Showing posts with label ICP. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ICP. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Victoria Sambunaris


Untitled from The Border series
2010
copyright Victoria Sambunaris

The Photographer's Lecture Series: Victoria Sambunaris
International Center of Photography
February 23, 7pm

The Border

Victoria Sambunaris
Yancey Richardson Gallery
535 West 22nd Street 3rd Floor
February 24 - April 9

Wednesday, December 8, 2010

Robin Schwartz speaks at ICP


Congratulations to my friend and colleague at William Paterson University, Robin Schwartz, who will lecture about her work tonight at the School at the International Center of Photography.

The Photographers Lecture Series: Robin Schwartz
School at ICP, 1114 Avenue of the Americas
Wednesday, December 8, 7:00pm
Price: $15 Member Price: $15

Wednesday, January 13, 2010

NYMPHOTO curates culturehall


Mom and Her Boyfriend Mr. Art
2005
copyright LaToya Ruby Frazier

Thank you to NYMPHOTO founders, Nina Corvallo and Candace Gottschalk, who selected the work of four female photographers for the current Feature Issue 35 on culturehall. NYMPHOTO is a collective of women photographers whose members maintain the NYMPHOTO Blog, sharing news and issues relating or relevant to women in photography.

For their culturehall feature, Framed, Nina and Candace choose work by Sara Appelgren, Andrea Chung, LaToya Ruby Frazier and Tiana Markova Gold.

Culturehall featured artist, LaToya Ruby Frazier, will present her work, ideas and concerns as part of a lecture series presented by the International Center of Photography. LaToya's current work is a collaboration between herself and her family which acts both as portraiture and social document. Her lecture takes place on February 3rd at 7pm at the ICP.

Sunday, June 22, 2008

Reflect


copyright Carl Wooley
Light Pole on Island
2008

Friday night's opening of Reflect: Full-time Student Exhibition at the ICP was packed with people and energy. I felt just a little like a proud mom to see excellent work by two of my former students, Carl Wooley and Phillip Gutman, both of whom took my Photographing at Night course this past winter.

Carl's piece, Light Pole on Island, belongs to a series of photographs he has been making at night in the city and on the fringes of Long Island. Using a 4x5 camera and long exposures up to thirty minutes, Carl has been producing beautiful and mesmerizing meditations on light and color and empty, anonymous space. His subjects are places like parking lots and woods where leaves and grass are brightly lit by artificial light, giving them an almost alien glow, and other areas of the image fall into a deep darkness. Throughout the course, we picked Carl's brain for his technical expertise and experimentation and were moved by these dream-like and hypnotic images.

Phillip Gutman brought together his interests in classical portraiture, fashion, gender identity and performance in a black & white collage titled Observation, Provocation and Identity. Phillip, whose fierce physical presence calls to mind a Shakespearean actor with a head of thick and curly hair, casts himself as both photographer and subject. His images portray himself photographing his models, who appear to be drag performers of another era, which he combines with images depicting himself engaged in intimate homoerotic scenarios. The narrative he creates leaves us with perhaps some curiosity about a mysterious world he inhabits with lovers and cohorts.