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Slideshow: Winners of All About Photo Awards, the Mind’s Eye, 2020

06 May

Winners of All About Photo Awards, the Mind’s Eye, 2020

The 5th Annual Mind’s Eye competition from All About Photo attracted submissions from all over the world. Even though a majority of the entries were color photographs, 4 out of the 5 top category winners are black and white and came from women. The Photographer of the Year 2020 was awarded to Monica Denevan (United States) for her image ‘Across the River, Burma’ from the series ‘Songs of the River: Portraits from Burma.’ She received a $ 5,000 cash prize.

A panel of 7 jurors selected the 40 winning and finalist images. Compared to previous years, they were more inclined to choose calming images compared to those depicting unsettling or violent situations. ‘Perhaps a subconscious need has arisen in each one of us to escape the terrible events that are happening in the world right now,’ reads the official press release.

In a field dominated by men, women received a majority of the top honors in this competition. Elena Paraskeva was recognized in the Particular Merit Mention category for her image ‘The Lost Swimmer.’

Winners will be showcased on the daily fine art photography site Lenscratch, art streaming platform Daylighted, All About Photo’s online gallery, and in the print edition of AAP Magazine. All About Photo hosts a variety of competitions, year round, that can be found on their ‘Photo Contests’ page.

1st Place Photographer of the Year: ‘Across the River, Burma’ by Monica Denevan (United States)

Artist Statement: From the series ‘Songs of the River: Portraits from Burma.’

2nd Place Winner: ‘Florida’ by Gabriele Galimberti (Italy)

Artist Statement: Avery Skipalis (33) – Tampa, Florida / THE AMERIGUNS – In the States there are more guns than people. ‘120.5 registered firearms for every 100 residents’ and the statistic doesn’t count ‘not-registers firearms.’ As a European, I started wondering if owning many weapons by a single person or family is a common habit in the US. I traveled across the US and created a series of 45 portrait of families or single individuals, including all races and beliefs, together with their firearms.

3rd Place Winner: ‘Philomena’ by Rebecca Moseman (United States)

Artist Statement: A little Irish Traveler girl looks out of her family car before going home to her family’s Illegal encampment.

4th Place Winner: ‘Sustenance 4’ by Nadia De Lange (Switzerland)

Artist Statement: Desert: ‘a waterless, desolate area of land with little or no vegetation, typically one covered with sand.’ And yet, there is life in the desert. More than most people realize. In the Namib this is thanks to the wonderful miracle of fog – the clouds that roll in from the Atlantic Ocean bring with them moisture that sustain the fauna and flora living in this beautiful, harsh landscape.

5th Place Winner: ‘Jump of the Wildebeest’ by Nicole Cambre (Belgium)

Artist Statement: Annual migration of the wildebeest at Northern Serengeti, Tanzania. This wildebeest did not wait for its turn and jumped on top of the others.

Particular Merit Mention: ‘Polarbearpet’ by Marcel Van Balken (Netherlands)

Artist Statement: Climate change, and the loss of sea ice habitat, is the greatest threat to polar bears. More and more polar bears are being forced ashore, away from their sea-ice hunting grounds. But it does not make sense to make your home (or bathroom) available as a haven for the polar bear. It’s better to spread awareness about the real and pressing threat of climate change.

Particular Merit Mention: ‘Untitled’ by Kosuke Kitajima (Japan)

Artist Statement: A monkey entering a Japanese hot spring. Had various expressions like a person.

Particular Merit Mention: ‘Break Away’ by Tony Law (Australia)

Artist Statement: A man falling off a bull in a rodeo event held in Taralga, Australia.

Particular Merit Mention: ‘Untitled’ by Yoni Blau (Israel)

Artist Statement: This image was taken while on a trip to the Suri tribe in the Omo Valley in Southern Ethiopia.
The model was not dressed, simply recorded as is. No artificial lighting was used.
The picture was taken within a dark tent with the light coming in from the entrance of the tent.

Particular Merit Mention: ‘Woman Mursi’ by Svetlin Yosifov (Bulgaria)

Artist Statement: The Mursi tribe are an African tribe from the isolated Omo valley in Southern Ethiopia near the border with Sudan.

