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Hey, Hot Shot! Entries for January 2010

Week in Review: January 29th, 2010

By Casey on January 29, 2010 5:54 PM

#52 by Kent Rogowski

Welcome back to the Week in Review! What's that, you ask? Every Friday we reminisce on the highlights of the week, point out some great things we saw on the internet, and drop hints about what the future holds.

Openings + Events:
+ Photographer Brian Ulrich will be giving a talk tonight at Hous Projects Gallery, and is part of a two-person show opening tomorrow in Brooklyn. We've got all the details on that here.

Instruments of Empire: Brian Ulrich and Amy Stein
On View: January 28 – March 25, 2010
Caption Gallery
55 Washington Street, No. 802
Brooklyn, NY 11201

Brian Ulrich Signing + Lecture
Tonight: January 29, 5:30 – 7 p.m.
Hous Projects
31 Howard St., 2nd Floor
New York, NY 10013

Photography on 20x200:
In the 20x200 newsletter this week, Jen wrote that she has been "trying to get [Hey, Hot Shot! panelist] Kent Rogowski to edition a couple of his bears for years." Finally her persistence has paid off with this week's photo edition: a pair of Kent's inside out bear photographs. While lovebirds are sure to see the sweetness in these prints, misanthropes will also relate to the grotesque reminder of hearts turned inside out. It all depends on how you look at it!

2110_artworkimage-308-1.jpg 2111_artworkimage-308.jpg
#51 by Kent Rogowski #52 by Kent Rogowski

HHS! News:
+ Work by Spring 2006 Hot Shot, Ian Baguskas, was featured on LA photography blog We Can Shoot Too.
+ Mikey Burton, the designer who created our logo, was featured on swissmiss this week. Woohoo!

From the Web
+ MagCloud has teamed up with photographers including iconic photojournalist Mary Ellen Mark, to create a photo-zine about Haiti, and will be donating all proceeds.
+ We're thrilled that photographer and 20x200 Edition-Maker Liz Kuball will be donating proceeds from a self-produced print to Haiti. Go, Liz!
+ It's not that we don't love New York, but we're dying to go to Philadelphia. Why, you ask? Well, Maira Kalman has a survey exhibition opening called Various Illuminations (of a Crazy World), which includes some of her rarely-seen photographs.
+ Were you able to stop by the Alec Soth lecture last night in Richmond, VA? Was it awesome? Let us know!

05:54 PM . Filed under: Week in Review

20% More Ridiculous Sale on 20x200!

By sara on January 29, 2010 2:35 PM

twentypercent.gif

It's here, it's here! The 20% More Ridiculous Sale has arrived. Today through noon on Sunday, we're offering 20% off everything on 20x200 when you make a purchase of $40 or more. Enter code RIDONK in Google checkout to get your discount. The site-wide sale happens but twice a year; there's no better time to get your art on than right now! Ladies and gentlemen, the prints are going to fly. So RUN, don't walk to the 20x200 browse page.

What does 20% More Ridiculous mean?
$50 prints are now $40
$200 prints are now $160
$500 prints are now $400
$2,000 prints are now $1,600
$5,000 prints are now $4,000

A few small details:
- You'll need to spend a minimum of $40 to qualify for the discount. (We're ridiculous and generous, but not entirely foolish!)
- No double-dipping! RIDONK stands alone, and cannot be combined with any other offers or promotions.
- Gift certificate purchases are not eligible for the discount.
- Being the incredible opportunity that they are to begin with, the very few and rather gorgeous prints by Mike & Doug Starn are not eligible for discounts.

We also just unveiled our Valentine's Day Gift Guide that will help you find the perfect print for your bookish babe, sporty suitor, and pretty much every or any sweetheart that could possibly be in your life! We also just rolled out 20x200 edition-maker Lisa Congdon's contribution to our series of artist-designed gift guides.

valentinesguide.jpg

P.S. To the collectors on our mailing list, who *always* receive the first word on sales and new editions, this is practically old news. What we're trying to say is that you should join the mailing list too. That's art (and so much more) in your inbox, twice a week!

02:35 PM . Filed under: Announcements

Alec Soth lecture in Richmond, VA tonight!

By youngna on January 27, 2010 11:14 AM
untitled_alecsoth.jpg
Untitled by Alec Soth

Short notice, but if you happen to be in Richmond, VA tonight, Alec Soth is giving a lecture at the Singleton Center for the Performing Arts from 6:00 - 7:30 p.m. hosted by the Photography department at the VCU School of the Arts.

After several years' hiatus, Alec has recently returned to blogging at Little Brown Mushroom, which is also an independent publishing venture most recently offering Alec's Las Vegas Birthday Book (and sculpture), a one-off publication that "comes with a unique, signed sculpture made out of Las Vegas prostitution advertisements (spoon and $100 bill are also included)." While you've missed your chance at that one of a kind work, you can see Alec and his work in person if you're down in Virginia. Details below:

Singleton Center for the Performing Arts
Sonya Vlahcevic Concert Hall, Monroe Park Campus
922 Park Ave, Richmond, VA
January 27, 2010
6:00 - 7:30 p.m.

More images available at Alec's site and his Magnum portfolio.

11:14 AM . Filed under: To Do

Maira Kalman: Various Illuminations (of a Crazy World)

By youngna on January 26, 2010 1:20 PM
kalman2.jpg
Illustration by Maira Kalman

Artist Maira Kalman is widely known for her whimsical works on paper, oft-seen on the cover of The New Yorker and in the The New York Times. She has written and illustrated countless children's books, designed objects ranging from watches to umbrellas and in 2005 illustrated Strunk & White's famous The Elements of Style. Her beloved but now-defunct blog in the Times, And the Pursuit of Happiness, tackled issues that inspired the foundation of our nation: democracy, invention, bipartisanship, law-making, civil rights, founding fathers and diversity. Through her monthly stories, Kalman integrated text, illustration and photography into inspiring, provoking and comforting messages.

kalman19.jpg
Photograph & Text by Maira Kalman

There's no wonder why Ms. Kalman is on Jen's 20x200 artist wishlist, but what is lesser known about Kalman is her work as a photographer and how these images inspire her illustrations. The Winter 2009 issue of Aperture, #197, takes an in-depth look at "The World According to Maira," investigating how the artist plays with photographs. For those near Philadelphia, the first major museum survey of Maira's work is also currently on view at The Institute of Contemporary Art at the University of Pennsylvania featuring her works on paper, embroidery, textiles, the aforementioned photography and an installation of furniture and found objects.

Maira Kalman: Various Illuminations (of a Crazy World)
The Institute of Contemporary Art at the University of Pennsylvania
Exhibition on view: January 15-June 6, 2010
118 South 36th Street
Philadelphia, PA 19104-3289
(215) 898-5911

For those of you who can't make it to the exhibit, you can look forward to a book version of And the Pursuit of Happiness, which will be published in October 2010.

