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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
© Elinor Carucci

© Elinor Carucci

Scholarly Exhibition Explores the Pioneering Role of Women Using Color in Photography

Color photography can trace its earliest roots to Anna Atkins' mid-nineteenth century botanical cyanotypes. While camera-less, her adoption of the process has led many to consider her to be the world's first female photographer.

Curator, historian and artist Ellen Carey's latest exhibition "Women in Colour," on display through September at New York City's Rubber Factory gallery, uses Atkins' legacy to trace the lineage of women working with color photography through present day. Hinging on the recent discovery of tetrachromacy, the hypothesis that women are genetically prone to better discern color than men, Carey uses this exhibition to ask how that might impact female photographers' decision to work in color and hopes to gain recognition for their often under-exposed work. I spoke with Ellen Carey to learn more about the ideas behind her research and exhibition. 

Interview by Jon Feinstein

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PostedAugust 17, 2017
AuthorJon Feinstein
CategoriesExhibitions, Artists, Galleries
TagsEllen Carey, Women in Colour, Color Photography, Women in Photography, Marion Berlanger, Patty Carroll, Elinor Carucci, Amanda Means, Liz Nielsen, Meghann Riepenhoff, Carrie Mae Weems
© Virginia Wilcox

© Virginia Wilcox

Looking Outward: Robert Lyons' Unconventional Approach to Curating This Year's Hartford Photography MFA

Thesis shows aren’t usually hung salon-style. At most schools, students' experiences and interests differ, so each typically gets a few feet of wall space for themselves with the hope that their work can live in harmony with its neighbors. Inexorably, contexts clash. It’s always precarious. Even Hartford’s Photography MFA program lived by that mantra for its first few years, as the program's founder and director Robert Lyons explained to me, until 13, this year’s thesis exhibition at Joseloff Gallery in Hartford Connecticut. Lyons also curated the show, although he affirmed everyone had a voice the decision. It really is quite courageous of them all.

Exhibition Review by Romke Hoogwaerts

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PostedAugust 8, 2017
AuthorRomke Hoogwaerts
CategoriesExhibitions, Artists
TagsRita Baunok, Ben Brody, Charles Byrne, Zach Callahan, Matthew Genitempo, Garrett Grove, Kelly Lynn James, Seth Johnson, Kevin Kunstadt, Emma Phillips, Tamara Reynolds, Andrew Waits, Virginia Wilcox, 2017 Photography MFA, Hartford MFA, Romke Hoogwaerts
Ji Zhou @ Klein Sun Gallery/ Seattle Art Fair

Ji Zhou @ Klein Sun Gallery/ Seattle Art Fair

Photography Highlights From Seattle's Two Legit-Most Art Fairs

For the past few years, The Seattle Art Fair and Out Of Sight have been bringing a mix of blue-chip art and challenging creative brilliance to a town too commonly associated with fog and technology.

The Seattle Art Fair, founded by Paul Allen in 2015, is a usual hit-or-miss collection of international modern and contemporary art galleries, not unlike Pulse, or Art Basel.  More radical in its approach, Out Of Sight, feels less like an art fair (while work is for sale), and more like a Northwest on-ramp to the Whitney Biennial, with a rotating roster of curators, this year including S. Surface, Greg Lundgren, Justen Waterhouse and Benedict Heywood, as well as exhibition caretaker Scott Lawrimore. 

We waded through it all and have gathered some of our favorite photography-based highlights. The Seattle Art Fair will be on view through Sunday, August 6th, and Out Of Sight will be on view through August 27th. 

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PostedAugust 4, 2017
AuthorJon Feinstein
TagsSeattle Art Fair, New Photography, Out of Sight Seattle
© Tony Chirinos from the series Requiescat in Pace

© Tony Chirinos from the series Requiescat in Pace

Tony Chirinos: Death and Tenderness

Tony Chirinos has been making pictures of death for the past two decades. In his series Requiescat in Pace, grim light illuminates corpses in a morgue with a charge that is both scientific and poetic. In Beauty of the Uncommon Tool, Chirinos photographs scalpels and other surgical tools on hyper-saturated pastel backgrounds to appear almost floating in space. Divorced from their association with the operating table, they hang like musical notes or anthropological ephemera, which Chirinos acknowledges are an homage to Karl Blossfeldt's early twentieth century typologies of plants and flowers. In yet another series, Surgical Theater, Chirinos approaches the operating room as a stage of decisive moments. Like Garry Winogrand's classic photograph The Ladies on the Bench, or Larry Fink's series Social Graces, the surgeons' gestures are ripe with narrative.

Noticing a common thread between each of these series, Chirinos recently combined and re-edited them into a comprehensive collection of work titled The Marvelous Body. "Sometimes you create work with an intention, but later it changes with a different collective narrative," says Chirinos, acknowledging the combined series' ability to explore different angles of mortality. I spoke with Tony to learn more about his relationship to photography, fragility and death.

Interview by Jon Feinstein

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PostedAugust 1, 2017
AuthorJon Feinstein
CategoriesArtists, Portfolio
TagsTony Chirinos, Medical photography, new photography, black and white photography, photography and death
© Lissa Rivera

© Lissa Rivera

Rethinking the Female Gaze: A Conversation with Lissa Rivera and Marina Garcia Vasquez

In late June, a provocative exhibition opened at New York City's Museum of Sex. 

NSFW: Female Gaze - the first collaboration between the Museum and Creators at VICE - celebrates expression and desire in the female gaze. Historically, as described in John Berger's 1972 book and BBC series Ways of Seeing, art consumers were men, and the objects on which they feasted were the women who graced canvases or were sculpted from marble. In 1975, film theorist Laura Mulvey produced the landmark essay “Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema,” which drew from Lacanian and Freudian psychoanalytic theory as a critical means by which to deconstruct the power structures around who is looking, who is looked at, and to what ends. Mulvey helped initiate a much-needed dialogue that surpassed its roots in film culture, one which today takes on renewed relevance as gender matters play out on social media platforms. 

For NSFW, the all-woman artist roster works across a wide media and methodological landscape, exploring sexuality and positioning the act of women looking as a radical pursuit that resists social mores and gender expectations. I spoke with artist and Museum of Sex Associate Curator Lissa Rivera and Creators Editor-in-Chief Marina Garcia Vasquez about their curatorial approach, how "the gaze" is defined, and why an exhibition prioritizing women’s desires is critically important in this moment. 

Interview by Roula Seikaly

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PostedJuly 26, 2017
AuthorRoula Seikaly
CategoriesExhibitions, Artists, Galleries
TagsVICE, NSFW, Museum of Sex, Gender, Female Gaze, Lissa Rivera, Marina Garcia-Vasquez, Creators Project, Roula Seikaly
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Founded in 2005, Humble Arts Foundation is dedicated to supporting and promoting new art photography.