Stories and interviews
Submit
Info
Subscribe About Contact The Team
Online Exhibitions
Group Show 70: Under the Sun and the Moon Group Show 69: Photo for Non-Majors (part 2) Group Show 69: Photo for Non-Majors (part 1) Group Show 68: Four Degrees Group Show 67: Embracing Stillness Group Show 66: La Frontera Group Show 65: Two Way Lens Group Show 64: Tropes Gone Wild Group Show 63: Love, Actually Group Show 62: 100% Fun Group Show 61: Loss Group Show 60: Winter Pictures Group Show 59: Numerology Group Show 58: On Death Group Show 57: New Psychedelics Group Show 56: Source Material Group Show 55: Year in Reverse Group show 54: Seeing Sound Group Show 53: On Beauty Group Show 52: Alternative Facts Group Show 51: Future Isms Group Show 50: 'Roid Rage Group Show 48: Winter Pictures Group Show 47: Space Jamz group show 46: F*cked Up group show 45: New Jack City group show 44: Radical Color group show 43: TMWT group show 42: Occultisms group show 41: New Cats in Art Photography group show 40: #Latergram group show 39: Tough Turf P. 2/2 group show 39: Tough Turf P. 1/2

Humble Arts Foundation

New Photography
Stories and interviews
Submit
Info
Subscribe About Contact The Team
Online Exhibitions
Group Show 70: Under the Sun and the Moon Group Show 69: Photo for Non-Majors (part 2) Group Show 69: Photo for Non-Majors (part 1) Group Show 68: Four Degrees Group Show 67: Embracing Stillness Group Show 66: La Frontera Group Show 65: Two Way Lens Group Show 64: Tropes Gone Wild Group Show 63: Love, Actually Group Show 62: 100% Fun Group Show 61: Loss Group Show 60: Winter Pictures Group Show 59: Numerology Group Show 58: On Death Group Show 57: New Psychedelics Group Show 56: Source Material Group Show 55: Year in Reverse Group show 54: Seeing Sound Group Show 53: On Beauty Group Show 52: Alternative Facts Group Show 51: Future Isms Group Show 50: 'Roid Rage Group Show 48: Winter Pictures Group Show 47: Space Jamz group show 46: F*cked Up group show 45: New Jack City group show 44: Radical Color group show 43: TMWT group show 42: Occultisms group show 41: New Cats in Art Photography group show 40: #Latergram group show 39: Tough Turf P. 2/2 group show 39: Tough Turf P. 1/2
© Tania Franco Klein Contained (Self-portrait), from Our Life in the Shadows, 2016 63 x 42 inch Archival Pigment Print. Courtesy of ROSE Gallery.

© Tania Franco Klein Contained (Self-portrait), from Our Life in the Shadows, 2016 63 x 42 inch Archival Pigment Print. Courtesy of ROSE Gallery.

Channeling Cindy Sherman, Tania Franco Klein Reclaims the Trope of the “Beautiful Tragic Woman”

For Edgar Allan Poe, there was nothing as “poetical” as the death of a beautiful woman. For the past eighty years, Los Angeles’ creative minds have taken this musing from the Baltimore-based poet and splashed it into the popular imagination through noir and detective films. The beautiful dead woman—or, depending on the example, the beautiful sad woman who is not yet dead—is a hallmark of the (often misogynist) genre and a staple in Proceed to the Route, Tania Franco Klein’s solo exhibition at Rose Gallery through February 15, 2020, at Bergamot Station in Santa Monica, California.

Exhibition Review by Deborah Krieger

Read more …
PostedJanuary 14, 2020
AuthorDeborah Krieger
CategoriesExhibitions, Artists, Portfolio
TagsTania Franco Klein, female tropes, Female Gaze, Deborah Krieger, Rose Gallery
Photo: Everett Collection / Adobe

Photo: Everett Collection / Adobe

Reading (Still) Isn’t Dead. 22 Essays, Interviews, and Other Online Photography Writing You Should Have Read in 2019

Humble editors recommend standouts in 2019 (online) photography writing

How often do you read – beyond a quick skim – the text accompanying a gut-heavy photo essay someone you respect shared on some social network? One that happened to algorithmically line up to your endless scroll? What was the last piece of writing on photography that truly made you stop, think, and maybe twitch for more than a few seconds or the “five minute read?” What writing sat with you for more than a glance? 

As photography writers and quotationally proclaimed “critics,” we try to read as much as we can to keep us both pulsed and pleasantly distracted. But it’s more than that. Great photo writing, whether it’s an honest Q+A or a thoughtfully researched essay or even an inspired exhibition review, can help us wade deeper, can help clarify, and in many cases, can change how we see what we see.

The following list barely nicks the skin of all the inspiring photography writing in 2019, but we hope will help move, distract, change your view of the world. In some cases, they may even help you navigate your own process of shooting, editing, curating, or making a living from making pictures. 