01:20 PM . Filed under: Exhibitions

Week in Review: January 22th, 2010

By Casey on January 22, 2010 4:43 PM

tumblr_kwmrwxzVv61qafox8o1_500-1.jpg Untitled work image by Holly Lynton

Welcome back to the Week in Review, where we reminisce on the highlights of the week, point out all the great things we saw on the internet, and drop hints about what the future holds!

Hot Shot Q&As:
On Monday we posted our final Hot Shot Q&A, meaning all five are now available online. This is a great way to get to know this round of Hot Shots and future 20x200 edition-makers!
+ Jessica Eaton
+ Justin James King
+ Alejandro Cartagena
+ Leah Tepper Byrne
+ Marisa Aragona

HHS! News:
+Our photo edition this week on 20x200 was a beautiful-yet-sinister artificial landscape Rincon Artificial Island and Pipeline, Ventura, California by Ian Baguskas. Sara posted about it earlier this week, pairing it with an image and quote by Robert Adams.
+ 2008 Second Edition Hot Shot Yijun (Pixy) Liao was recently spotlighted on Feature Shoot for several series of her work.
+ Fall 2007 Hot Shot Ian van Coller's series The Garden Path is featured in Issue 10 of Fraction Magazine.
+ Hot Shot Jessica Eaton, Panelist Lesley A. Martin, and 20x200 Edition-Maker Penelope Umbrico are included in the upcoming Lay Flat 02: Meta. Pre-order a.s.a.p. to reserve your copy!
+ We rounded up the deadlines and information on submitting your work to a variety of competitions at the Santa Fe photography organization, Center. They currently have four open calls for entry with upcoming deadlines on January 27th.

Miyazaki_HawaiiSnaps_182.jpg
guest bedroom, holualoa town by Kevin Miyazaki

On the Web:
+ Kevin Miyazaki posted a beautiful photo on his blog this week. If you haven't collected his two 20x200 editions yet you are seriously missing out.
+ Jeffrey posted about Holly Lynton's great new work-in-progress on the JBG Blog. Don't miss out on this post with more info on "The Turkey Madonna" (above)
+ Shane Lavalette's blog led us to the Robert Heineken Studies by Jason Lazarus, an intense series of colorful photograms made with human ashes.
+ Last week we posted a guide to Buying Art to Benefit Haiti and today we posted Even More Ways to Buy Art (& Design) to Benefit Haiti, an update including your suggestions and additions to the list. If you have contributions, please let us know!

Happy Friday and see you back here next week!

04:43 PM . Filed under: Week in Review

Deadline for Center call for entries: January 27th

By youngna on January 22, 2010 10:38 AM
10_Watanabe.jpg
Kim Song Mi & Kim Yun Kyong, Pyongyang Schoolchildren's Palace, North Korea by 2008 Project Competition Winner, Hiroshi Watanabe

Center, based out of Santa Fe, New Mexico, has four open calls for entries with a deadline of next Friday, January 27th. Center produces the annual Review LA which took place last week simultaneous to Photo LA. They are also host to Review Santa Fe, a fantastic weekend conference for photographers to meet with curators, editors, publishers and galleries, and have their portfolios reviewed.

The Project Competition is open to photographers working on documentary projects and fine-art series. One First Prize and three finalists are selected by the jurors, who include curator Tina Kukielski (Whitney Museum), editor Markus Seewald (GEO magazine) and our own Hey, Hot Shot! panelist and CEO of Chronicle Books, Nion McEvoy. The first prize winner is awarded $5,000 cash, an exhibition in Santa Fe, admission to Review Santa Fe and feature in an online magazine. To learn more about how to enter and to see the work of previous winners, visit the Project Competition page.

Center is also accepting submissions to Project Launch, an award to help a single photographer complete a body of work currently in-progress. This award is also open to documentary projects and fine-art series. A single First Prize of $3,000 cash is awarded, with an exhibition at Zane Bennett Contemporary Art in Santa Fe, Feature in Fraction magazine, a tuition voucher at the Santa Fe Workshops and participation in Review Santa Fe. Two honorable mentions will also receive $500 cash and participation in Review Santa Fe. For more info and to apply, click here. Project Launch will be juried by Darren Ching and Debra Klomp Ching, co-directors of Klompching Gallery.

The final competition is the Choice Awards, which selects individual photographs in three categories: Curator's Choice, Director's Choice and Editor's Choice. As for the other two awards, the winners will also receive exhibition and publication. Applications can submit up to four images for $25, with a $5 fee for each additional photograph. The Choice Awards are juried by curator Roxana Marcoci (MoMA, Dept of Photography), Directors Laura Valenti & Chris Bennett (Newspace Center for Photography) and editors Kathy Ryan (The New York Times) and Scott Thode (Fortune).

All of the photographers who apply to the above three competitions are also encouraged to submit to Review Santa Fe. Those who apply for both the Project Competition and Review are eligible for a discounted fee. Last year's The Review Santa Fe 100 contains a list of stand-out projects from last year, and is a frequent source of inspiration for work being made by emerging and increasingly established photographers today.

Several people in the JBP office have attended Review Santa Fe in the past, and the experience—both as a reviewer and a photographer—is exceptional and rewarding. If you have a body of work in progress, or recently completed, we highly encourage you to apply.

10:38 AM . Filed under: Competitions

Ian Baguskas on 20x200

By sara on January 20, 2010 3:56 PM
20x200-Baguskas-Rincon-500.jpg
Rincon Artificial Island and Pipeline, Ventura, California by Ian Baguskas


We released the luscious photograph above, Rincon Artificial Island and Pipeline, Ventura, California by 2006 Hot Shot Ian Baguskas on 20x200 today. The edition's been a long time coming. We were all taken by the photograph way back when Ian exhibited his series Sweet Water at Jen Bekman Gallery after becoming a HHS! Ne Plus Ultra and earning representation. The photo made its second appearance at 6 Spring Street recently as part of the winter group show, Mixtape.

Even after spending many hours with the photograph, over the course of a couple years, I didn't place the image with one of my favorites by Robert Adams (below) until writing about the work today.


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Burning Oil Sludge North of Denver, Colorado by Robert Adams


Adams' books top my list of most-oft-thumbed-through reads. This morning I reached for Beauty in Photography: Essays in Defense of Traditional Values and pulled this: "The job of the photographer, in my view, is not to catalogue indisputable fact but to try to be coherent about intuition and hope."

03:56 PM . Filed under: 2006 Spring Hot Shots

Pre-Order Lay Flat 02: Meta

By Casey on January 19, 2010 4:36 PM

layflat02meta_cover.jpg Cover of Lay Flat 02: Meta

There's photography, and then there's photography about photography. The medium is (relatively) young, but what it lacks in history it makes up for in inquiry, and wild experimentation. Shane Lavalette has put together the second issue in his series of photography books, Lay Flat, this time bringing together "contemporary photographers whose images are conceptually engaged with the history, process and conventions of the medium itself." The publication, co-edited with Michael Bühler-Rose, will span 102 pages and be produced in a limited-edition of 2000.

