Monday, June 7, 2010

TIPS ON RENTING PHOTO EQUIPMENT

Foto Care shares Tips on Renting Photography Equipment

Today, we’re interviewing Fred Blake, Business Partner and Manager of Foto care Rentals. Fred, having been in the photo industry for many years, has a particularly broad knowledge base incorporating both the shooting, manufacturing and retail sides of the photo industry. Fred has been with Foto Care for fifteen years.

First off, why would a photographer consider renting equipment?

Many reasons:

For the professional, if they’re in need of a product they may not currently own, or perhaps a piece may be too expensive for them to purchase at that time; this is where we can help out. Other times, we may have a photographer that’s called to do a very particular type of job where they may only need specific equipment once.

For passionate amateurs, renting allows them to take various gear out for test-drives to see what works for them. While at the same time, it gives them access to a broader range of gear when special occasions like vacations, weddings, births or graduations come up.

Most of the time it’s more economical, technology moves faster than the time it takes some equipment to pay for itself (especially digital and hybrid video cameras)

How do I choose a good Rental Facility?

Honestly, price shouldn’t be the primary consideration. Most rental houses are in the same ballpark. For us, we pride ourselves on working with our customers based on their budget restrictions or working within the specific budget for the project at hand.

Proximity and accessibility should be factored in as well. There may be times where on site training on a product may be the best way to learn. Most importantly, a facility’s breadth and depth of its equipment is the leading reason as to where one should rent. Can a facility support what it rents? Can a facility suggest the best tools for the job? At Foto Care, this is what we pride ourselves on.

Talk to us about your staff’s knowledge:

Our staff has been with us an average of eight years, with some having been here for decades. The fact that we’re all passionate techies makes this not seem like work. We go out of our way to test drive every piece of equipment. It’s amazing how eager everyone is to get to know the hardware as soon as it comes in. Plus, part of our job is to be able to troubleshoot with our customers over the phone so we all need to understand the ins and out of each piece of gear we rent.

All of us have our particular areas of expertise but everyone seems to have jumped on the video bandwagon in a big way. We are becoming video hybrid experts. Things have been moving so fast that keeping up is critical. Video is just exploding. We’re adding microphones, special lighting and lenses that we’ve never had before based on demand and interest.

Talk to us more about the depth of equipment you offer?

Having the newest/latest equipment available for our customers is critical. And not just one or two either. Our depth of equipment and inventory (usually having 10 or more of something) is key. For example: We have more then 90 broncolor powerpacks; more than anyone in the country.

Foto Care has built a reputation on Outstanding Customer Service. How does that apply to Rentals?

It’s always been important, I remember one time Avedon Studios called from India with a problem: They were shooting the Dalai Lhama in 8 x 10 format with very limited time restrictions so every piece of film needed to be usable. With exposures all over the map, they needed to process the film by inspection so we ended up finding them night vision equipment to help them process their film.

These days, some of our newer customers will call to discuss various lighting scenarios they are considering and ask for our recommendations. Helping problem solve with them is one of the highlights of our day. In fact, often we’ll set up lights here at our facility to show them a particular setup. Fortunately, our facility is quite large and allows us to show a variety of setups to our customers. The time investment for us is important because this is their job at stake, and we see ourselves as a trusted partner in their business. And this doesn’t just apply to the working professional. We want all of our customers to be comfortable with the gear they rent from us. That’s why they keep coming back.

What can a customer do to ensure they get the best results?

1. Call orders in advance:

Most errors are made when under pressure. If this is unavoidable, check your equipment before you leave. Ten minuets at the counter can save you two hours in set.

2. Ask questions:

We’re not just handing out a box with no support. We expect our customers to ask us questions. In fact, we encourage it. We’d rather help answer all your questions when you’re placing an order or when you pick it up as opposed to when you are out on location or back in your studio. And b all means, keep asking questions until you are comfortable and satisfied. In photography there is more than one way to achieve most goals.

What do you recommend for customers consistently ordering over the phone?

If you start an order over the phone, get the name of the rental technician. This way, if you call to follow up with questions, there is continuity by dealing with the same person. We also except orders via email. Really, its whatever works best for you as a customer.

When picking up an order, what should customers know and do?

Go through your equipment. Look at it. We try to pack orders as accurately as possible but there can be misunderstandings. Sometimes funny ones: Someone the other day asked for a “Gary Coleman” C-Stand. Huh? Hadn’t heard that one before. What they wanted was a short 20” C-stand versus a 40” stand. With all the slang in our industry, it’s easy to misunderstand what folks are sometimes looking for.

What are some of the things to keep an eye out for?

