Oct 30, 2008

Photography Auction in Dallas

W. Eugene Smith, Soldier in Saipan Holding Baby, Silver Gealtin Print, 1944, 20 x 16 inches, stamped verso

Heritage Auction Galleries will offer a broad selection of both classical and contemporary photographs in its first-ever art photography auction. On-line bidding begins November 14th and ends at 10 pm (CST) the evening before the physical auction. Floor and web-cam bidding begins Friday, December 12th at 10 am (CST). The final session begins at 2 pm (CST). Please request a free printed catalogue at http://www.HA.com . You can also view the catalogue online at: http://fineart.ha.com/common/auction/catalog.php?SaleNo=5015 . Highlights include the only known formal portrait of Jacqueline Onassis made after 1963 (Estimate $8,000-10,000) and a rare Jock Sturges 'Portfolio for the Defense', with four signed prints in an unfinished limited edition ($6,000-8,000). A pristine 40 x 30 in. portrait of Ernest Hemingway by Karsh, printed by the artist specifically for the consignor in 1968 after visiting Karsh's exhibition in the Canadian Pavilion at Expo '67, will also be in the auction ($25,000-30,000)

Jock Sturges, Danielle, Montalivet, France, Gelatin Silver Print, 1989

Also on offer is an unusual Fifty Year Commemorative Portfolio of Paul Strand's 1931 film 'Redes' by Ned Scott. The portfolio, which is cased in the original wood veneer slipcase, contains two folios of 20 platinum prints by Paul Strand and 12 silver prints by Ned Scott, printed and signed by Ned Scott with a commemorative text folio by several contributors, including Manual Alvarez Bravo. All of this is in Spanish, signed and inscribed to Gunter von Fritsch, the film's editor. This lot also includes 43 vintage 5 x 7 Ned Scott film stills taken on location; 19 4 x 3 vintage 'snaps' of the film set; 34 35 mm contact proof strips; and one 35 mm film transparency of a young boy holding a set clapper; all from the estate of Gunter von Fritsch and offered for the first time at auction ($30,000-50,000). A group of three vintage images relating to Robert Kennedy, Jr.'s assassination is also on offer, plus a photo of J.F.K. in his office by Jacques Lowe. Original photographs by other important 20th-century artists in the sale include: Harry Callahan, Helmut Newton, Baron Adolf De Meyer, Lewis Hine, André Kertész, Clarence John Laughlin, Barbara Morgan, Ansel Adams, Arthur Siegel, Louis Clyde Stoumen, Arthur Wesley Dow, Brett Weston, Dorothy Norman, Charles Harbutt, Edward Quigley, Margaret Bourke-White, W. Eugene Smith, Ray Metzker, Bradford Washington, David Douglas Duncan, Todd Webb, Ralph Gibson, Inge Morath, Alfred Cheney Johnston, Paul Caponigro, Lee Friedlander, Ilsa Bing, Walker Evans, Paul Burty Haviland, Edward Steichen, Eugene Atget, Imogen Cunningham, Horace Bristol, Ruth Bernhard, David Heath, Minor White, Wynn Bullock, Edward Weston, Manuel Bravo, Ralph Meatyard, Weegee, Cole Weston and many others. Nineteenth-century American landscape photographers represented in the auction include: William Henry Jackson, Carleton Watkins, George Barker, Isaiah Taber and Charles Savage.

Jock Sturges, Maia, Arles, France, Gelatin Silver Print, 1990

Heritage offers the opportunity for registered bidders to bid online one-month before the floor bidding begins. The floor offers live-on-line-web-cam bidding as well. The lots can be previewed Heritage Auctions-Design District Annex, 1518 Slocum Street, Dallas, TX, on Thurs - Sat, Dec 4, 5, 6 from 10 am-5 pm; Sunday, Dec 7, noon-5 pm; and Monday-Friday, Dec 8, 9, 10, 11, 12 from 10 am-5 pm. There will be a discussion and reception on Tuesday December 9th from 5:30 pm-6:30 pm. Lorraine Anne Davis and Hank O'Neal will discuss O'Neal's career and the general topic of Collecting Photographs.

