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Plan & Publish Your Photography

Sunday, August 5th, 2007
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Plan & Publish Your Photography

Undertaking a personal project - it could be an article for a magazine, a book, a website, an exhibition or a commission - offers photographers an opportunity to focus their energies and ideas and broaden their horizons at the same time as developing their art and craft. This book, which aims to be both practical and inspirational, will take them through the thought processes and planning that must be undertaken before work commences and stressing the self-discipline that must be maintained if the final objective is to be successfully achieved. It also offers a wealth of first-hand advice based upon the experience of the author and more than 20 featured photographers. The book is heavily illustrated with relevant examples from project-based practice, captioned with quotations from the photographer about the genesis of the project, its objectives and realisation. The featured photographers are a mix of commercial, fine-art, documentary and funded photographers from the UK, USA and mainland Europe. Illustrations are in both colour and monochrome and selected to be relevant to the topic and tone of the section they appear in.

‘Photo Projects. Plan & Publish Your Photography’. Text by Chris Dickie.

Argentum, London, 2006. 128 pp., back-and-white and color illustrations, 9½x10¼”.

Via Photo-Eye

Photoworks 2007: Pictures at an Exhibition.

Wednesday, July 4th, 2007
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Photoworks 2007.Photoworks 2007.

Photoworks 2007.Photoworks 2007.Photoworks 2007.Photoworks 2007.Photoworks 2007.

Photoworks 2007.Photoworks 2007.Photoworks 2007.Photoworks 2007.Photoworks 2007.Photoworks 2007.

Photoworks 2007.Photoworks 2007.Photoworks 2007.Photoworks 2007.

Photoworks 2007.

Global Photographies: Histories | Theories | Practices

Tuesday, June 26th, 2007
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Global Photographies: Histories ¦ Theories ¦ Practices

Wednesday 27th, Thursday 28th, Friday 29th June 2007.

The Photography Program at the Institute of Art Design & Technology, Dun Laoghaire in Dublin is pleased to announce that it will be holding an international conference on photography and globalization in June 2007.

Widely perceived to be the driving force of our era, Globalization has attracted much critical commentary within the field of visual culture. Despite interest in the correlations between globalization and the visual, however, there has been relatively little examination of the role of photography in shaping the global media landscape. Equally the impact of globalization on photographic and artistic practices has been an area that has not received much commentary.

This conference brings together photographers, curators and writers to explore the intersection of the photographic image and globalization across the discplines of photography, art, anthropology, architecture and cultural studies. Sixty speakers from nearly twenty different countries will deliver papers over three days of the conference program on a range of themes including; global archives and the image content industry, migration, photography and the war on terror, colonial archives and post-colonial identities, photography and cultural diplomacy, cross-cultural curatorial practices, photojournalism and the global media, trans-cultural media practices, urbanization, photography and Diasporic identities.

The conference program will also include a special screening of Allan Sekula’s documentary film The Lottery of the Sea.

Keynote speakers include:

Allan Sekula (Photographer, Film-Maker and Theorist) author of ‘Against the Grain’, ‘Fish Story’, ‘Dismal Science’

Shahidul Alam (Drik Photo Agency) Photographer and founder of ‘Drik Photo Agency’ Bangladesh

Iain Boal (Berkley, California and Retort) Contributing author of ‘Afflicted Powers: Capital and Spectacle in an Age of New War’

Steve Edwards (Open University)
Research Lecturer and author of ‘The Making of English Photography: Allegories’

NOT TO MISS:
THE LOTTERY OF THE SEA, Allan Sekula
As part of the Global Photographies Conference Programme, IADT will host a special screening of Allan Sekula’s Documentary The Lottery of the Sea at the Mermaid Arts Centre, Bray Co. Wicklow on Wednesday 27 June 2007 at 6.30pm. If you would like to attend the screening please send a list of names to justin.carville@iadt.ie

Via Visual Arts Ireland. More info at Global Photographies Conference Programme website.

Photoworks 2007

Thursday, June 14th, 2007
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Photoworks 2007.

Exhibition of work by graduates of the Dublin Institute of Technology BA in Photography at the Gallery of Photography and the National Photographic Archive. The exhibition runs from 19 June until 30 June.

More in DIT’s website
See the works at SOURCE MAGAZINE’s website

Matthew Monteith: Czech Eden

Sunday, May 20th, 2007
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Matthew MonteithMatthew MonteithMatthew MonteithMatthew MonteithMatthew MonteithMatthew Monteith

Matthew Monteith: Czech Eden
by Michael Famighetti

After the Velvet Revolution marked the end of Czechoslovakia’s Communist regime tourists from across Western Europe, and the world, arrived by the busload in Prague to marvel at this spire-marked capital that had effectively been off limits, for a half century, to those outside the Soviet empire’s reach. Naturally, many of these visitors took photographs, proof that they had visited this fairytale-like place where time had seemingly stood still. Digital photography was not yet the norm, so a friend of mine, who worked in a photo lab near the center of Prague processed, day after day, photographs of the Charles Bridge, the Castle, and the famed astronomical clock, bemoaning that for all their good intentions, the photographs hit the same flat notes again and again. They were fine images to show to their friends back home but they ultimately revealed very little, beyond what Susan Sontag called “the indisputable evidence that the trip was made.”

