnati where I eventually became the photo editor of the student run newspaper. I spent most of my time in the darkroom.

After a few stints as a custom color printer at various commercial photo labs, I moved to Boston to attend The New England School Of Photography. That’s where I learned how to think and communicate visually. I discovered an entire family of photographers I never knew existed.

After I graduated, I assisted a few professional photographers on location and in their darkroom. That was my graduate school. I have an MFA from the School Of Making A Living.

Sweet Thud Of Night, 2010 and My Heart And Soul, They Are Free. -- Ronald Cowie

SB:     I'm interested in the origins of the Leaving Babylon series. It seems to be a very intuitive project. How did it develop? Are they scenes that you stumble upon or do the photographs require planning?

RC:     Up until Leaving Babylon, I was making pictures to learn how to make pictures, if that makes sense. I wasn’t making personal work. I made images that demonstrated my mastery of the mechanics of a camera and nuances of platinum printing. I wasn’t very satisfied with the images and was very frustrated at myself. I knew I was the source of my being stuck.

Leaving Babylon came about when I gave myself permission to create images I wanted to see. It developed a process for working that involved a lot of faith. An excellent definition of faith is what happens when a finite being opens themselves to the infinite. So, the process of making these images was very natural but also fraught with real insecurity. My process involves telling the demons of Sloth and Pride to be quiet while I set up the camera.

All of the photographs were made close to where I live. The process of making the images for Leaving Babylon was a process of surrender. I kept my camera and tripod in the back of my car. When a little voice told me to stop and see what’s there, I did it. After a while, I grew to trust that voice. Some of the most powerful images were the result of having no plan or interest in making a picture but doing it because “I said so.”

To answer the question, I planned to stumble upon the images.

Peace Of The Lord -- Ronald Cowie

SB:     Who are your influences -- photographic or otherwise?

RC:     This isn’t a comprehensive list but here are a few and why.

Keith Carter: He demonstrates that making art is a noble and curious thing. He also demonstrated a tremendous work ethic and faith. He was the one who passed on the advice about having a sense of place in one’s work. I am grateful for his friendship and support through the years.

Duane Michals: I saw him speak in Boston when I was a student. He was the first person to ever give voice to the folly of perfectionism I was struggling under. I love the way he tells huge stories with simple elements.

Herman Melville: Moby Dick is one of the most amazing novels ever written. If I make a body of work with as much nuance, depth, zest, and poetry as that novel, I will rest easy in the arms of eternity.

Annie Leibovitz: The only relationship I have with her is through her commercial work and the books she produces. I’m an admirer of the level of craft and dedication she brings to her work. While I could be wrong, I get the impression that she still shows up for work to do a job.

David Zadig: He is a photographer living in Norway. I was his first assistant when we both lived in Boston. He was doing things with a large format camera that directly influenced how I made the images in Leaving Babylon. He also instilled in me a work ethic and dedication to the craft of making images that I will be forever grateful to have received. He taught me how to make great images and be a human being at the same time. The creative risks he took in his career for the pursuit of what really matters has not been lost on me.

Jesus Christ: He wasn’t the first person in history to suggest being nice was a better way to travel but, he sure did put his money where his mouth was. His living example provides a necessary compass for living but the journey is mine to take. I’m learning that I don’t have to have all the answers in order to move forward and grow. Leaving Babylon is a reflection of that mindset.

Bob Cowie (my father): I have not always appreciated the well intended and unsolicited advice but that doesn’t mean I don’t take it on board. He has been right more often than not with regards to my career. The only real issue arises when he gives advice about six to twelve months before I’m ready to hear it. Such is life and I am grateful.

Vanne Cowie (my mother): I get a lot of my creative energy and talent from her. She is always making something wherever she goes. That is a rare and important thing. She taught me how to seek beauty in the world around me.

To Which A Broken Heart Always Replies "Yes" -- Ronald Cowie

SB:     You teach Alternative Processes at the New England School of Photography. How have alternative photographic processes informed your personal work?

RC:     19th century photo processes all require attention to one’s surroundings. I need to be connected and attentive to what the weather is like during a print session.

The processes that engage me are fairly easy to learn but difficult to master. I’m reminded of what goes into making a great pot of tea. It’s more than just adding dried leaves to hot water. Water temperature, type of tea, the amount of time the tea needs to steep, etc. The Japanese have a few opinions on how to make a cup of tea, I’m told.

Teaching alternative processes really is teaching a photographer how to make something by breaking it down into its elemental parts. When printing platinum, I need to be aware of the paper characteristics, the relative humidity, and the temperature and age of the developer. Each one of these parts can be broken down into smaller parts. By focusing on each step in faith, I make better work. My students do too. So, the actual process becomes a touchstone for more engaged observation.


SB:     The prints from the Leaving Babylon series are Platinum/Palladium prints and made using a combination of modern and antique photographic techniques. Can you talk about the process that you've used to create the Leaving Babylon series?

Kingdom Of Obviousness -- Ronald Cowie
RC:     The images in Leaving Babylon were made with a large format view camera. All selective focus/distortion was made in camera. I then had high resolution drum scans made of the negatives so I could interpret them the way I “saw” them using Photoshop. Then I made a new negative that was calibrated to the platinum printing process. I realize that this workflow isn’t that different from what the original masters of the medium were doing with their negatives. I just have a better tool for the job.

With all the inherent variables and expense printing in platinum presents, being able to create a custom made negative saves a lot of heartache. It also insures that the image people see in the online gallery looks like the one that shows up on their doorstep after making a purchase.



For additional information about Ronald Cowie's work or to acquire a photograph, please contact the gallery at (505) 988-5152 x202 or by email.

Book Review: A Period of Juvenile Prosperity

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A Period of Juvenile Prosperity. Photographs by Mike Brodie.
Twin Palms, 2013.
A Period of Juvenile Prosperity
Reviewed by Sarah Bradley

A Period of Juvenile Prosperity
Photographs by Mike Brodie.
Twin Palms Publishers, Santa Fe, 2013. Hardbound. 120 pp., 62 color illustrations, 9x12".


If you hadn’t seen Mike Brodie’s photographs when they first made the internet rounds in 2008, they are hard to miss now with his new book titled A Period of Juvenile Prosperity and several exhibitions with the same name. The beautiful and romantic photographs of natty, if dirty, young vagabond train hoppers -- cultural outsiders living a life of freedom most dare only fantasize about -- are captivating. As is Brodie himself. He hasn't simply documented the strange and lovely creatures of this life; he's one of them -- thus providing the authenticity the art world often craves. Born in 1985, he hopped his first train at 18 and began making portraits with a Polaroid camera he found in the back of a friend’s car. He was never trained in photography and called himself The Polaroid Kidd after the prolific boxcar tagger The Kodak Kidd. When Polaroid discontinued the film, he started shooting 35mm, and when he put the images on the internet the art world responded resoundingly. Then Brodie stopped making photographs to become a mechanic. It’s like art-world catnip – enticing and edgy subject matter, an embodiment of a spirit of youthful adventure, and an undeniably authentic photographer who has quit the art world right when interest is peaking. There is a lot here to talk about, but ultimately it all gets in the way of what actually makes the images in A Period of Juvenile Prosperity so special. None of it accounts for the power of Brodie’s photographic voice, which has been so thoughtfully distilled in the book from Twin Palms.