For more information on the sale, condition reports, etc., contact Lorraine Davis at lorrained@ha.com , or by phone at 1-214-409-1714 or 1-800-872-6467, ext. 1714.

Oct 29, 2008

Sale of Contemporary Photography at Christie's London


Christie’s Photographs Department continues its programme Distinctively. This series features photo-based works from specific regions which are sold-out and no longer available on the primary market, by established and emerging artists. The spotlight of Christie’s 19 November auction in London focuses on contemporary Nordic and Dutch artists. Elsewhere in the sale, shots of famous faces include Kate Moss, Britney Spears, Angelina Jolie, Gisele Bündchen, Christy Turlington and Cindy Crawford. Presenting a tightly edited selection of over 90 lots, with estimates ranging from £3,000 to £220,000, the sale is expected to realise in the region of £1 million.
The classic photograph Woman in Moroccan Palace (Lisa Fonssagrives-Penn), Marrakech, 1951, by Irving Penn (estimate: £180,000-220,000) is the top lot in the sale. In contrast, Martin Schoeller inverts accepted and expected beauty in Angelina Jolie with Blood, 2003 (estimate: £15,000-20,000) illustrated above centre. A challenging image, it is from an edition of seven which is sold-out on the primary market. Other shots include the fresh faced 17-year-old Britney Spears in Baby, 1999, by David LaChapelle for Rolling Stone (estimate: £15,000-20,000) and Albert Watson’s oversized crouching nude, Kate Moss, Marrakech, January, 1993 (estimate: £15,000-20,000), commissioned for German Vogue. Further fashion names range from Gisele, in an Indian headdress, by Rolling Stone and Vanity Fair photographer Mark Seliger, 2000 (estimate: £6,000-8,000), to Christy Turlington, New York City, 1990, by Albert Watson (estimate: £8,000-12,000) and two images of Cindy Crawford. The first Crawford image is from Playboy, Costa Careyes, 1998, by Herb Ritts (estimate: £5,000-7,000) and the second is one of six works featured in the sale by international fashion photographer Michel Comte, Cindy Crawford, Vanity Fair US, 1992 (estimate: £6,000-8,000).

Distinctively Nordic
The innovative Distinctively Nordic section presents 23 sold-out works, which are now unavailable on the primary market. An essay by Elina Heikka, Director of The Finnish Museum of Photography in Helsinki, accompanies this section. Dynamic examples include Blue Lagoon, 1997, a series of eight images by Olafur Eliasson [Danish/Icelandic] (estimate: £25,000-35,000); Untitled (Bubble wrap), 2007, by Annika von Hausswolff [Swedish] (estimate: £10,000-15,000); The Valley Beat I-II from ‘How to Hunt’, 2005, by Nicolai Howalt & Trine Søndergaard [Danish] (estimate: £20,000-30,000); Demonstration Day, 2003, by Miklos Gaál [Finnish] (estimate: £12,000-18,000) and Icy Prospects 31, 2006, by Jorma Puranen [Finnish](estimate: £8,000-12,000). The foundations of Nordic photography in the 20th century lie in Sweden which, out of the five Nordic countries, led the way until the 1990s. By the 1950s many Swedish photographers were internationally minded, living and working in Paris or New York; Hans Hammarshiö was amongst seven Swedes to be invited by Edward Steichen to be part of his famous Family of Man exhibition in 1955. In the 1960s and 70s the focus throughout Scandinavian photography was largely on socio-political documentary, often inblack and white. By the 1980s and 90s Finnish photographers became more prominent and focus moved towards more subjective, emotional works; utilizing a larger, colour format to capture the consumerism and mass media of contemporary society. Depictions of the landscape and a society living as one with nature, is a concept many hold as synonymous with Nordic photography. Fresh examples of this are shown in the eight pictures of Iceland by Eliasson and Untitled from ‘Swedish Red – Comfortably Secure’, 2005, by Joakim Eneroth [Swedish] (estimate: £5,000-7,000). Conceptual explorations of the landscape as a tool for expression are shown in the abstract minimalist work Untitled (No.7), 2005, by Ola Kolehmainen [Finnish] (estimate: £12,000-18,000) illustrated left, Manhattan #D from ‘The New Landscapes’, 2004, by Nanna Hänninen [Finnish] (estimate: £5,000-7,000) and Puranen’s Icy Prospects 31, 2006, detailed and illustrated at the start of this section. The landscape as a place for stories to unfold, is shown in the enigmatic Hypernatutral #4, 2003, by Astrid Kruse Jensen [Danish] (estimate: £4,000-6,000), Rowing, 2006, by Pekka Luukkola [Finnish] (estimate: £3,000-4,000) and Rollercoaster from ‘Museum of Nature’ 2004, by Ilkka Halso [Finnish] (estimate: £6,000-8,000).