Particular Merit Mention: ‘Eye Sea’ by Anuar Patjane (Mexico)

Artist Statement: A school of Bigeye trevaly and divers at Cabo Pulmo National Park, Mexico.

Particular Merit Mention: ‘Beyond the Wall’ by Francesco Pace Rizzi (Italy)

Artist Statement: Sometimes a shot cannot contain emotions, memories, moods…you need more … you have to ‘chisel’ the image to make that evolutionary-creative leap necessary to reach the right size.

This photo is intended as a small tribute to a great Master: Henri Cartier Bresson, the one who first knew how to show me the reality of ever with new eyes: more human, artistic, poetic. His photos taken between the 1950s and 1970s in Basilicata (my homeland) and around the world have changed the perspective of things in me, creating a fantastic ‘imprinting’ and becoming a source of great inspiration.

Particular Merit Mention: ‘Untitled’ by Chin Leong Teo (Japan)

Artist Statement: The Wallace’s Flying Frog is a moss frog found in Malaysia and western Indonesia. It is generally quite photogenic given its large size, brilliant colors and calm temperament. This is a shot taken of a specimen swimming in water, with full extension of its beautiful long legs.

Particular Merit Mention: ‘Step by Step’ by Mustafa AbdulHadi (Bahrain)

Artist Statement: Impression Lijiang is a cultural show which demonstrates the traditions and lifestyle of local Naxi, Yi, and Bai ethnics of the area. It is the second outdoor production of famous film director, Zhang Yimou, which debuts an open-air performance at the foot of Yulong Xueshan (Jade Dragon Snow Mountain) about 3,500 meters above sea level. The performance stage is specially designed to showcase the mountain as the best backdrop of the show. More than 500 local people from ten ethnic groups (participate).

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Why smartphone cameras are blowing our minds

28 Apr

An modified version of this article was originally published February 20, 2018.

There’s no getting around physics – smartphone cameras, and therefore sensors, are tiny. And since we all (now) know that, generally speaking, it’s the amount of light you capture that determines image quality, smartphones have a serious disadvantage to deal with: they don’t capture enough light.

But that’s where computational photography comes in. By combining machine learning, computer vision, and computer graphics with traditional optical processes, computational photography aims to enhance what is achievable with traditional methods. Here’s a rundown of some recent developments in smartphone imaging – and why we think they’re a big deal.

Intelligent exposure and processing? Press. Here.

One of the defining characteristics of smartphone photography is the idea that you can get a great image with one button press, and nothing more. No exposure decision, no tapping on the screen to set your exposure, no exposure compensation, and no post-processing. Just take a look at what the Google Pixel 2 XL did with this huge dynamic range sunrise at Banff National Park in Canada:

Sunrise at Banff, with Mt. Rundle in the background. Shot on Pixel 2 with one button press. I also shot this with my Sony a7R II full-frame camera, but that required a 4-stop reverse graduated neutral density (‘Daryl Benson’) filter, and a dynamic range compensation mode (DRO Lv5) to get a usable image. While the resulting image from the Sony was head-and-shoulders above this one at 100%, I got this image from a device in my pocket by just pointing and shooting.

The Pixel 2 was able to achieve the image above by first determining the correct focal plane exposure required to not blow large bright (non-specular) areas (an approach known as ETTR or ‘expose-to-the-right’). When you press the shutter button, the Pixel 2 goes back in time 9 frames, aligning and averaging them to give you a final image with quality similar to what you might expect from a sensor with 9x as much surface area. While it’s not quite that simple – sensor efficiency and the number of usable frames for averaging can vary – it’s not far off: consider the Pixel 2 can hold its own to the 5x larger RX100 sensor when given the same amount of total light per exposure.

When you press the shutter button, the Pixel 2 goes back in time 9 frames

How does it do that? It’s constantly keeping the last 9 frames it shot in memory, so when you press the shutter it can grab them, break each into many square ’tiles’, align them all, and then average them. Breaking each image into small tiles allows for alignment despite photographer or subject movement by ignoring moving elements, discarding blurred elements in some shots, or re-aligning subjects that have moved from frame to frame. Averaging simulates the effects of shooting with a larger sensor by ‘evening out’ noise.

