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Reviews

exhibits

  • Photo San Francisco 2005 at Fort Mason, San Francisco, Calif. [2005]
  • Annie Leibovitz: 'American Music' at Austin Museum of Art, Austin, Texas [2005]
  • Diane Arbus Revelations at SFMOMA, San Francisco, Calif. [2005]
  • Hiroshi Watanbe at Oswald Gallery, Austin, Texas [2005]
  • Gregory Crewdon at Site Santa Fe [2001]
  • 'The Clinton White House' | Bob McNeely at the Leica Gallery, New York [2000]
  • 'Without Sanctuary: Photographs and Postcards of Lynching in America' | The New-York Historical Society, New York [2000]
  • 'Picture This' | Christopher Brown, Scott Simpson, Talli Rosner-Kozuch and Jeff Gatesman at Victoria Boyce Galleries, Scottsdale, Ariz. [2000]
  • books

  • Uncommon Places: The Complete Works by Stephen Shore
  • Too Fast for Love by David Yellen
  • Acts of Charity by Mark Peterson
  • SuicideGirls by Missy Suicide
  • Revenge by Ellen von Unwerth
  • From the Sunshine State: Photographs of Florida by Alex Webb
  • River of Color: The India of Raghubir Singh by Raghubir Singh
  • software

  • Photoshop 7.0 | Adobe
  • cameras

    Fuji FinePix 2800 Zoom


    Reviews

    'Revelation' Copyright © Sean Perry. Courtesy of the artist. All rights reserved.

    Architectural spaces
    as a study in contrasts

    ...

    Click for a larger image
    Lumas Editions Gallery, whose booth at San Francisco Photo 2005 appears above, is a German company trying to fill the void between reproductions from a museum store and the single, or very limited, edition prints carried by established galleries. Lumas represents 50-plus photographers. [Copyright © 2005 Martin Taylor]

    Exhibitors aim to level
    field in San Francisco

    SAN FRANCISCO, Calif. (Fotophile.com) — The experience of seeing framed prints hanging on the wall of a museum is altogether different compared to that of seeing the said same prints hanging on the wall of a dealer's booth at Photo San Francisco 2005. The thing that makes all the difference is that little sticker on the wall next to the print; the one that tells you how out-of-your-league that master print really is. Yet among the highlights, three galleries stood out for their missions.

    ...

    'The White Stripes, New York City' (2003) by Annie Leibovitz, C-print, 26 x 32 inches (framed), Copyright © Annie Leibovitz, Courtesy of Experience Music Project

    Leibovitz's perspective
    infuses 'American Music'

    The Austin Museum of Art exhibit, "American Music" — based on Annie Leibovitz's book of the same name — takes the photographer full circle back to her early work with musicians while combining her eye for revealing the personality of celebrities with her skills as an artist.

    ...

    'Uncommon' America
    relevant decades later

    Aperture's reissue of The Complete Works by Stephen Shore pleases with excellent new texts and reproductions of interesting ancillary works, and the book also allows the core material — over twice as many images as the first version — to act its graceful, subtle magic.

    ...

    Horrors of Bhopal put
    into human perspective

    Courtesy of Maude Dorr

    The despair wrought by the worst industrial chemical disaster in human history is on display in Raghu Rai and Maude Dorr's exhibit at Seattle's Art/Not Gallery.

    ...

    'Diane Arbus Revelations' at Metroplitan Museum of Art in New York, Copyright © Bruno J. Navarro
    'Diane Arbus Revelations' at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York runs through 30 May 2005. [Copyright © 2005 Bruno J. Navarro]

    'Revelations' provides
    a broad view of Arbus

    Along with actual prints, the exhibit makes use of pages from Arbus's notebooks, letters and even the contents of her study. It's interesting to see her influences from the books she had on her shelves and the photographs of other photographers that she had displayed where she lived and worked.

    ...

    Heavy metal and hair
    converge at full speed

    'Hershey, PA June 15, 2000' from 'Too Fast For Love' by David Yellen, Courtesy of powerHouse booksAll style, all fun. No inhibitions, no haircuts. David Yellen's "Too Fast For Love" portrays a cultural moment that keeps on living: heavy metal. Yellen's portraits of fans, made over the course of three months in the summer of 2000, captures the eccentricities of this subculture. Photographed typologically and bound in an intimately-sized book, Yellen presents a dramatic cast of characters.

    ...

    Watanabe preserves life
    in portraits, observations

    AUSTIN, Texas (Fotophile.com) — Hiroshi Watanbe's exhibit of monochrome photographs displays an expert presentation of subtle beauty and exquisite prints.

    ...

