Results tagged “links” from words + images

Thursday Links

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As seen recently on the Internet:
  • It seems like these amateur photographs of Barack Obama during his college years are getting a lot of attention.  The idea of a woman digging negatives out of her basement from a bygone college photo class is pretty cool, but I was disappointed by the images themselves.  Maybe this is missing the point, but I found the compositions uninspiring and the feel of the photos to be rather posed/acted.
  • I haven't been seeing enough art lately, but I'm making a resolution to see the traveling exhibit of Dawoud Bey's "Class Pictures" at the Contemporary Museum.  The prints themselves are big (30 x 40 inch color prints) and I cannot wait to see them.  I'm also eager to read the one-page pieces the subjects wrote, which are displayed with the photos.

Thursday Links.

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I feel like this week has driven me crazy.  I can hardly believe it's Thursday.
Happy Thanksgiving!  An abundance of food and wine delayed the Thursday night links, but here they are!
  • I've heard rumors that the new Canon EOS 5D Mark II will start to filter into stores soon.  I'm really excited to see the creative things artists will do with the awesome HD video this camera can capture.
  • JeromeDelay_APPhoto.jpgAP photographer Jerome Delay took this heart-wrenching photo of two children looking for relatives in Kiwanja, Congo. He was inspired to try to reunite the family after receiving a flood of emails from strangers asking how they could help.
  • While on an adventure trip in Pakistan last year, my father-in-law sent us a postcard featuring what he called "jingle trucks."  They really are a sight to behold, and I recently found an article about them on Web Urbanist.
  • Wow, crazy!  I just learned I can do even more with my Flickr account.  After losing some valued pictures due to hard drive failures and the like, I have been much more religious about uploading full-quality photos to Flickr.  Positive side effects: I got some very pretty business cards from Moo, we'll be ordering our Christmas cards using Flickr, and while I'll always be partial to handmade artist books I may take Blurb for a spin.

The week in links.

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This Thursday's links include...

  • Did you know the National Museum of Women in the Arts is free every first Sunday of the month?  That means I could even splurge on a $14 Amtrak ticket rather than driving.  There really is no excuse not to go.
  • Speaking of DC, it's too bad we can't combine Free Community Day at the NMOWA with American University's Mid-Atlantic MFA Invitational.  Oh well.
  • I recently stumbled upon photographer Elinor Carucci and her "Crisis" series.  These domestic images are very intimate, almost to the point of making me feel slightly uncomfortable and voyeuristic.  It's interesting to see images so different from my own, yet still unfolding domestic life in pictures.
  • The Magenta Foundation has posted a call for entries in search of emerging photographers age 34 and under.  I'm a little iffy about the $50 application fee, but then again, maybe that narrows the pool of competition.  Who knows? 

Link roundup.

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As seen this week:

Thursday Links

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As seen this week:

  • Found a new addition to my RSS reader this week: Web Urbanist.  It may end up being too trendy and hip for me, but for now I'm thoroughly enjoying both the subject matter and the writing style.
  • Incidentally, Web Urbanist recently put up some classic, texture rich color photos of abandoned hotels, churches, and hospitals.  Who isn't a sucker for photographs like these?  They reminded me of a photo book I absolutely fell in love with sometime in spring 2007: Stephen Wilkes' Ellis Island: Ghosts of Freedom.  I just wish I had the extra cash to buy this book instead of just looking at the whole thing over the course of an hour in the Barnes & Noble.
  • 1000 Words Photography just featured some interesting work by Pawel Jaszczuk.  I thought it was some sort of commentary on the the quasi-homeless drunks that inhabit our subways.  Then I thought to myself, "that guy is wearing a pretty nice suit," and read the description.  Salaryman is actually about white-collar Japanese workers, among whom heavy drinking is "naturally accepted" as a "compulsory catharsis" to escape from their high-stress jobs.  Apparently these scenes are more the rule than the exception.
  • Maxim photo editor Kelly Stuart was riding the NYC subway at around 12:30 a.m. on election night when a group of people unfurled a giant American flag in the subway car and everyone started singing the national anthem.  How often do you see that kind of patriotism while using public transportation?  I don't care who you voted for, that's really nice.

