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Jan 28th 2009 11:38AM
No, that's not the name of the latest band featured to be featured on Spinner this week.

Just yesterday, I was sent a link to an amazing photograph of President Barack Obama's inaugural address. I've come to find out that the photo has practically gone viral, with over 2 million views in the first 5 days it was posted, so I'm potentially not the first person to share this with you.

I had a rather strong reaction to the image itself, the story if its creation, as well as the interactive element, and the combination inspired me to go out on a declarative limb: This is THE image that depicts everything historical about Barack Obama's election. A grand statement, I know, but read on and I'll attempt to explain.




New York photographer David Bergman blogged about covering Barack Obama's inauguration on January 20th, 2009. "I covered my first inauguration and what an inauguration it was," he writes. "Before Tuesday, I had photographed five presidents and covered big events including the Olympics, the Super Bowl, and concerts like Live 8 and Live Earth. But this one was the biggest. It deserved a big photo."

When he says big, he means big.
Oct 2nd 2008 10:16AM
Filed under: photography


I haven't blogged in quite a while, but I'm proud to have a comeback tour featuring the site Women in Photography..

I went to Aperture on Monday for the kickoff of a new series of educational lectures curated by Laurel Ptak of I Heart Photograph. This particular event featured the creators Amy Elkins and Cara Phillips of the female-centric online gallery, Women in Photography, and two of the featured artists on the site, Elinor Carucci and Robin Schwartz.

After an introduction explaining the reasons behind WIP's conception, Elinor Carruci discussed her personal work while flipping through never seen images. If you're familiar with Elinor's style, the work is painstakingly intimate, revealing beautiful yet embarrassingly tender moments.. The portfolio transitioned into images of her children enraged and delicate; the vulnerability once unraveled in herself tenfold within her children.

Robin also touched on the odd vulnerability of her child, Amelia. Her series, Amelia's World, is a surreal portfolio of her crystalline-eyed child interacting with animals. The scenes aren't hesitant dog pettings in the park, but are of feeding deer sandwiches, or sitting alongside a wild elk in the woods. One of the first things often seen in a portrait is the portrait taker... but within the images of Amelia, the quiet and intricate relationship between mother and daughter struck me even more so than Amelia's complete acceptance of her animal kingdom.

Many women photograph familiar relationships, and are subtly criticized by the greater world as being 'complacent' in their role as a woman photographer. Amy Elkins presented a myriad of statistics showing the small percentage of female photographers within museums and galleries, regardless of the percentage of females within the field.
There are undercurrents defining niche subjects as traditionally female verse male, and these unfair delineations have perpetuated a severe sexism within photography. Women in Photography is devoted to undercutting these designations by showing that quality work by women, is quality work regardless.
Sep 15th 2008 6:22PM
Filed under: content, photography
The hullabaloo of fashion week has dissipated leaving a lovely collection of delights.

Stylelist.com
hired V. Nina Westervelt to shoot backstage and front row during the Spring 2009 presentations, and she came back with quite an impressive portfolio of portraits. Nina's shots, caught on a medium format camera using a spotlight flash, leave the celebrities unpolished. It's as you found snapshots of your best friend's high-school party...with some familiar faces standing next to the keg... There is a disassociation from the perceived reality of Fashion Week, and a candidness usually not attributed to the likes of Kanye West, Nicole Richie, or pretty models...

Click here to see the works.




Aug 18th 2008 4:07PM
Filed under: photography


A friend of mine sent me a link to squareamerica.com, a website that collects amateur snapshots from the past one-hundred and thirty years. The images are what you would expect to see in any household-- banal images of dance lessons and summer BBQs, blurry beach shots and plump pinups in their backyards.

The combination of anachronism and 'found image' is attractive. For those of us who weren't around in the 1920's, we perceive this decade as a patchwork of images from history text books, Hollywood movies and grandma's yellowing portrait. There is something voyeuristic but also oddly educational about looking at images from a bi-racial bi-sexual house party in the 50's; these snaps are less refined than the puritanical suzie-homemaker ads associated with the decade. Alternative grassroot histories portray the manifestations of trends and historical events in a way that we can relate...

I feel like no other medium besides photography has regarded the amateur to such an extent. We are seeing a proliferation with the rise of citizen cell-phone journalism. There will always be a differentiation between professional and non, but I think the overabundance of peaks into people's lives plays into the modern idea of ultimate transparency. Its interesting to note that just fairly recently these voyeuristic looks been main-stream heralded. Check out Found Magazine and FFFFOUND online for a digital version of found images...
Jul 2nd 2008 9:51AM


For those of us that think visually and like to click on pictures (ok, that's most of us btw), PicLens is a pretty amazing app that brings the Web to life as a visual medium. Just download the extension and PicLens turns image and video feeds from top sources into an interactive "wall of media" that animates smoothly across your screen. So smoothly, in fact, that you may actually get motion sickness playing with it (like I did).