Per Bak Jensen, Wandering Rock from 'Rügen' (German island in the baltic sea), 2008. Chromogenic Print, signed, titled and dated, edition 6/6, 39 1/4 x 55 in.

Such intrigue extends into the figurative works such as Shark Riding, 1992, by Pierre Winther [Danish] (estimate: £5,000-7,000) and Kuivanieni, 1991, by this year’s Deutsche Börse Photography Prize winner, Esko Männikö [Finnish] (estimate: £5,000-7,000). Further examples range from Almost There (3), 2000, by Maria Friberg [Swedish] (estimate: £10,000-15,000) to Untitled (Door 501), 2004, by Aino Kannisto [Finnish] (estimate: £6,000-8,000) and Le Printemps from ‘The New Painting’, 2001, by Elina Brotherus [Finnish](estimate: £5,000-7,000).

Distinctively Dutch
For the first time Christie’s London presents 23 photographs from the Netherlands. An essay by Hripsimé Visser, Curator of Photography at Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam, accompanies this section. The exceptional works offered are no longer available on the primary market and include sold-out works by key artists such as Desiree Dolron, with Xteriors VII, 2004 (estimate: £25,000-35,000); Céline van Balen’s Muazez, 1998 (estimate: £10,000-15,000); Marnix Goosens’ celebrated Cloud from ‘Regarding Nature’, 2000 (estimate: £10,000-15,000); Elspeth Diederix, with Still life (milk), 2002 (estimate: £8,000-12,000) and Edwin Zwakman’s significant work Fly-over II, 1996 (estimate: £10,000-15,000). Traditions, genres and concepts frequently become entwined in contemporary photography; this is exemplified in works from the Netherlands. The fusion of fashion and documentary disciplines is apparent in Viviane Sassen’s highly stylised Kathleen, 2006 (estimate: £5,000-7,000). Such crossovers between genres have underpinned new forms of expression. This is the case with the expressive pop photography of Anton Corbijn, such as Patti Smith, 1999 (estimate: £10,000-15,000). The Dutch photographers featured have created highly personal works. They present staged worlds which become new realities; choose unexpected view points; remove contexts of understanding; construct remembered realities from maquettes and alter or blur focus. The resulting works are colourful, large and autonomous, such as Diederix’s Still life (milk), which points to the long tradition of Dutch still life.

Carla van de Puttelaar, Untitled, Amsterdam 1998, Chromogenic Print, signed, dated and numbered '9/10', 30 x 24 1/2 in.

