Wednesday, September 19, 2012

Bill Jacobson


 "...these shadowy pale photographs evoke the loss experienced by so many during the height of the AIDS epidemic. With their blurred human subjects, they indicate the futility of capturing true human likeness in both portraiture and memory.

 His next body of work, Thought Series (1996-1998) is a nearly monochromatic deep-black evocation of the flow of life. Photographing a broad spectrum of subjects from tightly cropped faces to fields of grass and surfaces of water, Jacobson deliberately links the human figure to nature, suggesting their constant but subtle connections."



http://www.billjacobsonstudio.com/wp

Johan Thornqvist






http://www.snarlik.se/category/art/

Uta Barth


 "In the 1988–89 series Untitled, she began to explore questions of photographic abstraction, mixing painting reminiscent of Op art and preexisting photographs into her images. In Ground (1992–97) and Field (1995), she introduced the imagery for which she has become known: blurry backgrounds created by focusing her camera on empty foregrounds. Ground was exhibited site-specifically (in a Los Angeles house-turned-gallery), and much of Barth’s subsequent work has engaged the notion of the photographic environment as opposed to the photographic subject...Barth extends her exploration of light and the nature of vision in photographs that capture the natural sheens, glares, and shadows that travel daily through our everyday habitats."

  




http://www.tanyabonakdargallery.com/artist.php?art_name=Uta%20Barth
http://www.guggenheim.org/new-york/collections/collection-online/show-full/bio/?artist_name=Uta%20Barth
http://dpope4.wordpress.com/2011/02/04/uta-barth/

Tuesday, September 4, 2012

Jamie Beck and Kevin Burgh

A Cinemagraph is an image that contains within itself a living moment that allows a glimpse of time to be experienced and preserved endlessly.

Visual Graphics Artist Kevin Burg began experimenting with the .gif format in this style in 2009 but it wasn't until he partnered with photographer Jamie Beck to cover NYFW that Cinemagraphs were born. Marrying original content photography with the desire to communicate more to the viewer birthed the cinemagraph process. Starting in-camera, the artists take a traditional photograph and combine a living moment into the image through the isolated animation of multiple frames. To quote supermodel Coco Rocha "it's more than a photo but not quite a video".

Beck and Burg named the process "Cinemagraphs" for their cinematic quality while maintaining at its soul the principles of traditional photography. Launched virally through social media platforms Twitter and Tumblr, both the style of imagery and terminology has become a class of its own. The creative duo are looking forward to exploring future display technologies for gallery settings as well as pushing this new art form and communication process as the best way to capture a moment in time or create a true living portrait in our digital age while embracing our need to communicate visually and share instantly.



http://cinemagraphs.com