Helen Levitt–Gone at 95

Monday, March 30, 2009

Helen Levitt, a major photographer of the 20th century who caught fleeting moments of surpassing lyricism, mystery and quiet drama on the streets of her native New York, died in her sleep at her home in Manhattan on Sunday. She was 95.

Her death was confirmed by her brother, Bill Levitt, of Alta, Utah.

Ms. Levitt captured instances of a cinematic and delightfully guileless form of street choreography that held at its heart, as William Butler Yeats put it, “the ceremony of innocence.” A man handles garbage-can lids like an exuberant child imitating a master juggler. Even an inanimate object — a broken record — appears to skip and dance on an empty street as a child might, observed by a group of women’s dresses in a shop window.

As marvelous as these images are, the masterpieces in Ms. Levitt’s oeuvre are her photographs of children living their zesty, improvised lives. A white girl and a black boy twirl in a dance of their own imagining. Four girls on a sidewalk turning to stare at five floating bubbles become contrapuntal musical notes in a lovely minor key.

In Ms. Levitt’s best-known picture, three properly dressed children prepare to go trick-or-treating on Halloween 1939. Standing on the stoop outside their house, they are in almost metaphorical stages of readiness. The girl on the top step is putting on her mask; a boy near her, his mask in place, takes a graceful step down, while another boy, also masked, lounges on a lower step, coolly surveying the world.

“At the peak of Helen’s form,” John Szarkowski, former director of the photography department at the Museum of Modern Art, once said, “there was no one better.

To read the entire obit visit the New York Times article here

UT Documentary Center welcomes Donna DeCesare


On Tuesday, March 31st at 6:00 PM Donna DeCesare will show a short illustrated autobiographical piece about her work in Latin American and will give examples from different bodies of work of her process of collaboration, earning trust and ethical issues that emerge when documenting children and communities that are stigmatized or at risk.

Donna is widely known for her groundbreaking coverage of the spread of Los Angeles gangs to Central America. Her photographs and testimonies from children in Guatemala and Colombia who are former child soldiers, survivors of sexual abuse, or who live with the stigma of HIV helped UNICEF to develop protocols for photographing children at risk.

News and arts publications havehttp://www.blogger.com/img/blank.gif featured her award-winning photographs including: The New York Times Magazine, Life, Mother Jones, DoubleTake and Aperture. She is recipient of an Emmy award, the Dorothea Lange Prize, The Alicia Patterson Fellowship, the Mother Jones International Photo Fund Award, the Soros Independent Project fellowship and most recently a Fulbright Fellowship in Colombia.

For more information on Donna DeCesare’s work View her Web site.

Date/Time: Tuesday March 31st 6:00 PM
Location: CMB Studio 4D
Come early and get free snacks!

"Fine Line: Mental Health/Mental Illness"

Saturday, March 21, 2009


The exhibition by San Antonio based photographer Michael Nye combines black-and-white portraits with audio recordings of the subjects' stories in an effort to confront stereotypes and reveal the courage and fragility of those living with mental illness.

The photographs' simple eloquence and the various stories draw the viewer closer into each life by addressing and exploring topics such as family, confusion, pain, abuse, treatment and healing, explained Christian Cutler, director of SFA galleries.

"We are pleased to be partnering with the Nacogdoches Community Collaborative on this exhibition and to welcome Michael Nye to the opening," Cutler continued.

Nye has had more than 70 one-person photography exhibitions in museums and galleries such as the Memphis Brooks Museum of Art, the Arthur Roger Gallery in New York City and the Tampa Museum of Art.

He has been a recipient of a Mid-America National Endowment for the Arts grant in photography and a Kronkosky Foundation grant and been a participant in two Arts America tours in the Middle East and Asia. He has lectured widely in Morocco, India and many museums and universities.

"Fine Line: Mental Health/Mental Illness" is supported by the Nacogdoches Community Collaborative through a grant from the Texas Health Institute. It is sponsored in part by the SFA Friends of the Visual Arts and Nacogdoches Junior Forum.