Clean, maintained equipment, especially clean sensors. It’s a matter of pride with us. You can tell a lot about a rental facility by how clean and well maintained their inventory is.

Anything else people need to know?

All rental houses in NYC require deposits, valid identification, and, in some cases, proof of insurance. It’s a very good idea for photographers to have insurance. This not only protects the photographer but the rental department can take a reduced security deposit for the value of the deductible.

Is there anything else you want customers to know?

Foto Care constantly offers seminars and lectures for continuing education of our customers so check our website and sign-up for the Foto Care Newsletter which comes out twice month. And get out and shoot.

ShareThis

June 7th, 2010 | Tags: battery pack, battery strobe, beauty dish, broncolor, c stand, camera stand, equipment, fashion, fashion power pack, Foba, foto care, fotocare, gear, grafit, grip, hmi, kobold, lighting, Lighting Seminar, nyc, para, parabolic reflector, power pack, pulso, reflector, rental, rental department, rental house, rentals, ringflash, scoro, special lighting, strobe, studio, studio lighting, technician, unilite, verso, video | Category: California Sunbounce, Foba, Interesting Stuff, Lighting Tips, Sinar, Technical Tips, broncolor, kobold | Leave a comment | Colin King

Saturday, June 5, 2010

Photo Assistants Boot Camp.

The original 1ProPhoto.Com Photo Assistant Boot Camp July 10-11 2010
By JamesNYCJune 5. 2010 07:37
Our next 1ProPhoto.Com Photo Assistant Boot Camp will be July 10-11 2010 http://www.photoassistantbootcamp.com And will feature ProFoto studio strobes & K5600 continuous lighting.
This is not some 2-4 hour sit around seminar were your stuck listening to photo company sales reps.try and sell you shit you can't afford.
This is a real world hands on event that will actually prepare you for working on set.
Our Photo Assistant Boot Camp is held in a real NYC studio, not some corporate event space cramped school venue.
Yes I'm well aware that others in the past two years have been offering something they call a Photo Assistant Boot Camp.
But in the end those that have gone to these events have always ended up attending Boot Camp, and wondered why they wasted their time going else where.
Check out this link for full details. http://www.photoassistantbootcamp.com

What every photography school student needs to know.

What every photography school student needs to know.
By JamesNYCFebruary 21. 2010 14:00
During the last 6 years of teaching workshops promoted through my sites, I have come in contact with hundreds of photo school / college grads that have felt cheated after spending up wards and beyond $160,000 for an education that has left them unprepared and unqualified for working in the real world of commercial photography.

So here is some of what I have come to find, and what they have personally revealed to me, in no specific order.
Unless you absolutely positively can not live a full life with out taking pictures or making images every single day of your life, do not pursue a career in photography.

If you are the type of person that needs emotional, financial, and job stability do not get into photography.

Know your photographic history. you can not move forward without acknowledging the past.
And know whom from the past you can stealthy "barrow" from.

If you believe that by taking photography classes in high school, college, or other will make you a photographer it won't

If after taking photography classes you are under the impression that you will be able to move to a major photo market like New York and become the next Avedon you will not.
Photographers are competing on a world stage and there are thousands of highly skilled over qualified photographers that have worked as assistants, digital techs, lighting techs, and producers for some of the most famous and infamous photographers in the world and you will have to wait your turn behind them as you are competing for the few jobs available.
(Many of those have been doing this for nearly 20 years and have been cultivating business contacts for as long.)
A question to all:
How many of you have the type of personality that allows you to walk into a room and begin introducing yourself to strangers and in 60 minutes have been able to make 20 new contacts?
(After a show of hands)
Those of you that did not raise your hand will probably never make it in commercial photography because networking is as important as being able to push a button and make a great image.
Those of you that did raise your hand probably have a 1 in 250,000 shot at being able to make a living at photography and a 1 in 200 million shot at becoming the next Avedon.

Knowing Photoshop does not make you a photographer, nor does it make you a qualified digital tech.

Big name photographers are looking for highly skilled people to work with. (link is to a job listing for Mark Seliger from last year)
http://www.1prophoto.com/CMSblog/post/2009/10/21/What-a-famous-photographer-is-looking-for-in-a-new-Fill-time-first-assistant.aspx

If all you know is digital you are severly under qualified.

If you do not know lighting you do not know photography.
Study sales, marketing, contract law, business, finance, advertising in school. Learn photography from photo assisting.
Professional photographers do it in the camera not in Photoshop.

Becoming a photo assistant is the best way to learn what to do and what not to do in running a photo shoot and the business of a photographer.