That’s what allows the Pixel 2 to capture such a wide dynamic range scene: expose for the bright regions, while reducing noise in static elements of the scene by image averaging, while not blurring moving (water) elements of the scene by making intelligent decisions about what to do with elements that shift from frame to frame. Sure, moving elements have more noise to them (since they couldn’t have as many of the 9 frames dedicated to them for averaging), but overall, do you see anything but a pleasing image?

Autofocus

Improvements in autofocus, combined with the extended depth-of-field inherent to smaller sensors, are bringing focus performance of smartphones nearer and nearer to that of high performance dedicated cameras. Dual Pixel AF on the Google Pixel 2 uses nearly the entire sensor for autofocus (binning the high-resolution sensor into a low-resolution mode to decrease noise), while also using HDR+ and its 9-frame image averaging to further decrease noise and have a usable signal to make AF calculations from.

Google Pixel 2 can focus lightning fast even in indoor artificial light, thanks to Dual Pixel AF, allowing me to snap this candid before it was over in a split second. Technologies like ‘Dual PDAF’ autofocus – used by recent iPhones – don’t quite offer this level of performance (the iPhone X lagged and caught a less interesting moment seconds later when it eventually achieved focus), but offer potential image quality benefits.

And despite the left and right perspectives the split pixels in the Pixel 2 sensor ‘see’ having less than 1mm stereo disparity, an impressive depth map can be built, rendering an optically accurate lens blur. This isn’t just a matter of masking the foreground and blurring the background, it’s an actual progressive blur based on depth.

Instant AF and zero shutter lag allowed me to nail this candid image the instant after my wife and child whirled around to face the camera. A relatively new autofocus technology on recent iPhones we’re seeing is ‘Dual PDAF’ autofocus, where a 1×2 microlens is placed over a green-blue pixel pair where the blue color filter has been replaced by a green one. This can offer some benefits over masked pixels, which sacrifice light and can affect image quality, and over dual pixel AF by not requiring as much deep trench isolation as split photodiodes require to prevent color cross-talk.

However, current implementations only utilize this modified microlens structure in 2 pixels out of an 8×8 pixel region, which means only 3% of the pixels are used for ‘Dual PDAF’ AF. That means less light and information available compared to the full-sensor Dual Pixel AF approach which, combined with the lack of the multi-frame noise reduction the Pixel 2 phones benefit from even for AF, meant more misfocus or shots captured after the decisive moment. Like every technology though, we expect generational improvements.

Portrait Lighting

While we’ve been praising the Pixel phones, Apple is leading smartphone photography in a number of ways. First and foremost: color accuracy. Apple displays are all calibrated and profiled to display accurate colors, so no matter what Apple or color-managed device (or print) you’re viewing, colors look the same. Android devices are still the Wild West in this regard, but Google is trying to solve this via a proper color management system (CMS) under-the-hood. It’ll be some time before all devices catch up, and even Google itself is struggling with its current display and CMS implementation.

But let’s talk about Portrait Lighting. Look at the iPhone X ‘Contour Lighting’ shot below, left, vs. what the natural lighting looked like at the right (shot on a Google Pixel 2 with no special lighting features). While the Pixel 2 image is more natural, the iPhone X image is arguably more interesting, as if I’d lit my subject with a light on the spot.

Apple iPhone X, ‘Contour Lighting’ Google Pixel 2

Apple builds a 3D map of a face using trained algorithms, then allows you to re-light your subject using modes such as ‘natural’, ‘studio’ and ‘contour’ lighting. The latter highlights points of the face like the nose, cheeks and chin that would’ve caught the light from an external light source aimed at the subject. This gives the image a dimensionality you could normally only achieve using external lighting solutions or a lot of post-processing.

Sure the photo on the left could be better, but this is the first iteration of the technology. It won’t be long before we see other phones and software packages taking advantage of—and improving on—these computational approaches.