Thursday Links

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Busy week, but not without some good link finds.

Image © 2001 Martin Wattenberg.
All rights reserved by copyright owner.
Lots of links this week.  Here's what I've been seeing:

Thursday Links

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Just one link today, and it's for my fellow Baltimoreans this time.  This weekend, I'm going to set aside some time to enter the Baker Artist Awards.  If you live in the greater Baltimore region maybe you should, too:
baker.jpg

Thursday Links

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I'm going to test out a new idea here: another weekly post with some finds I've made throughout the week.

  • Influential photojournalist James Nachtwey is using the $100,000 TED Prize to spread awareness about extreme drug-resistant tuberculosis (XDR-TB).  The pictures are an intense in terms of the abject human suffering displayed, but with that word of warning are worth a serious look: http://xdrtb.org/photographs.php
  • The Artists Review Artists Project connects artists via the internet for peer reviews.  Participating artists exchange one JPG image of their work and write a 100-500 word review.  Upon receiving your review, you have the option of responding with no more than 100 words and providing an additional image.  To participate, check it out here.
  • Some of my nighttime photos are on the JPG Magazine website for consideration for future issues.  They take the form of a little photo essay.  Check it out and cast your vote!

Links

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The promised (and delayed) weekly post from last week still sits in a file on my computer.  Unfortunately, I am dealing with some technical problems with my web hosting company and cannot seem to add images to entries anymore.  While that gets sorted out, I am going to share some of my regular online reading.  I own a couple good photo books, but the internet is by far my biggest source of mental nutrition.  Here are some things hanging out in my Google Reader right now:

  • Women in Photography is half-blog, half-gallery.  A new "solo exhibition" showcasing a female photographer opens each month.  Submissions are accepted on a rolling basis and the site is curated by Amy Elkins and Cara Phillips.  There are a lot of women doing thought-provoking photographic work, and these two have chosen some great images in the past few months the site has been in existence.
  • I find that I Heart Photograph is a little hit or miss: sometimes I find a real gem, sometimes I fail to be inspired by this site that posts copious amounts of photographic finds.  However, I keep the RSS feed on my radar just for those gems it unearths from time to time, such as
  • Crashed Cars of Kuwait.  This documentation of car wrecks in Kuwait is eerie, unsettling, and wholly engaging.  I think all our eyes experience a magnetic tug toward mangled vehicles like this because it's so easy to imagine ourselves in the drivers' place, and that is the spirit in which this photographer documents the wrecks.  He acknowledges there is a certain morbid insanity to it but treats the subject with enough reverence to make this a stunning body of work.  In later images he ventures into night scenes, a realm near and dear to my heart.
  • Friends' blogs are always in my feed, and I'm always up for a few tales from the entertainment world via Hungry Filmmaker, which has a little bit of everything: job stories, a touching video marriage proposal, tips on working with limited resources, film theory, and some interesting thoughts on copyright/intellectual property in the digital age.  Oh, I admit it, I also read this because secretly I want to work with film but haven't been able to come up with a good enough idea quite yet.  I live (and struggle) vicariously.
  • Okay, so I haven't been keeping up with Strobist at all because I haven't been doing much off-camera lighting.  BUT.  I feel I need to bring this blog to light because it a.) is written by a Baltimore Sun photojournalist, b.) has an excellent community of active readers and c.) does a great job of teaching professional lighting on a budget.  There is a huge wealth of tips for making highly effective lighting gear on the cheap, with a focus of lighting off-camera using groups of remotely triggered Speedlights.  If I were a photo professor, I would list this site as a required text.
What is on your reading list?  Feel free to send me your favorite online food for thought in the comments.

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