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Third Prix Pictet Commission Unveiled

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The Third Prix Pictet Commission, a major new body of work by US photographer Chris Jordan titled Ushirikiano, will be unveiled Thursday, October 6, 2011 at Diemar/Noble Photography, London.

The Commission, a series of over 30 photographs, documents Chris Jordan's field trip to Northern Kenya where Pictet Cie is contributing to the establishment of the Nakuprat-Gotu Conservancy, a new community-led initiative, supported by the Tusk Trust and overseen by the Northern Rangelands Trust.  

 

Prix Pictet Commission: Chris Jordan 

Ushirikiano

Building a sustainable future in Kenya’s Northern Rangelands

 

Diemar/Noble Photography
66/67 Wells Street, London W1T 3PY
October 6-29, 2011

visit www.prixpictet.com

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Winners of the 2011 Daylight/CDS Photo Awards Exhibition at the Center for Documentary Studies

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A solo show featuring Project Prize winner Tamas Dezso and a group exhibition featuring Work-in-Process Prize winner David Pace along with Jurors’ Pick winners in both categories are on view at the Center for Documentary Studies at Duke University in Durham, NC.

September 19–December 22, 2011

Porch and University Galleries



Read more about the Photo Awards and view photographs by the artists in the exhibition 

Here, Anywhere

Photographs by Tamas Dezso

2011 Daylight/CDS Photo Awards Project Prize winner



2011 Daylight/CDS Photo Awards

Photographs by David Pace,

2011 Daylight/CDS Photo Awards Work-in-Process Prize winner,

and John Cyr, James Dodd, Baldomero Fernandez, Lydia Goldblatt, Shane Lavalette, Sebastian Liste, Lorenzo Martelli, Kris Vervaeke, Juror Pick Winners



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The Lexicon of Sustainability Pop-Up Art Shows

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For the past two years Douglas Gayeton has been photographing some of the foremost practitioners of sustainability in food and farming. The resulting project—the Lexicon of Sustainability—is comprised of large photo collages illustrating different terms and definitions gleaned from experts in sustainability around the country. 

The first of 100 temporary pop-up art shows for the project is happening tonight, Monday October 3, at Watts Grocery restaurant in Durham, NC. Hosted by the Walking Fish community supported fishery (CSF), prints from the project will be auctioned off to support other fishing communities design creative business plans that make local, healthy, high quality, low-impact seafood more accessible.

 More information about that event here.

The pop-up art shows are a great example of community-engaging photography. Anyone can apply to curate two temporary shows in their town—non-traditional curators such as "community leaders, students, farmers, activists, gardeners, and cooks" are particularly encouraged—and to get local non-profits and interested groups and individuals involved in the discussion. The prints are donated to local community spaces or schools after the exhibition.

More about the Lexicon of Sustainability project at lexiconofsustainability.com

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Old friends, Two Shows: Walker Evans and Peter Sekaer

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On view now, in NY and in CT, are two shows of work by two friends, Walker Evans and Peter Sekaer. Though the exhibitions each center on one or the other artist, there are images in both that were made the same day, in the same locations, when the pair travelled together on a photographic road trip in late 1935. Among the places they stopped was St. Michael's Cemetery in Bethlehem, Penna., where Evans made one of his most famous and powerful images: the picture of the cross overlooking workers' homes and, in the distance, the huge steel mill. (See: http://www.daylightmagazine.org/blog/2010/12/16/897 )

Sekaer's work is now on view at ICP in Midtown, along with the moving 9/11 Remembered show and the glam Vince Aletti-curated Harper's Bazaar exhibtion. Born in Denmark, Sekaer studied photography with Berenice Abbott. He was friends with Ben Shahn and also Evans, who also helped him to secure more contracts from 1936 to 1943 to work on assignment as a photographer for various government agencies. His untimely death in 1950 at the age of 49 put an end to an incredible body of work. This show is an incarnation fo the show on view one year ago at the High Museum in Atlanta, which I was lucky enough to also have seen, as it was more exhaustive in what it could present. Included were unseen pictures of black American life in the 30's, but also different views of scenes and spots that we know well through the images of Evans, a travel companion.

Evans's work is on view at the Florence Griswold Museum in Old Lyme, CT. You may ask yourself why the Flo Gris, as the institutiona dn the town were home-base for the American impressionism movement, a far cry from the clear and concise images that Evans made. The show, basically a mini-retrosepctive, is mounted here because the town is where Evans lived during the last few years of his life, while commuting to Yale to teach. The show encompasses his whole career, and the pictures range from those made on trips for the FSA and on assignment for Fortune Magazine, to his subway series, to the detailed photographs of tools, to a grid of Polaroids of close-up portraits, to photos of the interior of his Modern home and of him on a nearby private beach he frequented, clad in a massive fur coat and carrying a large bag, presumably filled with driftwood, flotsam and jetsam. Most exciting about the show are two things: the very large mural prints made digitally in New Haven by John Hill, in which you can make out details you never before would have been able to see, and also the collection of ephemera on view. In vitrines are original copies of Fortune, so viewers can see how many famous images were originally seen, and enlargements of some of the pages are also installed on the walls. There are also some of the actual signs that Evans had students "liberate" for him, as well as replicated versions of signs that were not available for teh show. There is even an auto repair shop sign on loan from a private collection that he had cut in half, in order to hang each piece in diffferent locations in his home. One half, a blue car, is housed at the Met, and the other half, which reads "Car Shop," still hangs in what was Evans's garage to this day, but here reunited with it's other half in an inkjet print on display.

The ICP Show is on view through January 8, 2012, and the Evans show is on view through January 29, 2012. There will be an Evans Symposium on November 12th; tickets are $35.

http://www.icp.org/museum/exhibitions/signs-life-photographs-peter-sekaer

http://walkerevans.florencegriswoldmuseum.org/introduction/

Name index: 
Peter Sekaer

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SPBN - Self Publish, Be Naughty

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SPBN – SELF PUBLISH, BE NAUGHTY is a relentlessly provocative and uncompromising portrayal of contemporary love, sexuality, desire, gender and the taboo. This unique and collectible book presents 122 photographs from 75 contemporary artists in homage to, (and in radical subversion of), traditional mainstream erotica.

The images in Self Publish, Be Naughty are the most engaging, titillating and downright odd photographs from over 5,000 submissions.  Each of the limited editions' 1000 copies are unique, with an individual selection of pages and a selection of texts.

 

To view a promo video, visit http://vimeo.com/29366270

For more information, go to http://selfpublishbehappy.com/2011/09/book-de-lannee-self-publish-be-naughty/

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