    From 'Acts of Charity' by Mark Peterson, Courtesy of powerHouse books

    'Acts of Charity' captures
    how the other half gives

    A subtle sense of irony and a knack for telling detail allows Mark Peterson to illustrate in "Acts of Charity" the concept of noblesse oblige and the idea that it takes money to make money as they co-exist in the high-powered world of upscale giving. Set amid the playground of the rich and famous, Peterson's photographs provide a peek at how the other half gives.

    ...

    'New York City, 1963' by Joel Meyerowitz, Courtesy of the artist and Ariel Meyerowitz Gallery, New York

    An American perspective
    of a simpler time abroad

    NEW YORK (Fotophile.com) — Youthful exuberance and a healthy degree of innocence infuse much of Joel Meyerowitz's "Work from the Sixties," an exhibit highlighting the B&W and color photography from the perspective of an American in his 20s traveling through Europe.

    ...

    'Laurence Fishburne' (2003), Courtsey of Matthew Marks Gallery, New York

    Taylor-Wood takes threefold,
    theatrical views of transience

    NEW YORK (Fotophile.com) — "Sorrow, Suspension, Ascension," Sam Taylor-Wood's third solo show at Matthew Marks Gallery, brings her evolved sense of theatrics to the forefront with striking imagery that makes passing allusions to the transience of life, mourning and, ultimately, hope.

    ...

    'Unnamed Lake' (2002), Copyright © Subhankar Banerjee

    Arctic refuge photos evoke
    concept of national treasure

    NEW YORK (Fotophile.com) — It's rare that something so straightforward and beautiful resonantes with such political and vaguely unsettling overtones, but Subhankar Banerjee's photographs of the contentious Artctic National Wildlife Refuge manages to do all of that.

    ...

    Pin-up grrrls craft version
    of new, stylized sexuality

    Book: 'SuicideGirls' by Missy Suicide, Feral House, 156 pages, hardcover

    Imagine the girls your mother warned you about — then picture them resplendent with tattoos, piercings and enough attitude to make most matriarchs swoon with repressed jealousy. That's the world Missy Suicide has created in "SuicideGirls," the book version of the wildly successful and wicked Web site featuring the indie sexuality of alterno-divas.

    ...

    Von Unwerth takes
    decadent 'Revenge'

    Book: 'Revenge' by Ellen von Unwerth, Twins Palms Publishers, 270 pages, hardcover

    Deliciously decadent, Ellen von Unwerth's latest work has all the trappings of a classic, highly stylized tale of lasciviousness and a study in form, sexuality and society — albeit one tucked away behind the velvet curtain of propriety.

    Titillating yet never prurient, "Revenge" depicts the erotic journeys of three young women who arrive for a respite at a rural manor. Instead, what follows is a series of sexually charged S&M scenes of the women as they become entagled with the Baroness (think "Rocky Horror Picture Show" with a stunning older woman in the antagonist role), her chauffer and her stable boy.

    ...

    Photoshop 7.0 is a nod
    to new digital realities

    Software: Adobe Photoshop 7.0

    It's finally here.

    Adobe Photoshop, the single piece of software that's the reason photographers overwhelmingly use Macintosh computers, is now compatible with Mac OS X. CONTINUED

    ...

    Making multiple myths
    in suburbian settings

    Exhibit: Gregory Crewdon at Site Santa Fe — Feb. 10 through May 27, 2001.

    Brooklyn-born Gregory Crewdon, in selections from two bodies of work, depicts a strange confluence of nature, suburbia and humanity by creating fantasy scenarios that speak to the underlying forces of modern American life. What drives the work's relevance is the underlying element of absurdity in its portrayals of our conventions. CONTINUED

    ...

    Clinton's presidency
    at point-blank range

    Exhibit: 'The Clinton White House' by Bob McNeely at the Leica Gallery, New York — June 30 through Aug. 26, 2000.

    In his capacity as chief White House photographer from 1992 through 1998, Bob McNeely shadowed President Clinton in quiet personal moments and campaign strategy sessions, at historic meetings with heads of state and preparing for on-air debates. Through it all, McNeely manages to capture aspects of the president's private and public moments with stateliness and intimacy. Most importantly, however, is McNeely's approach as a kind a Clinton biographer. CONTINUED

    ...

    A disturbing view
    of race and revenge

    Exhibit: 'Without Sanctuary: Photographs and Postcards of Lynching in America,' a collection by James Allen at The New-York Historical Society, New York. — through Aug. 13, 2000.

    The horrifying images of lynching victims — as snapshots and souveniers throughout the early 1900s — at the New-York Historical Society exhibit stand as evidence of mob vengeance, racism and a dark side of American history. CONTINUED

    ...

