David Schonauer
Robin Rice Gallery Tuesday July 5, 2016
On view in New York through September 11 is the Robin Rice Gallery’s annual Summertime Salon, which features work from 53 of the gallery’s artists and a few newcomers. They include Mark
Sink, Nenad Amodaj, Stewart Ferebee, Tanya Malott, and ilvia Lareo-Vasquez, Ron Hamad, Jose Picayo, RJ Muna, and Barbara Gentile. In general, the work in the show evokes summertime in some way, though
the real point, notes Rice, is the celebration of a community of art. Read the full Story >>
Joanne Dugan Wednesday May 21, 2014
New York-based photographer (and Pro Photo Daily reader) Joanne Dugan loves the summertime—which, by the way, will officially begin in a couple of weeks). A photographer, author and curator, she
spends her own summers at Cape Cod taking pictures. But over the past winter she kept herself warm by editing a new book called Summertime, which features work from a number of other
photographers who have made a name for themselves shooting at the beach—from Joel Meyerowitz and Martin Parr to Peter Marlow. The publisher, Chronicle Books, says the new volume is ideally sized
to present as a gift for weekend hosts. “It was a honor to edit the work of so much great talent,” says Dugan. Read the full Story >>
Robin Rice Gallery Tuesday July 9, 2019
When not working from her studio in Beacon, NY, Robin Rice tends to her eponymous gallery in
Manhattan, where the annual Summertime Salon will be taking place from from July 17 to Sept. 22. The unique exhibition, which Rice describes as a kind of family get-together, brings together nearly
100 works from 58 gallery artists, including Kristen Hatgi, RJ Muna, Ruben Natal-San Miguel, Dorothee Brand, Tina West, and Barbara Gentile. Read the full Story >>
Vimeo Thursday January 11, 2018
Many astronomers and
stargazers prefer to look up at the stars in the summertime, in part because the brightest part of our own galaxy, the Milky Way, is more visible to us then. But the winter sky holds countless gems,
notes French nature photographer and cinematographer Adrien Mauduit, whose short film Galaxies Volume II: Wonders of the Winter Night
Skies is now a Vimeo Staff Pick. He shot the film over the past year in a variety of locations. Read the full Story >>
YouTube Friday August 21, 2015
In the summertime at Scott Base in Antarctica, the sun remains above the horizon from late October to late February. New Zealand filmmaker Anthony Powell has created a time-lapse video capturing 24
hours of sunlight by pointing his cam directly at the sun and tracking it across the sky. A watch in the foreground ticks off one second for each frame shot. “I could just manage enough depth of
field at f/22 to get both the watch and background in focus,” Powell tells PetaPixel. Read the full Story >>
Pop Photo Monday June 13, 2022
Maine-based Cig Harvey’s photographs often feature bright, saturated colors and a touch of surrealism as she tries to find the magic in the mundane. Her latest book, Blue Violet, explores grief through flowers and colors, notes Pop Photo. The project started with a request. “A friend was diagnosed with a rare form of leukemia at 36, and she went into an isolation unit, where everything is super sterile, for six weeks. It was summertime in Maine, and she was in Boston, and she said, ‘send me pictures,’” says Harvey. Read the full Story >>
By David Schonauer Tuesday September 10, 2019
Transportation is a daily headache in Cuba. "Private trucks are used to move people around. These trucks are filled with people, and during the summertime when temperature can reach over 100 degrees
it is a real nightmare," says photographer William Riera, who was born in Cuba. He left in 1995, but since 2000 has been visiting his hometown of Santiago de Cuba. "My photographic … Read the full Story >>
By David Schonauer Wednesday May 13, 2020
What does America look like to you? Month two of the American Photography Open 2020 competition is in the books, and today we feature three entries from April that delighted the judges: a touching
shot made on a Nebraska farm during calving season, a drones-eye view of a summertime beach in Rhode Island; and a black-and-white portrait of a family of surfers in Florida. … Read the full Story >>
By Peggy Roalf Monday August 31, 2009
Fashion designer Isaac Mizhrahi, known for wide-ranging interests that include fine cuisine, made his curatorial debut this summer with a group show at Julie Saul Gallery. His selections are highly
personal and idiosyncratic - and mouth-watering, like food for the eye. He has brought together work by well known and rarely seen artists, chosen for their sophisticated use of color, and a sensual,
joyful … Read the full Story >>
By Peggy Roalf Thursday February 23, 2017
