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Archive for March, 2013

2013 GPP Shootout Challenge: Photograph Greg Heisler

09 Mar

The Gulf Photo Plus 2013 Shootout just concluded, and boy was it a doozy.

The challenge: make a portrait of Greg Freakin’ Heisler, soup to nuts, in front of 350 people in 20 mins flat. No pressure there.

Major props to John Keatley, who managed to not crack under the pressure and actually make a portrait of Heisler that was consistent with the slightly off-center Keatley style.

Completely seriously, I want a 16×20 of this for the Strobist Cave.

And here’s the thing: Keatley didn’t even win it. This year’s winner was Zack Arias, who suffice to say has a brass pair for what he did. You’ll definitely want to watch the video when it comes out.

Whatever you have to do to get to Dubai for GPP, make it happen.

-30-


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Cool Visual Art images

09 Mar

Some cool visual art images:

Lucile Blanch, American painter, 1895-1981
visual art
Image by Smithsonian Institution
Description: Lucile Blanch was a recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship as well as a WPA (Public Works of Art Program) artist commission. She was a key part of the revitalization of the Woodstock Art Colony in the 1920s as well. By the mid-1940s her style evolved from realism into abstraction.

Creator/Photographer: Peter A. Juley & Son

Medium: Black and white photographic print

Dimensions: 8 in x 10 in

Culture: American

Date: 1930

Persistent URL: http://photography.si.edu/SearchImage.aspx?id=5813

Repository: Smithsonian American Art Museum, Photograph Archives

Collection: Peter A. Juley & Son Collection – The Peter A. Juley & Son Collection is comprised of 127,000 black-and-white photographic negatives documenting the works of more than 11,000 American artists. Throughout its long history, from 1896 to 1975, the Juley firm served as the largest and most respected fine arts photography firm in New York. The Juley Collection, acquired by the Smithsonian American Art Museum in 1975, constitutes a unique visual record of American art sometimes providing the only photographic documentation of altered, damaged, or lost works. Included in the collection are over 4,700 photographic portraits of artists.

Accession number: J0001215

Tim Durfee, Bruce Sterling, Fiona Raby, Anne Burdick
visual art
Image by G A R N E T
Art Center (Pasadena, California)
Exhibition: www.artcenter.edu/mdp/madeup/exhibition.html

Tim Durfee is organizer-curator-director of the events that comprise the MADE UP series. Tim became part of the core faculty at the MDP in 2009, after a two-year visiting Associate Professorship at Woodbury University. Before that, he taught for twelve years at SCI-Arc (The Southern California Institute of Architecture), where we was Director of Visual Studies. Tim’s independent and collaborative practices are diverse, but — resisting the term ‘multi-disciplinary’— attempt to operate in a way where the appropriate mode and medium for a given project emerges from a process of research and inquiry. Some of this work includes award-winning buildings, exhibitions, online exhibitions, sign systems, motion and sound.

Bruce Sterling is an Austin-based science fiction writer and Net critic, internationally recognized as a cyberspace theorist. He currently blogs at Beyond the Beyond for Wired Magazine.
Bruce’s most recent book-length essays question and promote how the future is shaping our concepts of self, time and space, including Shaping Things (2005), and Tomorrow Now: Envisioning the Next Fifty Years (2002). Bruce was the founder of the Dead Media Project, an on-line reliquary of forgotten media technologies. He founded the Viridian Design Movement, an environmental aesthetic movement founded on the ideas of global citizenship, environmental design and techno-progressiveness. His writings have been very influential in the cyberpunk movement in literature, specifically the novels Heavy Weather (1994), Islands in the Net (1988), Schismatrix (1985), The Artificial Kid (1980), and Involution Ocean (1977). He co-authored, with William Gibson, The Difference Engine (1990), a novel that is part of the steampunk sub-genre.

Fiona Raby studied Architecture at the RCA before working for Kei’ichi Irie Architects in Tokyo. She also holds an MPhil in Computer Related Design from the RCA. She was a founding member of the CRD Research Studio where she worked as a Senior Research Fellow leading externally funded research projects. She taught in Architecture for over 10 years before teaching in Design Interactions. Fiona is also a partner in Dunne + Raby, a creative design partnership that use design as a medium to stimulate discussion and debate amongst designers, industry and the public about the social, cultural and ethical implications of existing and emerging technologies. She is co-author, with Anthony Dunne, of Design Noir: The Secret Life of Electronic Objects.