HDR and wide-gamut photography

And then we have HDR. Not the HDR you’re used to thinking about, that creates flat images from large dynamic range scenes. No, we’re talking about the ability of HDR displays—like bright contrasty OLEDs—to display the wide range of tones and colors cameras can capture these days, rather than sacrificing global contrast just to increase and preserve local contrast, as traditional camera JPEGs do.

iPhone X is the first device ever to support the HDR display of HDR photos. That is: it can capture a wide dynamic range and color gamut but then also display them without clipping tones and colors on its class-leading OLED display, all in an effort to get closer to reproducing the range of tones and colors we see in the real world.

iPhone X is the first device ever to support HDR display of HDR photos

Have a look below at a Portrait Mode image I shot of my daughter that utilizes colors and luminances in the P3 color space. P3 is the color space Hollywood is now using for most of its movies (it’s similar, though shifted, to Adobe RGB). You’ll only see the extra colors if you have a P3-capable display and a color-managed OS/browser (macOS + Google Chrome, or the newest iPads and iPhones). On a P3 display, switch between ‘P3’ and ‘sRGB’ to see the colors you’re missing with sRGB-only capture.

Or, on any display, hover over ‘Colors in P3 out-of-gamut of sRGB’ to see (in grey) what you’re missing with a sRGB-only capture/display workflow.

iPhone X Portrait Mode, image in P3 color space iPhone X Portrait mode, image in sRGB color space Colors in P3 out-of-gamut of sRGB highlighted in grey

Apple is not only taking advantage of the extra colors of the P3 color space, it’s also encoding its images in the ‘High Efficiency Image Format’ (HEIF), which is an advanced format aimed to replace JPEG that is more efficient and also allows for 10-bit color encoding (to avoid banding while allowing for more colors) and HDR encoding to allow the display of a larger range of tones on HDR displays.

But will smartphones replace traditional cameras?

For many, yes, absolutely. Autofocus speeds on the Pixel 2 are phenomenal, assisted by not only dual pixel AF but also laser AF. HDR+ like image stacking algorithms will only get better with time, averaging more frames or frames of various time intervals. The Huawei P20 can do exactly this and results are impressive. The P20 can also combine information from both color and higher-sensitivity monochrome sensors to yield impressive noise – and resolution – performance. Dual (or even triple) lens units give you the focal lengths of a camera body and two or more primes, and we’ve seen the ability to selectively blur backgrounds and isolate subjects like the pros do. Folded optics can give you far reaching zoom.

Below is a shot from the Pixel 2 vs. a shot from a $ 4,000 full-frame body and 55mm F1.8 lens combo—which is which?

Full Frame or Pixel 2? Pixel 2 or Full Frame?

Yes, the trained—myself included—can pick out which is the smartphone image. But when is the smartphone image good enough?

Smartphone cameras are not only catching up with traditional cameras, they’re actually exceeding them in many ways. Take for example…

Creative control…

The image below exemplifies an interesting use of computational blur. The camera has chosen to keep much of the subject—like the front speaker cone, which has significant depth to it—in focus, while blurring the rest of the scene significantly. In fact, if you look at the upper right front of the speaker cabinet, you’ll see a good portion of it in focus. After a certain point, the cabinet suddenly-yet-gradually blurs significantly.

The camera and software has chosen to keep a significant depth-of-focus around the focus plane before blurring objects far enough away from the focus plane significantly. That’s the beauty of computational approaches: while F1.2 lenses can usually only keep one eye in focus—much less the nose or the ear—computational approaches allow you to choose how much you wish to keep in focus even if you wish to blur the rest of the scene to a degree where traditional optics wouldn’t allow for much of your subject to remain in focus.

B&W speakers at sunrise. Take a look at the depth-of-focus vs. depth-of-field in this image. If you look closely, the entire speaker cone and a large front portion of the black cabinet is in focus. There is then a sudden, yet gradual blur to very shallow depth-of-field. That’s the beauty of computational approaches: one can choose extended (say, F5.6 equivalent) depth-of-focus near the focus plane, but then gradually transition to far shallower – say F2.0 – depth-of-field outside of the focus plane. This allows one to keep much of the subject in focus, bet achieve the subject isolation of a much faster lens.