Like most interactive things it really has to be experienced to be appreciated. If you have ever felt that image or video search should be more compelling than this one is certainly for you. I recommend everyone on my team try it out. Though if you haven't wanted a more visual, interactive Internet than this plug-in will probably go into the "cool things" bookmark graveyard you never go back to visit. I do believe the new "Shop Amazon" feature is a stretch though.

Speaking as the General Manager of PIXCETERA, this one is a tough act to follow I must admit.
Jun 2nd 2008 1:33PM
PIXCETERA is a fully fleshed-out celebration of the craft of photography and has, as its central innovation, the ability to dynamically "read" galleries being published across the AOL network and consolidate them into one website (some innovations are not so obvious). Our users clicked billions of photos last year so we're hopeful that bringing all of this amazing programming work into one website fulfills an unmet need for them.

It is important to note that the site is not trying to compete with flickr as a UGC play (I myself am a faithful user of the site). Though we do have plans for user upload and gallery publishing and favorites, the main concept here is to bring the best programmed photography experiences in our network into one simple interface and provide the user the ability to "skip" across topics effortlessly.

One of my favorite little features is the ability to reskin the interface to white, gray or black so you can view photos in your own neutral tone of choice.

We've only just begun so expect some interesting innovations out of the pixcetera team over the coming months. And please let us know what you think.

May 29th 2008 10:23AM


The first MediaStorm workshop projects launched recently, featuring a fine cast of photographers including Lucy Nicholson of Reuters and Carolyn Cole of the Los Angeles Times. The workshops took place the first week in May, giving photographers a canvas to define a New Yorkcentric story with audio, video, stills, and production.

I recently took a look at Reuters photographer Lucy Nicholson's piece and was impressed with the combination of media Lucy utilized. She told the story of the famous New York Naked Cowboy from an intimate perspective, incorporating a narrative from his girlfriend as well as the Cowboy's described auto-biography. The quality of the editing and production work was class.

The workshop, if interested in attending, is not for amateurs. The admitted photographers in this first round are at the top of the photojournalism field. It's compelling that MediaStorm is single-handedly helping talented photographers compose multifaceted narratives.
May 6th 2008 10:50PM
The Webby Awards have been announced! There are some overwhelming overachievers who rightfully deserve many a nod (ahem, TED.com), as well as some interesting discoveries. My favorite findings consisted of:

Moo.com- An ingenious printing press allowing users to create paint-swatch-esque "moo cards". The cards come in a petite box and can be used as a mini collection of images or as satisfying business cards.

Richard Serra Sculpture: Forty Years- MOMA's illustrious flash experience devoted to the sculptor. Full screen images of work with a nice splitting zygote menu for effect.

Checkland Kindleysides
- The most soothing promotional design site EVER. Imagine: a paper tree blows leisurely in the wind while you look at hard-hitting design work for some of the largest corporations in the world. The navigation is as fluid as the calming background music.

PostSecret- A cheap and easy (yet so gratifying) blog. Concepting off of I can Has Cheezburger, this blog takes random doodlings, drawings, photos and offers them vulnerable narratives.

Blurb- Make your own book. Blurb allows users to download software and put together a collection of images/words for a very captivating price. It seems to offer more options than iphoto and has a FANTASTIC URL.




Apr 1st 2008 6:15PM

This past weekend was hectic for the New York art scene. The grand Armory Show came to Chelsea along with a slew of other less exalted fairs. The crowning event for me was the cultish photo event, the Slideluck Potshow, at the Chelsea Art Museum.

Slideluck originally began as a social gathering in an apartment and quickly burgeoned into a massive party. The main concept of Slideluck is based around the dual interaction of a potluck and a slide-show. An attendee must bring food/beverage to participate in the slide-show watching, which begins post desultory shop-talk and a grub session of mostly chocolaty deserts. The participating photographers range from celebrated professional to emerging amateur, but the images are always of the highest caliber. The participating audience is a mixed bag, but all are welcome to attend.

The most recent Slideluck was the first true combination of still photography and multimedia. The past attempts to include audio beyond music didn't succeed due to the overly-chatty atmosphere of the events. The recent combination of fewer freebie- hunters (the event is now paid-membership based), the leveled architecture of the Chelsea Art Museum, and the sophisticated content of the multimedia, fostered an attentive crowd. Or perhaps we now just expect more than images...

The once wee face of Slide-luck is converting into a diversified project-- both in location and work presented. It's worth the membership.

Mar 25th 2008 10:14AM

To commemorate the five year anniversary of the war in Iraq, Reuters joined with MediaStorm to create a multimedia project portraying the agency's coverage and bureau. The presentation 'Bearing Witness' is both succinct and substantial, extracting stories and images epitomizing the futility of this war and iconography representing the agency's ubiquity.

I am consistently impressed with MediaStorm productions, and this is no exception. The chronology of the war was beautifully interlaced with the chronology of coverage, of personalized accounts from within the bureau representative of the greater conflict. The most harrowing account came from Samia Nakhoul, the Gulf Bureau Chief who had been covering Iraq since 1991. She explains the destitution of watching a country destroyed, her own body mauled, and the weight of Post-Trauma after seeing children killed. She cannot cover war any longer.

