23 April 2008

Fan

The political situation in Taiwan has been somewhat special for many decades. Taiwan is recognized as an independent nation by some countries and by others not. China reclaims the island as a part of its territory, but has until now not performed any hostile actions, that is to say: unless the island will proclaim its independence. Traditionally, the relation between China and Taiwan has been tense, especially concerning the question of independence.

The picture "Fan" was taken about a month ago, during the last meeting of the Kuomintang party before the victorious elections. After many years in opposition, Kuomintang has now won the island's leadership and there is a process of trying to improve relations with China.

Text and photo: Alberto Lizaralde

Spring is here

To The Moon (April 2004)

photo: Jeanne Wells

22 April 2008

invited guest: Manuela Martin

I am not a pro photographer but simply love strolling around and seeing the world through my camera. Some say I'v got a very strict and geometrical way of taking pictures, some say it's very minimalistic and abstract - to be honest, I don't really think about that.

All I'm striving for is displaying what I see when looking at buildings, as modern architecture is my passion.




Needless to say that I am really glad if some people enjoy to look at my work!


photos and text by Manuela Martin
more works of Manuela you will find here ->


invited by Marcin Górski

Through the lens (close up)

Photo: Jan Bernhardtz

20 April 2008

Rhonda Prince now becomes author on F-Blog

I love all kinds of cameras...I love pushing buttons, turning dials and looking through viewfinders. What is even more exciting to me is when a picture jumps out at me uninvited. It's just there staring me in the face, begging to be taken. Of course, sometimes I plan a picture by composing, calculating, agonizing over the light, etc...but I keep taking pictures for the interlopers who appear unannounced, challenging me to grab a camera fast enough to answer their call... Mostly photography is what keeps me sane and feeds my soul…

Available, 2007

Some of the well-known photographers who have influenced me are Walker Evans, Diane Arbus, Elliot Erwitt, Robert Frank, Robert Adams, William Eggleston…to name a few. The music/poetry of Tom Waits, Bob Dylan and Leonard Cohen inspires me as well.

115th dream, 2006

My favorite photography quote: “The thing that's important to know is that you never know. You're always sort of feeling your way.”

(Diane Arbus)

I have been feeling my way in photography since 2001 while living and working in Chattanooga, Tennessee as an exceptional education teacher. My true love is shooting film, color and b&w, in a variety of 35mm and medium-format cameras. Education in photography has been from books, trial and error and a myriad of talented photographers I’ve met on numerous photo sites.

Overturned, 2004

I don’t see a particular thematic pattern in my pictures though there may be one. I do know empty chairs and seats or all types seem to have a recurring role. I tend to take pictures of places and things more than people. Finding the beauty in inanimate objects is like hunting for treasure. The textures and patterns combined with light and shadow create a landscape of their own. I search for the story in a place or object, imagining what happened before I took the picture or maybe after. I often like to add words and titles to my pictures when the picture evokes an emotion. Recently I have started a blog with poems illustrated by photos or photos illuminated by poetry, whichever way you want to see it. So many times it may be the memory of the place or the circumstances of when I took the picture that makes the photo more meaningful to me than anyone else. Because of this fact, it is always exciting when others understand my vision and appreciate my photos.

Chasing Bubbles, 2008

I’ve experimented some with toy cameras and developing b&w film in the kitchen sink. No matter how many times I try it I find there is nothing like the feeling of pulling the film from the reel and seeing that a picture has actually developed there…magical!

Hard times, 2007

I have so much to learn…so many directions to follow…always hoping to propel myself forward. I feel honored to have this opportunity to be a part of F-Blog and all the fine photographers represented here. More of my pictures can be seen here on F-Blog , BlogSpot and altphotos

Northshore, 2005

ggf

invited guest: Tommi Pirnes

1. School morning. Kourseong, India 2006



2. Playing in the back streets of Jhunjhunu. Jhunjhunu, India 2006

I really don’t consider myself as a photographer as much as a traveller. I rarely pick up the camera in my hometown, but when I travel it’s all I do. From dawn till dusk and then after that. My trips are relatively short so I must make the best of the time I have. These photographs from India were taken during November 2006.


3. Under the bodhi tree. Bodhgaya, India 2006



4. Jaipur, India 2006



5. Adinath Jain Temple, Ranakpur India 2006

Why India? There are few places left in the world that still has that aura of mystique above it.
For me India has always been one of those places that has had that something... So, the only way to try to make sense of it all was to go there and see that something myself.

