IMPORTANT NOTE

Stellazine has moved to stellakramer.com/category/stellazine



Thursday, July 29, 2010

Chelsea Art Walk Tonight 5pm - 8pm



There are all kinds of events at all kinds of galleries. For more information

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Thursday, July 22, 2010

Tonight in New York--Care of Ward 81


Tonight is Bill Diodato's book release/show of "Care of Ward 81," the first of two books on the subject. Located at the Oregon State Mental Hospital (the hospital where One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest was filmed in 1976), Ward 81 was set up as a psychiatric ward to help women in need by providing them with medical attention and isolation. The event is being presented by Resource Magazine.

From the Introduction by Bill Diodato:_“…. Entering Ward 81, I found each room vibrated with pastel colors, some walls even adorned with curiously upbeat art from the patients. All this beauty was contrasted with a dense chalky air, earthy odor and constant crackling of debris beneath my feet….In the end, I can’t say where exactly the many sleepless nights I spent pondering what happened to the women of Ward 81 have taken me. I simply do not know. If, by chance, it helps even just one woman and her family, I rest my head with a renewed sense of hope.”

Sun West Studios
450 West 31st St, 10th Floor (between 9th and 10th Ave)
7:00pm - 10:00pm

You must RSVP in order to attend.
PLEASE RSVP via Facebook or email: WARD81@RESOURCEMAGONLINE.COM

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Thursday, July 8, 2010

Manjari Sharma: The Shower Series

I first saw Manjari Sharma's project The Shower Series at ASMP's most recent portfolio review. It was not just such a fully realized project, but something so filled with sensuality, reverence and stillness, that I was blown away. Manjari is so full of energy and light, and her excitement is contagious. We spoke about the amazing success she has had since presenting this project to blogs and at portfolio reviews. I was struck by how the Web helped to propel the momentum of Manjari's work and career, and asked her to tell her story here.


How did you come to photography?

I came into photography by sheer fate. I never thought of photo as a career, even though in retrospect I had always been my family's "Kodak moment" girl on road trips. I was actually planning on pursuing dietetics in college. I got very turned off by the thickness of the food and nutrition text books actually. Also, the lenses on the reading glasses adorning the faces of the students in that department were so thick!

It's funny how vividly I remember that being the sole reason for me to drop the plan of being a dietician; visual communications, still photography sounded more attractive to me. I did exceeding well my first year (shamefully) without working very hard, receiving a merit of excellence for my images. That certificate was the turning point for me. I decided to take it very seriously and never looked back. I wasn't going to flirt with the camera anymore I decided--I entered into a committed relationship.

How did the shower project start?

I was actually centering my own showers around this light that came in through my bathroom window. For one hour it turned my shower space into this glorious sun room. I invited someone in for a dry portrait and then asked her if she had showered that day...so in essence the project started in a very simple way--following the light, and my heart of course.


The fourth person changed my project and made it into so much more. As I studied what happened to these people as they showered for me, I felt there was a ritualistic unveiling of the mind. The walls that somehow surround us and restrict us, came down in the shower and made people say some very personal things about their life to me. In my artist statement I attribute it to the intimacy of standing in the same bath tub, the washing down of the water and the shower thereby transforming into a confessional.

The project lasted for a year and just started back up a couple weeks ago actually.

Where did you find your models?

They were always 2nd, 3rd and 4th generation friends. I stayed away from people who were too close because I felt it took some of the nervous energy away.

Where did you shoot?


I shot the entire project in my shower in Brooklyn. My apartment was gut renovated when I moved in, and my shower is all marble, which certainly helped.

What did you do when you thought the project was ready?


I decided that when I had a pool of images ready I would contact a list of people--an admiration list--a list of online haunts I respected, and online portals where I went to learn and get inspired.

Can you take us through the steps of showing it, portfolio reviews, gallery representation, show, etc?

I firstly showed the work when I had shot maybe six people and made a little self bound book that I took to a Fine Art portfolio review where I showed it to a handful of reviewers. I got some great feedback about it at its midway point, which I now think in retrospect was crucial! I then showed it at a Commercial Portfolio review, a few months later, and showed it to agents like Joe Pritchard from Vaughn Hannigan, to Redux Images and PDN. This gave me great insight into the project's commercial and editorial capabilities.

On a personal level, I was shooting the project as a fine art piece, purely for the concept I was after.

I submitted it to PDN's Photo of the Day and got selected, which gave me some initial high visibility online. Chronologically I then entered my work in a Centre for Fine Art Photography competition and two pieces were selected by John Paul Caponigro for a "Water" themed exhibit. This was my first group exhibit for the series.


All along the way I did small informational interviews with industry folks like Jacqueline Bovaird of Glasshouse Assignments and Jonathan Cherry of Mull It Over. These were just small ways to make sure that this body of work in progress was still on people's radar.