Anne Burdick is a regular participant in the international dialogue regarding the future of graduate education and research in design. In addition, she designs experimental text projects in diverse media, for which she has garnered recognition, from the prestigious Leipzig Award for book design to I.D. Magazine’s Interactive Design Review for her work with interactive texts. Burdick has designed books of literary/media criticism by authors such as Marshall McLuhan and N. Katherine Hayles and she is currently developing electronic corpora with the Austrian Academy of Sciences. Burdick’s writing and design can be found in the Los Angeles Times, Eye Magazine and Electronic Book Review, among others, and her work is held in the permanent collections of both SFMOMA and MoMA. Burdick studied graphic design at both Art Center College of Design and San Diego State University prior to receiving a B.F.A. and M.F.A. in graphic design at California Institute of the Arts.

 
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Guardian photographers share tips for getting a portrait in ten minutes

09 Mar

Kofi-Annan-010.jpg

British newspaper The Guardian is known for its editorial photography, but like all working pros, the staff photographers sometimes only get a few minutes to capture their subjects. In an article posted on the Guardian’s Photo Blog, several of the paper’s photographers share their tips for getting portraits in a hurry. Click through for some pictures, and a link to the article at guardian.co.uk.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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National Geographic celebrates 125 years of photography with Tumblr

09 Mar

tumblr_mj9r0ioIjH1s7f3fyo1_1280.jpg

The National Geographic Society continues to celebrate its 125th anniversary, and has launched a Tumblr blog called ‘Found’, which hosts a curated collection of photos from the National Geographic archives. The curation is done by Nat Geo’s William Bonner who has been scanning through the company’s extensive photography archive in the basement of its Washington, D.C. headquarters. Click through for more information and some fascinating photos.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Accessory Review: Cinetics Cine System

09 Mar

CineSkates-Feature.jpg

The Cinetics Cine System is a low-cost kit which enables videographers to achieve smooth panning and zoom shots as well as window and vehicle mounted footage. The system is built around Joby’s popular Gorillapod Focus flexible tripod, and includes wheeled feet and the ‘CineSquid’ attachment allowing you to firmly mount a DSLR or small video camera to windows. We covered the Cine System last year in an article about interesting photography-related Kickstarter projects, and were really intrigued by its potential. Click through for a link to our review. 

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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8. März 2013

09 Mar

Ein Beitrag von: André Winkler

© André Winkler


kwerfeldein – Fotografie Magazin

 
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Posted in Equipment

 

Nissin announces Di700 flashgun and PS 8 external battery pack

09 Mar

Nissin-Di700.png

Nissin’s UK distributor Kenro has announced the Di700 flashgun and the PS 8 external battery pack for Canon, Nikon and Sony digital SLRs. With a guide number of 50 (at 200mm), the Di700 is equipped with an external power socket making it compatible with the PS 8. The battery pack offers a heat-resistant plastic body, a USB socket for charging and an LED indication lamp. The PS 8 is available for £165 (including VAT), while the Di700 will be available from April 2013 at a price to be confirmed. There is currently no information about US price and availability.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Travel with Speedlights and a Smartphone? Get One of These.

09 Mar

I very rarely review gadgets on this site. But this is something that may be new to many of you.

When I travel I try to take as little gear as humanly possible. But the Tekkeon MP1580, seen above at bottom right, is on my must-take short list every time I fly with a camera.

Here's why. Read more »
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Homeless Hotel: Radical Urban Retreat has No Rooms, Ever

08 Mar

[ By WebUrbanist in Boutique & Art Hotels & Global. ]

homeless hotel

You may have seen some strange and unique accommodations on AirBNB, but few hosts can boast something as unusual as Faktum Hotels, an unreal room-free resort in Sweden.

homeless shelter hostel rooms

Their offerings are entirely out in the open air, doubling as an awareness-raising campaign for the city’s homeless and and actual alternative sleeping space for those same citizens.

homeless urban living awareness

So if not rooms, then what are you actually booking? A sleeping bag, or simply a secluded space … everywhere an actual vagabond or vagrant might occupy, including park benches, public restrooms, abandoned buildings, bridge underpasses and below bleachers.

homeless street parking spaces

And how much to reserve one of these temporary hobo hostels? The rate for each of these 10 surreal pseudo-spaces is just 10 Euros per night … proceeds of which go to charity work supported by Faktum Magazine.

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[ By WebUrbanist in Boutique & Art Hotels & Global. ]

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Posted in Creativity

 

12 Fantastic Deep Space Photos of the Planets

08 Mar

Some of the greatest human achievements have been the missions to explore the planets in our Solar System, and these endeavours have also produced some of the most important and visually stunning images in the history of photography. This post brings together a showcase of some of the best planetary space photos starting with Mercury, the closest planet to the Continue Reading

The post 12 Fantastic Deep Space Photos of the Planets appeared first on Photodoto.


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