The lineup of contributors is pretty incredible, including work by our own 2009 Second Edition Hot Shot Jessica Eaton and 20x200 edition-maker Penelope Umbrico as well as an essay by HHS! panelist Lesley A. Martin.

However, since the print run is limited, to secure your copy you will need to pre-order Lay Flat 02: Meta by January 31st at 10pm. The previous issue of Lay Flat, printed in an edition of 1000, is now completely sold out so you'll want to get in on 02 while you still can. I am happy to say that my pre-order has been placed and I'm anxious to see the publication in all its printed glory, come February.

Lay Flat 02: Meta
102 pages, perfect bound
Edition of 2,000

Edited by Shane Lavalette and Michael Bühler-Rose.

Photographs by Claudia Angelmaier, Semâ Bekirovic, Charles Benton, Walead Beshty, Lucas Blalock, Talia Chetrit, Anne Collier, Natalie Czech, Jessica Eaton, Roe Ethridge, Stephen Gill, Daniel Gordon, David Haxton, Matt Keegan, Elad Lassry, Katja Mater, Laurel Nakadate, Lisa Oppenheim, Torbjørn Rødland, Noel Rodo-Vankeulen, Joachim Schmid, Penelope Umbrico, Useful Photography, Charlie White, Ann Woo and Mark Wyse are accompanied by the textual contributions of Adam Bell (Co-editor, The Education of a Photographer), Lesley A. Martin (Publisher/Editor, Aperture Foundation), Alex Klein (Editor, Words Without Pictures), artists Noel Rodo-Vankeulen and Arthur Ou, as well as an interview with James Welling by Lyle Rexer (Author, The Edge of Vision: The Rise of Abstraction in Photography).

04:36 PM . Filed under: 2009 Second Edition Hot Shots

Hot Shot Q&A: Marisa Aragona

By Casey on January 18, 2010 11:27 AM

1-1.jpg Untitled, from Drapery by Marisa Aragona

Today we conclude our Hot Shot Q&A series with questions for and answers from 2009 Second Edition Hot Shot Marisa Aragona. Marisa's work stands out for the vibrant tableaux she creates with figures and fabrics in tight interior spaces. "I photograph both myself and others in their homes during periods of isolation and transition. In doing this, I wish to reveal a character in the midst of confusion, transition, chaos or even adventure." 2010 is off to a great start for this San Francisco-based photographer, whose work is currently traveling around Lithuania as part of a public art exhibit, will be published in Aperture's juried Photo Review Journal, will be included in a show at Meridian Gallery, and, of course, will appear in the Hey, Hot Shot! exhibition at Jen Bekman Gallery this March. For more about Marisa, including a full bio and statement, visit her Hot Shot profile. Marisa also just relaunched her website this weekend with some new work, so make sure to check it out! And now, Marisa Aragona:

From:
I grew up in Fort Washington, Maryland. It's both a unique and ordinary place. Rural and urban are side-by-side, [there is] no in-between. Growing up, I'd go to my best friend's farm, less than a half-mile from my house, where we would play with the animals and graffiti the barn. I once watched her father help a cow to give birth, if you can imagine that! On the other hand, just a few more short minutes up the road is the Beltway to DC. I drove by the Washington Monument every day on my way to high school. Bill Clinton once jogged right in front of my car with his security team...and he winked at me!

Formal and/or informal education and training:
I feel lucky I got to go to art school...twice! I got my BFA in 2000 from the School of Visual Arts in New York, which gave me an amazing foundation and photo skill set. At SVA, so many different kinds of photography were happening all at once. This total immersion was critical to my ongoing fascination with photography. Then, in 2005 I received my MFA from the San Francisco Art Institute. The critiques at SFAI were challenging and diverse. Moving to the West Coast and being exposed to conceptual and performance art in grad school really blew my mind wide open.

How you pay the bills:
Like a lot of artists, I do a lot of different things, the main thing being teaching. My day job is educational and arts programming for the Boys and Girls Club of San Francisco. I also teach photography to adults at UC Berkeley and get a few photo gigs here and there.

Best advice you ever received as a photographer (and/or as a human):
The collective wisdom of my most beloved mentors and friends consistently has been to trust myself (and shoot a lot of film).

Top 3 Favorite Artists:
For today, my answer is Eva Hesse, Ana Mendieta and Lynda Benglis. It goes without saying that I can't really answer this question though.

Photograph (or other work of art) that you can't get out of your head,
ever
:
6a00cdf3a306d9cb8f010980b55ceb000b-500pi.jpg

It's been a few years now since I saw Cornelia Parker's Colder, Darker Matter at the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts in SF. The piece consists of bits of charcoal, which came from a church in Texas that was struck by lightning, suspended in the shape of a cube—absolutely brilliant on so many levels. Being in the room with that piece was an experience that made me lose my breath, and I still think about it all of the time. The image doesn't really compare to seeing it in a huge space as I did.

Reading now:
Good New Year's reading for me is Yoko Ono's book of instructions and drawings, Grapefruit.

Top 3 photo-related websites/blogs:
Sprayblog: interviews with young artists and other good stuff (search my name to find an interview with me).
Amy Stein Photo: always great.
Horses Think: my friend Ofer keeping me in the know.

Top 3 non-photo websites/blogs:
Cliché Site: "Easy as pie," my favorite website! How amazing to search clichés alphabetically. Totally genius!
SF Burlesque: Local, stay-in-the-know entertainment listings.
Super Tight Stuff: Just learned of this one last week. Check out the 10 greatest places to swim in the world.

What project or idea are you working on now?
I remain really interested in the body and continue to shoot self-portraits mostly, as well as lots of clothes and color. Lately, I'm photographing myself interacting with my clothes, searching to understand my own changing relationship to my body. I enjoy the excess of my old clothes, like bodies or old selves.


Thanks to Marisa and all of our Hot Shots for taking the time to answer our questions. We can't emphasize enough how excited we are to work with these amazing photographers, and we're counting the days to the opening!

11:27 AM . Filed under: 2009 Second Edition Hot Shots

Week in Review: January 15th, 2010

By Casey on January 15, 2010 1:21 PM

haiti-bigpicture.jpg AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes (via The Big Picture)

It's that time again for the Week in Review, where we reminisce on the week, point out things we saw on the internet and drop hints about what the future holds.

Haiti:
- We were shocked and quite somber this week around the HQ after hearing—and seeing—all the destruction from the earthquake in Haiti. The images we're seeing from Port-au-Prince are incredibly humbling, painful and emotional to process. We wanted to take a minute to recognize all the incredible photographers who are putting their lives on the line to show the rest of the world how this devastating story is unfolding and also offer sympathy to all the individuals, families and organizations that have been affected.