Today India is in the midst of a massive change both ecomically and culturally. During the last 15 years it has been the second fastest-growing country in the world surpassed only by China. By 2040 it will be the the third largest economy in the world. You can see this change clearly in the outskirts of big cities such as Mumbai or Bangalore where new and shiny glass-walled towers rise next to the slums. India is still home to 40 percent of the world's poor. Mohandas Gandhi said 'You must be the change you wish to see in the world' and it seems that millions of Indians are becoming that change.


6. The rescue. Mumbai, India 2006



7. Just after sunset. Ranakpur, India 2006



8. Butterflies and the Mahabodhi Temple. Bodhgaya, India 2006

Many things have changed yet many things stay the same. The 1444 distinct marble pillars that carry the heavy roof of Adinath Jain Temple in Ranakpur will still stand centuries after we are gone. And every night bats leave their nearby cave with no knowledge of actions of men.
India is not easily understood and it will get under your skin. Still. I can’t wait to go back…

Tommi Pirnes: "Born -78. My grandfather gave me my first camera. My father photographed. The library gave me books. And the streets keep me walking... I'm just naturally curious about almost anything new and of course when you travel many things are new. When I was 23 realised that I can take a decent picture so, I desided to buy a decent camera. After that my only travel companion has been my M6.

One thing also is a must for me. Film. Photos in media and especially the net have lost much their credibility after Photoshop etc.
If I take photographs with a mechanical film camera and print it myself, the final print will hold some of that original photographic truth. Not saying that digital prints would not have that. But I guess you know what I mean? And yes you can debate about truth or photographic truth for eternity. But it's still the way I like to work. I need something I can touch. And believe."


Text and photos © Tommi Pirnes

invited by ulf fågelhammar

18 April 2008

the wall

photo: Jan Bernhardtz

The warm and friendly Tokusegawa-san a big hearted Makushita takes time to pose with one of his Kiriyama-beya juniors

photo by Skorj

Raspberry Fields


As a kid,
I remember playing at my grandparents place.
The taste of life was sweet back then.
Sweet and red.
Like raspberries.

Well, it is all gone by now.
A small job for a caterpillar,
a giant leap for mankind.
A new highway.

Evolution has punched me.

This summer
I will plant raspberries in the garden.
For my kids. And for me.

That is my way to punch back.

Yola Monakhov exhibition in New York

F blog author Yola Monakhov invites you to the opening of her show at the Sasha Wolf Gallery on Thursday, May 1st, from 6-8pm. The address is 10 Leonard Street, in Tribeca. (Please check Sashawolf.com for more information.)

F Spotting: Nurse Rabbit and the White Man



This wonderful Ummavison is the start of our new and very unpredictable proyecto called "F-spotting". Your contributions are welcome - but don´t count on us to publish them, unless they meet the criterias of the F Doctors. Email your pictures to
gruppof-inbox@googlegroups.com

It's (F)riday again

photo: Jeanne Wells

and time for the Daily Print.
As always, my gratitude to all my F Blog friends and readers, you're the best!




invited guest: Edward Yanowitz

On my visual odyssey, I photograph to remember the moments I’ve seen that had some special significance to me. Sometimes the serendipity of life presents you with a private scene, something special for your eyes to see. The photograph verifies to me that … yes, I was there… yes, I did see that and it was not something I imagined. I get great enjoyment from looking at the intimate details of life, a wandering eye that is never satiated, always looking for something….. in the hope that I will be aware enough to recognize the significance of a moment, before it is lost in time.















Interpreting the parallel view of my eye and the camera, has helped me expand my visual observation and awareness, letting me convert the things I’ve seen into symbols of sight. I photograph the simultaneous realities that coexist within my line of sight, the intersection of light and time, people and the space around them. From my perspective, life itself is the canvas and I am just a framer of its singular moments. - Edward Yanowitz









Edward Yanowitz was born May 25,1946 in Miami, Fl., raised in Nassau, Bahamas and Miami Beach, Fl. He has been a photographer since 1967, working in the Fine Art, Social Documentary and Commercial fields.

In 1972, he received a Masters of Fine Arts degree in Photography, from The San Francisco Art Institute. He has taught photography at the University of Miami, Coral Gables, Fl., Barry University, Miami Shores, Fl., Miami-Dade College, Kendall Campus, and The New World School of the Arts located in Miami Fl. He is presently coordinates the photography program at American InterContinental University, School of Design, South Florida.

Four of his photographs were selected by John Szarkowski for the collection of The Museum of Modern Art, in New York City in 1974. His photographs have been in numerous exhibitions and are held in corporate and private collections both nationally and internationally.

See more of Edward Yanowitz work at www.photobistro.com and www.luminous-lint.com.

All photos and text © Edward Yanowitz

invited by ulf fågelhammar