A Period of Juvenile Prosperity, by Mike Brodie. Published by Twin Palms Publishers, 2012.

The book's selection sticks to Brodie's 35mm work and doesn't include any of the early Polaroids. It's carefully edited but with an easy hand, and everything feels designed to let the photographs speak for themselves. The image that wraps the book’s boards of two kids sleeping in a train car is arresting in its softness and intimacy, but also intriguing. You can’t help but notice the sleepers’ odd clothing and tattoos or the copy of The Rum Diaries under head. It provides a perfect entry point, and after a photograph that serves as endpaper we’re right into the images with little more than a title page. The book opens with what are ultimately Brodie’s most widely memorable photographs taken on or near trains. Outsider youth and the iconic American landscape share the frame. These images capture the sensation of freedom and adventure that easily draw people in, but they are also more personal than may be expected. This isn’t exactly a documentary project. Brodie has made images that are only possible when you’re really living the life, but he's also done so with a rare honesty. He photographs what he loves from instinct and his images draw you in. We are invited in to see what he sees, experience his life through his eyes. The images are both private and inviting, full of warmth but clearly made with a decisive eye. The preciousness of Polaroid film can make a very good teacher.

A Period of Juvenile Prosperity, by Mike Brodie. Published by Twin Palms Publishers, 2012.
A Period of Juvenile Prosperity, by Mike Brodie. Published by Twin Palms Publishers, 2012.

Part way through, trains are left behind and the experience of traveling comes into view. We see arrests and injuries, portraits of a few outsiders, members of Brodie’s community in squats, the interiors of cars. They are grim in places, and for all the romanticism of the photographs on trains, these later images ground the project. There’s vitality in a life like this; the community is close but the threat is as real as the adventure. The title feels apt. Brodie’s work has frequently been placed it in the context of the American travel icons like Huck Finn and Kerouac. It’s not a perfect fit, but they are kindred to what this book draws out. These are not photographs taken by jumping in front of the action, but from within it, from the experience of travel. The images in the book come off like stolen glances, memories made while the world is moving by, making it feel diaristic. It’s a feeling aided by Brodie’s essay that closes the photographs, which reads a bit like a confession – a rundown of critical life moments rather than a statement about the work. It's perfect -- given the lack of art-world ambition, we couldn't ask for anything more. Twin Palms made a good call by letting it remain the only text.

A Period of Juvenile Prosperity, by Mike Brodie. Published by Twin Palms Publishers, 2012.
A Period of Juvenile Prosperity, by Mike Brodie. Published by Twin Palms Publishers, 2012.

I could write a whole other essay on Brodie’s outsider status, how half the art world has gobbled up him and his work while the other half seems slightly miffed. I really like Brodie’s work. My life has never included train hopping, but I recognize these kids. They’ve been part of my community, slept on my couch when rambling through town. I understand the urge to take these photographs. From the impression of him I’ve gathered from interviews, Brodie seems to have a solid enough idea of himself and a true enough understanding of his own fulfillment that I don’t think he’ll bend from pressure to make a photographic project out of anything other than passion. If he chooses to take pictures again, I’d love to see them. But if not, A Period of Juvenile Prosperity is enough.—SARAH BRADLEY

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SARAH BRADLEY is a writer, sculptor, costumer and general maker of things currently living in Santa Fe, NM. Some of her work can be seen on her occasionally updated blog. She has been employed by photo-eye since 2008 and is Editor of photo-eye Blog and Magazine.

Interview: Jon Naiman on Familiar Territory

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Familiar Territory by Jon Naiman
Published by Editions Patrick Frey
Published by Edition Patrick Frey, Familiar Territory by Jon Naiman is a beautifully designed large-scale monograph of unusual portraits. For this series, Naiman photographed families with the farm animals they keep, but instead of making the portraits outside or in the barn, the creatures were invited into the family home. Donkeys, goats, horses, geese and cows pose in the wood paneled Swiss interiors, the family gathered around, at times with a book on their lap, but always in dialogue with the camera. There's an element of humor, but more than anything we are invited to stare and the people, and often the animals too, stare right back. The calmly surreal scenes disturb our assumptions about the human/animal relationship and the idea of what belongs inside or out: "American photographer Jon Naiman invokes the traditions of portrait and documentary photography as a way to investigate culture, habitat, domesticity, family and gender roles, as well as our relationship with animals. Although the photographs are orchestrated and carefully composed, Naiman has managed to capture moments of intimacy." - Edition Patrick Frey

photo-eye has been proud to have a portfolio from Naiman's Familiar Territory series on the Photographer's Showcase for several years and were happy to have the opportunity to ask him a few questions about the project and the new book.

from Familiar Territory by Jon Naiman

Sarah Bradley:     Familiar Territory brings what are typically perceived as farm animals into the domestic setting for portraits with the families who care for them. It’s an unusual idea and I’m curious about the origins of the series. How did it come to you?

Jon Naiman:     I had been visiting Switzerland a number of times and had encountered a culture there in which farm animals seemed to be omnipresent. It seemed to have a lot to do with the history and landscape. For me, this contrast with Brooklyn, where I was living, was quite a shock. I wanted to do something exploring this, though a typical portrait of farm life wouldn't have been interesting to me. I wanted to find a way to shift the ground just enough to not only look at the subjects (the people and farm animals) but also change the dynamic. The fact that the animals often live only a short distance away from their owners' homes made me wonder if I might collapse this boundary. The distance is short, but the thin boundaries separating the human spaces from animal spaces are buttressed by strong taboos, such as those separating the civilized and the wild, the clean and the unclean, etc. There are blurry areas, such as with cats and dogs, which often are kept in the house, as house pets. In earlier times, farm animals also were sometimes kept in the living space of people for warmth and for protection. In fact, with one of the portraits in Familiar Territory, the pig actually did live in the house with the woman. Anyhow, challenging this cultural divide between those that belong inside and those that belong outside was intriguing for me. I also was interested in how the personal spaces of these living rooms, each uniquely decorated, became, through the photographing, a public stage, the reverse of its normal status as the retreat away from the out of doors and the public realm.

from Familiar Territory by Jon Naiman

SB:     I imagine that there was a lot of potential for chaos when shooting this series, yet you managed to capture tranquil domestic scenes. What was your process? Did you have to alter your set up to contend with the difficulties of animal wrangling?