Surprise and delight…

Digital assistants. Love them or hate them, they will be a part of your future, and they’re another way in which smartphone photography augments and exceeds traditional photography approaches. My smartphone is always on me, and when I have my full-frame Sony a7R III with me, I often transfer JPEGs from it to my smartphone. Those images (and 720p video proxies) automatically upload to my Google Photos account. From there any image or video that has my or my daughter’s face in it automatically gets shared with my wife without my so much as lifting a finger.

Better yet? Often I get a notification that Google Assistant has pulled a cute animated GIF from my movie it thinks is interesting. And more often than not, the animations are adorable:

Splash splash! in Xcaret, Quintana Roo, Mexico. Animated GIF auto-generated from a movie shot on the Pixel 2.

Machine learning allowed Google Assistant to automatically guess that this clip from a much longer video was an interesting moment I might wish to revisit and preserve. And it was right. Just as it was right in picking the moment below, where my daughter is clapping in response to her cousin clapping at successfully feeding her… after which my wife claps as well.

Claps all around!

Google Assistant is impressive in its ability to pick out meaningful moments from photos and videos. Apple takes a similar approach in compiling ‘Memories’.

But animated GIFs aren’t the only way Google Assistant helps me curate and find the important moments in my life. It also auto-curates videos that pull together photos and clips from my videos—be it from my smartphone or media I’ve imported from my camera—into emotionally moving ‘Auto Awesome’ compilations:

At any time I can hand-select the photos and videos, down to the portions of each video, I want in a compilation—using an editing interface far simpler than Final Cut Pro or Adobe Premiere. I can even edit the auto-compilations Google Assistant generates, choosing my favorite photos, clips and music. And did you notice that the video clips and photos are cut down to the beat in the music?

This is a perfect example of where smartphone photography exceeds traditional cameras, especially for us time-starved souls that hardly have the time to download our assets to a hard drive (not to mention back up said assets). And it’s a reminder that traditional cameras that don’t play well with such automated services like Google and Apple Photos will only be left behind simpler services that surprise and delight a majority of us.

The future is bright

This is just the beginning. The computational approaches Apple, Google, Samsung and many others are taking are revolutionizing what we can expect from devices we have in our pockets, devices we always have on us.

Are they going to defy physics and replace traditional cameras tomorrow? Not necessarily, not yet, but for many purposes and people, they will offer pros that are well-worth the cons. In some cases they offer more than we’ve come to expect of traditional cameras, which will have to continue to innovate—perhaps taking advantage of the very computational techniques smartphones and other innovative computational devices are leveraging—to stay ahead of the curve.

But as techniques like HDR+ and Portrait Mode and Portrait Lighting have shown us, we can’t just look at past technologies to predict what’s to come. Computational photography will make things you’ve never imagined a reality. And that’s incredibly exciting.

If you’d rather digest this article in video form, watch my segment on the TWiT Network (named after its flagship show, This Week in Tech) show ‘The New Screen Savers’ below. And don’t forget to catch our recent smartphone galleries after the video.


Appendix: Studio Scene

We’ve added the Google Pixel 2 and Apple iPhone X to our studio scene widget. You can compare the Daylight and Low Light scenes below to any camera of your choosing, keeping in mind that we shot the smartphones in their default camera apps without controlling exposure to see how they would perform in these light levels (10 and 3 EV, respectively, for Daylight and Low Light).

$ (document).ready(function() { ImageComparisonWidget({“containerId”:”reviewImageComparisonWidget-19227307″,”widgetId”:589,”initialStateId”:3906}) })

Note that we introduced some motion into the Low Light scene to simulate what the iPhone does when there’s movement in the scene. Hence, the ISO 640, 1/30s iPhone X image is more reflective of low light image quality for scenes that can’t be shot at the 1/4s shutter speed (ISO 125) the iPhone X will tend to drop to for completely static (tripod-based) low light scenes.

The Pixel 2 rarely drops to shutter speeds slower than 1/30s in low light, yet impressively almost matches the performance of a 1″-type sensor at these shutter speeds in low light (though the ‘i’ tab shows the RX100 shot at 1/6s F4, you’d get an equivalent exposure at 1/30s were you to shoot the Sony at F1.8 like the Pixel 2).

