Monday, November 30, 2009

Mama Kati



I'm Pregnant! Two months to go! I am starting to slow down and take less assignments as I reach the end of my pregnancy. I will start back up in the spring/summer with Pedagogy of Photography and other fine art, documentary and commissioned projects so feel free to contact me to schedule sessions. Until then, I am going nurture this growing belly and hibernate with my beautiful baby boy!

Monday, November 9, 2009

Patricia Lay-Dorsey


Photograph by Patricia Lay-Dorsey

A beautiful reflective photo essay is featured on the New York Times Lens Blog today by a dear friend and photographer Patricia Lay-Dorsey whom I met at the Mary Ellen Mark Workshop at the Center for Photography at Woodstock last summer. We have kept in touch since and edited each others work. So proud of her and her inspiring work!

Tuesday, November 3, 2009

American Photography 25

If you are in New York next week come celebrate the publication of American 25. RSVP here.



As mentioned in a previous blog post in April, 3 of my images taken on assignment at the Eddie Adams Workshop last October were selected by American Photography as the best photographs of 2008. 171 images were chosen from a record-breaking 10,100 submitted. The following 3 winning images can be viewed online here



Looking In: Robert Frank’s ‘The Americans,’


Robert Frank, Swiss, unobtrusive, nice, with that little camera that he raises and snaps with one hand he sucked a sad poem right out of America onto film, taking rank among the tragic poets of the world. To Robert Frank I now give this message: You got eyes. -Jack Kerouac, from the Introduction to The Americans

I had the honor of not only viewing the inspiration exhibit Looking In: Robert Frank’s ‘The Americans,’ at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, but meeting the charming photographer and living legend Robert Frank himself, hearing him speak about his journey as a foreigner photographing America in the height of the Cold War. As a photographer and educator, at a time when photography legends are leaving us and digital photography has antiquated techniques we used just a few years ago, it was a blessing to be present at such a unique and memorable event celebrating an evolutionary artist and witnessing this seminal body of work.

The exhibit can be viewed from September 22, 2009-January 3, 2010 at the MET.

From the MET website,

This exhibition celebrates the fiftieth anniversary of the publication of The Americans, Robert Frank’s influential suite of black-and-white photographs made on a cross-country road trip in 1955–56. Although Frank’s depiction of American life was criticized when the book was released in the U.S. in 1959, it soon became recognized as a masterpiece of street photography. Born in Switzerland in 1924, Frank is considered one of the great living masters of photography. The exhibition features all 83 photographs published in The Americans and will be the first time that this body of work is presented to a New York audience. In addition, the exhibition includes contact sheets that Frank used to create the book; earlier photographs made in Europe, Peru, and New York; a short film by the artist on his life; and his later re-use of iconic images from the series.