Archives For Photography

SHIMPEI TAKEDA’s series Trace documents radiation in the soils via sites he picked in Japan. He rigged up a unique method to expose photographic paper to the soils radiation content. Like some sort of shaman/scientist he makes the invisible visible and records all his methods in this haunting project of Japan’s contamination and loss.

“Hardly anyone outside of Japan had heard the name “Fukushima” until last year, now it’s known around the world disgracefully. The nuclear fallout covered precious land where ancestors passed away. As the reading on the radiation meter climbed uncomfortably, it was such an odd and terrifying experience to collect soil samples as I felt like gathering somebody’s ashes.”

via SHIMPEI TAKEDA – Trace / Note.

Not a photographer in the classical sense yet Susan Derges is known for her images of water that encompass the reflected night sky. She produces mystical and moving photograms by placing photographic paper in rivers and shorelines at night. Her intensely poetic images are some of the most beautiful nature pictures ever made – and all without a camera. You can find her work in book Elemental.  Here is her Lecture at ICP.

 

Best known for his black and white work Harry Callahan was one of the first artists to really turn my head in terms of what a photograph could say. His design and composition awareness is legendary. Just gaze at the tension he creates via the gutter and telephone pole in a rare color image below. One inch to the left or right and the composition would fall into utter banality but Callahan knows the secret sauce to making an empty street sing.

Harry Callahan Retrospective at the House of Photography, Deichtorhallen, Hamburg

March 22 − June 23, 2013

 

21st Editions creates what many consider to be the most elegant photographic art books in the world. Our fine books and portfolios have been purchased by major collectors and museums from around the world. Our titles are illustrated with signed original photographs in platinum and silver. Each book is handmade, one at a time, using the finest papers, bindings, and often, letterpress printing. They are published in very small editions, and are individually signed by the artists and writers.

via the web site

 

If there is any doubt that a new generation of highly digital pro photographers is quickly dispelling the notion that photography is dead or that we don’t need professional photographers anymore have a look at Elena Vizerskaya as she will help you see the light. Her work gets a little kitschy and self obsessed at times but on a good day (like most great photographers) she can make images that astonish and astound.

via her web site