The exhibition will run through Sunday, March 29. Regular gallery hours are 12:30 to 5 p.m., Tuesday through Sunday. The Cole Art Center @ The Old Opera House, 329 E. Main St. in downtown Nacogdoches. Admission to the opening and gallery is free. For more information, please call (936) 468-1131.

Mini Nikon F

Monday, March 16, 2009


This photograph was found in a Gizmodo blog article.

It's a toy camera from 2002 that is a remarkably realistic Nikon F in miniature. (One of my all time favorite cameras.)

Read more here in the original article by Mark Wilson.

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PDN: Cole Thompson on Online Print Sales.



Cole Thompson speaks on selling his prints online. His overarching philosophy is to cultivate customer relationships with trust and personal contact.

Thompson's online presence is supported with search engine optimization and active linking from other websites.

Online print sales can be difficult. Photographs face fierce competition with other art prints, such as those on Jen Bekman's 20x200 or poster art at Flatstock.

Video via PDN Online.

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Blood Trail Screening in Austin at SXSW

Sunday, March 15, 2009


Blood Trail: A must see film for photographers interested in the realities
of conflict coverage. BLOOD TRAIL premiers at the S x SW film festival in Austin Texas. Film screenings are on March 13, 16, and 18th. Monday's screening is at noon and Wednesday's is at 4:30pm. For schedule details click here.

Filmmakers Richard Parry and Vaughan Smith founders of London's Frontline Club might be present at screenings.

When filmmakers Richard Parry and Vaughan Smith first meet Robert King in
Sarajevo in 1993 he is a 23-year-old Art Photography graduate from Tennessee
with dreams of becoming the world's youngest Pulitzer Prize winner. Their
film Blood Trail, which follows King over the next 15 years though a number
of conflicts, is a strangely touching and welcome antidote to sanctimonious
portrayals of the lives of war photographers.

Robert comes across as a charming if callow rookie when we first meet him in
Bosnia. It is not that Robert lacks motivation. Like all photographers
who do this work there are many motives in play, some of which are not
entirely clear to him. On the one hand he sees war photography as a fast
track to fame, fortune and women, "the Robert Capa mystique" which he refers
to. But he also has a sense of mission even if it is somewhat inarticulately
defined. Early on he says that he feels called to be "a messenger."

Blood Trail catalogs not only Robert's developing career but also a candid
behind the scenes look at the ways that pressures and danger have changed
conflict coverage over the years. In Sarajevo, Chechnya and Russia Robert
has friends among the local population. By the time he gets to Iraq he has
grown into a weathered cynic who feels his ability to capture telling images
has been compromised by the security necessities of covering the war as a US
military embed. He can only wonder what the Iraqis he photographs might be
thinking and is vigilant about how they may react to him.

These are provocative insights, but perhaps what makes Blood Trail most
unique among the handful of films about war photography is it's willingness
to explore topics that journalists are often loathe to talk about except
perhaps amongst themselves. We see Robert reveal the problematic addictive
nature of covering crisis, the tendency to seek refuge in substance abuse or
sex, the emotional fallout whether it is flashbacks and PTSD or depression.
And then there are the ethical and moral dilemmas that one lives with in the
aftermath as a consequence of split second decisions made in combat. At one
point Robert asks himself: How many nameless bodies have I stepped over? It
is a question that calls to mind a harrowing scene that depicts a man still
alive, his legs blown off imploring the photographer and filmmakers for
help. What can they do? They move on. We get a glimpse of the unspeakable
horrors that the professional witness confronts as well as the burden of
decisions that haunt.

By the film's end Robert is a husband and a father. He is a "successful" war
photographer, but he is also unsure why he risks his life when so few people
who see his images can understand or really care about the people in the
scenes he documents. And yet like many soldiers who come home from battle he
seems to feel he has no choice but to return. This too should give us pause.

Review written by Donna DeCesare

Icons of Photography #1, an attendee's review

Friday, March 13, 2009

The following excerpted with permission from James Frederick Bland's Facebook posting...

