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
© Tanya Marcuse from her new book Ink, published by Fall Line Press

© Tanya Marcuse from her new book Ink, published by Fall Line Press

Poetic Photographs Of Squid Ink Oozing Onto Pages of The NY Times

Tanya Marcuse’s new oversized book Ink, is a beautiful cacophony of form and symbolism.

One summer in Maine, photographer Tanya Marcuse’s son insisted they try nocturnal squid fishing. Moved by the uncanny spontaneity of the experience, Marcuse – who normally makes slow-process large format photographs – pulled out her iPhone and embarked on an unexpected series and way of seeing.

She began making similarly fleeting yet intricately crafted photos of squid spilling its ink across story titles, fashion advertisements, and marriage announcements. In each photograph, the squid, ink and newsprint become a painted, Rorschachy mess that pushes viewers to conjure their own relationships between ink and image, gesture and surface, headline and tentacle.

Marcuse’s images are both alluring and disquieting. These tableau-like still-life compositions reminds us of her background as a large-format photographer, and her iPhone brings a freeing informality to how she organizes form and space. Now a large-scale book (and limited edition folio, if you fancy) published by Fall Line Press, Ink takes on a new layer of tactility from its once digital-only existence – photos you want to hold and handle as you attempt to figure out their mystery. I spoke with Marcuse to learn more about her process and the story behind it.

Jon Feinstein in conversation with Tanya Marcuse

Read more …
PostedJuly 16, 2021
AuthorJon Feinstein
Categoriesinterviews, Artists, Art News, Publications, Photobooks, Portfolio
TagsTanya Marcuse, 2021 photobooks, Fall Line Press, squid ink photographs, squid ink painting, photographic tableaux, #shotonaniphone, iPhone photography, mobile photography, Rorschach photography
Brea Souders: Eleven Years. Published by Saint Lucy Books

Brea Souders: Eleven Years. Published by Saint Lucy Books

Brea Souders' New Photobook "Eleven Years" Spans Photography's Endless Possibilities

The artist’s first monograph brings together her wide ranging approach, process, and strategies to reimagine what a photograph can be, and what it might mean.

With the publication of Eleven Years by Saint Lucy Books, Brea Souders’ restless interrogation of the photographic medium and its materials is celebrated. Her inventiveness eschews signature style thus risking what conventional wisdom casually dictates, and gives license to perform an inquiry without formula and reliance upon the habitual. It is a methodology that foregrounds the thought process rather than the appearance, and siphons experience and observation into something unfamiliar.

The photographs cull from reservoirs of impermanence, illusion and shards of memory and grief, and engage the archive, map, the picture postcard; the fragment. Her process is nomadic rather than sedentary, cultivating a renewed understanding of the artist’s task.

A few weeks shy of the book’s release (and Souders’ opening reception and book launch at Silverstein Gallery) former SVA Photography and Video chair and Dear Dave Magazine founder and Editor in Chief Stephen Frailey speaks with Souders about the many angles of her career and practice.

Brea Souders in conversation with Stephen Frailey

Read more …
PostedJuly 1, 2021
AuthorStephen Frailey
CategoriesArt News, interviews, Photobooks, Publications
TagsBrea Souders, Stephen Frailey, Saint Lucy Books, 2021 Photobooks, Silverstein Gallery
Cover.jpeg

Help This Wild Contemporary Photographic Interpretation of T.S. Eliot's "The Waste Land" Get Published

Gregory Eddi Jones is raising funds to publish his upcoming book Promise Land with Self Publish Be Happy and we think you should support it.

Promise Land is a 200-page, epic visual poem that reinterprets T.S. Eliot’s classic “The Waste Land” through a contemporary lens. Picking up where the poem left off nearly a century ago, Gregory Eddi Jones jacks and manipulates stock images and video stills, into unreal, sometimes cartoonish, sometimes pictorial riffs on the clichéd experiences they represent.

Chirping birds, boring cat photos, clouds, rainbows, and other dentist-office-poster images fade and break apart at varying degrees on the page, often looking like a marriage of classic impressionism and amateur “Microsoft-paint-ism”…. and that’s precisely the point.