JN:     Each of these shoots was a gamble. Most of them, I arrived at without any scouting, and didn't know what I'd find. I had to be prepared for anything. One couldn't predict how the animal might react on being brought inside into the tighter confines of a living room with furnishings, people, camera and lights. I was lucky these families were willing to go along with me on this. When it came down to it, though, it rarely got out of control. Farm animals are to some extent obedient. I shot the project with a 4x5 camera. The process with large format shooting is cumbersome and slow for portraits and rather unwise to use for photographing animals. But I felt I wanted to capture as much detail as possible in the subjects and their spaces. I also like composing an image on the large plane of a 4x5 ground glass. I used strobes for lighting because I wanted to both stop motion and use smaller apertures for a greater depth of field. I did certainly have to consider that one or more large and powerful animals would be there. I didn't want them or the people to get hurt. Nor a house to get wrecked. On one of the shoots a donkey spontaneously turned his head to look to the side. The young girl sitting on a chair beside it was suddenly knocked to the floor and the wooden chair broke. The family were very nice about it and told me that the chair had previously been broken. On another occasion, when I was under the dark cloth composing the shot, I heard a loud crashing sound. My first thought was that one of the strobe lights had been knocked over or had blown out. But it turned out that the two male goats in the shot had gotten aggressive and were butting their heads together. They had to be separated.

from Familiar Territory by Jon Naiman
from Familiar Territory by Jon Naiman

SB:     You've mentioned the gaze as being a fixture of this body of work, and it certainly is striking. In many of the images, the subjects seem to be returning the inquisitive gaze of the viewer, really looking out of the portrait. Can you tell us more about the importance of the gaze in this photographic series? Was it difficult to capture?

JN:     With the subjects in the Familiar Territory images, it was important for me to achieve a comfort level among all those portrayed, both people and animals, to have the situation feel rather normal. Had the people predominately been eyeing the animal, with fear, anticipation, or whatever, it would distract from this relaxed atmosphere. A connecting look between the subjects and the camera/photographer/viewer does, as you suggest, provoke a direct connection with the viewer. It took a great deal of effort to get to those moments, particularly with group shots and as I often had to focus a lot on getting the animal's attention and keeping them from walking out of the frame.

from Familiar Territory by Jon Naiman

SB:     There’s a definite element of humor in your work; in this particular series, using juxtaposition to create an absurd scenario that highlights how skewed our perceptions can be. Some similar elements can be seen in your series Natural Selection where people are presented inside natural history dioramas along with the animals. Can you talk about the use of humor and juxtaposition in your photographic work?

JN:     I think the humor is there in that expectations are thwarted. When what we know from previous experience is not confirmed but instead turned on its head, it can be humorous. Confusion, shock, offense, anger, anxiety, etc. are other possible responses to a diversion from the expected. Humor can draw viewers in, but then there needs to be more to it. With both the series' that you mentioned, Familiar Territory and Natural Selection, a form of placement and scale are used to consider some of the oddities of subject. People portrayed in their homes is rather normal. However, when a farm animal is there in the same space, it highlights the oddity of decoration, furnishing, clothing, and human spaces. The animal allows a certain absurd look at these style choices because of their inconsequentiality to him. It makes me think of Gary Larson's The Far Side and the way that the animals with human habits and thoughts in those cartoons allowed us to laugh at (and reflect on) our own absurdities. Likewise, when a human is suddenly inside the space of a savannah, a jungle, or a mountain landscape in a natural history museum diorama, in amongst the animal specimens, like with the Natural Selection images, it breaks the fantasy and begins to question the institutional form.

Jon Naiman and Familiar Territory on press

SB:     The oversized book from Editions Patrick Frey is a beautiful object. How did it come together?

JN:     I first met Patrick and I hadn't known that much about the books he'd done. He was into my Familiar Territory images and said that they wanted to do the book. But their timetable was long, as they do only a small number of books per year. As months went by between meetings, I wasn't sure that it would actually get made. With further meetings and steps forward it became slowly more and more real. I'd progressively had a chance to see more of the books they'd published and got to appreciate the eclectic range and high quality. Patrick has a great eye and really got what Familiar Territory was about and what it could be as a book. We knew early on that we wanted to make a book large enough to see the detail in the images. The book designers had a very good sense for structure and giving the images and text enough space to breathe with white space and pacing. The cover was a puzzle for a long time. The type seemed to fight with the cover photograph. Finally, we came to this elegant solution of having a simple text-only front with the image on the back cover. One had to pick the book up, and turn it in ones hands to find the image on the back and vice-versa to find the title. The book-as-object that one experiences with the hands as well as with the eyes was important to us from the beginning.

Naiman shooting on location
SB:     Is there a new project that you're working on?

JN:     There is, but its in its early stages, so I don't like to say too much. Animals probably won't play a central role though. The completing of the Familiar Territory series and the birthing of the book was so absorbing in the last two years, that its taken some time to clear my head and get any headway on new work.

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A selection of prints from Familiar Territory can be viewed in Jon Naiman's Photographer's Showcase portfolio

New on Publisher Direct

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Broken Things by Sam Seager, Photographic Exposure Calculations and Camera Operation by Michael G. Prais
and Irish Tinkers: A Portrait of Irish Travellers in the 1970s by Janine Wiedel

Broken Things by Sam Seager documents the site of Japan's historic earthquake and tsunami of 2011 on its first anniversary. The title refers to both the emotional and physical damage caused by the earthquake and tsunami. The photographs explore life after a great loss and the enduring human spirit.

Irish Tinkers: A Portrait of Irish Travellers in the 1970s by Janine Wiedel is a fascinating glimpse into the vanishing world of a nomadic people, who, through the efforts of globalization, have rendered their skills of tinsmithing, flower-making and spoon-mending obsolete. The black & white photographs depict every day life on the fringe of society and their daily struggles to survive.
In Photographic Exposure Calculations and Camera Operation, Michael G. Prais debunks some of the most ubiquitous myths that appear in photography textbooks and instructional manuals. The sunny f/16 rule, exposure compensation, and the myth of 18% as midtone are explored and deconstructed. Prais offers new insights into some of the most common misconceptions about the technical aspects of the photographic process.



All Publisher Direct titles are available for order through the publisher via a special link within their listing.

See all the Publisher Direct books here.

photo-eye Auctions: Signed D'Agata, Sherman, Watson, Heinecken & More

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Leading off this week's offerings in photo-eye Auctions is a lot of four signed books by controversial photographer Antoine D'Agata, whose visceral images of the nether worlds of sex, drugs and self-destruction have earned him comparisons to Larry Clark and Nan Goldin, with whom he studied at ICP in New York. (Though the more apt comparison would be to the writer William T. Vollman, with whom he shares what the Paris Review called a "unique engagement of his own personality with his work.")

Two very different takes on our erotic drives come to us courtesy of the late Dutch photographer Sanne Sannes in his 1972 classic, The Face of Love and Bettina Rheims elegantly raunchy Morceaux Choisis.

Also on the block, Colors Cacas [Sh*T]: A Coffee-Table Book a somewhat tongue-in-cheek look at, yes, poop. It is included in Parr and Badger, The Photobook: A History, Vol. II in their chapter titled, 'The Düsseldorf Tendency.' Not surprisingly, it is also the current favorite of Jacob, my four year old son!

Other listings this week include signed books by Robert Frank, Cindy Sherman, Constantine Manos and Julian Schnabel. Be sure to check out Eric's weekly presentation where he opines on a few of this week's selections.

Book Review: Punk Press

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Punk Press. Edited by Vincent Berniere and Mariel Primois.
Abrams Books, 2013.
Punk Press
Reviewed by Blake Andrews

Punk Press
Edited by Vincent Bernière and Mariel Primois.
Abrams Books, 2013. Softcover. 240 pp., 160 color illustrations, 9x13-1/4".