    Florida as a fragile
    mosiac of cultures

    Book: From the Sunshine State: Photographs of Florida by Alex Webb | U.K

    The images here exist as a record of the interlocking aspects of life in Florida that exist side by side but never really mix. From Guatemalan immigrants who labor into the night to the tourists who flock to the fantasy lands of Disney World, from the poor rural families often left out of the bigger picture to the retirees who adopt the balmy Caribbean weather as their own, Webb's images create social commentary within a framework of beauty. His signature use of saturated colors and strong vertical lines place people within a context they have helped create.

    A leisure fisherman on a bridge, a pelican in mid-air behind him. A man, faceless, stumbles away from a storefront, a few paces from a dog stretching. Two children amuse themselves in a playpen covered by mosquito netting as an empty chair sits on the grass nearby.

    At his best, Webb stands with the likes of Cartier-Bresson due to his instinct for the decisive moment. And he responds to his environment like an anthropologist with a sense of humor and empathy.

    Bruno J. Navarro | Fotophile.com

    ...

    In its March 2000 issue, Art in America reviews a posthumous exhibit of work by Raghubir Singh, saying that, "As personal as his photographs undoubtedly are, Singh's mise-en-scènes are nation-scaled and highly variable ..." The six-page, in-depth article takes a look at the color photography Singh created in his prolific career. "It could become, for India, what Robert Frank's The Americans has been in this country," writes P.C. Smith. The exhibit was organized by the Art Institute of Chicago, which hosted the show 23 January 1999 through 2 May 1999.

    Singh's 13th and last book, River of Color: The India of Raghubir Singh, was published shortly before his death last April.



    Thank you for interest in photography reviews. If you'd like to review an exhibit, a Web site or a book, please keep these guidelines in mind: We are looking for an honest and meaningful assessment of a particular show in whatever community you live in, about 200-350 words, with your e-mail address available for replies.

    Interested? E-mail reviews@fotophile.com.


    Carrie Levy at Daniel Cooney Fine Art through 24 April 2005

    Starkly lighted nudes in front of bright backgrounds turn away from the camera in this series of photographs that puts a playful, pop twist on a time-honored genre. Whether the poses allude to shame, modesty or voyeurism, the images surprise in how they boldly emphasize form — and even personality — via silhouettes of an arm, torso or breast. — Fotophile.com

    ...


    Uncommon Places: The Complete Works
    by Stephen Shore


    Revelations
    by Diane Arbus


    Too Fast for Love
    by David Yellen (foreword by Chuck Klosterman)


    Acts of Charity
    by Mark Peterson


    Sam Taylor-Wood
    by Sam Taylor-Wood


    Arctic National Wildlife Refuge: Seasons of Life and Land
    by Subhankar Banerjee


    SuicideGirls
    by Missy Suicide, editor

    Read the Fotophile.com review!


    Adobe Creative Suite Premium CS2 Upgrade (Mac)
    | (Win)


    Adobe Photoshop CS2 (Mac)
    | Upgrade
    Adobe Photoshop CS2 (Win) | Upgrade


    Photographic Possibilities: The Expressive Use of Ideas, Materials and Processes
    by Robert Hirsch, John Valentino

    "One of the most comprehensive collections of photographic information to date, 'Photographic Possibilities' includes everything from an overview of its history and basics, to alternative processes, from customizing chemicals to pinhole cameras and digital imaging. This is a must-have for photographers, new and experienced." — Fotophile.com

    ...

    Fuji FinePix 2800 Zoom


    Fuji FinePix 2800 Zoon

    Review: Fuji FinePix 2800 Zoom digital camera

    ...

    Viennese Types
    Viennese Types

    by Emil Mayer (photographer), Edward Rosser | U.K

    Exclusive: Edward Rosser tells Fotophile.com how the work of an Austrian master photographer was almost lost forever.

    ...


    Polaroid mio instant camera — "Polaroid's latest offering drew plenty of interest from reviewers and onlookers for its unsual yet comfortable shape, as well as the half-sized, wallet-ready instant pictures it created. The mio is one of the most enjoyable cameras to come this way in a long time — the only downside is that you'll want to keep snapping photos after the film is done." — Fotophile.com

  • Order one now.
  • ...


    Logitech Pocket Digital camera — "The size of a credit card and just half an inch thick, the new 1.3 megapixel Logitech Pocket Digital marks a breakthrough in ultralight camera technology. The drawback: The low image file size and poor parallax correction might leave photographers with images of less-than-desireable quality. Still, it's small enough to fit in a shirt pocket and will turn heads without weighing you down." — Fotophile.com

  • Order one now.
  • ...

    The Clinton Years
    The Clinton Years

    by Robert McNeely | U.K

    ...

    The Photo Book
    The Photo Book

    by Ian Jeffrey (editor) | U.K

    ...

    Without Sanctuary
    Without Sanctuary: Lynching Photography in America

    by James Allen (editor) | U.K

    ...

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