Different examples include striking, digitally manipulated images such as The Ice Cream Parlour from 'Rain', 2004 (estimate: £15,000-20,000) illustrated page one right and the portfolio Royal Blood, 2000 (estimate: £10,000-15,000), both by Erwin Olaf, as well as World #16, 2006, by Ruud van Empel (estimate: £10,000-15,000). Distinctively Dutch includes four portraits of Muslim girls which are thought provoking and aesthetically beautiful. Céline van Balen’s Muazez, 1998, (estimate: £10,000-15,000) , is part of an important series, Muslim Girls, which depicts girls in temporary accommodation in Amsterdam. Zaineb from ‘Sisters’, 2006, by Martine Stig (estimate: £5,000-7,000) is part of her portrait series of young women at the University of Kuwait who deliberately chose to wear veils. The project revealed the fine balance between depictions of self and personal modesty. Hondius’s Amman from ‘Harmless’, 2003, (estimate: £5,000-7,000), taken with a hidden camera, is a candid image providing a rare glimpse into a normally closed world. Another unique, almost painterly, approach is Untitled #10 from ‘Frontstage’, 2006, by Anoek Steketee (estimate: £6,000-8,000), whose works illuminate the everyday life of Iranians and investigate the accuracy of portrayals by western media. From the main body of the sale a further work in this genre includes I am its Secret by Iranian photographer Shirin Neshat (estimate: £3,000-5,000). Also of relevance, is The Vegetable Shop, Mogador, Morocco, 1962, by Paul Strand (estimate: £15,000-20,000).

Photographs at Christie’s South Kensington on Wednesday, 26 November at 2pm: The Marilyn Monroe shot which Andy Warhol used as the basis of his iconic Marilyn series of silk screens, taken by Frank Powolny in 1953 (estimate: £5,000- 7,000) illustrated left, is exceptionally rare and leads the South Kensington Photographs sale. Another key work is the original 1976 photograph of Farah Fawcett by Bruce McBroom, which became the best selling poster of all time having sold 12 million copies worldwide (estimate: £4,000-6,000). These photographs are part of the 31 lots from the James Danziger Collection, who was Picture Editor of The London Sunday Times Magazine and Features Editor of Vanity Fair.

Sale dates:
Christie’s London
Wednesday, 19 November 2008
2:30 pm
Christie’s South Kensington
Wednesday, 26 November 2008
2 pm

Public Viewing dates:
Christie’s London, 8 King Street, St. James’s, London, SW1Y 6QT: on Friday 14 November and between Sunday 16 and Wednesday 19 November 2008.
Christie’s South Kensington, 85 Old Brompton Road, London, SW3 3LD: between Saturday 22 November and Tuesday 25 November 2008.

Obsessions of the Russian Upper-Class

Photos: Bettina Rheims, The Book of Olga

The Russian millionaire Sergei Rodionow has an obsession which is his wife Olga with the face of an Ex-Model, seamless long legs and an enlarged bust, the size gained under the scalpel of a surgeon. In order to indulge in his obsession, Rodionow limits himself not just with his camera but also takes position according to one photographer, not just someone, but Bettina Rheims. For Olga Rodionowa, standing in front of the camera was not new; she had already exposed herself bare for Playboy and for Helmut Newton. And this time for Bettina Rheims. Initially her husband Sergei enjoyed the images only for private pleasure, but for the couple, this was not enough. The result was the illustrated Book of Olga with texts by Catherine Millet and photographs by Bettina Rheims. Olga Rodionowa posed as Pin-Up Girl, like a lascivious Marquise and as cool Domina in the 18th century Ssyle. This is a single Book with 154 pages dedicated to just one woman, a public tribute and the presentation of a public obsession in erotic and sexual settings of luxury.


Like the historic Domina captured while being fondled, in a mirror. As a lover writes with a pen and red ink on their skin Rodionowa lays in a bathroom with hands shackled. Even her vagina adorns a fine jewelry chain. The images tell of glamour, luxury and artificiality, but not of artistic quality. Sergei Rodionow has earned millions from banking and media businesses in Russia and his wife is a former model and successful presenter. The couple is part of the financial elite of the country so these erotic obessions are expensive and the book is also obviously not for everyone. Finally, the edition is limited to 1000 copies and will cost 350 Euros.