There are two kinds of photo books, those concerned with the primacy of the image -- in which the book is merely a secondary vessel -- and those more concerned with the book itself as an artistic form.

And I suppose there's a third kind too, books that aren't concerned with being photo books at all. The recent Abrams book Punk Press falls into this category. Yes, the book contains photos, but they are incidental to the content and poorly reproduced. If you're looking for a volume of finely toned art prints to fawn over, this ain't it.

And that's as it should be. Punk is unpolished. In fact that's sort of the point of it. Grainy half-tones from old magazines bleeding into the gutter are completely appropriate. String a few hundred together in herky-jerky order, number the pages by hand, and you've got Punk Press the book, a wonderful assortment of posters, essays, rants, and clippings from old punk magazines circa 1968-1980.

Punk Press, by Vincent Bernière and Mariel Primois. Published by Abrams Books, 2013.

Punk music may have begun as a reaction against bland pop schmaltz, but it wasn't built entirely upon rebellion. If punk stood for anything constructive -- a premise that might be argued by Johnny Rotten, et al -- it was the Do-It-Yourself aesthetic. Gone were the days when a producer would hire out everything from songwriting to temporary session bands. Punk bands didn't need labels. They didn't need sound effects, distribution, or even a recording studio. They'd handle all of that themselves, thank you very much.

Punk Press, by Vincent Bernière and Mariel Primois. Published by Abrams Books, 2013.

And the homegrown media that quickly blossomed around the music followed suit. Xeroxed show bills served as press releases. Much of the reporting was compressed into hand-written accounts. "The punk fanzine reflected the music," writes Jon Savage in Punk Press's introduction, "in that there was very little, in fact no, distance between having the idea, executing it, then broadcasting it to the world." The fanzines covered a huge range in quality and distribution. Some were mere copies bound with staples. Other magazines achieved widespread sales in newsstands. What they all had in common was an irrepressible enthusiasm for the nascent movement. Even three decades later skimming clippings compiled into a book, the sheer energy and vitality of the fan-base inspires wonder.

Punk Press, by Vincent Bernière and Mariel Primois. Published by Abrams Books, 2013.

For anyone who's followed the recent history of photobooks the DIY aesthetic will sound familiar. Within the space of a decade or so, it has thoroughly infiltrated book publishing culture, washing away the barriers between art's production and publication like yesterday's muzak. The rush is on. Some of these homegrown publications rival the best publishers. Others are closer to xerox broadsides. All follow the DIY doctrine.

Punk Press, by Vincent Bernière and Mariel Primois. Published by Abrams Books, 2013.

Like any cultural phenomenon, punk had a definite life cycle. By the early 80s it had been safely defused and assimilated into mass culture. The marrow has long been sucked out, and what's left is now grist for MoMA fashion retrospectives and historical scrapbooking. Reading Punk Press one gets the feeling of looking at a specimen in formaldehyde. The former enthusiasm is palpable, but also the sense that it's over. One can't help wondering if the current photobook boom will endure a similar cycle.

The most interesting part of Punk Press is the last section. The book shifts from cheap matt paper to thick glossy stock, and the material from reproductions to sharp analysis, offering a detailed historical account of the underground press, title by title. It's the sort of shiny coffee-table essay you'd expect from any professional art history guide. But the whole book couldn't follow suit. That wouldn't be very punk.—BLAKE ANDREWS

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BLAKE ANDREWS is a photographer based in Eugene, OR. He writes about photography at blakeandrews.blogspot.com.

In-Print Photobook Video #19: Medic by Jennifer B Hudson

Portfolio and Interview: Ryann Ford

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Monument Valley, Arizona -- Ryann Ford

We are happy to release a portfolio of images from Ryann Ford, a series titled Rest Stops - Vanishing Relics of the American Roadside. Ford's images capture a once common but now increasingly rare sight -- the roadside rest stop, simple picnic tables positioned a scenic locations that served as respite from the road, a place to eat packed-lunches, take a break from the car and enjoy the landscape. They are quaint structures, sometimes simple, sometimes quirky, but despite their charm, they are now seldom used. Many of us don't bother to pack a meal on a road trip, preferring instead to take advantage of the ease of the many fast food joints just off the road or the one-stop convenience of the travel centers that combine gas, restrooms, tourism information and food. Ford's images not only document these often over looked and under used structures, but also capture the landscapes in which they reside. Sitting center frame, the rest stops are surround by the iconic American Southwest -- National Parks, rock formations, Saguaro cactus, big skies and mountains. These rest stops provide a link to the highway culture of America's past and speak to how that culture is changing.

On the occasions of Ford's portfolio debut, we've taken the opportunity to ask about her photographic background and the Rest Stops series.

Near Clines Corners, New Mexico - U.S. 66/I-40 -- Ryann Ford
Sarah Bradley:     How did you get started in photography?

Ryann Ford:     When I was about 12 or 13, my dad brought out his Pentax Spotmatic that he bought in Vietnam. Being so young, it was really complex to learn since it was fully manual, but he gave me a few pointers and I was determined to take photos with it. I figured out the self-timer feature, put on red lipstick and curled my hair, and took glamour shots of me and my dog. That was really the extent of it until I got to high school.

Even in high school I was drawn to photographing buildings and structures, but especially the abandoned ones, whether it was an old ghost town or some shack in the desert. I asked my photo teacher where I should go to college if I wanted to pursue photography. Immediately, without even thinking, she snapped back “you have to go to Brooks [Institute of Photography]. It’s the best photography school in California, you can eat off the darkroom floors.” I’ll never forget her telling me that. So that was it, off to Brooks I went.

When it came time to choose electives at Brooks, I read about an Architecture class. During school I hated shooting people, so I would look for any classes where I wouldn’t have to shoot people. The Architecture teacher told us about an internship being offered at the end of the session with Resorts and Great Hotels magazine, and I ended up getting it. It was one of the best internships at Brooks because you got to travel with the R&GH photographers to a few shoots that could be anywhere in the country. I ended up going to San Francisco, Chicago and Detroit, and it was probably the most pivotal point in my career.

Right before graduation, a photo assisting job at the magazine opened up and I took it. The next three years were some of the most incredible years of my life. I traveled the world, staying at and shooting incredible hotels, and eating as much free room service as I could. On our days off, we snorkeled in Brazil, rode scooters around the British Virgin Islands, and snowboarded in Whistler. It was an unbelievable job for a 20 year old, straight out of school. Eventually though, believe it or not, the traveling got tough (we’d be gone for up to a month at a time) and decided it was time to move on to my next adventure. A couple friends from Brooks had recently moved to Austin, and told me how amazing it was, so I packed up my car, and moved to Texas, sight unseen. That was the second most pivotal point in my career.

Near Big Bend National Park, Texas -- Ryann Ford

SB:     Rest Stops is a documentation of the picnic tables and small rest areas that used to be a staple of the American highway. I’m interested in how this series came to be. What made you notice that these structures disappearing? Do they hold special significance for you?

