[AGL] Starn twins and Earth exhibitors
Michael Eisenstadt
michaele at hotpop.com
Wed Mar 29 09:42:49 EST 2006
Thanks, Connie, for the links.
I discovered that if you Reload the http://www.photofest.org page you will
see a kind of slide show of photos from the show.
Mike
----- Original Message -----
From: "Connie Clark" <connie_3c at yahoo.com>
To: "BJ's List Ghetto 2" <ghetto2 at listserv.whathelps.com>; "Ghetto List"
<austin-ghetto-list at pairlist.net>
Sent: Wednesday, March 29, 2006 8:08 AM
Subject: [AGL] Starn twins and Earth exhibitors
> Earth is the other theme of fotofest this year. In Artists Responding to
> Violence, I saw a lot of photos of people - cultural and political, real
> and/or dummied up. The Earth theme shows us more landscape and still life
> type work - but nothing cliched or traditional about any of them.
>
> Artist Heidi Bradner traveled to Siberia and recorded in black and white
> the Nenets life, constantly on the move in the Artic circle, following
> reindeer. People like this still exist.
> http://www.heidibradner.com/galleries/nenets/index.html
>
> Vesselina Nikolaeva walked the Bulgarian-Turkish border, the southeastern
> edge of the Soviet bloc to gather photographic evidence of what was once
> there.
> http://www.vesselinanikolaeva.com/
> Her soft eye-pleasing compositions of abandoned guard stations and
> broken, penetrated border fences are printed on watercolor paper giving
> the color photos texture, and a painted quality.
>
> I noticed that in the various fotofest exhibits that ink jet prints of
> digital photos can be printed on just about any surface that will run
> through the printer.
>
> The reknowned NYC photographers, twins, Doug and Mike Starn used mulberry
> paper to print a series of photos of a very old, large Thai mulberry tree
> in the northeastern US. Since this paper is somewhat translucent, they
> were able to frame a printed photo over another printed photo with a
> pocket of airspace between them. One could see the blue-grey photo behind
> the bare limbed knarlly tree on top. There were some very large pieces.
> One delicate and vein rich leaf photo covered an entire wall. This one
> was printed on rolls of shiny photo paper, in strips hung side by side,
> matching, much like a bilboard poster. Spectacular. Better yet, was their
> trippy one-minute video of dried fall leaves. The video was created with
> one of those laparoscopy cameras that is used in surgery - it wiggled and
> swiveled, twisted through the leaves intimately in quiet seduction.
> http://www.newworldmuseum.org/starn.html
>
> Several of the artist exhibits showed beautiful natural spaces ruined by
> man or industry, like the gas fields that are poised soon to invade the
> Nenets' "land of the second sun".
>
> See works of Masaki Hirano (Tasmanian old growth forests), Martin Stupich
> ( the Red Desert) and John Ganis (Oregon clear cutting).
>
> And this Korean guys work jumped out with gorgeous color.
>
> http://mcserver.gold.ac.uk/media_showcase/ma_image/0405/ma_ic_0405.php?name=hyung-geun_park
>
> Photographic art seems to take the viewer on a trip somewhere that one
> might not ever go, or be able to go. That's what I like about this big
> show. I'm about half-way through the main exhibits.
>
> Connie
>
> http://www.fotofest.org/
>
>
> ---------------------------------
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