- The Big Picture has two posts (Earthquake in Haiti, Haiti 48 Hours Later) full of images from press photographers on location, and if you've seen other documentation, please let us know in the comments.

Google has a great list of ways you can help, and don't forget that you can easily donate $10 to the Red Cross by texting HAITI to 90999 and donate $5 to Yele's Earthquake Relief efforts by texting YELE to 501501. It's super easy and the donation will be added directly to your next cellphone bill.

Jen Bekman Gallery:
- Tonight from 6 - 8 p.m. you're cordially invited to the opening of Clare Grill's NYC debut solo exhibition, What You're Told, at Jen Bekman Gallery. The show features six paintings on canvas and eleven works on paper; you can see more images here and check out our Facebook invite for more info. Hope to see you there!

HHS! News:
- Our Hot Shot Q&A series is drawing to a close. Check back on Monday for our final Q&A with Hot Shot Marisa Aragona. So far we've heard from Jessica Eaton, Justin James King, Alejandro Cartagena, and Leah Tepper Byrne. If you missed any of these conversations, be sure to check them out.

- The first ever Too Much Chocolate + Kodak Film Grant was awarded to ten deserving photographers, including Hot Shots Leah Tepper Byrne, Molly Landreth and Honorable Mention Magda Biernat. They will get their choice of film from Kodak to complete a new or ongoing personal project in 2010. Congratulations!

- Panelist Lesley A. Martin met with photographer Joel Meyerowitz at the NY Public Library for a public discussion of photo books earlier this week.

On the web:
- Have you seen our Tumblr? Throughout the week we've been posting images that catch our eye, quips from our office, sneak-peeks of secret things, and photos of dogs and kittens. Head over there and subscribe to that nonsense!

- Prison Photography ran a photo feature on Hot Shot Leah Tepper Bryne with some nice images of her work!

- The Future of Photobooks conversation led by Miki Johnson of LiveBooks RESOLVE Blog and Andy Adams of Flak Photo also continues asking questions like, "How should photobook funding evolve in the next decade?" and "What are the best printers if you want to self-publish a photo book?" Head over to RESOLVE to join in on, or read the discussion.

- On the topic of photo books, photo-eye just published their list of the "Best Photobooks of 2009" as selected by a group of photographers, editors, publishers and bookmakers. You can also see a longer list of all the books that received at least one vote—the breadth and beauty of what was published in '09 is shocking!

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offSET #29, New York by Lacey Terrell

- Did you catch our 20x200 photo release this week? It's a richly textural photograph called offSET #29, New York by Honorable Mention Lacey Terrell.

- Last but not least, we love how much art is hanging in the London flat of photographer (and friend of many-of-us here!) Rion Nakaya, who appeared on Design*Sponge earlier this week.

Did we miss anything worth seeing this week? Leave a comment or reply to @heyhotshot on Twitter and let us know!

01:21 PM . Filed under: Week in Review

Too Much Chocolate + Kodak Film Grant Winners!

By youngna on January 14, 2010 11:44 AM
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Untitled by Molly Landreth from the project Embodiment: A Portrait of Queer Life in America

We're pleased to offer hearty congratulations to the ten talented winners of the Too much chocolate + Kodak film grant. Each recipient of the award will be awarded their choice of Kodak film to execute a new or ongoing personal project, to be completed during the 2010 calendar year.

Congratulations to all ten photographers:
Murray Ballard
Anna Beeke
Magda Biernat
Phil Jung
Collin LaFleche
Molly Landreth
Caitlin Price
Andy Spyra
Leah Tepper Byrne
Susan Worsham

We're also thrilled that two of our Hot Shots, Leah Tepper Byrne (read a recent Q + A with Leah) and Molly Landreth as well as Honorable Mention, Magda Biernat were among the ten selected from an entrant pool of over 450 contenders.

We look forward to seeing the work created with this grant this year. Head over to Too Much Chocolate to see the projects and images submitted and learn more about the TMC + Kodak collaboration.

11:44 AM . Filed under: Competitions

Hot Shot Q&A: Jessica Eaton

By Casey on January 13, 2010 1:16 PM

HHS-Jessica-Eaton-Ping-Pong-Balls.jpg Additive Pong by Jessica Eaton

Today we're back with another Hot Shot Q&A, with questions for and answers from Jessica Eaton! Jessica's photographs, often exploring the limitations and possibilities of photography as a medium, are the definition of experimental. So it comes as no surprise that she states, "I want to make photographs that surprise myself." But Jessica isn't the only one surprised by her work, so were our Hey, Hot Shot! Panelists. You can find a full statement and bio in Jessica's official Hot Shot post, and more on her work in her contender post which ran during the competition. We caught up with Jessica by email from her "self-directed residency" in Argentina, where she took a few minutes out from her daily experiments to answer our questions:

From:
Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada. I have also lived in Vancouver, Toronto, Montreal, and currently, Buenos Aires. I will be in NYC this March and hopefully Berlin to follow.

Formal and/or informal education and training:
I have a BFA in photography from Emily Carr University, Vancouver. However, very little of my technical knowledge of the medium came from there. Most of what I know technically came from books, colleagues, friends, staff at labs, rental departments and most importantly: trial and error. I re-shot my Quantum Pong series six times in studio and I would still re-shoot everything I have ever done to "fix things" if reality didn't stop me.

This is not to say that art school was a useless experience. On the contrary—the institution gave me the access to studios, darkrooms and equipment that would have been difficult to obtain on my own. Most importantly, school allowed me to connect with other people involved in the arts and provided me with a basic language and historical context for both the medium of photography and fine art and design in general. I would love to do my MFA if the opportunity became economically feasible.

How you pay the bills:
Throughout my life I have been faced with the dilemma of how to live with very little money to cover basic needs and high photography expenses. I take the odd music-related photography gig, editorial assignments, wedding recommendations, photographs for other artists and sometimes stills for independent film. Typically, I have maintained service industry jobs but recently gave it up to focus exclusively on my photography. At this point in my career, I am lucky to have the financial support of some very generous people who have faith in me. I have been given the privilege to concentrate solely on my work and to put exhibits together for show. Fortunately, this is beginning to pay off with increased exposure, awards, new opportunities and many kind letters from admirers of my work. I am optimistic that the financial rewards will soon be realized. I will often pre-sell friends the first edition of a gallery-finished piece for the cost of getting it on the wall. They get a great deal on a piece of work and I am able to do my exhibit.

Best advice you ever received as a photographer (and/or as a human):
"It isn't the gear you have, but what you do with it."
"Demand more, expect less."
"Happiness is a choice."