RF:     Upon moving to Austin, I decided it was time to go freelance, and while shooting various jobs all over Texas I started noticing these cute little roadside tables along the different highways. We had the giant interstate rest areas in California, but it wasn’t until living here that I really started to notice rest areas. I noticed that a lot of them looked really old, some had cool mid-century architecture, some were really quirky, like they were shaped like a teepee or an oil derrick, or had a theme to them depending on the region we were in.

One night I decided to Google “rest areas” to see what they looked like in other areas of the country. I came across a news article detailing the closure of many of them due to budget cuts, and they weren’t just being closed, but demolished. I had considered doing a photo project on them before, but this was the deciding factor.

While doing my research, I read about a rest area just north of Ft. Worth that was “a breeding ground for crime.” Evidently a lot of prostitution and drug deals went on there, and it was scheduled for demolition. They showed a photo of it - it had a roofline mimicking the shape of longhorn horns, and on its sidewalls was the Texas flag. It had so much personality and charm, I just couldn’t believe they were tearing it down. The next weekend I high-tailed it up there to shoot it. A few weeks later I had to drive up there again for work and it was gone.

After that, I got serious about the project and set out to start documenting as many as I could. I think what really drew me to this project was a mix of things - definitely the architecture, but I also just love roadside culture and Americana. I’ve always been big into road trips, especially through the southwest, and I think it’s so fun to be driving along and see how each rest area is different. After learning the history, and visiting so many of them, I have become even more attached to them.

Near Burleson, Texas - I-35 -- Ryann Ford

SB:     What’s the process of finding and making the photographs in the series? The 20 images in your Photographer’s Showcase portfolio were taken in the Southwest. Do you have plans to continue the series to other parts of the country?

RF:     When I first started out, and had a free Saturday or something, I would just grab a map and head out to search for them. The map had an icon where the rest areas and picnic areas were supposedly located, but I found, even after buying a brand new map, that the maps were inaccurate; I would arrive at the destination and half the time the rest area was gone. After shooting most all of the ones near Austin, I decided it was time to hit the road for a real road trip.

Ever since high school my mom would worry about me going on road trips alone, and shooting alone at all of these desolate places. I finally agreed to let her tag along on one of the trips, and we’ve been road trip buddies ever since. It’s pretty tough to find someone who can, or would even want to take off work for a week to drive around the desert looking for rest stops. I have a pretty cool mom.

Saguaro National Park, Arizona -- Ryann Ford
Since discovering that most of the maps are inaccurate, I’ve started using Google images to find various people’s snapshots of rest areas all over the country. When I find one that looks really unique or fun, I do a little research and then set out to find it. I usually plot a weeklong trip around a few great ones that I’ve found online, and then end up finding lots more along the way. Since almost no two are the same, the anticipation of what the next one down the road will look like is really fun.

One of the challenges of shooting them is that you’re driving hundreds of miles a day, and you may come upon one at noon, and the lighting is terrible. If that were the case, and it was one really worth shooting, sometimes we’d wait for better light, sometimes we’d move on. We tried to spend the night near the one we really wanted to shoot, so that it could be shot at sunset or sunrise. The process of shooting them is fairly simple, which is nice, since time is so limited on the road and we have so much ground to cover. We usually just pull up, I take a couple frames, and jump back in the car. For the really great ones we spend a bit more time there.

I have thought about continuing the series throughout the rest of the country, though honestly, the rest stops aren’t quite as photogenic, in my opinion. What really drew me to them initially was the simplicity and beauty of this lone table sitting out on the stark landscape. When you move outside of the southwest, the rest of the country is more wooded, and often times the tables aren’t covered. If they are covered, they are usually obstructed by trees. Also, because the east is more densely populated, there aren’t as many rest areas. I’m still undecided on how to continue the project and there are still so many I’d like to get in the southwest.

Juan Santa Cruz Picnic Area - Tucson, Arizona -- Ryann Ford

SB:     What are the differences in your methods of shooting for a commercial project verse a personal one? Do the two ever inform each other?

RF:     Most of my commercial jobs are high stress, and every element is completely controlled or staged. A lot of equipment is involved, and it’s really quite a production. When I shoot the rest stops, it’s just my Mamiya RZ medium format camera, film, a tripod and light meter. It’s so relaxing hitting the open road, and being outside in these beautiful landscapes, often alone with these quirky tables. Because I am an architectural photographer, I’m a bit of a control freak, and I sometimes find myself making sure the verticals are straight on the rest stops, or something like that. Also, with commercial jobs, you’re taking pictures that will make clients happy. When I’m photographing the rest stops, I shoot what makes me happy.

White Sands National Monument, New Mexico -- Ryann Ford
SB:     Both your commercial and personal work seem to indicate a special interest in architecture. What inspires you photographically?

RF:     Yes, I definitely have an interest in architecture, and I guess I always have, I just didn’t know that’s what it was when I was younger. As I mentioned above, I’ve always been drawn to photographing buildings or structures, especially ones that have been forgotten. My previous personal project was on the Salton Sea and all of its abandoned motels and yacht clubs. I am drawn to shooting in quiet, remote places, versus bustling cities. With my commercial work, I am inspired by great design, especially great architecture and interior design. If I wasn’t a photographer, I’d probably be an interior designer.



Time lapse video of Ryann Ford shooting the Rest Stops series.


For additional information about Ryann Ford's work or to acquire a photograph, please contact the gallery at (505) 988-5152 x202 or by email.

Book Review: American Photographs

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American Photographs. Photographs by Walker Evans.
Published by The Museum of Modern Art, 2012.
American Photographs
Reviewed by Alexandra Huddleston

American Photographs
Photographs by Walker Evans
The Museum of Modern Art, 2012. Hardbound. 208 pp., 87 duotone illustrations, 7-3/4x8-3/4".


In his lively and erudite essay in Walker Evans' first book American Photographs, Lincoln Kirstein writes, "The American reading public is fast becoming not even a looking-public, but a glancing or glimpsing public." Written for the first edition of the book in 1938, this statement has become even more relevant in our digital age, just as Evans' photographs still manage to defy the impatient eye of a modern viewer and draw her into a world in which deep looking and deep thinking are equally rewarded.

The 2012 Seventy-Fifth-Anniversary edition of American Photographs closely follows the 1938 first edition, from its cover, size, and paper to the photographic edit, print tone, and text. The book is a testament to the benefits of fine craftsmanship – just as was the original – and the MOMA has the money to devote to quality while still pricing the book low enough so that a younger generation of photography lovers can afford the luxury. The book's weight and size make it a pleasure to hold. The paper makes it fun to touch, and the print quality leads even long-time Walker Evans fans to notice new details in photographs that have long been old favorites. Did the street in part 1, plate 27 ever look quite as much like a gently flowing river? Did I ever notice the chalk scrawl "come up and see me sometime" in part 1, plate 1; or the cleanliness and freshness of the newspapers and towels in part 1, plate 6; or the girl spreading her dress as for a bow in part 1, plate 35?

American Photographs, by Walker Evans. Published by The Museum of Modern Art, 2012.
American Photographs, by Walker Evans. Published by The Museum of Modern Art, 2012.

We seem to be going through an era, again, in which the snap-shot aesthetic has gathered a dominant following in the photography world. If you doubt my 'again,' just read Kirstein's essay. This never-ending stream of imagery is easily accessible on multiplying websites from Instagram to Flikr and in a rapidly proliferating number of photography books whose overarching message seems to be a tenuous 'this is the way I see my world.'