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Amateur photographs, however, can be resonant, revealing, and accomplished in their own right. Though Matthew Monteith is a prodigiously skilled, highly technical photographer, he understands this well. During his first visits to the Czech Republic in the 1990s, he developed an appreciation for Czech vernacular photography and postcards from the 1920s and ‘30s. In them he found scenes of day-to-day life that were that were at times sentimental, romantic, humorous, and mysterious, but almost always anonymous. Although these authorless photographs had functioned primarily as aide-memoire for someone unknown to Monteith, he was equally stuck by both their senses of idealism and uncanny. He then set out to create a body of work inspired by the fragmented stories to which these images had alluded.

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“Czech Eden” is named after an officially protected park in the Czech Republic, a place known for its vertiginous sandstone formations and remarkable natural beauty. However, few of Monteith’s photographs depict this preserve. Instead, most were taken in or around Prague, in his friends’ homes, on the streets, or in small towns where it is as likely to find a centuries-old castle as an ominous nuclear cooling tower looming large. Although it is important to know where these photographs were taken, ultimately their meanings are not contingent upon place. “Czech Eden” should not be viewed as a documentary project. It is not a literal description of life in the Czech Republic but instead an open-ended allegory, one that references old images but articulates a vision of contemporary life that is at times disquieting and humorous. In one image a boy plays amidst the ruins of a brightly colored building; in another a man sitting in a vertigo-inducing patterned chair contemplates a hammer at his side. Elsewhere, an elderly couple, their clothing tattered, take a break from cutting wood, to pose for a picture.

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They seem happy, or at least willing to oblige the photographer, but standing far apart the viewer can be forgiven for assuming that they don’t seem entirely happy with one another. Whether a landscape or a portrait, each image, however visually seductive it may be, is underscored by a revealing, albeit often disquieting, tension. The great Czech writer Ivan Klima identifies this quality in his essay in Matthew Monteith’s forthcoming monograph, suggesting that these photographs are “like a tour of the world as perceived” by Kafka, a Czech writer (though he wrote in German) known for his portrayals of alienation in the modern world. Monteith’s “Czech Eden” does not picture anything resembling paradise but instead a place that conjures a feeling of loneliness that is a basic, if unsettling, part of experience today—a mood of alienation that would be as familiar to my friend processing those pictures as to the people who took them in earnest.

via www.matthewmonteith.com
book available at Photoeye

5593 - Photography exhibition: Follow up.

Saturday, May 19th, 2007
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Untitled 8 by Daniel HolfeldUntitled 6 by Daniel HolfeldUntitled 11 by Daniel HolfeldUntitled by Teresa Martin VarelaUntitled by Teresa Martin VarelaUntitled by Teresa Martin VarelaUntitled by Jane McGarrigleUntitled by Jane McGarrigleUntitled by Jane McGarrigle

The Gallery of Photography will is curating 5593 as an online exhibition entitled ‘3×3′, hosted on this website.

Thomas Allen

Thursday, May 17th, 2007
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Jackpot - Thomas AllenGravity - Thomas AllenFury - Thomas AllenSwing - Thomas AllenModest - Thomas AllenMight - Thomas AllenRed - Thomas AllenSwell - Thomas Allen

Thomas Allen at Foley Gallery

Julia Fullerton-Batten

Wednesday, May 16th, 2007
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Julia Fullerton-BattenJulia Fullerton-BattenJulia Fullerton-BattenJulia Fullerton-BattenJulia Fullerton-Batten
Julia Fullerton-BattenJulia Fullerton-Batten
http://www.juliafullerton-batten.com

Discussion on “Trends in Contemporary Photography Publishing”: Follow up.

Friday, May 4th, 2007
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Mark Schaden showing samples of books.Mark Schaden.Mark Schaden.Mark Schaden.Mark Schaden and Martin McCabe.Mark Schaden.Schaden books.Mark Schaden, Martin McCabe, Mark Curran and David Farrell.

Philippe Ramette

Wednesday, May 2nd, 2007
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Rational exploration of the undersea: the contact.Rational exploration of the undersea: the reversal.Rational exploration of the undersea: the map.Rational exploration of the undersea: irrational walk.Rational exploration of the undersea: the arrival.Bases to think.Crisis of casualness.Contemplation irrationnellePhilippe RamettePhilippe RamettePhilippe Ramette
How is that for suspended disbelief?


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