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Tuesday, February 8, 2011

Chinese New Year: The Year of the Rabbit

Gung Hay Fat Choy!
Xīn Nián Kuài Lè!

Below is my annual greeting with images captured this year, last week in fact, at the Eve and beginning of the Chinese New Year/Spring Festival. This year started on February 3rd and the 15 day celebration ends with the Lantern Festival on February 17th. The year itself will end in January of 2012.

The photographs of this annual greeting are part of my long-term project, FINDING CHINATOWN, a study of Chinatowns in the United States and Canada. The project will have its first solo show this summer at the Craig Krull Gallery at Bergamot Station in Santa Monica, CA.

Many cities throughout the world will be celebrating the New Year in many ways, from parades, firecrackers, and prayer at the many temples and shrines. Most importantly, the Chinese New Year is a time for families to be together and the migration home represents one of the largest annual migrations in the world.

We are blessed here in Los Angeles to be part of such a multi-cultural community and culture that our Chinese-American neighbors share with us so willinging and graciously.

Here is my greeting.




Friday, January 7, 2011

A Tree Falls In The Canyon






and everyone notices.

Saturday, January 1, 2011

Busy Holiday Week

From the swirl of holiday parties to a windy cool day at the beach to visit with Tyrus Wong and family for his monthly kite fly to a day between storms up at the top of Malibu to photograph the 747 Wing House, still in construction. Between holidays is not necessarily that restful but it IS creative!

And best of course is seeing my work and that of many of my fellow photographers on Aline Smithson's excellent LENSCRATCH blog. Her New Years Day curation of favorite photographs from photographers is incredible but do not skip over Aline's New Year's Eve post, a rare post about her own work.

Some pics from all of this posted on this chilly but brilliant New Years Day in Los Angeles.

Tyrus Wong, 26 December 2010 at 100 years+





My favorite image of the year posted on Lenscratch, Wing Abstract from the 747 Wing House Project. More to see on my website and photoshelter archive sites.



And new pics from the 747 Wing House Project, photographed between the rainistorms at the end of 2010. I am in love with these construction phases, contrasting often the many elements of structure with the beautiful environment in which it is situated.







Wednesday, December 22, 2010

Holiday pics

It is the time of year for holiday greetings and for making a small limited edition gift print. Thought I'd post some of the cards and images here.










Sunday, October 24, 2010

Tyrus Wong at 100!

Out yesterday at the Santa Monica Beach to spend time with California - and national - treasure, Tyrus Wong who is celebrating his 100th Birthday as he does best(!): out monthly flying his handmade kites with the large attendance of Kim Wong and many family and friends!

Happy Birthday Tyrus! Here are some pics:











More on Tyrus on my 1 January 2010 post.

Catching Up

Almost six months since the last post. A busy time with much to do including organizing and co-curating an exhibition of photograhers at the request of LACMA's curators: SUMMER MIX, an exhibition of work from the Annenberg Department's Photographic Arts Council.



Then, a composition of my photographs of the 747 Wing House has been on exhibit at the Pasadena Museum of California Art in their Design Biennial, accompanied by the model of the house designed by architect, David Hertz.



A busy Fall, continuing work on the Chinatowns Project in preparation for my show next year at the Craig Krull Gallery, in Santa Monica, CA


And best, out on the Beach this weekend to celebrate with Tyrus Wong, his 100th Birthday! The kites are still gorgeous and Tyrus is going so strong! See next post!

Sunday, April 11, 2010

Do Photographers Need to Write Well?

A photographer/professor friend, Ann Mitchell, has asked several photographers the following:
"From some of my students, I often get the 'Photographers don't need to write well [for] a photograph is worth...' response. Has it been important for you to write well as a photographer? If you could send me a few lines as to why it has (or hasn't) been a significant part of your success I'd appreciate it."

The question intrigues me for I am a writer as well as a photographer and the written word underlies much of my work, whether literary or visual. I often write down words from my reading and at times when out photographing, a phrase may return to inspire me, often months later than when it was read. When on a speaking engagement about the two books for youth on contemporary art & poetry that I created and edited, marrying the paintings of known artists with the words of evocative poets, I highlight the "conversation" that thus ensues between the words and the art. That is just what it is when the fine arts weave together. Many times an active collaboration as well.

Writing and writing well for me is an integral part of the creative process and, as a photographer, it is key to how I see and shoot and formulate a project as well as how I may describe it later... for "describe" again is about the word.

This is adapted from my response to Ann:

1. Writing is as much about expression as is photography.
2. Writing is about metaphor. Isn't that what a lot of photography is? A visual expression that can be symbolic of idea and emotion? It takes being able to write well to understand the nuance and true significance of metaphor.
3. Writing well is about searching for the best possible expression, whether in the written word or in the image. It is essential to both.
4. Writing well is an exercise that sharpens the questions and focus of all that is being done photographically.
5. Writing well is about ensuring that the rules are learned. Well. It is only when absorbed into one's psyche and creative process that they can be broken.
6. Writing well is about grammar, spelling and most importantly, editing whether for a note dashed off or for a formal exercise that, when combined with or interpreted into the visual image, creates that picture that may be "worth a thousand words."
7. Writing well can be about collaboration, i.e., working on an idea or an edit with another whose mind and skills you respect to hone what it is you want to say.
8. Writing is having the skill and the knowledge to present oneself in the best possible manner and in this case, writing also includes reading to broaden and understand what is to be expressed. See http://www.simpleartmarketing.com/blog/category/writing-for-artists/

How does knowing how to write and to write well mean in terms of photography?
Learning how to write well enhances the application of those skills to one's photography to achieve what is to be expressed.
Learning how to write well enhances the photographer's ability to articulate what it is that is being done photographically and, can even lead to a different tighter photographic focus when, by editing the statement, that direction is honed.
Learning how to write well enhances the opportunities to enter into the business of photography from
1. Artist Statements
2. Proposals
3. Titling a photograph
4. Creating and preparing a website
5. Writing a blog or even Twitter! The latter: when there are only a few words permitted, they must be right.
6. Preparing a college and/or graduate application
7. Job applications
8. Press releases about the work
9. Grant applications - From a grant website "But this opportunity is often squandered when photographers don't appreciate the importance of the written proposal. "We look for a good idea first and the portfolio second," says David Sutherland, a professor of photography at Syracuse University and administrator of the Alexia Foundation for World Peace student photography contest." A caveat to this quote: many curatorial and gallery friends, while recognizing the importance of the written statement, entirely disagree, saying that in all cases, the work is the first to be viewed, the statement only after.
10. Learning how to write well opens up the range of artistic expression to add to the piece of art being made, whether in a fine art application or commercial.

Writing well is about reading, and reading well, for it may be about "a photo is ... " but it is also always about the word. And the better the word is expressed - through great literature, through poetry, through hip-hop and rap - the better the opportunity for visualization and aesthetic conversation

Here is the visual poetry of Federico García Lorca beginning his Romance Sonambulo:
"Green, how I want you green.
Green wind. Green branches.
The ship out on the sea
and the horse on the mountain. ....."
... or in the original Spanish:
"Verde que te quiero verde.
Verde viento. Verdes ramas.
El barco sobre la mar
y el caballo en la montaña. ..."

When one reads such words, says them aloud; when one writes down a word or phrase just to savor it for a while, the words - the concept - infuse our being and our photographs.

Writing. Reading. Words. All are about creation, expression, appreciation and adventure. Emotional. Risk-taking. Sensory. Powerful. Edited. Focused.

Wait, are we speaking about writing or are we speaking about photography?