What makes American Photographs any different? The title itself is about as vague as one can get while still remaining in the country… and it's actually a lie since some of the photographs were taken in Cuba and few were taken west of the Mississippi! Moreover, while each individual photograph is composed with a literary tightness, as a collective they couldn't be more different: we see different types of film used, different cameras, different crops, different page placements, and an eclectic array of different subjects. In truth, the book is as lop-sided a view of America as the photo studio storefront in part 1, plate 2. After all these years, it should be pretty clear that in over 210 mini-prints posted in the glass, no noticeably African-American faces appear in that collective portrait of Savannah, Georgia.

American Photographs, by Walker Evans. Published by The Museum of Modern Art, 2012.
American Photographs, by Walker Evans. Published by The Museum of Modern Art, 2012.

Why, then, does the book feel so specific, so unified, and so structured despite what is arguably a weak conceptual framework? A careful viewer will begin to realize that Evans organized the book's photographic edit with the same rigor as he did his compositions. The formal visual structure of part 2 is educational. Plates 2 through 5 are dominated by horizontal lines. Plates 6 through 11 all have strong vertical forms. The compositions in plates 12 through 25 contain powerful rectangles, and plates 26 through 37 are structured around arches. A similar breakdown can be done of part 1 based on the photographs' literal and emotional content. Moreover, there are countless smaller motifs bringing the disparate scenes together. In part 1, plate 40, the placement of the men's arms is a direct link to the placement of the couple's arms in the subsequent photograph, both of which encourage the viewer to notice the arms and hands in plates 42, 44, and 45.

Perhaps it's true that there is no more unifying concept to this book other than 'this is the way Walker Evans saw his world.' However, this newest edition of American Photographs reminds us that Evans' vision has managed to capture and keep our wayward attention because of its solid foundation in fine craftsmanship, rigorous structure, and deep thinking.—ALEXANDRA HUDDLESTON

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ALEXANDRA HUDDLESTON is an American photographer who was born in Freetown, Sierra Leone, and grew up in the Washington, DC area and in West Africa. She holds a BA from Stanford University and an MS in broadcast journalism from Columbia University. Her work has been published in The New York Times, Zeit Magazine, and National Geographic Explorer, and exhibited in group and solo shows worldwide. Among other honors, she has received a Fulbright Grant for her photographic work. Her prints are in the permanent collection of the US Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division and the Smithsonian Institution National Museum of African Art Eliot Elisofon Photo Archives. In 2012 Huddleston published her first artists’ book Lost Things under her own imprint. She is currently working on publishing her next book “333 Saints: a Life of Scholarship in Timbuktu,” a project that explores the legacy of traditional Islamic scholarship in this famous Malian city. http://www.alexandrahuddleston.com

Remembering Gary Grenell

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Green Lake Gothic, 1996 -- Gary Grenell

We were saddened to hear of Gary Grenell's passing earlier this week. We've represented Grenell's Five Blocks to Green Lake portfolio on the Photographer's Showcase for a number of years, and we wanted to take this time to remember Grenell and share some of his wonderful portrait work photographed in his neighborhood in Seattle around Green Lake. Grenell said of his work:

"Since 1993, I have spent innumerable hours wandering the neighborhood sidewalks and the three mile path around the lake with my camera in hand, creating unplanned photographic portraits of a very few people whom I encounter. My photographic subjects are “found” in the most familiar locations: under trees, on sidewalks, and in front of their homes. 
"This project does not endeavor to portray a totalistic sense of Green Lake, the park or the neighborhood. There is scant evidence of the crowds that are often just outside of the range of my camera lens. In fact, I position my subjects in a way that momentarily sequesters them from much of the visual cacophony. Rather, this project reflects my personal vision of this very public place, and, hopefully, the project reveals something about the depth of character of the people who frequent it, a depth that has sustained me in numerous ways over many years."

Vance With His Python, 1996 -- Gary Grenell

Three Teenage Girls, 2008 -- Gary Grenell

Curly Williams in the Grasses, 1996 -- Gary Grenell

The Apparition, 1994 -- Gary Grenell

Picnic at Green Lake, 1993 -- Gary Grenell

View more images from Grenell's portfolio

Photo Center NW has published a nice post on Grenell and his work, which can be read here.
View Grenell's website here.

Artist Update

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Megan, 2009 -- Evan Baden
Five photographs from Evan Baden’s Technically Intimate series will be on view as pat of Vita Nova, an exhibition exploring adolescence and change. The show also features work by Paul Graham, Hannah Starkey, Lise Sarfati, Tobias Zielony, Julia Fullerton-Batten, Raimond Wouda, Hellen van Meene, Luigi Gariglio. Opening on May 3rd, the exhibitoin is part of the Fotografia Europea 13 in Reggio Emilia, Italy. A photograph from Baden’s Technically Intimate series is currently view at photo-eye Gallery in The Nude show open through May 10th. Three of Baden’s photographic series, title, title, and Technically Intimate, can be viewed on the Photographer's Showcase. Read the interview with Baden here.



Hair, 2013 -- Julie Blackmon


Julie Blackmon was recently interviewed on Michael Werner's blog Two Way Lens. In the interview, Blackmon discusses her background and process and can be read here

photo-eye is also happy to include a new image titled Hair in Blackmon's on-going photographic series (pictured at left). Anne Kelly's interview with Blackmon on the occasion of her 2012 exhibition at photo-eye can be read here. Copies of the limited editions of Blackmon's book, Domestic Vacations, are still available and can be viewed here. View Blackmon's work on photo-eye Gallery.





image405 -- Christine Laptuta
Congratulations to Christine Laptuta who has recently had a portfolio of her Memory and Imagination, Desert images purchased by the Huntington Library/Gardens and also a print donated to the Museum of Modern Art in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. A portfolio of Laptuta's work can be viewed on the Photographer's Showcase.

Book Review: Passengers

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Passengers. Photographs by John Schabel.
Published by Twin Palms, 2012.
Passengers
Reviewed by Adam Bell

Passengers
Photographs by John Schabel.
Twin Palms Publishers, Santa Fe, 2012. Hardbound. 112 pp., 85 duotone illustrations, 8x10".


From the relatively new fear of terrorist attacks and catastrophe to the maddening inconvenience of flight delays and endless security lines, commercial air travel elicits a combination of fear, frustration and tedium. Nevertheless, flight is miraculous. As a technical achievement, it is as marvelous to contemplate, as it is convenient. While documenting and conveying the complex emotional and psychological effects of travel is particularly challenging, it is not impossible. John Schabel's evocative new book, Passengers, collects a series of portraits of people shot through the windows of airplanes waiting to take off on the runway. Elegantly restrained in both design and concept, Schabel's book powerfully captures the tedium and vulnerability of modern air travel.