Catherine Millet, Bettina Rheims, The Book of Olga
german, english, french
154 pages, Hardcover + Box 29,2 x 43,7 cm
Taschen
ISBN 978-3-8365-0760-8

Oct 25, 2008

Auction Results: Swann Galleries sells 19th and 20th Century Photography

Swann Galleries has finished an auction of 19th and 20th century photographs including 75 rare Japanese landscapes, street scenes and temples by Felix Beato who visited Asia 140 years ago and pictures by Edward Weston, Margrethe Mather and Ansel Adams. The sale total was $1,486,440 with Buyer's Premium and 263 out of 390 lots have been sold. These are the results:

31* Marc Ferrez, album comtaining 68 original photographs of Brazil, late 1880s-early 1890s, $48,000 C

57 Edward Weston / Margrethe Mather, The Marion Morgan Dancers, platinum-palladium print, circa 1921, $43,200 D

98** Roman Vishniac, The Vanished World, portfolio with 12 silver prints, 1936-38, printed 1977, $38,400 C

154 Ansel Adams, Winter Sunrise, Sierra Nevada, from Lone Pine, California, silver print, 1944, printed 1978, $31,200 D

24 Felix Beato, group of 75 rare Japanese landscapes, albumen prints, circa 1870, $24,000 C

219***Ruth Orkin, The Cardplayers, the Family of Man, 6 photographs, silver prints, 1947, printed 1955, $24,000 D

20 Timothy O’Sullivan, Ancient Ruins in the Canyon de Chelle, N.M., on Wheeler Survey letterpress mount, 1873, $24,000 C

88 Dorothea Lange, Ex-Slave with a Long Memory, Alabama, silver print, 1937, printed 1950s, $19,200 C

255 Minor White, Jupiter, portfolio with 12 silver prints, 1947-1971, printed 1975, $19,200 D

79 Walker Evans, Sidewalk in Vicksburg, Mississippi, silver print, 1936, printed 1940s-1950s, $18,000 C

37 Edward S. Curtis, Chief of the Desert, Navajo, orotone, 1909, $16,800 D

137* Margaret Bourke-White, DC-4 Flying over New York City, silver print, 1939, printed 2001, $15,600 C

117 Horst P. Horst, Mainbocher Corset, Paris, silver print, 1939, printed 1980s, $15,600 D

353 Francesca Woodman, Untitled (skull), silver print, 1977-1978, $14,400 C

60 Tina Modotti, Maria Marin de Orozco, platinum print, 1925, $14,400 D

63 Tina Modotti / Ava Vargas, group of 4 photographs from the “Tina Modotti” portfolio, platinum prints,1924-1927, printed 1993, $14,400 D

308 Ansel Adams, Sonoma County Hills, silver print, circa 1955, $14,400 C

256 Minor White, Snow on Garage Door, Rochester, New York, silver print, 1960, $14,400 D

110 Walker Evans, Coal Stevedore, Havana (Dockworker, Havana), silver print, 1933, printed circa 1970, $14,400 C

359 William Eggleston, Untitled (Confederate flag), dye-transfer print, 1973, printed 1996, $13,200 D

321 Horst P. Horst, Round the Clock I, New York, silver print, 1987, printed 1980s, $13,200 C

Prices with buyer's premium. KEY: *=Artist Record; **=Record for Portfolio; ***=Record for Suite; C=Collector; D=Dealer