There is no point to fret over not being able to afford a Hasselblad H3D or something like it. These days, photographs created with a point and shoot, a plastic black box, or even a cell phone, could end up in the MoMA. Sadly, too many people who are lucky to own an H3D or what-have-you, produce nothing but crap. For me ultimate creativity [comes from] work[ing] with limited resources, figuring out something interesting that I can do in the now. There are infinite possibilities. I have never met a person with real passion and perseverance for their art that I didn't like and respect, even if the works were not particularly to my liking. However, I have met many people primarily fixated on their lenses and DPP reviews whom I find difficult to tolerate.

I have also been advised to "always be closing," although I interpret this to mean "always be working." It is dangerous to ride or get stuck in your own success or failure. The only way to move forward into the future is to forget the past. I apply this rule of thumb to always be working on something, completing it, and moving on with new ideas. Imogen Cunningham said something to the effect that her best photograph was the one she would create tomorrow.


Top 3 Favorite Artists:
Other than restaurants, I avoid making top lists. Every day there are new and amazing things just around the corner. I do think it is a good idea to put big ideas out there because that is the only way they might happen. As such, I will say that two well-known artists I would love to do collaborations with are James Turrell and Olafur Eliasson. I am very interested in and inspired by their work with light, space, scale and phenomena.

To include those no longer with us, I'd also add the late, great, Maya Deren. I have often felt like I have been working with her since I first discovered her anyway. Similarly, with regard to limited resources, Maya stated: "I make my pictures for what Hollywood spends on lipstick". Ms. Deren was first brought to my attention during art school by my friend Zoe Gordon. She suggested that I made photographs in her spirit which compelled me to learn more about her. Coincidentally the documentary, In the Mirror of Maya Deren, had just been released, a heart-warming and inspirational film for me to experience. If even just a tiny bit of her spirit is with me, that is enough to inspire me to dance in her footsteps.

Photograph (or other work of art) that you can't get out of your head, ever:
There is a photograph I have held in mind and [it] has affected my entire life. It is a silver gelatin print, about 18" in height, cut and framed with a bubble of glass to an oval. The photograph, from the early 1900s, is of a little girl aged 2 or 3. The child is the sister of my grandfather who died from bad milk shortly after the photograph was taken. My grandparents had an impressive wall of family photos in the house they lived in throughout my childhood. I remember being fascinated by the wall and spending a great deal of time looking and thinking.

By the time I could talk, I would ask about each of the people in the photographs. Upon learning that the girl with the eyes that stared back at me had died, I became particularly fixated with [her photo]. It was this image, at around age three, the same age she was, that gave me my first memorable philosophic experience. It was an absolutely Barthean moment, having to do with time, the "real," the image and death. Being so young when these thoughts first dawned on me, there was something about the ideas that I recall as being more of a physical experience, a knowledge and questions embodied, as opposed to constructed in language.

In 1991, my mother passed away, so there are all those pictures as well. Although I didn't start taking photographs until 1998, I think all this death and the photographic relics of the deceased throughout my childhood significantly influenced my practice. I quickly realized that even if I had thousands of photographs of my mother, not one or all could adequately describe anything about her. All that remains is a mutable physical appearance and at best the suggested, contextual interpretation found in gesture. I would not hesitate to trade them all for a mere 15 minutes with her again, or even a recording of her voice. I ventured into photography with the idea that a photograph always was much more or something other than what it was presumably a picture "of." I think this has all made me most interested in creating a photograph that often disregards the indexical — a photograph that is about being a photograph and hopefully pointing to something more metaphysical.

Reading now:
Being in Buenos Aires at the moment the obvious answer is, basic Spanish, as well as the history and politics of Argentina. Most days I find myself reading through restaurant and museum guides. I typically and avidly read fiction but have put that aside in favour of photography writing and non-fiction over the last few years. I just started the novel The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao by Junot Diaz, as sun tanning while reading off a laptop is so wrong and difficult to see the screen. I brought no books and barely any clothing with me as camera and computer gear took up most of my luggage. When picking up fiction for the first time in far too long, a Pulitzer Prize winner is usually a safe bet—so far it's great! Sadly it is difficult to find books in English in Argentina and they are expensive. Fortunately there are many expatriates who are willing to share.

Top 3 photo-related websites/blogs:
Again no hierarchical top list, especially with so much of great stuff out there. I wish I could name them all but I do make an effort to back-link them on my weblog. That said, I would never turn down an opportunity to promote a few of the things I think are great. I have given this much thought and it was very difficult to name just three with so many out there. Here you go:

1. Flak Photo
Go Andy Adams GO! That is all I have to say about that :)

2. Tinyvices
Tim Barber's web site was the first place where my photographs were published online. I think my first portfolio went up on tinyvices in 2005 and photography was just starting to be disseminated online. Most of my initial images were poorly scanned 8x10 darkroom prints and at that time I had barely touched a computer, nevermind scanned a negative or used a curve. No doubt tinyvices is the first place many people first saw my work (I think it is how I ended up doing a 20x200 edition!), and for that I am forever thankful. While maintaining an active personal photography career and art practice, Tim has just redesigned the website and continues to graciously promote the work of others. It is a special thing to discover people who are both content producers in a serious sense as well as disseminators and promoters for the work of others. There are many more people doing this now, people with such an obvious passion for the photographs. Bless you all!

3. GIMP, the GNU Image Manipulation Program
GIMP is open-source software, very much like Photoshop but free. I do indeed use Photoshop and even the GNU folk will tell you that they are not trying to replace Photoshop or discredit the importance of higher-end commercial software and proprietary software. In my opinion, the three main reasons to use GIMP are in situations where maybe your computer has crashed and you are having an image editing emergency or when using a computer that does not have Photoshop installed, but most importantly, if you don't feel comfortable resorting to piracy. Open source is the heart of the Internet and computing, and indeed, much love can be found.


Top 3 non-photo websites/blogs:
1. Processing
More open-source software, in this case a programming language created to teach programming basics within a visual context. On my list of things to explore in 2010.

2. Tumblr and Wordpress
The two best ways to blog and the two that I use. Thank you!
An extra shout out for Wordpress founder, Matt Mullenweg who has made me absolutely confident and content that I won't wake up one day to find my weblog gone for no apparent reason, without any explanation like a certain "140 character micro-blogging service" once did to me. ehemmm!

3. Zero.in (a.k.a Project guiGoog)
Coming soon, but you can check out a limited preview beta now. Zero.in is a Graphical User Interface (GUI) for Google Advanced Search. I have been watching the development over the past 6 months in my kitchen by a smarty-pants techie whom I spend a lot of time with. Every now and then, I pester him to focus more on image searching and he assures me this is in the works for the next release.


What project or idea are you working on now?
In 2010, I am focusing on a number of new ideas although I am continuing with works utilizing masking, both in and out of camera like "108" and "Other Obstructions." These pictures and the process are very time consuming and I don't have a fantastic success ratio, yet they are extremely satisfying when things come together. I am working on my next solo show, to be held in Montreal tentatively in late spring at PUSH Gallerie. Other current works in progress fall under "Incidence and Accidents" and they bring together and fill in gaps of my tests of phenomena and geometry as interpreted through the camera.