It is hard not to look at Schabel's work and read it against the backdrop of post-9/11 air travel. An impossible project in today's world, Schabel photographed his subjects in the mid-90s at various airports in the United States as they awaited take off. Shot with a long telephoto lens far from the tarmac and closely cropped to the windows, the photographs give us an intimate look at each passenger. Mostly shot at night, and often during inclement weather, each window frames the person and seems to glow. Like an illuminated screen, the windows offer a voyeuristic peek at the waiting passengers. Shielded behind thick glass, the faces are obscured by rain and incidental reflections. Most are distracted and sit patiently, quietly reading newspapers or books. Others are turned to their travelling companion or are already fast asleep. Some peer out the window to meet our gaze or simply contemplate the journey ahead. In one image, a woman with large framed glasses looks out the window, her expression both startled and afraid. In another poignant image, a small boy raises his hand to touch the window – reaching out to the photographer and us, waving goodbye.

Passengers, by John Schabel. Published by Twin Palms Publishers, 2012.
Passengers, by John Schabel. Published by Twin Palms Publishers, 2012.

Passengers and modern travel have a rich history in photography. Among contemporary photographers, Michael Wolfe's images of torturously compacted Japanese subway commuters strike a similar vein – albeit in a more brutal manner. Alternatively, Andrew Bush's Vector Portraits offers an amusing twist on cars and their drivers – each passing window framing their idiosyncratic personalities and offering a glimpse into their mobile world. However, the most obvious touchstone is Walker Evans' seminal book and series Many Are Called. In this work, Evans surreptitiously photographed fellow subway travelers in NYC through a hole in his trench coat. Tired and guarded, Evan's fellow commuters slowly make their way to work or journey home below the city. Both Evans and Schabel capture resigned tedium and vulnerability of modern travel – be it the New York City subway or modern air travel. Forced into close proximity to our fellow passengers and trapped inside, we must all surrender to the plane or train that carries us.

Passengers, by John Schabel. Published by Twin Palms Publishers, 2012.
Passengers, by John Schabel. Published by Twin Palms Publishers, 2012.

There is a curious phenomenon that occurs on airplanes. Hovering above the world, protected only by metal and glass, our emotional fragility is laid bare. Forced to watch a limited selection of movies on our tiny screens, even the worst Hollywood treacle can cause us to cry. Faced with our own mortality, defenses drop. Will we make it? Why did the seatbelt light go on? Trapped in a narrow seat, we have nowhere to go. There are no tears in Schabel's images, but he does capture the coerced fragility and state of surrender. The hope that the plane will take off, land and arrive safely, that the miracle of flight will hold true if just one more time.

Passengers, by John Schabel. Published by Twin Palms Publishers, 2012.

Twin Palms and Schabel have taken a long time putting this book together and it shows. Although seemingly simple in design, the spare elegance of the design allows the work to shine. As the illustrator, graphic designer and author Christoph Niemann recently wrote, "Simplicity is not about making something without ornament, but rather about making something very complex, then slicing elements away, until you reveal the very essence."* In this sense Schabel's book and images does exactly what it should and no more. The book contains no explanatory or self-justifying text and instead presents each image almost full-bleed on the page – sometimes facing another image, and other times by itself and facing a black page. Moving through the book, one has the sense of scanning the horizontal rows on windows on a taxiing plane. As distant observers, we can only watch, knowing we are all travelers at some point - alone, surrounded by fellow travelers and waiting to depart.—ADAM BELL

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ADAM BELL is a photographer and writer based in Brooklyn, NY. He received his MFA from the School of Visual Arts, and his work has been exhibited and published internationally. He is the co-editor and co-author, with Charles H. Traub and Steve Heller, of The Education of a Photographer (Allworth Press, 2006). His writing has appeared in Foam Magazine, Afterimage, Lay Flat and Ahorn Magazine. He is currently on staff and faculty at the School of Visual Arts' MFA Photography, Video and Related Media Department. His website and blog are adambbell.com and adambellphoto.blogspot.com.

In-Print Photobook Video #20: No Ordinary Days by Maggie Taylor

Interview: Fritz Liedtke on Astra Velum Artist Book

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Astra Velum by Fritz Liedtke
In the past if one wanted to publish a book it was necessary to work with a publisher. While traditional publishing may still have its advantages, many photographers today are opting to self-publish their own photobooks. A wide range of new options are available -- the most common being print-on-demand books and zines. It can be a difficult process, but one of the payoffs of self-publishing is the complete control the photographer has over the final book. This is best showcased in the handmade artist book. Handmade books are not a new invention, but, as each one is unique, they sometimes feel like you are seeing an artist book for the first time.

One finely crafted handmade artist book is Fritz Liedtke’s Astra Velum. In Liedtke’s words his series Astra Velum“explores the beauty of flawed human skin, with its freckles and scars, overlaid upon us like a thin veil of stars.” All of the materials used in the production were carefully selected by Liedtke who designed the book with master bookmaker Rory Sparks. The book opens with an introduction by award-winning author Gina Ochsner, who, like the women pictured in Astra Velum, also has freckles. This thoughtful essay is deeply embossed into the rich paper. Astra Velum features 19 inkjet reproductions printed on double thick, cotton rag paper. The cover boasts a unique custom paper embedded with mica, a flaky, crystalline rock sediment. The mica is a perfect compliment to the book's production as it mirrors the random patterns of freckles, much like a thin veil of stars. Astra Velum is limited to 25 copies with the options of selecting the collector’s edition clamshell and limited edition print. I've asked Liedtke to tell us a little bit more about this special artist book and self-publishing. -- Anne Kelly

Astra Velum by Fritz Liedtke

Anne Kelly:     Tell us a little bit about the process of making the book.

Fritz Liedtke:     In the past I’ve created dozens of press-printed and photographic books, as well as sculpted books and small handmade books. But this was the first time I’d worked with a professional bookmaker, and designed a limited edition book. It was a lot more work than I expected.

To begin, Rory and I talked through all the different binding options, seeing how they looked and how much they would cost. Since I had a budget I was trying to adhere to, we selected options that both looked great, but also fit the budget. For book style, we selected drum leaf binding, which allows the book to lay flat when open, not losing anything to the gutter. It also makes the pages extra thick, since each page is two pieces of paper bound together.

Astra Velum on press

We also spent hours poring over cover material options, considering everything from real wood veneer to leather to fabric. We ended up selecting a paper that is handmade by Cave Papers, and had them tweak it to match the color scheme of the book. They had this beautiful, thick, uneven black paper with mica flakes embedded into it. You pick it up, and it shimmers like stars in the sky; the effect was fairly stunning. We asked them to make us a more walnut/sepia tone version, which they did. Being handmade, each piece of paper is different, which seemed appropriate for a book about the unique nature of faces and freckles.

Rory Sparks working on Astra Velum
I spent a few weeks seeking out and testing papers on which to print the actual images in the book. I finally settled on a warm matte paper made by Red River. It was a perfect match for the warm images. Then I spent days getting the images properly registered and the values and color perfected. Once these things were in place, I spent a couple weeks making nearly 600 prints for the pages, hand feeding each piece of paper into the printer myself.

During this time, Rory was at work making the book covers, and letterpress printing the text pages for the book. She also put together a proof copy of the book, which we reviewed and tweaked. Once I delivered the final image pages to her, she set to work binding the pages together, and finalizing the book, with some help from me.