The start up of Austin Center of Photography can be counted as a success. The organization has 80 members to its count, with lifetime members in that count. The program was nearly standing room only in the newly opened wing of the Blanton Museum and to my estimate, between 300-500 paying admission. I reckon the cohort consisted of the Journalism / Photography students from UT, St Ed, Tx State, ACC and other interested parties.

I'll freely admit that I do not harbor a Documentary, or Photo Journalist bent to my imaging, but it was fascinating to listen to the nuts and bolts and see the faces of a 50 year career. Mary Ellen Mark freely admits that she could not replicate the effort under today's restraints and media aware public.

The images were highly edited, the best of her best and were gorgeous film creations. I'm guessing Tri-X and Kodachrome for the most part, with the occasional slow speed large format image. The program was divided into three segments: Behind the scenes candid film set stills [B&W], Falkland Roads excepts from the book on an India red light district, and another set of excerpts which include images form various circuses in India and Mexico, State Mental Hospital Ward, and the Homeless or Rural Poor from various assignments. The still images were followed by a motion film segment on Twins, which appears to have been created at a Twin convention.

Now being an identical mirror image twin, I have to say that the subjects seemed to be skewed to the strange side, some down right freaky, but entertaining in an uncomfortable kind of way, at least for me.

A very nice program...

Thank You



Thank you to everyone who made it out last night, despite the weather to hear Mary Ellen Mark speak at the Blanton Auditroium.

A huge thanks to my fellow board member, John Langmore for asking his dear friend Mary Ellen Mark if she would speak at our very first "Icons of Photography" lecture. And thank you to our volunteers–we would not have been able to cover all our bases without your support. I sincerely apologize to those of you who arrived late and found the lecture sold out.



A few comments we've already received:
Congratulations to ACP for bringing Mary Ellen Mark to Austin! Although I was familiar with most of her work, and actually took a workshop from her many years ago in San Antonio at the Southwest School of Art and Craft, I was not familiar with her photography shot on film sets, and really enjoyed seeing and hearing her speak about that work. It is always fascinating to hear photographers/artists speak about their own work. It was fascinating to hear her reflect on the changes she has seen occur in photojournalism over her career.
Trish Simonite, Associate Professor, Trinity University, San Antonio, Texas

"It was great to see such a large turn out. I was especially happy to see so many students at the lecture. The Icons of Photography series is a great resource for student to be introduced to work they might not have seen and to see the artist talk about their own work. Mary Ellen Mark gave great insights into her process and it was great seeing a variation of work than she usually shows. Great way to kick off the series. "
Chase Browder, Photographer, Austin, Texas

"Mary Ellen Mark's Austin presentation... a vignette of true commitment."

Mary Ellen is perhaps one of the last photographic icons that was privileged to work in a culture of photographic accessibility that is no longer true for most working or aspiring photo documentarians. A golden age of accessibility if you will... still possible but ever more challenging and difficult.
Joel Salcido, Photographer, Austin, Texas

It is so amazing to see the photography community in Austin and the greater Texas area being brought together by ACP. I think Mary Ellen Mark was the perfect person to have as part of a lecture series. Her talk appealed to both professionals, film buffs, and enthusiasts. I love that no matter how many years it has been since she has seen a subject, she seemed to know their names and intimate details about where they are today. . . a valuable lesson for any photographer or journalist these days, where subjects seem to be dehumanized by the media.
Jaime Collier, Photographer, Houston, Texas

An Evening with Mary Ellen Mark

Wednesday, March 11, 2009

Thursday, March 12, 7pm - An Evening with Mary Ellen Mark
This is the kick-off for the 2009 Icons of Photography lecture series which is the cornerstone of ACP entry into the Austin arts scene. ACP is proud to bring Mary Ellen Mark to Austin for this exciting event.

From Mary Ellen's web site: "Mary Ellen Mark has achieved worldwide visibility through her numerous books, exhibitions and editorial magazine work. She is a contributing photographer to The New Yorker and has published photo-essays and portraits in such publications as LIFE, New York Times Magazine, Rolling Stone, and Vanity Fair."