Famous for his role in New York’s artistic heritage and the Pop Art movement, Andy Warhol believed that everyone had it in them to be a star for fifteen minutes. Through his own art, he
defined his identity and shaped the world around him. He once commented that he’d like his tombstone to say only one word: “Figment.” So to all of the unrecognized … Read the full Story >>
By Anna Donnella Thursday July 28, 2016
In vintage base ball, the bases are made of canvas bags filled with sawdust or sand, home plate is an actual iron plate, and yes, it is called base ball, not baseball. Sara Stathas, a team
photographer for the Milwaukee Brewers, got to learn all about the historic beginnings of America's national pastime when she took on an assignment for the Vintage Base Ball … Read the full Story >>
By David Schonauer Tuesday June 23, 2015
In 2009, New York City-based photographer Zack Seckler was in Botswana when he created a series of stunning aerial images. Shooting from an ultralight aircraft a few hundred feet off the ground, he
was able to capture the landscape and wildlife below from a compelling perspective. The work proved to be very popular with collectors. This summer, Seckler's latest personal series goes on view … Read the full Story >>
By David Schonauer Monday April 25, 2022
Redheads are back, in more than one way. The color seems to be trending--a slew of influencers have recently been seen with bottled-dyed copper tints, while Vogue claims that red hair is "having a
moment," noted AnOther recently. Meanwhile, photographer Joel Meyerowitz's seminal 1990 book "Redheads" is being reissued by Damiani. "I had begun making portraits with the intention of photographing
ordinary people," he … Read the full Story >>
By Peggy Roalf Thursday February 22, 2018
Since the NYC Ferry system went into service last year, close to 3 million people have emerged from darkness to travel the city’s outer boroughs. Commuting to work or finding summertime bliss
at the local beaches, they have come to appreciate the city as a vast archipelago. Well before the ferry service began, photographer Susannah Ray, a resident of Rockaway Beach, would
cross New … Read the full Story >>
By Peggy Roalf Friday May 24, 2013
The unofficial start of summertime in New York is now—and for my money, the best one-day destination this weekend is Governors Island. Yesterday I beat the downpour for
a preview of LMCCs Building 110 Swing Space studios, which will be open to the public on Saturday and Sunday. Jeanne Verdoux, a French artist
living in Brooklyn, met me at the ferry in Lower Manhattan … Read the full Story >>
By David Schonauer Wednesday May 15, 2019
Robin Rice has taken up spinning. Not the kind you do on bikes, but the kind deejays do. She's got turntable set up at her loft in Beacon, New York, in a converted 19th-century textile mill along
Fishkill Creek. A photo of her at her turntable was included recently in Chronogram, a lifestyle magazine focusing on the Hudson Valley, which coincided with an exhibition … Read the full Story >>
By Peggy Roalf Tuesday June 28, 2016
Talk / Discussion / Screening / and Beyond Tuesday, June 28 SVA Lunchtime Lecture Series presents: Jerry Saltz, 12:30-2 pm. Room 501H, 335 West 16th Street, NY, NY. Info Wednesday, June 29 Prix Canson 2016 finalist, ruby onyinyechi amanze and Prix Canson 2016 juror,
Amanda Hunt, 6 pm. The Drawing Center, 35 Wooster Street, NY, NY Info Strike Art | Contemporary Art … Read the full Story >>
By Peggy Roalf Tuesday June 28, 2011
Left: Phoebe Washburn, Nunderwater Nort
Lab; courtesy Zach Feuer Gallery. Right: Eva Struble, Night Assembly; courtesy Lombard-Freid Projects. Tuesday, June 28 Opening reception,
6-8 pm, for Photo Camp: The Culture of Now. Aperture Bookstore and Gallery, 547 West 27th Street, 4th floor, NY, NY.
Wednesday, June 29 Opening reception, 6-8 pm, inaugural exhibition at Franklin Parrasch Gallery’s new space:
Peter Alexander, 1969-1972 … Read the full Story >>
By David Schonauer Monday August 27, 2018
Stopping time is something photography does quite well. But it's a complicated business, time and change being what they are: After living in Chicago for more than 20 years, photographer Barry Phipps
and his wife relocated to Iowa City, Iowa. He started making road trips and photographing the state, capturing an America that is gone but not forgotten. His work is now collected in … Read the full Story >>
By Friday November 10, 2006
The first question I'm usually asked these days is, "What made you decide to live in Oaxaca, Mexico?" This brings to mind some dialogue from the movie Casablanca: Captain Louis
Renault (Claude Rains): "What in heaven's name brought you to Casablanca?" Rick Blaine (Humphrey Bogart): "My health. I came to Casablanca for the waters." Captain Renault: "The
waters? What waters? We're in the desert!" … Read the full Story >>