It was a lengthy and costly process, but I have to say the final product was worth it. Having such a beautiful book—a beautiful object—in my hands, and in the hands of collectors and collections, is a great feeling.


Astra Velum by Fritz Liedtke


AK:     What are your thoughts on the book as object?

Astra Velum on press
FL:     When I was in my teens, I remember picking up a Zane Gray novel from my grandparents’ bookshelf. I remember thinking to myself, “This book is solid; it is the perfect size and weight.” The heft of it in my hand, the embossed hardcover, the deckled edges of the paper, the lightly embossed text…it was perfect. It was the first time I’d thought of a book as something more than just a medium for words.

Over the years, I’ve designed a few hundred books for clients, and for myself. I’ve also made a few handmade books in art classes. But more recently, having seen handmade books by Lauren Henkin, Heidi Kirkpatrick, Laura Russell, and others, it dawned on me that there was more to explore in the medium.

Inspired by this, I created several hand-carved antique books, repurposing old books with my own images and imagination. I had a similar feeling in picking them up as I did with the Zane Gray book: they felt good in my hand. And within the covers, they were full of surprises.

Most press printed photography books are standard, plain books, with pictures and words in them. The form is bland, and has little to do with the content. On the other hand, artist books often feature innovative book forms, but the content on the pages is weak or lacks cohesion and purpose.

With Astra Velum, I wanted to create a book in which both the content and the form are meaningful, beautiful, and solid. I think we’ve achieved that. The custom cover paper references stars in the night sky—just as the title Astra Velum is Latin for ‘veil of stars’, itself a reference to the constellations of freckles on these faces. The essay text, embossed with warm inks into the paper, is reminiscent of the texture of freckled and flawed skin. The intimacy of the portraits is heightened by the fact that you are holding them in your hand, near your own face.

Ultimately, holding the book in your hands becomes an experience. More than merely looking at photos on a wall, or reading an essay in a magazine, opening the cover of Astra Velum becomes a way to enter in to the beauty and pain of the women whose stories are captured in the book.


Images from Astra Velum

AK:     What are your thoughts on handmade book vs. the variety of new publishing outlets that are available today?

FL:     Each book style has its place and purpose. What I value about a handmade book is similar to what I love about photogravures: you can see the artist’s hand in it. Each book is absolutely unique; no two are identical. Also, when you hold a handmade book in your hands, you are touching something the artist touched and held. Perhaps it’s a bit mystical, but I like this. There’s more of a personal connection between viewer and artist. No machines get in the way.


Astra Velum by Fritz Liedtke


AK:     Do you have any advice for photographers who want to make a handmade book?

FL:     If you have opportunity, talk with someone who has done it before, and get their thoughts on the process. Also, find someone to collaborate with. One of the sadder sides of photography is that it can be a very isolated working environment. Use a handmade book project as an opportunity to collaborate with bookmakers, authors, gallerists, papermakers, painters, printmakers, letterpress printers, and more. It’s a lot of fun, and the creative synergy can produce something far greater than you could have made alone. Also consider applying for a grant, or running a Kickstarter campaign to help fund the cost of the book. If you can pay for it out of pocket, great, but if not, invite others to join you in this adventure.

Image from Astra Velum



Astra Velum is available in three different collector's editions. See them all here.

Prints from Astra Velum are available for purchase on the Photographer's Showcase, and are also offered as a portfolio. Read our previous photo-eye Blog post on Liedtke's Astra Velum series here.

For more information, please contact photo-eye Gallery Associate Director Anne Kelly by email or by calling the gallery at (505) 988-5152 x202

Book Review: Las Sombras/The Shadows

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Las Sombras/The Shadows. Photographs by Kate Breakey.
Published by University of Texas Press, 2012.
Las Sombras/The Shadows
Reviewed by Daniel W. Coburn

Las Sombras/The Shadows
Photographs by Kate Breakey. Introduction by Lia Purpura.
University Of Texas Press, Austin, 2012. Hardbound. 168 pp., 100 color illustrations, 12x12".

Kate Breakey follows in the footsteps of major figures in the history of photography. In her latest monograph Las Sambras, aka The Shadows, she makes a series of cameraless photographs. These photogenic drawings, otherwise known as photograms, are made by placing objects onto light sensitive paper. She borrows stylistically from the grandfather of photography William Henry Fox Talbot, and also from Anna Atkins, an English botanist and photographer who published what some consider to be the first book of photographs. These artists made major contributions to the history of photography, so of course, I was excited to see what Breakey had to offer.

Las Sombras/The Shadows, by Kate Breakey. Published by University Of Texas Press, 2012.

Kate Breakey makes pretty pictures. They are whimsical, fantastical and sometimes enigmatic, but mostly they are just pretty. She makes most of these images using dead animals, but we don’t see the evidence of death. Instead we see bunnies frolicking and foxes dancing. She shows us beetles, bats, and bobcats. We are confronted with the shadows of creatures we would otherwise avoid such as scorpions, snakes and skunks. Breakey playfully arranges foxes fowl and fauna, demonstrating her love and fascination with wild life of the American Southwest. I can't help but compare her photograms to those made by Adam Fuss. Fuss transforms the grotesque elements of death into something visceral, surreal and beautiful. Breakey gives her audience respite, or an escape into a world where animals are reanimated in a series of simple narratives that remind me of Aesop’s fables or children's stories.

Las Sombras/The Shadows, by Kate Breakey. Published by University Of Texas Press, 2012.

A majority of the images in this book are high contrast, sepia toned prints. Occasionally, Breakey presents a blue, cyanotype image, which is a refreshing and welcomed change. She stays true to the scientific roots of this process by providing a list of data, classifying and identifying each of the specimens she documents. She indicates the scale, the common name, and the specific genus and species of each animal.

Las Sombras/The Shadows, by Kate Breakey. Published by University Of Texas Press, 2012.

Poet Lia Purpura and Breakey contribute informative texts to this impressive volume that consists of 168 pages and 99 plates. Purpura's writing is simultaneously poetic, articulate and well informed. I get the sense that she understands the nuances of photography and she is brilliant in her explanation of the artist's work. Breakey's writing gives us insight into her process and why she makes these images. It is a well-made, well-designed book. However, I feel like something is missing. In the context of an exhibition, Breakey presents these images in antiquated frames of various size and shape. There is an important conversation that happens between the images in this type of installation, a conversation that is all but completely missing in book form. Despite these shortcomings, I think that it is a beautiful and well-crafted monograph.—DANIEL W. COBURN

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DANIEL W. COBURN lives and works in Phoenix, Arizona. Selections from his body of work have been featured in exhibitions at the Los Angeles Center for Digital Art and the Chelsea Museum of Art in New York. Coburn's prints are held in many public and private collections including the University of New Mexico Art Museum, The Mulvane Museum of Art, The Albrecht-Kemper Museum of Art, The Mariana Kistler-Beach Museum of Art and the Moraine Park Museum. His writings and photographs appear regularly in regional and national publications including Fraction Magazine and Photo-Eye Magazine. Coburn recieved his BFA with an emphasis in photography from Washburn University where he was the recipient of numerous honors including the Charles and Margaret Pollak Award. He received his MFA with distinction from the University of New Mexico in 2013.
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