07 March 2008

This is the Wilds now; pt I





























She came to me crying before we left the room screaming at the top of our lungs.

We saddled our horses, and rode out of that accursed sunset.
I yelled; "Hi ho silver!" as we left it all behind.

And we rode far away from everyone that we had called our own. Nothing fading, but everything becoming clearer

Suddenly, when the shadows of our former friends were nowhere to be seen, she leaned in and spoke to me...

"This is the wilds now."

Ze kwam huilend naar mij toe voordat we schreeuwend uit alle macht de kamer verlieten.
Wij zadelden onze paarden, en reden weg van die vervloekte zonsondergang.
Ik riep; "Hi ho silver !" terwijl wij alles achter ons lieten.
En wij reden ver weg van alles en iedereen dat we het onze hadden genoemd. Niets vervaagde, maar alles werd helder
Plotseling, toen de schaduwen van onze vroegere vrienden nergens meer te zien waren, leunde ze naar mij toe en ze zei...
"Dit is de wildernis nu."

Photographs and text: Morgan Malaska, http://www.morganmalaska.se/
Dutch translation: Nadja Voorham

hair is overrated

Photo: Walter Neiger

from behind

Photo: Ulla Larsson

man behind tulips

Photo: Jan Bernhardtz

two kitchens

Beijing, 2003



Stockholm, 2003
Photos: Margareta Cortes

Shopwindows in Praga




Daily Print for (F)riday

photo: Jeanne Wells

Another from the Daily Print project -- if you click on the picture it will take you to the subscription page so that you can get a print sent to you every morning. This one's a silver gelatin narcissus.

06 March 2008

Face to Face (90)

photo by Filip Martins Górski

focus is for loosers is the motto of this 3 yo photographer

her hair

Photo: Markus Jenemark

invited guest: Amy Elkins











Wallflower, an ongoing and evolving series of male portraits, is an exploration into the other. With a strong interest in psychology, Elkins has turned specifically to the psychology of the opposite sex, finding the mannerisms in which significant role models in her personal life reveal endlessly fascinating. It is through the series that Elkins investigates and confronts some of the cultural grounds underlying gender, opting to focus on the beauty, sensitivity and vulnerabilities found in a sex that has long been held to masculine expectations and stereotypes.










Her sittings are done one-on-one, with a confined amount of space, her subject and the use of floral wallpaper. The dynamic creates an intense confrontation between the two, where the use of wallpaper serves to contrast the sitter’s masculinity against something clearly more feminine, forcing both worlds to mix for the lens.

While majority of Elkins’ portraits are done with the use of floral backdrops, there are instances where she has created similar environments with naturally occurring floral backdrops, playing off of the femininity of the natural world. Such works were done in New Orleans, post-Katrina, with men that were affected by the severity of a hurricane that destroyed vast areas of the city, in Woodstock, NY where she photographed swimming holes and in Santa Monica where she photographed her father for the first time upon release from his recent incarceration.

The portraits in Wallflower remain a personal and psychological delving into the other, in which Elkins’ opts to focus on a sex far less gazed upon.










Amy Elkins was born in 1979 in Los Angeles, CA. She received a BFA in Photography from the School of Visual Arts in May of 2007.

Her work has been published in PDN, American Photo, EyeMazing, Dear Dave the Visual Arts Journal and New York Times Magazine.

Elkins photographs have been shown in group exhibitions across the world, including the PIP International Photo Festival in Pingyao, China, Gallery Gagopa in Masan, South Korea, Gallery Elsa in Busan, South Korea, 3rd Ward Gallery in Brooklyn, Jen Bekman Gallery in SoHo, PEER Gallery and the Visual Arts Gallery in New York.

Elkins currently works and resides in New York City.


You should pay a visit to Amy´s site to see more of her work. She has a great blog as well. It´s a collective project called wanderlustagraphy. Amy says on her blog: "My brain's been swirling lately while looking at ideas/words/collectives like Chicagraphers, Minneagraphers, Omahagraphers, Alaskagraphers. The idea of creative collectives is wonderful." You will find a bunch of great photographers who has participated in her project (not unlike the F Blog) I am truly glad to see your work here Amy. invited by ulf fågelhammar


www.amyelkins.com
www.wanderlustagraphy.blogspot.com

another cup of tea

Photo: Mattia Marchi

split vision

Photo: Walter Neiger

hairy

Photo: Tatiana Bitir

04 March 2008

Pilgrims

This is a story about one old lady from my family, and she`s rehabilitation helper - Daniel. Mrs. Mila decided, at the end of she`s live, to visit some holly places on Silesia. It became possible with Daniel`s help. I hope you well enjoy this story.
Stanley









Exhibition by Seeing with Photography Collective


D A R K R O O M

FEB 10 - MAY 4 2008,

Regionmuseet Kristianstad, Sweden


Ben Paige

Photo: Mark Andres, swpc


"Seeing with Photography Collective is a group of photographers based in New York City who are visually impaired, sighted and totally blind. Coming from diverse backgrounds and life experiences, we share an awareness of sight loss, along with the determination to dialogue and integrate our images into a more universal context. Sighted assistants focus and compose the view camera’s frame directed by the blind artist. Then, in a darkened room, we leave the camera’s shutter open as we slowly paint our sitter with a small flashlight ...human scaled exposures, lasting many minutes, rather than the instant shutter click we typically hear. Luminous distortions, blurred or glowing forms result from the technique, not digital altering. The nature of our visual limitations can provoke any viewer or perceiver of these portraits...Is less, more? What is seeing? What does one choose to see?"

-Steven Erra, seeing with photography collective, swpc, photographs by the blind


Radiant abyss

Photo: Victorine Fludd, swpc

More info coming soon, until then go see the exhibition if you can, it´s magic, or go for a visit here

trapped

Photo: Melanie Neiger

reaching for the caffettiera

photo: Tiberio Fanti

New York shopwindow

Photo: Virginia Ascione

hairstyle

Photo: Krister Kleréus

Shopping in Vienna

Photo: Jan Buse

Masters of Photography - Eva Rubinstein

Praga shopwindows

photos by Szymon Kochański
taken in Warsaw district Praga