With seventeen books and numerous awards to her credit, Mary Ellen Mark will discuss some of her most iconic work and her lifetime contribution to photography. Following the lecture, several of her books will be available for purchase. There will be a book signing period and a chance to meet the photographer.

For more, click here to see our newsletter First Exposure.

  • Date: Thursday, March 12th
  • Time: 7pm
  • Where: Blanton Museum Auditorium | University of Texas | Austin, Texas
  • Cost: Members Free | $10 General Admission | $5 Students/Seniors/Military Tickets at the door
  • Seating is limited so please arrive early to ensure admission

Hiroshima: The Lost Photographs

Saturday, March 7, 2009

As a photographer and amateur historian of WWII, I was amazed to stumble across this site on the web.

The fact that things like this still turn up is fascinating -- like the recent story of a GI's dogtag found in a NYC subway tunnel and returned to him 60 years later.

Depending on your views, Hiroshima and Nagasaki were height of barbarism on the part of the U.S., or a brilliant tactical move that saved what some historians estimate would have been a million Allied casualties and bejesus knows how many Japanese lives by ending the war without an invasion of the Japanese home islands.

Some still hotly debate this subject -- but the fact remains that the U.S. is the only country (one might add thankfully) that has exploded not one but two atomic weapons in anger.

It is hard to believe that someone could have been so careless with photographs that bare witness to this monumental moment in history.

The article by Adam Harrison Levy that accompanies some of the photographs starts off in what might be mistaken for a work of fiction. Fascinating stuff. Read it here.

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Fritz Henle Exhibition and Lecture by Alison Nordstrom

Wednesday, March 4, 2009


A new exhibit recently opened at the Harry Ransom Center at the University of Texas, in Austin, displaying the work of Fritz Henle. There are over 125 photographs on display, taken across Henle’s 60 year career. There is a wide range of subject matter on display, fashion images for Harper’s Bazaar, industrial landscapes, images from Life magazine, portraits, nude studies, landscapes. Henle was nicknamed ‘Mr. Rollei’ and much of his work is shot in that camera’s square aspect ratio. There is a strong sense of design and a different point of view running through all of his photographs.

“Fritz Henle: In Search of Beauty” can be seen at the Ransom Center on Tuesdays through Fridays from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., with extended Thursday hours to 7 p.m. On Saturdays and Sundays the galleries are open from noon to 5 p.m. The galleries are closed on Mondays. The exhibition runs from Feb. 3 to Aug. 2, 2009.

This Thursday, March 5th, at 7pm, Alison Nordstrom, Curator of Photographs at the George Eastman House, presents “The World Every Week: Picture Magazines and the Golden Age of Photojournalism.”

This lecture, which is held in conjunction Henle exhibition, explores the historical and cultural context of Henle’s work. Nordstrom discusses the era of great American photo magazines, such as LIFE and Look, and how these publications were made, marketed, consumed, and understood both then and now. Seating is free, but limited. There will also be a live webcast, starting at 7pm.

Gordon McGregor contributing writer

"Simulacra" Photography Show



The St. Edward's University senior photography show, Simulacra, opens next week.

SEU Fine Arts Gallery
March 13 - April 3, 2009
Opening Reception March 13 6-9p

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Woodstock Artist in Residence Program

Tuesday, March 3, 2009

Woodstock A-I-R is a residency program of the The Center for Photography at Woodstock for artists of color working in the photographic arts.

Since 1999, Woodstock A-I-R has provided artist workspace residencies to artists of color working in photography and related media who currently reside in the United States. In 2009, CPW will provide four residencies for photo-based artists and one residency for a critic/scholar.

Residency opportunities range from two to four weeks from June through August. Participants receive workspace, critical and technical support, housing, stipends for food, travel, and honoraria.

To learn more about Woodstock A-I-R and to download an application form, visit www.cpw.org. Application deadline is April 3, 2009.

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