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Fused Minds

14 Jan

Es ist kein Gleichklang in „Fused Minds“ von Zimmer117. Ich schmecke Dissonanz zwischen den Bildern und höre in Gedanken jemanden verloren auf einer Gitarre schrammeln.

Es ist Nacht, das Licht des Mondes ergießt sich auf den alten Dielenfußboden, auf den ich so stolz war, als ich das Zimmer anmietete. Die Pflanzen auf dem Fenstersims haben ihre Blätter verloren. Der Winter ist eingekehrt und das Heft liegt vor mir.

Es ist ein Winterheft, in dem der Schwan stolz seinen Hals verrenkt, tote Fliegen auf dem Nichts liegen, Menschen gedankenverloren in die Ferne schauen und ausgestopfte Kraniche angstvoll den Blitzen lauschen.

Die Bilder sind eine Ansammlung von Gedanken. Der Betrachter ist es, der sie wieder zusammensetzt. Manch einer mag nicht, zuckt mit den Schultern und geht wieder weg. Der andere schaut drauf, lauscht der Schrammelmusik, findet ein Stück von sich wieder.

Das Heft ist Berlin. Es wirkt genauso zerstückelt und wieder zusammengesetzt wie diese Stadt, in der die Einsamen sich treffen und zusammen auf die Party gehen. Wo dann pailettenbenetztes Licht behaarte Körper schmückt und im Morgengrauen ein Vogelschwarm zerstäubt.

Die Bilder sind wie diese Filme, die keiner versteht und doch ein jeder kennt und drauf schaut – poetisch, direkt, plakativ, verstörend und seltsam. Eine Linie, der man folgen kann, zu finden ist schwer. Und doch stolpert man von Bild zu Bild und ist irgendwie berührt und weiß nicht wieso.

~

Fused Minds ist ein Gemeinschaftsprojekt von Zimmer 117. Nach einer längeren Pause hat die gesamte Gruppe, bestehend aus Christian Conrad, Lars Kiss, Marina Jerkovic, Daniel Harders, Susann Probst und Yannic Schon, endlich einmal wieder ein neues Fotoheft zusammengestellt.

Bestellen kannst Du das auf 180 Exemplare limitierte Heft über Zimmer117 für 14 € + Porto.


kwerfeldein – Fotografie Magazin

 
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Mind’s Eye

25 Dec

Some cool visual art images:

Mind’s Eye
visual art
Image by Walt Jabsco
Cardiff University’s School of Psychology has 1,000 individually-made terracotta tiles, the art work is supposed to reveal a number of different visual illusions to highlight the way the mind recognises patterns.
Artist Peter Randall-Page has created the work, Mind’s Eye, which will stand as a landmark on one of the major routes into Cardiff.

fifty two heartbeats [verse four]
visual art
Image by the|G|™
fifty two heartbeats [a requiem for 2009]

the entire 8 here:
www.flickr.com/photos/the-g-uk/sets/72157622990446749/

a new decade. new directions. new connections.

this is a beat poem for the eyes in eight parts.

some sections have been considered, some are purely accidental.

fifty two pieces. diverse. from landscape to dada to abstract to portrait. and beyond.

the people, the artists, have made my year better. their gift to me.

this is a visual echo to them. to you.

a new decade.

may it treat you well.

the|G|™

[NB]

this work is in not in ‘absolute’ order of preference.

though of course, from the beginning, i thought about those who have a deep connection for me, so there is a modicum of ‘hierarchy’.

however, i suddenly remembered people who are dear to me toward the end of the process!! you cannot read too much into your ‘placing’ in the mosaics, and that is as it should be.

if you are not in the mix, i can only apologise. it was quite a lengthy process 😮
i will certainly have forgotten people [i can think of several now] who should have been a part of this process, but a year only contains a finite number of weeks.

you are not forgotten.

the best to all my contacts.

should you be interested in the fundamental reasons for many of my contacts being held in high esteem and great regard, please feel free to cast an eye over my new year video. it explains much with regard to how i view my contacts:

www.flickr.com/photos/the-g-uk/4232387716/

once again.

thank you all, for being who you are.

the|G|™

1. 201/365, 2. #484, 3. I got a letter from the Army, 4. Untitled, 5. Untitled, 6. Santa Margherita

TodaysArt 2008 – Vloei / Flow I
visual art
Image by Haags Uitburo
Gifts Bram Vreven calls them, the beautiful visual effects caused by the movemaent of water over glass or plastic. Vreven uses physical phenomena based on adhesion and cohesion in purely artistic ways. Rejecting scientific pretence, he is only concerned with the beauty of the images.