I have recently started a collaborative project with a fantastic NY-based photographer, Lucas Blalock. The project, brought to the table by Lucas, will eventually be a publication and hopefully an ever-changing exhibition. Look for more news of that in the fall. We are both doing work independently at the moment but in March I will spend the month in NYC, developinging the project and photographing together. When I first saw Lucas's work, I was struck by how many times I felt we were trying to work out the same ideas. I am totally fascinated by the differences in how we photographically expressed that process. I am quite excited to see how the collaboration unfolds between us. My biggest hope is that things present themselves in ways I can't yet imagine.

I am experimenting with some stop-motion, captured digitally. I have a few ideas where I would like to work with dancers — stop-motion pieces using bodies and different exposure variables, as well as stills based on the same ideas; dances that are choreographed specifically for a camera, the camera's options and lighting effects; the camera as dance partner.

Another project on the agenda for 2010 is an idea for a 35mm motion picture and surround sound project that I have had in my head for far too long. Funding and producing film and complex sound works has always intimidated me, but in 2010 I will try. If all goes well I hope to produce the work sometime in 2011.


A huge thanks to Jessica for answering all of our questions! We've almost reached the end of our Hot Shot Q&A series, but our final Q&A for this round, with Hot Shot Marisa Aragona, will run on Monday so be sure to check back.

01:16 PM . Filed under: 2009 Second Edition Hot Shots

Joel Meyerowitz and Lesley A. Martin Discuss "The Urban Sublime" Tomorrow at NYPL

By Casey on January 11, 2010 11:11 AM

meyerowitz.jpg

This Tuesday, January 12th, you're invited to a conversation between Hey, Hot Shot! panelist and publisher of the Aperture Foundation's book program, Lesley A. Martin and photographer Joel Meyerowitz. The two will be discussing Meyerowitz's book Legacy, a result of the first government commission to document public parks in New York City since the 1930's. As any New Yorker will tell you, our beloved parks—all nine-thousand acres of them—are thriving some eighty years since the documentation first began. Here are some more details about the event:

Ms. Martin, who edited the book, will talk with Meyerowitz about how this ambitious project evolved from conception to completion, what surprises he encountered in the course of discovering these corners of nature hidden within the concrete world of the city, and how Legacy connects with his first New York project documenting Ground Zero for nine months following 9/11, which resulted in the publication of Aftermath: The World Trade Center Archive.

This discussion is part of the "Architectural Explorations in Books" series at the New York Public Library, a program of events which seeks to "delve into the critical role that architecture books play in the understanding of contemporary urban developments and structures." Not only is Tuesday's discussion a great opportunity to learn about photo books and the evolution of parks and green spaces in New York City, but it is totally free and open to the public.

The Urban Sublime at The New York Public Library
Joel Meyerowitz in conversation with Lesley A. Martin
Tuesday January 12, 2010
6:00 p.m.

Stephen A. Schwarzman Building
Margaret Liebman Berger Forum
Room 227 (2nd Floor)
476 Fifth Avenue (5th Avenue & 42nd Street)
New York, NY 10018

11:11 AM . Filed under: Panelists

Hot Shot Q&A: Justin James King

By Casey on January 11, 2010 12:10 AM

HHS_King_InfiniteMomentum4.jpgAnd Still We Gather With Infinite Momentum 4, 2009 by Justin James King

Justin James King's work immediately distinguished itself among entries during this round of competition. Conceptual, witty, and critically reflective of photography itself, his series And Still We Gather With Infinite Momentum depicts sightseers gaping and pointing at a null black void. At such tourist sites, it seems redundant to actually depict the vistas, because, as Justin says, all we really see are "preconceived notions and pre-experienced views." Read Justin's bio and statement on his Hot Shot profile, and more on our contender post; herewith, a Q&A with Hot Shot Justin James King.


From:
I was born and raised in Saratoga Springs, New York. I lived in Florida from about age eleven to fourteen, but we moved back to Saratoga just before I started junior high school. I didn't know it at the time, but growing up in an historic town would come to have a big effect on themes in my work.

Formal and/or informal education and training:
I went to art school in Boston at The Museum School, but my real education came from reading Beuys and Duchamp. They taught me to see meaning in everything. School gave me the formal language to talk about my decision-making, but it was reading other artists that taught me how to think critically about my choices and consider all the possibilities.
I shoot primarily with a 4x5 camera. Using a large-format camera was something that I learned on my own; it is an expensive way of working but the results are worth it.

How you pay the bills:
Ah yes, paying the bills. When I first moved to New York, I worked in retail and as an intern for two of my favorite artists/photographers, Mike and Doug Starn. Getting a chance to work for them was a gift. Retail is where I am right now (a manager). It's flexible, it pays pretty good and the people I work with are great...it works for now.

Best advice you ever received as a photographer (and/or as a human):
(in that order?!)
Put your head down and work—trust your ideas.
The other bit of advice is from a bumper sticker I saw a long time ago. It goes: When all else fails, go fishing!

Top 3 Favorite Artists:
I look at tons of work and the list of people whose work I like is long...but three artists that I always come back to are William Henry Jackson, Richard Long, and Frederic Edwin Church.

Photograph (or other work of art) that you can't get out of your head,
ever:

Images that are starting to form and that I have yet to shoot, those are the images that I can't get out of my head.

Reading now:
Rebecca Solnit, Storming the Gates of Paradise: Landscapes for Politics
Charles Saatchi, My Name is Charles Saatchi and I Am an Artoholic
George Stewart, Names on the Land

Top websites/blogs:
Here are a few blogs that I look at pretty regularly:
Fecal Face
American Suburb X
Mossless
Welcome to the Broadcast

What project or idea are you working on now?
I'm working on more images for the And Still We Gather With Infinite Momentum series. I went out to Wyoming last year with a few specific shots in mind and was unable to get them because of a giant snow storm in June; the roads were closed and everything was shut down. I'm going back to Wyoming this spring. The trip will include shooting locations in other states and a few other projects will begin to take shape during those travels.

12:10 AM . Filed under: 2009 Second Edition Hot Shots

Week in Review: January 8th, 2010

By Casey on January 8, 2010 12:04 PM

umbrico_suns_pdp.jpg 5,537,594 Suns by Penelope Umbrico

Hello dear readers and photographers. We're starting a new series called Week in Review, where we reminisce on the highlights of each week, point out some great things we saw on the internet, and drop hints about what the future holds!

Openings:

- On Wednesday, a whole bunch of us headed to Brooklyn to catch the opening of Leonards for Leonard & 5,537,594 Suns (above), two found-photographic installations at BAM by Penelope Umbrico (also a 20x200 edition-maker). The works are photographic in the unorthodox sense that Umbrico used printouts of photographs she found on Google Images and Flickr to create her installations. See this next time you catch a movie at BAM, highly recommended!