Oct 24, 2008

Bettina Rheims: The Book of Olga

Catherine Millet, Bettina Rheims, The Book of Olga © Taschen

Femme fatale Olga Rodionova is a well-known beauty who moves in Moscow's fashion and jet set circles.When her husband, a powerful Russian oligarch, sought to have special portraits made of his wife, he asked Bettina Rheims - an unusual request for a photographer of Rheims's stature. Rheims was captivated by Olga's unique aura and felt excited by the challenge of finding aesthetic ways of doing the portraits so that they didn't feel like run of the mill pornography. The first shoot took place in Rheims's country home and Olga's husband was so pleased with the images that he suggested they produce a book with Olga as the private model. A second shoot followed, in black and white with a sado-masochistic décor and other men and women playing slightly perverse sex games with Olga. A third, Marie-Antoinette inspired shoot took place entirely in the studio. Rheims succeeded in finding a variety of ways to depict the artificial way of presenting human beings in ads and media nowadays and subjects like decadence, pleasure and living lifes as sexual libertins with a continuous freshness and intrigue. The way Bettina Rheims considers the modern depiction of the human body is sometimes exaggerating, provocative and satirical .
Inspired by her passion for art and female portraiture, Bettina Rheims devoted herself wholly to photography beginning in 1978. In the past three decades she has produced many major series of works for books and exhibitions. In 2007 she was awarded the Légion d'Honneur for her artistic achievement. The contributing author Catherine Millet is editor-in-chief and co-founder of Art Press. She is also a curator and the author of many books, including La vie sexuelle de Catherine M. (2001).
The Book of Olga
Limited Edition of 1000, numbered and signed by Bettina Rheims
Catherine Millet
Hardcover and box 29,2 x 43,7 cm, 154 pages
Actually it's possible to preorder Bettina Rheims: The Book of Olga to get it next week.

National Portrait Gallery presents Works of Annie Leibovitz


The exhibition Annie Leibovitz: A Photographer's Life, 1990-2005, draws together for the first time the well-known assignments and rarely-seen personal work of the portrait photographer With over 150 photographs, Annie Leibovitz: A Photographer's Life, 1990-2005 shows iconic images of famous public figures together with personal photographs of her family and close friends. Arranged chronologically, they project a unified narrative of the artist's private life against the backdrop of her public image. 'I don't have two lives,' Leibovitz says. 'This is one life, and the personal pictures and the assignment work are all part of it.' At the heart of the exhibition, Leibovitz's personal photography documents scenes from her life, including the birth and childhood of her three daughters, and vacations, reunions, and rites of passage with her parents, her extended family and close friends.

The exhibition features Leibovitz's portraits of figures, including actors such as Jamie Foxx, Daniel Day Lewis, Al Pacino, Nicole Kidman and Brad Pitt as well as artists and architects such as Richard Avedon, Brice Marden, Philip Johnson, Chuck Close and Cindy Sherman. Highlights include dancers Mikhail Baryshnikov and Rob Besserer holding a dance position on a beach, William S Burroughs in Kansas and Agnes Martin in Taos. Featured assignment work includes searing reportage from the siege of Sarajevo in the early 1990s and the election of Hillary Clinton to the US Senate. There are also landscapes taken in Monument Valley in the American West and in Wadi Rum in the Jordanian desert. Annie Leibovitz has been making images documenting American popular culture since the early 1970s, when her work began appearing in Rolling Stone. She became the magazine's chief photographer in 1973, and ten years later began working for Vanity Fair, and then Vogue, creating a legendary body of work. In addition to her magazine work, Leibovitz has created influential advertising campaigns for American Express, Gap, Givenchy, the Milk Board and the TV series The Sopranos. A retrospective of her work from the years 1970 -1990 was presented at the National Portrait Gallery, London, in 1994, as well as Washington, D.C. and the International Center of Photography in New York.

Annie Leibovitz: A Photographer's Life, is a Brooklyn Museum exhibition, curated by Charlotta Kotik, Curator Emerita of Contemporary Art. The exhibition opened at the Brooklyn Museum on 20 October 2006 and has since toured to the San Diego Museum of Art, the High Museum of Art in Atlanta, the Corcoran Gallery in Washington, and the de Young Museum in San Francisco. It is now on tour at La Maison Européenne de la Photographie in Paris before arriving in London, and after the National Portrait Gallery, the exhibition will tour to C/O Berlin. Susan Bloom is the international coordinator of the exhibition.