Every year, for one weekend, the TodaysArt Festival brings a whole range of innovative and groundbreaking acts to the Netherlands. For two days, the city centre of The Hague functions as one big festival terrain, with performances both in the public domain and on several indoor stages. Interactive installations, projections and acts use the city centre as a stage and transform The Hague into an inspiring stronghold of audiovisual experiences.

 
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Art Inspires the Curious Minds / 100% Acrylic Art Guards by Agata Olek / Dumbo Arts Center: Art Under the Bridge Festival 2009 / 20090926.10D.54792.P1.L1.CC / SML

07 Dec

A few nice visual art images I found:

Art Inspires the Curious Minds / 100% Acrylic Art Guards by Agata Olek / Dumbo Arts Center: Art Under the Bridge Festival 2009 / 20090926.10D.54792.P1.L1.CC / SML
visual art
Image by See-ming Lee ??? SML
See also Agata Olek talks about her 100% Acrylic Art Guards (Flickr 720p HD video)

Agata Olek (Flickr)
100% Acrylic Art Guards

"I think crochet, the way I create it, is a metaphor for the complexity and interconnectedness of our body and its systems and psychology. The connections are stronger as one fabric as opposed to separate strands, but, if you cut one, the whole thing will fall apart.

Relationships are complex and greatly vary situation to situation. They are developmental journeys of growth, and transformation. Time passes, great distances are surpassed and the fabric which individuals are composed of compiles and unravels simultaneously."

Agata Olek Biography. The SPLAT! of colors hits you in the face, often clashing so ostentatiously that it instantly tunes you into the presence of severely cheeky humor. A moment later the fatigue of labor creeps into your fingers as a coal miner’s work ethic becomes apparent. Hundreds of miles of crocheted, weaved, and often recycled materials are the fabric from which the wild and occasionally wearable structures of her fantasylands are born.

Olek was born Agata Oleksiak in Poland and graduated from Adam Mickiewicz University in Poland with a degree in cultural studies. In New York, she rediscovered her ability to crochet and since then she has started her crocheted journey/madness.

Resume sniffers may be pleased to know Olek’s work has been presented in galleries from Brooklyn to Istanbul to Venice and Brazil, featured in "The New York Times", "Fiberarts Magazine", "The Village Voice", and "Washington Post" and drags a tail of dance performance sets and costumes too numerous to mention.

Olek received the Ruth Mellon Award for Sculpture, was selected for 2005 residency program at Sculpture Space, 2009 residency in Instituto Sacatar in Brazil, and is a winner of apex art gallery commercial competition. Olek was an artist in an independent collective exhibition, "Waterways," during the 49th Venice Biennale. She was also a featured artist in "Two Continents Beyond," at the 9th International Istanbul Biennale.

Olek herself however can be found in her Greenpoint studio with a bottle of spiced Polish vodka and a hand rolled cigarette aggressively re-weaving the world as she sees.

agataolek.com
agataolek.com/blog

13th annual D.U.M.B.O. Art Under the Bridge Festival® (Sept 25 to Sept 27, 2009)
www.dumboartfestival.org/press_release.html

The three-day multi-site neighborhood-wide event is a one-of-a-kind art happening: where serendipity meets the haphazard and where the unpredictable, spontaneous and downright weird thrive. The now teenage D.U.M.B.O. Art Under the Bridge Festival® presents touchable, accessible, and interactive art, on a scale that makes it the nation’s largest urban forum for experimental art.