Natman Room, BAM Peter Jay Sharp Building
Jan 6-Mar 14, 2010
30 Lafayette Ave, Brooklyn, NY

- Versus, a show pitting photographers against each other as well as pairing them together, opened at Hous Projects yesterday. The show includes 2008 Second Edition Hot Shot Cara Phillips, photographer and 20x200 edition-maker Brian Ulrich, and 2008 Second Edition Honorable Mention Alex Leme, among others.

Hous Projects
Mon-Sat, 10 am-6 pm
January 7 - March 8, 2010 31 Howard Street 2nd fl
New York, New York

Hot Shot Q&As:
- We want to get to know the person behind the camera so each round of HHS! we send out our trusty questionnaire to each of the Hot Shots. This week we heard from Leah Tepper Byrne and Alejandro Cartagena. The last three Q&As will run this coming Monday, Wednesday and the Monday after that, so get pumped and stay tuned.


On the web:

- As if three blogs wasn't enough for you, JBP is officially on Tumblr! We haven't made a fuss about it yet since we're still kicking the tires, but it's a casual running dialogue from our team in New York (a.k.a. an opportunity for us to share the funny things we find on the internet and drop hints about upcoming editions, exhibitions and things you can look forward to from JBP). If you're on Tumblr, follow us for the inside scoop.

- 01 Magazine released their Photography Issue including the work of Summer 2005 Hot Shot Noah Kalina and 2009 Second Edition Hot Shot Jessica Eaton.

- Online art resource Culturehall presented a showcase of work including the Aura Portraits of Fall 2007 Hot Shot Carlo Van de Roer and work by Honorable Mention Alex Leme. The showcase, which also includes Gina Levay and Matthew Pillsbury, was curated by Ruben Natal-San Miguel (also curator of the aforementioned Versus show) and runs on the front page of Culturehall through January 12th.

- We're not entirely sure whether Polaroid fans should rejoice or beware, all we know for sure is that Lady Gaga has officially been appointed Creative Director of Polaroid.

- Tomorrow is your very last day to catch Mixtape at Jen Bekman Gallery so scurry on down to Spring Street and check it out. There are lots of Hot Shots in the show and I can attest to the fact that the work is even more impressive in person than on the screen. After this show comes down JBG will be unveiling What You're Told, the NYC debut solo show of painter Clare Grill.

12:04 PM . Filed under: Week in Review

Review with Jeffrey and Sara at the powerHouse Portfolio Review

By Casey on January 8, 2010 11:31 AM

powerhouse-portfolio-review

Where will we be on February 28, 2010? At the annual powerHouse Books photography portfolio review!

The Sixth Annual powerHouse Portfolio Review event [is] a platform for all levels of aspiring and professional photographers to present their body of work to be reviewed and critiqued by leading experts in the fields of photography, art, media, and advertising and to receive guidance and mentoring for future artistic and commercial career development.

This year the panel of experts includes our own Jeffrey Teuton, Associate Director of Jen Bekman Gallery, and Sara Distin, Associate Director of Jen Bekman Projects. Each photographer who signs up will be assigned five one-on-one reviews of his or her portfolio. Reviews such as these are an extremely valuable way to develop your artistic practice, as well as get on the radar of experts like ours. We’ll make sure to keep reminding you about this awesome opportunity as it approaches, but for the early birds who do their research: the full list of reviewers, and much more information, is available on the powerHouse website.

The registration form (pdf) is available online, and we recommend that you sign up as early as possible because there is a 100 person cap on the event.

11:31 AM . Filed under: Of Interest

Versus, Opening TONIGHT at Hous Projects

By Casey on January 7, 2010 11:28 AM

landreth.jpg Meg and Renee, 2007 by Molly Landreth

If you are in New York tonight, don't miss the opening of what looks to be a remarkable show: Versus at Hous Projects. As with the current feature at culturehall mentioned here earlier, this exhibition is curated Ruben Natal-San Miguel, but features more artists, is in a physical space, and is organized with an intriguing curatorial concept. The artists here—including 2008 Second Edition Hot Shot Cara Phillips, Winter 2007 Hot Shot Molly Landreth, 2009 Second Edition Honorable Mention Alex Leme, as well as 20x200 edition-maker Brian Ulrich—are paired off, which should result in some unpredictable creative friction. Can't wait to see Michael Wolf's stately architectural photographs next to Gina LeVay's images of underground tunnelers, and Jen Davis's subdued meditations on domestic self and body image aside Eric Ogden's beatific photos of Penelope Cruz. From Ruben's curatorial statement:

Compared and contrasted, each artist dissects and highlights the other through juxtapositions of subject matter, composition, style, lighting and technique. The exhibition is a cornucopia, yet the underlining tone is one that allows each of these strong voices to sing and praise the body as a whole whose refrain is socially relevant, neither mundane nor negative or shallow and is extremely timely. It is ever amazing how much courage it takes to live an ordinary life, but this exhibition hopes to cull and inspire in each viewer the motivation to embrace and own the good, usher it into their day to day and make the next year as well as decade one of positivity and strength.

VERSUS

Brian Ulrich vs. Alex Leme
Mickalene Thomas vs. Nadine Rovner
Hank Willis Thomas vs. Cara Phillips
Amy Elkins vs. Molly Landreth
Matthew Pillsbury vs. Kris Graves
Phil Toledano vs. Elizabeth Fleming
Zoe Strauss vs. Ruben Natal-San Miguel
Jen Davis vs. Eric Ogden
Michael Wolf vs. Gina LeVay

Opening: Thursday Jan 7, 2010, 6–10:30 pm
Gallery Hours Mon–Sat, 10 am–6 pm

Hous Projects
31 Howard Street 2nd fl
New York, New York
212.941.5801
info@housprojects.com

11:28 AM . Filed under: Exhibitions

Hot Shot Q&A: Alejandro Cartagena

By Casey on January 6, 2010 12:00 PM

fragmented2.jpg Untitled, from Fragmented Cities, by Alejandro Cartagena

In case you missed Monday's kick-off with Hot Shot Leah Tepper Byrne, welcome to our series of 2009 Second Edition Hot Shot Q&As. Today we have a few questions for artist, lecturer, writer, and Hot Shot Alejandro Cartagena. Alejandro is currently documenting suburban sprawl south of the phenomenon's North American birthplace: Mexico. With his photographs, however, he does "not overtly condemn these development projects;" rather, he seeks to examine the "yearning of a society for a fairer world in which to live." Alejandro's full statement and bio can be found on his Hot Shot profile, and don't miss his contender post which ran during the competition. Ladies and gentlemen, I give you Alejandro Cartagena:

From:
Born in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic. Raised in La Romana and Monterrey, Mexico.

Formal and/or informal education and training:
I received a bachelor in Leisure Management and am currently in an MA program in Visual Arts at Universidad Autónoma de Nuevo León (UANL) in Monterrey, set to graduate in 2011.