A despondent thread ran through all of the interviews. Most mentioned that this was like any other war. Civilians are always effected in wartime, but the account painted was one of complete inseparability from all involvement; of complete defenselessness within Iraq. There was no insinuation of positivity, just a tributary nod to all involved and a sad remembrance of the lost. There is a huge amount of heroism in war coverage, but the price is an irreversible reverence for lost relationships, and lost pieces of ones self.

Mar 20th 2008 7:57PM
Filed under: photography

One of the most respected photographers in the industry recently passed. Philip Jones Griffiths (1936-2008) shot images for 60 years, working with the esteemed Magnum Photos agency. His epic images of post-war Vietnam published in the collection 'Viet Nam at Peace' are respected as touching articles of a country dealing with the emotional wreckage of conflict. Magnum Photos put together a touching tribute on both their blog and main website.

Mar 20th 2008 10:52AM

According to a recent Stanford News Service report, Standford researchers are developing a camera exceeding our two dimensional standards.

Professor Abbas El Gamal and a team of students are embarking on research to develop a three-dimensional camera containing 12,616 lenses as opposed to the single lens in two-dimensional SLRs. Stanford News Service reports, "they've shrunk the pixels on the sensor to .7 microns, several times smaller than the pixels in standard digital cameras." These pixels are further grouped into arrays of 256 with a lens topping each array.

The coolest thing about this proposed invention is its depth perception and quality. Imagine having the ability to upload images and instead of viewing and editing a flat surface, different planes of the image are navigable and alterable. Direct your 'crop' tool to take you five feet into the frame instead of 20 pixels from the top and side. The quality of the imagery would lead you into gigapixel territory, eliminating the antiquated 'megapixel' devices.

Cost and size? Cheaper than your current point and shoot, and smaller than your cell phone. Now if that isn't photo-progress, I'm not really sure what is.

Mar 19th 2008 11:53AM
Filed under: photography
Getty Photographer John Moore was awarded Magazine Photographer of the Year, a prestigious title granted by Pictures of the Year International. According to the Getty News Blog, Moore was 'the sole American Journalist present at the assassination of Benazir Bhutto'. The combination of the accessibility of Getty Images, and Moore's nationality, made his images and his account vastly sought after. His story and images become ubiquitous, most wonderfully covered by the New York Times.

The Times created a multimedia piece featuring the images and voice of Moore. The shift in images represents the trajectory of events; the rally begins saturated and framed, and quickly explodes into vibrant smears of oranges and blacks, then to a hurried and bloody aftermath. Photographers who are lucky/unfortunate enough to witness momentous events in history have a nanosecond to make a mortal decision. John stayed, documented, motor-drived during the blast, and solemnly reflected on the tragedy .

He states, "I stayed clear of the area where they were doing the body searches... that's where I thought a bomber might set off the charge...they knew their target, they wanted to get her, and they did."

Check out John's work and the rest of the winners of the POYi prize.


Mar 10th 2008 2:34PM
Filed under: photography



There has been a series of award announcements within photography recently, most notably the PDN 30 award and the ICP infinity award. I attended a charming (and surprisingly informative) lecture with three of the PDN's winners at Parson's School of Design, which influenced me to follow up by checking out the portfolios of the 27 others.

Most of the portfolios were commercial/portrait based portfolios with a sprinkling of photojournalism. I noticed the crops instantly- square- reinforcing the concept that these images were shot using medium format cameras, and most likely with film. There is a classic reverence for the use of film; and this idealism was expressed in the winners panel. There is a connotation of professional dexterity, skill (sports withstanding) if shooting preference for portraiture/art is analog instead of digital. There is a purity attached.

But the digital/analog debate has become contextual -- if a magazine demands a tight deadline, blessed film becomes an impossibility. This makes me question, were deadlines not tight 10 years ago? Is film only reserved for the upper echelon photogs who actually DON'T have tight deadlines? Would any 'true professional' photographer admit that they prefer digital over film?

Regardless, there were some standout selections from the winners-- Christina Paige's eerie street shots, Mike McGregor's elegant portraits, Mikhael Subotzky's diverse documentaries ( He also won the Young Photographers Award from the ICP). I recommend perusing the winners portfolios at PhotoSource.


Mar 3rd 2008 10:40AM


I've been fortunate enough to participate in the brilliant taste tests that AOL Food has started to hold on a regular basis. Thus far I have shot peanut butter spoon-fulls, Valentines Chocolate, candy bar cross-sections, and most recently 52 frozen pizzas.

While most of these classy cuisines have been presented in a Consumer Reports format, the candy bar cross-sections are available in quiz form. You think you know what the innards of a Snickers Bar look like? From my perspective, a spelunkers dream. And if you want to see more disorienting cross sections of not so delectable gastronomic inventions, check out the Cross-Sectioning site.


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