Read more …
PostedJanuary 7, 2020
AuthorEditors
CategoriesArtists, Publications
TagsJacqueline Bates, Kat Kiernan, Laura Mallonee, The Luupe, APerture, Sara Rosen, Miss Rosen, Ellyn Kail, Kathy Ryan, Megan Gannon, Layla Fassa, Sarah Lewis, Vision and Justice, Aline Smithson, Carol Evans, Jess T. Dugan, Teju Cole, Wanda Nanibush, Zoe Samudzi, Gregory Eddi Jones, Brad Feuerhelm, Jonathan Blaustein, Ysmisi Arbisala, Yemsi Arbisala, Efrem Zelony-Mindell
deinkampf__11_copy_2048x2048.jpg

Brad Feuerhelm's New Photobook Navigates the Anxieties of History and Ideology

In 2017, Brad Feuehelm spent three days wandering around Berlin. He photographed various scattered symbols of capitalist modernity – billboards, television stations, satellite dishes, and contemporary office buildings – with no specific beginning or end in sight. And then he stopped.

Rather than painting a linear narrative of the city, its people or cultures, Feuerhelm cropped, collated and reorganized these often blurry, grainy black and white photographs into Dein Kampf, his disorienting 2019 photobook published by MACK that emphasizes the equally disorienting, blurry and anxious ways we navigate history and political ideology.

For Feurhelm, whether it's on the left or right, nothing is clear, everything is broken and whichever direction we turn, we confront a mess of cacophonous gray. I spoke with Feuerhelm to learn more.

Jon Feinstein in conversation with Brad Feuerhelm

Read more …
PostedJanuary 3, 2020
AuthorJon Feinstein
CategoriesPhotobooks, Artists, Portfolio
Tagsphotobooks, Brad Feuerhelm, Dein Kampf, Mack Books, black and white photography, new photography, conceptual photography
ImaginedFuturesDetail (1) (1).jpg

Rafael Soldi Transforms a Photobooth into a Sanctuary

Rafael Soldi’s new monograph, Imagined Futures, published by Candor Arts, uses the photobooth as a sacred space for healing amidst cultural and political turmoil.

Seattle based photographer, curator, and activist Rafael Soldi’s latest series and limited edition photobook lowers the volume on the heated dialogues in which nationality, gender, sexual orientation and their role in identity continue to inflame and divide.

Using quiet self-portraits made in traditional photo booths around the world, Soldi invites us to witness his reckoning with adolescent traumas shaped by socio-religious discrimination and ill-fitting masculine tropes. With closed eyes, he mutes extraneous noise to hear his inner monologue and find empowerment and solace within himself.

I chatted with Soldi about photo booths as interlocutors in the self-portrait process and healing wounds through ritual and performance.

Roula Seikaly in conversation with Rafael Soldi

Read more …
PostedDecember 11, 2019
AuthorRoula Seikaly
CategoriesArtists, Photobooks, Portfolio
Tagsphotobooth, photobooks, Rafael Soldi, Candor Arts, Roula Seikaly, self portraiture
Holding Missle, Peenemünde, 1940/2019 © Barbara Diener

Holding Missle, Peenemünde, 1940/2019 © Barbara Diener

A Strange New Photo Series Retells the Story of Two of Rocket Science's Earliest Pioneers

Photographer Barbara Diener's The Rocket's Red Glare Untangles a Convoluted History

As teenagers in the 1920s, a time when space travel was limited to science fiction novels, Wernher von Braun in Germany and Jack Parsons in Pasadena, CA shared an intercontinental rocket science correspondence. Talking for hours on the phone, they exchanged ideas, tips, and notes from experiments on everything from explosions to home-engineered rocket fuel tests. Into adulthood, they went on separate paths.

In 1932, Braun began working for the German Army just before the country fell under Nazi rule, and Parsons quickly severed ties. Parsons made significant contributions to the development of rocket fuel and was part of the famous rocket building Suicide Squad at CalTech, but was later written out of much of NASA's history because of his involvement with Aleister Crowley's occult religion. Meanwhile, the US government recruited Braun who later developed the Saturn V rocket for NASA

Barbara Diener’s The Rocket’s Red Glare combines found photographs and other archival materials from the period with her own photographs to create a meandering alternative narrative of the two scientists' work and relationship. Aerials of rocket testing sites volley with portraits of male and female actors Diener hired to stand in for Parsons, as well as (glasses required) 3D photographs of martian landscapes. Diener’s nonlinear mix of old and new creates a disjointed yet effective story of a period in history to which most viewers are likely unaware.

Intrigued and confused, I spoke with Diener to dig through her strange historical revision.

Jon Feinstein in conversation with Barbara Diener

Read more …
PostedNovember 26, 2019
AuthorJon Feinstein
CategoriesPortfolio, Artists
TagsBarbara Diener, The Suicide Squad, NASA Photography, Wernher von Braun, Jack Parsons, NASA History, rocket science, found photography
Newer / Older

Founded in 2005, Humble Arts Foundation is dedicated to supporting and promoting new art photography.