Art Under the Bridge is an opportunity for young artists to use any medium imaginable to create temporary projects on-the-spot everywhere and anywhere, completely transforming the Dumbo section of Brooklyn, New York, into a vibrant platform for self-expression. In addition to the 80+ projects throughout the historical post-industrial waterfront span, visitors can tour local artists’ studios or check out the indoor video_dumbo, a non-stop program of cutting-edge video art from New York City and around the world.

The Dumbo Arts Center (DAC) has been the exclusive producer of the D.U.M.B.O Art Under the Bridge Festival® since 1997. DAC is a big impact, small non-profit, that in addition to its year-round gallery exhibitions, is committed to preserving Dumbo as a site in New York City where emerging visual artists can experiment in the public domain, while having unprecedented freedom and access to normally off-limit locations.

www.dumboartscenter.org
www.dumboartfestival.org
www.video_dumbo.org

Related SML
+ SML Fine Art (Flickr Group)
+ SML Flickr Collections: Events
+ SML Flickr Sets: Art
+ SML Flickr Sets: Dumbo Arts Center: Art Under the Bridge Festival 2009
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+ SML Pro Blog: Art

Art + Artists: James Cospito talks about the Brooklyn Art Project / Dumbo Arts Center: Art Under the Bridge Festival 2009 / 2009-09-26 / SML
visual art
Image by See-ming Lee ??? SML
James Cospito, founder of the Brooklyn Art Project, talks about the art seen at the project’s headquarter in Dumbo during the Art Under the Bridge Festival held annually by Dumbo Arts Center in New York City.

Brooklyn Art Project (FriendFeed / Twitter) is a free online social network that connects 5500+ artists, collectors, and art enthusiasts from over 44 countries featuring over 44,000 artworks and 800+ short films and videos.

Members can participate in collaborative exhibits in Brooklyn and beyond while enjoying unlimited online gallery space, blogs, forums, chat, and tools to share / promote their artwork across the web.

BrooklynArtProject.com

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13th annual D.U.M.B.O. Art Under the Bridge Festival® (Sept 25 to Sept 27, 2009)
www.dumboartfestival.org/press_release.html

The three-day multi-site neighborhood-wide event is a one-of-a-kind art happening: where serendipity meets the haphazard and where the unpredictable, spontaneous and downright weird thrive. The now teenage D.U.M.B.O. Art Under the Bridge Festival® presents touchable, accessible, and interactive art, on a scale that makes it the nation’s largest urban forum for experimental art.

Art Under the Bridge is an opportunity for young artists to use any medium imaginable to create temporary projects on-the-spot everywhere and anywhere, completely transforming the Dumbo section of Brooklyn, New York, into a vibrant platform for self-expression. In addition to the 80+ projects throughout the historical post-industrial waterfront span, visitors can tour local artists’ studios or check out the indoor video_dumbo, a non-stop program of cutting-edge video art from New York City and around the world.

The Dumbo Arts Center (DAC) has been the exclusive producer of the D.U.M.B.O Art Under the Bridge Festival® since 1997. DAC is a big impact, small non-profit, that in addition to its year-round gallery exhibitions, is committed to preserving Dumbo as a site in New York City where emerging visual artists can experiment in the public domain, while having unprecedented freedom and access to normally off-limit locations.

www.dumboartscenter.org
www.dumboartfestival.org
www.video_dumbo.org

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Dr. Oliver Sacks on The Mind’s Eye

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In The Mind’s Eye, physician and author Oliver Sacks tells the stories of people who are able to navigate the world and communicate with others despite losing what many of us consider indispensable senses and abilities: the power of speech, the capacity to recognize faces, the sense of three-dimensional space, the ability to read, or the sense of sight. Dr. Sacks recently visited the American Museum of Natural History to discuss his book and how he too has struggled with several perceptual conditions, from face-blindness to a loss of stereo vision due to ocular cancer. Dr. Sacks’ talk was recorded live on Oct. 17, 2011.

 
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Inspiring Minds: Photography Tips by the Masters

18 Oct

This is the first of many interviews by photographer Robert Vasquez with the great photographers of our generation. Meet Mark Edward Harris as he gives valuable insight to the realm of magazine assignments and travel photography.
Video Rating: 5 / 5

 
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Posted in Photography Videos