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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
Bernice, 2018.  30" x 36" oil on panel. © Justin Duffus. Courtesy of Justin Duffus and Linda Hodges Gallery

Bernice, 2018.  30" x 36" oil on panel. © Justin Duffus. Courtesy of Justin Duffus and Linda Hodges Gallery

Painting Snapshots: Robert E. Jackson in Conversation with Justin Duffus

Snapshot collector Robert E. Jackson speaks with snapshot painter Justin Duffus about his work and inspirations.

Justin Duffus makes paintings from twentieth-century snapshots and snippets of Americana, highlighting the strange, humorous, often lonely, and sometimes inconsequential moments of everyday life.

In one painting, a boy sits at the edge of a motel swimming pool – shivering with arms crossed – swathed in cyan and blue tones. In another, three business-suited men in a nondescript room walk in a circle around another man, wrapping him in pastel streamers like a human maypole while two women watch. In other paintings, masked figures confront the viewer head-on, the harsh light of a cheap camera flash rendered with jarring elegance. Hung together, Duffus’ paintings embolden a mysterious, open-ended narrative, giving new energy to images with an anonymous or discarded past.

While his sources vary, some of them are based on images acquired from the collection of Robert E. Jackson, the Seattle-based vernacular collector-extraordinaire, whose collection currently boasts more than 12,000 American snapshots from the past century. Like Duffus’ paintings, many of Jackson’s snapshots have a similar attention to the peculiar, absurd or unintentionally artful. Following Duffus’ recent exhibition, Fear of Drowning at Seattle’s Linda Hodges Gallery, we asked Jackson – who is also a collector of his work – to speak with the artist about his practice and the ideas behind it.

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PostedMay 7, 2018
AuthorRobert E. Jackson
CategoriesExhibitions, Artists, Portfolio
TagsJustin Duffus, Contemporary Painting, snapshots, vernacular photography, Seattle Artists, Robert E. Jackson, Linda Hodges Gallery
© Elsa Leydier. From the series Braços verdes e olhos cheios de asas

© Elsa Leydier. From the series Braços verdes e olhos cheios de asas

Where the Postcard Breaks: Elsa Leydier's Photographs Dismantle Cultural Exoticism

Elsa Leydier uses photography and found materials to unpack and re-think popular narratives of exoticism in South America.

"My work begins where the postcard breaks," writes Leydier, who has been making a range of challenging photographic series for the past 7 years. Her approaches include deconstructing visual representations of South America's regions in found imagery, manipulating press images, creating cyanotypes, and culture-jamming postcards and Olympic commemorative postage stamps. With these varying treatments, Leydier aims not to represent the terrain or people, nor to immerse the viewer in lush natural wonders, but to reveal the problems and false narratives in its constructed fantasy. 

I contacted the artist via email to learn more. 

Jon Feinstein in conversation with Elsa Leydier

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PostedApril 19, 2018
AuthorJon Feinstein
CategoriesArtists, Portfolio
TagsElsa Leydier, Appropriation, new photography, visual literacy
Psychscape 18 (Banner Ridge, CA), 2017 © Terri Loewenthal

Psychscape 18 (Banner Ridge, CA), 2017 © Terri Loewenthal

Psychedelic Pictures Reconsider a History of American Landscape Photography

Terri Loewenthal’s Psychscapes, on view at CULT | Aimee Friberg Exhibitions, San Francisco through April 21, considers the California landscape as a canvas for technological and psychological interpretation.

Terri Loewenthal’s colorful visions are grounded in – and radically riff on – the photographic expeditions of post-Civil War US Geological surveys, which had many now-controversial goals. On one level, newly gathered information might help industrialists better understand – and subdue –  the vast terrain between the growing nation’s eastern and western shores and properly feed an increasingly hungry consumer economy. On another, to help “secure” the land and fully realize Manifest Destiny’s mandate, governmental agencies used survey information to envision future European-settler civilizations. Photography was a tool to meet both of these ends and visually justify their explorations and conquests. 

Exhibition review by Roula Seikaly

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PostedApril 10, 2018
AuthorRoula Seikaly
CategoriesExhibitions, Artists, Portfolio
TagsTerri Lowenthal, New Landscape Photography, New Photography, Large Format, Aimee Friberg Exhibitions, American Landscape Photography, Terri Loewenthal
© Anthony Tafuro

© Anthony Tafuro

Making Sense of Anthony Tafuro's Brilliantly "All-Over-The-Place" Photography

Artist finds his voice and unexpected order in visual chaos.   

Anthony Tafuro is hard to pin down. In one series called Barrier Kult, the Brooklyn-based artist makes dreamy, mysterious black and white photographs of skateboarders with references to satanic Norwegian Blackmetal. The statement for another project, his recent book, Where Ya' At, which includes digital glitches, discolored flowers, skulls, and abstractions of light sources describes the work as "Analog captures of living and dying throughout the real and digital world." And since the days of Occupy Wall Street, he's followed masked activists Anonymous, making images that hover between traditional photo-journalism and something sinister. 


Across all of his work, Tafuro's eye weaves through black and white and color, through casual snapshots, near-documentary, pure abstraction and visual experiments with no beginning or end. On the surface, it's messy and discordant but somehow it hangs together swimmingly.

I contacted Tafuro to learn more.

Jon Feinstein in conversation with Anthony Tafuro. 

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PostedMarch 29, 2018
AuthorJon Feinstein
CategoriesArtists, Portfolio, Publications
TagsAnthony Tafuro, New Photography, Photographic Practice, Blackmetal
Photo © Kris Kozlowski Moore

Photo © Kris Kozlowski Moore

Kris Kozlowski Moore's Poetic Response to Switzerland's Gun Culture

Guns are one of the most contentious dialogues in the United States today. They have become wedges in elections, with the NRA defending their ‘rights' to semi-automatic weapons at all costs, and after a wave of shootings in the past year, the issue has mobilized mass student walkouts to demonstrate an increasing support for restrictions that will help keep them safe. Other countries, such as Australia in 1996, have demonstrated progressive overhauls of legislation in response to mass shootings, a move that is increasingly cited as something to consider adopting in the United States.

Being recognized as one of the world’s safest countries to live in, one would rarely expect Switzerland to sit alongside the United States with one of the highest rates of gun ownership per capita of any country. Switzerland’s legislation towards guns, while not totally unrestrictive, is relatively liberal yet there have been only three recorded mass shootings in recent history.

This premise is where English photographer Kris Kozlowski Moore's series and self-published photobook Forty Six Guns began, to engage in a varying and exceedingly broad discourse around the idiosyncrasies of Switzerland's gun culture. Black and white landscapes are juxtaposed against still life photographs of baseball mitts and sculptural gun range targets, while snowy mountaintops play off in situ portraits – it's not exactly what you might expect from a series called "Forty Six Guns." The work is airy and poetic, presenting an open-ended unraveling of Switzerland's little known, yet dominant gun culture. 

While Humble stands firm in our support of gun control legislation, we're drawn to Kozlowski's meditative series on how guns can pervade a national identity. I had a conversation with Kris to learn more.

Jon Feinstein, in conversation with Kris Kozlowski Moore

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PostedMarch 21, 2018
AuthorJon Feinstein
CategoriesArtists, Portfolio, Publications
TagsKris Kozlowski Moore, New Photography, English Photographers, Gun Culture, photobooks, Switzerland
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Founded in 2005, Humble Arts Foundation is dedicated to supporting and promoting new art photography.