Finally in December when I felt I had a good set of final images together, I wrote to David Bram of Fraction Magazine who blogged about me as "a must see". From there I got picked up by Aline Smithson's Lenscratch and Exposure Compensation, which is a blog I greatly admired. The interesting parts to me, were the blogs that picked me that I did not submit to, like Notcot, KameraKuntz, 180 Magazine, Boing Boing, and Detangle.us. These were all blogs that contacted me to run my work after seeing it on other blogs.

Some of these blogs were followed by design lovers which opened the work up to a bigger audience, making it interesting to design portals like Beautiful Decay. In the following months I got picked up by blogs in Italy, Scotland, Germany and then Leica's blog in China, all through a chain reaction off of other blogs. It was great to see the work just jump from one cloud to another.

Nina Buesing Corvallo
from nymphoto did an interview of my work and finally PDN Edu decided to spotlight The Shower Series as one to watch for their spring portraiture issue, running my image as a cover for their magazine. Some of my most recent and strongest response was from Burn Magazine. They ran a great edit of the work as recently as a couple months ago. To view a complete list of people that showed this work feel free to visit the website.

Via all of this blog success which was so exciting and humbling, I got contacted in March by Richard Levy from Levy Gallery based in New Mexico. Richard expressed his interest in picking me up as an artist for his roster and took me to the San Francisco Art Fair. Richard has since offered me a solo show and will also be taking me as one of his three premier artists to Art Miami 2010 in December.

The most important part in all of this is to certainly remember that:
A) It's about forgetting about all of the above and actually making work that is true to the artist you are
B) When making it, let it be seen by some trusted eyes because as artists we can get too close to our projects
C) To develop it, and particularly remember that no one knows what you're up to unless you inform them.

It's like every day, you have to wake up and fall in love with what you do again. And if you truly love it, then share it with conviction and know that infectiously those others are bound to love it too. It of course does have to come from a place of sincerity for all of this to translate and work.

How did the advertising job come to you?

The advertising job was certainly another blessing of the blogosphere. While this work was being bounced around a lot on the blogs early this year, an art director from Delhi happened upon it and pitched me to Grohe, a German company that manufactures high end shower heads and faucets. Grohe was launching in a big way in India and I got hired for an advertising campaign based on this personal project. The job was to shoot ten Indian models under the shower, enjoying water under Grohe's products.

The work is currently being shown on billboards in eighteen cities in India. This was again so graciously another treat from the work being out in the open and being available to be recognized.

What steps should people take when they’ve finished (or think they’ve finished) a project?

I think people should be open to taking feedback from trusted sources as the project develops. In my case it gave me tremendous chutzpa when I showed it around to run harder with my concept. Of course you have to somewhat feel resolved at your own level with it before you show it to people. It's very important to have your hand on the pulse of what is going on in the scene. My Google Reader is chock full with blogs I respect and I've always been up on as much industry news as I can be.

I definitely think that work should be made from the core of your heart. Certainly whilst making the work the mind has to be uncluttered and not focused on who may be impressed with it and run it. But once it is created, it cannot live in a vacuum. It needs to breathe and air on other platforms--online, and in print. As artists, we must allow other peoples' seasoned eyes to fall upon it. Or else it's like a delicious meal that is not being eaten and thus appreciated.

I always think of a body of work/a project as an album of composed songs that needs to be released. Once the CD release party is over and done with the world will interpret it, love it, dislike it, be intrigued by it and/or be depressed or disturbed by it. The work has to be allowed to evoke a response. Without that, it is just like a tree that fell in the woods that no one heard.

So my word of advice would be to read, be up on the blogs, take advice and feedback from peers and be open to rejection. The people who critiqued my work early on, in good and bad ways, were certainly in on shaping it. I did ultimately do what I wanted to, but to hear from incredible industry professionals that the work has a strong back bone is such great reinforcement while it's still in production.

So get it out there.

What's next?

A new project is already brewing, more will be revealed about it on my blog so stay tuned!

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Thursday, July 1, 2010

Last day to see MSF's Starved for Attention exhibition in New York!



Starved for Attention: The Crisis of Childhood Malnutrition

Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) and VII Photo present “Starved for Attention,” a multimedia campaign exposing the neglected and largely invisible crisis of childhood malnutrition.

Starved for Attention” aims to rewrite the story of malnutrition through a series of multimedia documentaries that seamlessly blend photography and video from some of the most accomplished and award-winning photojournalists working today.

VII photojournalists Marcus Bleasdale, Jessica Dimmock, Ron Haviv, Antonin Kratochvil, Franco Pagetti, Stephanie Sinclair, and John Stanmeyer traveled to malnutrition “hotspots” around the world—from war zones to emerging economies—to shed light on the underlying causes of the malnutrition crisis and innovative approaches to combat this condition.

Starved for Attention” captures frontline stories of malnutrition from Bangladesh, Burkina Faso, Democratic Republic of Congo, Djibouti, India, Mexico, and the United States.

VII GALLERY
28 Jay Street
DUMBO, Brooklyn
(Two blocks north of the York Street F-Train Station)
Gallery opens at 10:00 AM — Reception begins at 5:30 PM

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