How you pay the bills:
I work at a photography center and also teach in the Faculty of Visual Arts at UANL and other schools.

Best advice you ever received as a photographer (and/or as a human):
Find a deeper meaning to whatever you are photographing.

Top 3 Favorite Artists:
Eugène Atget, Joel Sternfeld, Paul Graham

Photograph (or other work of art) that you can't get out of your head,
ever:

sternfeld_glen.jpg Glen Canyon Dam, Page, Arizona by Joel Sternfeld

Reading now:
Top 3 photo-related websites/blogs:
A Photo Editor, A Photo Student, Conscientious

Top 3 non-photo websites/blogs:
Series Yonkis (I have an addiction to Fringe, Lost and The Office), TED, iTunes U

What project or idea are you working on now?
A few things: a project on urban layering, another on the US-Mexico border, and one called Daydreamers, which is like an Episode One of the Suburbia Mexicana series.

Our huge thanks to Alejandro for taking the time to answer our questions! Join us again on Monday for another Hot Shot Q&A.

12:00 PM . Filed under: 2009 Second Edition Hot Shots

First 2010 Culturehall Feature With Carlo Van de Roer

By alan on January 5, 2010 1:00 PM

terence_k.jpgTerence Koh, 2008 by Carlo Van de Roer

The first biweekly feature of the new decade over at online art resource culturehall was curated by Ruben Natal-San Miguel of ARTmostfierce. Ruben selected four photographers in response to an invitation by culturehall's Tema Stauffer (one of three artists in Jen Bekman Gallery's inaugural exhibition in 2003, and who has also produced two great editions for 20x200) to select work that "communicated strong messages and reflected the direction of the medium in the new year." The resulting line-up, 2010: A New Year With Photographs, features work from Fall 2007 Hot Shot and 20x200 edition-maker Carlo Van de Roer's Portrait Machine project. From the culturehall announcement:

Carlo Van de Roer brings new meaning to contemporary portraiture with The Portrait Machine Project. Using AURA technology, Carlo creates portraits mostly of well-known artists and prominent figures in the art business. The color palette varies with the personality of the individual in front of the camera.

adultery.jpgAdultery, 2009 by Alex Leme

Also included is 2009 Second Edition Honorable Mention Alex Leme:

Alex Leme searches and explores the content of billboards and signs while driving aimlessly through the south of the United States in an area known as The Bible Belt....The subtext of his images demonstrate how far some fundamentalist religious institutions are willing to go to recruit new members and to warn their followers of the lure of the adult entertainment industry which threatens their faith.

These, as well as pieces by Gina Levay and Matthew Pillsbury, are right up front at culturehall until January 12—check it out!

01:00 PM . Filed under:

Hot Shot Q&A: Leah Tepper Byrne

By Casey on January 4, 2010 12:58 PM

ltb.jpgUntitled from the series Still Lives, by Leah Tepper Byrne

A few weeks ago we announced the 2009 Second Edition Hot Shots, an awesome group of photographers who we can't wait to work with! For the next few days we'll be running a Q&A with each of our newly crowned Hot Shots to get to know the people behind the cameras. All this, of course, will lead up to the Hey, Hot Shot! Showcase in early March at Jen Bekman Gallery, followed by solo shows from the year's to-be-declared Ne Plus Ultras.

Today we're kicking off the Q&As with 2009 Second Edition Hot Shot, Leah Tepper Byrne. Aside from graduating from one of the world's top programs in photojournalism, Leah is a performer trained in corporeal mime, a style of acting which emphasizes the creation of drama through body language rather than dialogue. Perhaps this is the source of the intense and silent empathy that seeps from Leah's photographs. Her ongoing series, Still Lives, tells the story of The Children's Village, a 150-year-old residential treatment center for teenage boys in upstate New York. It was these evocative images that caught the eye of our panel of judges and earned her the title of Hot Shot. You can read Leah's bio and artist statement in our previous post about her, but now without further ado, a Q&A with Leah Tepper Byrne:


From:
I was born in Montreal and grew up in Toronto, Canada.

Formal and/or informal education and training:
In undergrad I studied a combination of art history and critical theory, with some studio practice mixed in. When I graduated I was doing a lot of work with kids in difficult circumstances, which led me to a professional training program in trauma studies. That was before I started thinking seriously about photography. I moved to England a few years later, and while I was there a group of forensic anthropologists took me under their wing and trained me in the kind of field photography necessary for exhumations. I was interested in documenting how such efforts can help communities with the mourning process in the aftermath of war. It was fascinating, but at the same time very technical, with little room for creativity. Last year I went back to school to attend the photojournalism and documentary photography program at the International Center of Photography, which I finished in June 2008.

How you pay the bills:
I do a lot of odd jobs, both photography and non-photography-related. I also work at a bar in Brooklyn.

Best advice you ever received as a photographer (and/or as a human):
The most important thing you can do in this life is make yourself happy.

Top 3 Favorite Artists:
I have big trouble with favorites, but 3 artists whose work I really love are Egon Schiele, Anders Petersen, and Maya Deren.

Photograph (or other work of art) that you can't get out of your head, ever:
mikhailov.jpg Untitled, from Case History by Boris Mikhailov

Reading now:
Low Life, by Luc Sante

Top 3 photo-related websites/blogs:
There are so many! The ones I look at tend to rotate, but a few I really like and have been looking at recently are American Suburb X, nofound, and Prison Photography

Top 3 non-photo websites/blogs:
Radiolab on WNYC, Simply Recipes (I love to cook...), and TED

What project or idea are you working on now?
The work I submitted to Hey, Hot Shot! is part of an ongoing project, so mostly I'm continuing to work on that by collaborating with different organizations in the New York area committed to youth in the juvenile justice and foster care systems.

Thanks to Leah for taking the time to answer our questions! We'll be back with another Q&A with one of our 2009 Second Edition Hot Shots on Wednesday, so stay tuned.

12:58 PM . Filed under: 2009 Second Edition Hot Shots

Hot Shots Jessica Eaton and Noah Kalina in 01 Magazine

By Casey on January 2, 2010 10:28 AM

01mag.gif

I have to admit that I was unfamiliar with the Canadian 01 Magazine until the recent release of their fourth issue, dedicated to photography, but I am totally blown away. Their site is brimming with gigantic images, interviews, reviews, and essays (also check out their excellent blog).

There are lots of promising photographers in the mix as well as some familiar faces: Summer 2005 Hot Shot Noah Kalina is interviewed about his passion for collecting photo books, and newly crowned 2009 Second Edition Hot Shot Jessica Eaton reveals her conceptual and technical approach to making experimental photographs.

It's a treat to see so much interesting work and writing concentrated in one site. Congratulations to Noah and Jessica, and everyone at 01 on a great issue!

10:28 AM . Filed under: Hot Shots News



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