For Jones, the cheapness of these photographic conventions and how he treats them reflect what he considers the “spiritual poverty of common cultural pictures.” En masse, they envision photography’s potential to do more than just regurgitate a simulation of these base experiences.

Nearing the end of his Kickstarter campaign (hey readers, you should help fund this!) I caught up with Greg to learn more and wrap my head around his wild work…

Jon Feinstein in conversation with Gregory Eddi Jones

Read more …
PostedJune 8, 2021
AuthorJon Feinstein
Categoriesinterviews, Artists, Art News, Photobooks, Publications
Tags2021 photobooks, Gregory Eddi Jones, The Waste Land, photography inspired by The Waste Land, Photography inspired by T.S. Eliot, contemporary photography, Pictures Generation, Self Publish Be Happy, Promise Land, post photography
© Virginia Wilcox

© Virginia Wilcox

The Scraggly Poetic Life of Los Angeles Trees

Virginia Wilcox's new book Arboreal, published by Deadbeat Club shows a sinewed relationship between Los Angeles trees and the sprawling landscape they inhabit.

Spidery branches look over and onto highways, pointing and wrapping like withered fingers. Their power is in the space around them, their conversation with the land, the occasional person sitting for a portrait, or the built human presence for which they continue to make space.

“These images present a survey of trees inhabiting a mangled urban landscape that looks something like wilderness,” writes Wilcox. The work does more than simply note urban development's impact on nature - it portrays a melancholic meditation on coexistence. A mirror leans against a palm tree reflecting bramble and sky behind it; a stand of baron trunks mimics a distant downtown skyline; a pathway stretches to reveal an anonymous figure on a park bench who almost disappears in their knotty camouflage.

As a collection of images, Arboreal is a quest for coexistence in an increasingly hostile world, and Wilcox’s soft, wistful way of seeing creates entry points from many angles.

I spoke with Wilcox to learn more about the book and her life within it.

Jon Feinstein in conversation with Virginia Wilcox

Read more …
PostedMay 12, 2021
AuthorJon Feinstein
Categoriesinterviews, Artists, Photobooks, Publications
TagsVirginia Wilcox, Arboreal book, tree photography, Photo series about Los Angeles, 2021 photobooks, Deadbeat Club publisher, large format photography, contemporary black and white photography
© William Gedney

© William Gedney

The Reanimation of William Gedney, Over Fifty Years After the Summer of Love

A Time of Youth editor Lisa McCarty highlights the importance of preserving an artist's intention through the example of the extensive and meticulous archive of photographer William Gedney.

William Gedney was a New York street photographer who earned four major art grants including a Guggenheim and Fullbright Fellowship in the late 60s. The first of these allowed him to travel to San Francisco, settling in Haight-Ashbury right before the Summer of Love. His photographs are contemplatively personal, focusing on the intimacy between people at the time.

Through his lifetime, Gedney created many book maquettes but never received a publishing contract. One of these maquettes was developed solely from the photographs taken during his time in San Francisco. After dying of AIDS in 1989, the maquette entitled, A Time of Youth, was left to the Archive of Documentary Arts at Duke University, who recently published the book with the artist's intent in mind.

A Time of Youth sequences eighty-seven of over two thousand photographs Gedney took in Haight-Ashbury between October 1966 and January 1967. These photographs document the complex lives of youth at the center of 1960s counterculture. Gedney lived among them in their communal homes, photographing the intimacy of their everyday life. It’s an alternative snapshot of the San Francisco counterculture, going deeper than the surface-level, care-free depictions of 1960s flower children. Handwritten descriptions and ephemera complement Gedney’s photographs giving deeper context to his experience and work.

Artist, professor, and archivist Lisa McCarty edited and the book, reanimating Gedney's work with deep respect and homage to his original sequence and creative decisions.

Duke Archive of Documentary Arts curatorial assistant Cassandra Klos speaks with McCarty on her experience and process working through Gedney's historical archive.

Read more …
PostedApril 14, 2021
AuthorCassandra Klos
CategoriesArtists, Art News, Publications, Photobooks, writing on photography
TagsWilliam Gedney, photo history, history of photography, Lisa McCarty, Photography and the Summer of Love, A Time of Youth Photobook, A Time of Youth
Newer / Older

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