Annie Leibovitz: A Photographer's Life, 1990-2005,
16 October 2008-1 February 2009.
National Portrait Gallery
St Martin's Place,London

Admission £11, Concessions £10/£9. Free for Gallery Supporters.
Tickets www.npg.org.uk or 24 hour Booking Hotline : 0844 579 1924

Oct 23, 2008

Diana Walker : Behind-The-Scenes of the White House

Howard Greenberg Gallery actually presents Diana Walker: Political Party, an exhibition of behind-the-scenes photographs of the past 20 years inside The White House. In a period when the media's access to politicians is tightly controlled, Walker manages to reveal the private moments that humanize our public figures. Her attention to a laugh, a gesture, an attitude reveals the subtleties that make up the true character of her subjects.
For more than two decades Diana Walker was the White House photographer for Time magazine. She has masterfully documented five administrations, from Gerald Ford to Bill Clinton, photographing the nation's First Ladies and the key political players in each administration. Her first photograph appeared in Time in 1976 launching her career as a contract photographer for the magazine in 1979. In 1984 she became one of two White House photographers to cover the Reagan and Bush administrations. At the beginning of George Bush's re-election campaign, Walker was the first photojournalist granted access to exclusively shoot presidential life beyond the scripted formalities of public life.
"I have considered it my job always to try and show who our President is, and hopefully, something about his character. I have strived to keep myself, my own ego, my own political persuasion, out of my pictures. I am looking at the President purely as a man, not Republican or Democrat, watching always for that look, that touch, that relationship which will help better to understand him," explains Walker.
Diana Walker has won numerous awards from the White House News Photographers Association, World Press and the National Press Photographer's Association. In 2003, she also received the Paul Peck Presidential Award, presented by the National Portrait Gallery for her portrayal and interpretation of the Presidency. Her photographs are in the collections of the Art Institute of Chicago, the Minneapolis Museum of art, and the Smithsonian's National Portrait Gallery and National Museum of American History, which held a retrospective of her work in 2003. Selections from that show are touring the U.S. until 2009 in an exhibition organized by SITES, the Smithsonian Traveling Exhibitions Service. Walker's photographic archive resides at the Center of American History at the University of Texas. She is the author of Public & Private: Twenty Years Photographing the Presidency and The Bigger Picture: 30 Years of Portraits.

Diana Walker: Political Party
- 22 November 2008
41 East 57th Street
New York
Howard Greenberg Gallery

Oct 22, 2008

Portraits from Wisconsin

AP - Photographers John Shimon and Julie Lindemann don't do candid photos. They let the everyday people they photograph construct and present themselves deliberately — and that's the point."All that mental energy is what the pictures end up being about: the ideas about who you are and who I am, who we are," Lindemann says. "All that feeds into it."And they prefer to work with more traditional processes, such as daguerreotype, ambrotype and tintypes and mostly photograph with an 8x10 view camera — giving their portraits an antique feel.Forty-three of their portraits are featured in "Unmasked & Anonymous: Shimon and Lindemann Consider Portraiture," which runs through Nov. 30 at the Milwaukee Art Museum in Milwaukee.Their work is juxtaposed with 54 portraits mostly owned by the museum, from Alfred Stieglitz, Diane Arbus, Sally Mann and Larry Clark. It's the couple's first major museum show.Lisa Hostetler, the museum's curator of photographs, said she and the couple spent the last two years poring through the museum's portraits to put together the show. The pair's collection and the museum's enhance each other in the juxtaposition, she said."When we were looking at their work we were seeing connections back in history so the time and eras started to kind of intertwine and move back and forth — that was one really interesting part of the whole experience," Hostetler said.They have had other solo shows including Sarah Bowen Gallery in New York and Wendy Cooper Gallery in Chicago. They've photographed for Fortune, Metropolis, New York, People and The New York Times Magazine.Shimon and Lindemann want to blend history with the present by recycling photographic practices and appearances from different periods. "This allows us to make pictures that move time in multiple directions, to create spaces for ideas simultaneously familiar and new," they say in the catalog's essay.For example, a 10-inch-by-8-inch black and white tintype of "Caitlin With Rose Dress" is juxtaposed with a series of small, anonymous daguerreotypes, ambrotypes and tintypes from the mid 1800s owned by the museum.The couple generally photograph people they know or friends who come out of their work.

