martes, 17 de julio de 2018

Rhea Malinofsky: «Untitle»

Rhea Malinofsky

Untitle

Rhea Malinofsky
For her, photography has never been about what it is or where it is. She leaves that to photojournalists. She saw black-and-white photography as having more to do with form, composition, line, light and shadow. That is what distinguishes it from color photography, which can pass on the merits of wonderful, saturated color alone. To that extent, she photographs only in black and white.

Una artista exclusiva del Blanco y Negro

Francesca von Rabenau O'Reilly : «Cristo and his family»



La foto de Francesca von Rabenau O'Reilly la descubrí en el Latin American Foto Festival, cuya sede es el Bronx Documentary Center, esto gracias a un reportaje The New York Times. La foto se defiende por si sola en el valor documental y ritmo. Me llamó la atención por el parecido que tiene al trabajo de Graciela Iturbide, no es estoy diciendo que lo copia o se influencia de ella, es la manera de acercarse al sujeto.


Gregg LeFevre: «Swaddled in Pink»



Gregg LeFevre
American, b. 1946
Swaddled in Pink, 2015
Photographic relief
30 x 20.25 x 1 in. (76.2 x 51.44 x 2.54 cm.)


Mauricio Amador «Morfología familiar»



Mauricio Amador (Monterrey-México,1994)

Seleccionado para la exposición colectiva Imágenes Emergentes en la Casa de la Cultura; y en la Tercera Muestra Universitaria de Arte Contemporáneo en Monterrey.

«Con el proyecto Morfología Familiar intento encontrar respuestas a cuestionamientos como: ¿Qué tan importantes son los vínculos familiares para nuestra época? ¿Qué tan pública es nuestra intimidad? ¿Soy lo que mi familia pretende ser a través de las imágenes conservadas? ¿O en realidad solo estoy intentando inventar memorias que le den sentido a mi actualidad?»

El joven talento mexicano, ha obtenido diferentes premios y ESPACIO GAF, nos presenta su portafolio en su última entrega y me llama la atención que su trabajo a la vez de ser una corriente muy fuerte en la fotografía contemporánea por no decir moderna, además de hacer uso del photoshop como elemento técnico que lo distingue el uso del color rompe con esa tendencia mundial, aunque no deja de apuntar hacia el Pop Art, habrá que estar pendientes de su evolución.

Steve Schapiro: « Freedom Bus Riders»

Steve Schapiro

 Freedom Bus Riders

 Summer of ’64, Oxford, Ohio, courtesy High Museum of Art


Pendiente la traducción y síntesis 

Schapiro was born in 1934 in New York City. He discovered photography at the age of nine. Soon he decided to devote himself to photojournalism. One of his role models at the time was the French photographer Henri Cartier-Bresson.

Schapiro took lessons with W. Eugene Smith, an influential photographer during the Second World War. Smith taught him the technical skills and showed him how to develop his own views of the world and of photography. Schapiro’s work reflects the influence of his teacher.

In 1961 Schapiro began working as a freelance photographer. His photos were published in Life, Vanity Fair, Sports Illustrated, Newsweek, Time and Paris Match.

The political, cultural and social changes of the 1960s in the United States were an inspiration for Schapiro. He accompanied Robert Kennedy during his presidential campaign and captured key moments of the civil rights movement such as the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom or the Selma to Montgomery marches. Schapiro not only worked in the fields of photojournalism and documentation, but also became a real activist. This is, for instance, visible in his way of documenting the hard lives of immigrant workers from Arkansas he dealt with in 1961.

In the 1970s, Schapiro focused more on film set photography. Having taken photos of Midnight Cowboy (1968), among them also a famous one of Dustin Hoffman, he was hired as a photographer by Paramount Pictures. He photographed on the set of The Godfather (1972) by Francis Ford Coppola with a cast including Marlon Brando, Al Pacino, James Caan and Robert Duvall. One of his photographs is of "Marlon Brando and the Cat". Schapiro was also present at the film set of Chinatown (1974) by Roman Polanski. Two years later, Schapiro was – by request of Robert De Niro – hired as a photographer on the set of Martin Scorsese's movie Taxi Driver (1976).

Schapiro captured key moments of modern American history with his photos that also reflect his own social and human awareness.

Edith Gerin: «Immeubles démolis»



Edith Gerin 
Immeubles démolis (Demolished Buildings)
13th Arrondissement
Paris 1954


George Hoyningen-Huene: «Divers, Horst with Model»



George Hoyningen-Huene
American/Russian, 1900–1968
Divers, Horst with Model, Paris, 1930
Platinum-palladium print
Image: 10 x 7.5 in. (25.4 x 19.05 cm.)
Sheet: 14 x 11 in. (35.56 x 27.94 cm.)