Sally Mann, Candy, Cigarette, 1989. Gelatin Silver Print, 8 x 10 inches, S&R Pieper Family, © Sally Mann

They don't like to refer to them as "models" because Lindemann said that objectifies them, and they don't call them subjects either — "it sounds like we are the king and queen or something," Lindemann says. Instead they call them collaborators."They are open to being photographed and giving us something of themselves that we can work with or respond to, which is generous of them," she said.They refer to themselves as non-famous artists photographing non-famous people in rural and small-town life. In the essay, they say photographing the nonfamous allows them to "question the prevailing social order."That can been seen in photos of longtime friends Brad and Amber Daugs, who work at a pizza restaurant. The multimedia installation "Brad & Amber's Backyard, 2008" shows a session at the Daugs' house, with Brad sitting at a fire pit drinking beer and Amber standing at a chair nearby. A film strip showing Shimon and Lindemann photographing the couple plays across from a video showing the couple during the photo shoot. On the walls hang four photos from the session. Elsewhere in the show are one of the pair cooking ribs and one of Brad alone, from 1996.Also in the show are four photos at various ages of their friend Nigel. He's in prison for rape and assault but they still visit him and he writes them letters. In one, Nigel said he was happy the couple is being recognized but tells them they are selling out for having a museum show. But Lindemann said most of their friends are supportive and happy for their success. A series of photographs depicts area residents at work juxtaposed with August Sander's "Circus Artiste," which was made between 1926 and 1932. There's "Rich With Ice, Manitowoc, Wisconsin""Mel With His Bottling Machine, Seymour, Wisconsin" or their neighbor in "Ryan at Work, Manitowoc, Wisconsin."The idea of dressing up is featured in the juxtaposition of the pair's "RJ as Glade Boy, Manitowoc, Wisconsin" in 1996, and Julia Margaret Cameron's "Beatrice," from 1866. RJ is posing as a made-up superhero Glade Boy with Glade cans taped around his waste and "Glade Boy" written across his white T-shirt. In "Beatrice," Cameron's niece portrays Beatrice Cenci, a 16th-century noblewoman who murdered her abusive father.



J. Shimon, J. Lindemann, Ann in her Kitchen (No. 2), Madison, Wisconsin, Archival Inkjet Print, 20 x 16 inches, Edition 2/10. Courtesy of the artists.

Both show the subjects without smiles, like most of the photos. Lindemann said she tends to pick unsmiling portraits because smiling is too strong of a social construct — "Smile for the camera ... that just seems too thoughtless to me," she says.Hostetler says she hopes the exhibition inspires people to slow down and think about the production and creation of their image and how that defines them."Although we often sort of enact and play these roles unconsciously, it doesn't hurt to really think about them in a more extended fashion especially in this age where image is everything or at least that's the accepted wisdom," Hostetler says.


Unmasked and Anonymous
Shimon & Lindemann consider Portraiture
- November 30
Milwaukee Art Museum
700 N. Art Museum Drive
Open daily 10 a.m. –5 p.m., Thursdays until 8 p.m.

Oct 17, 2008

Collectors bidding cautiously at Sotheby's New York

Imogen Cunningham, Two Sisters, 1928 © Imogen Cunningham Trust
Does the crisis of the financial market impair the photography art market? Considering the latest auction “Contemporary Photography” of Sotheby's New York, collectors were bidding cautiously. There were no sales with sensational high prices, otherwise the buyers mostly did not pay more than the estimates of photos by Ansel Adams, Edward Weston or Imogen Cunningham. Her photograph Two Sisters was sold for only $ 46,875. The estimate was $40,000 to 60000. There remains to wait for how the price index at the art market develops for photographs.