As a photo assistant never ever bring your portfolio to a shoot, never pass out your business cards to clients, do not date models or anyone else in the industry, keep your drink and drugs at home, show up on time always, wear clean clothes, shower, shave, ...

When trying to get work as an assistant work for as many photographers as you can and for as many types of photographers as you can.
The best being still life and editorial or corp. portraiture photographers. They will teach you lighting and production skills that you will never learn working for the fashion guys.

If you only speak 1 language start learning another: Spanish, German, French, Japanese, Italian, Portuguese, Chinese.

All photographers are insecure and most are frustrated musicians too.

When you are not working on a shoot you need to be looking for that next job, when your not doing either you need to be working on your portfolio or next series of images.
If your not doing this or something that will drive success to your business you are not serious about becoming a photographer.

Very few photographers have successful marriages or relationships.
Decide early on what your priorities are so that neither you or your potential partners are disappointed.
How ever there are those very rare occasions when you may meet someone that is willing to tolerate playing second to your photography.
When you find them keep them at all costs.

Photography is about communication(s). you need to develop your verbal communication skills as well as you photographic skills.
Clients do not always,...well actually they almost NEVER know what they want and it is sometime up to you to be able to pull their thoughts out of their heads.
If you do not have good communication skills as well as a good vocabulary you may not be able to express yourself adequately to your potential clients and both they and you lose out.

Beginning today,...Do not burn any bridges EVER.
Odds are that someone here to day or in your graduating class will be in a position to advance you or your career in the future.
Piss someone off now and they will only remember that aspect of your personality later.

With that in mind, "Always pay it forward" it costs you nothing and helps down the road.

Have a backup plan, and no, being a rockstar is not a back up plan.
Realize that hundreds of thousands of students graduate every semester believing that they will be on the road to fame and fortune.
What no one has told them is that most of us have spent a great deal of time living with roommates or a small east village apartment, eating Mac & Cheese and tuna out of a can on those none shoot days when there is no catering to take home as our next meal.

If your not working, shoot every day.

Edit Edit Edit. and then edit the crap that you kept as filler.

You must be proactive, make those cold calls, send out promo pieces regardless of the type of jobs you are looking for.

Maintain good credit, pay your bills, pay your freelancers first, and keep your reputation in tact.

Everyone talks in the photo world and everyone knows most of everyone else's business.
Bad news travels very fast in the photo world, so make sure the only thing people have to say about you is positive.

Keep your private life private and your opinions to yourself.
Even after you think that your becoming friends with a photographer your not, your still a freelancer hoping to keep working with them.

Internships are not positions of indentured servitude.
Do not take an internship unless there are clear guide lines as to your responsibilities and clear statement of on the job learning opportunities.
Too many students have ended up walking the dog, picking up dry cleaning, doing house work, parking cars, cleaning up after the dog, baby sitting, taking the kids to ballet or karate class, or picking up after the homeless guy that dumps in front of the photographers studio every morning.

When you get a phone call and the person on th eother end hems and haws on the type of job, terms of payment or other details about the job they are trying to book you for,
the odds are you will never get paid for that job.
Tell then your not available to work that day.

Never tell a photographer that you do not like his work or do not wish to work with them.
Try 1 of the following.
"I'm sorry but I'm booked for the next week, perhaps another time in the future."
"I'm sorry but another photographer has first option on me for that week, if it opens up I can call back."
I'm sorry but I'm out of town on those days."

This is a business and you need to treat it as such.
It's all well and good that we get paid to make pretty pictures but at the end of the day you need to get paid for your work, be it photographer, assistant, catering, hair & make up, stylist, location van driver, location scout,
NO ONE WORKS FOR FREE!
If you can handle the fact that the photo industry operates like the wild west and has no standards or practices, it's the best job in the world.

What photographers look for in full-time assistants

What a famous photographer is looking for in a new Fill-time first assistant.
By ROKKSTAROctober 21. 2009 15:29
Every once in awhile we get job postings which we post for everyone. But sometimes we hear about positions that are so sweat we go after them ourselves. The following was passed along discreatly to us regarding a very famous photographer that is currently looking for a full-time first assistant. Note the extensive skill set that would get you considerd for the job. Next time you say no one shoots film, think again. And for those of you still in photo school, these are the things your school should be teaching you.

Attention experienced NYC photo assistants:

Currently, there is an opportunity to work fulltime as a photo assistant for (Photographers name here).

Who we are looking for:

We are looking for a seasoned assistant (minimum two years assisting experience) with an upbeat and enthusiastic attitude and a strong work ethic. All candidates must possess the ability to operate effectively and efficiently under high-pressure photo assisting situations.



Time Commitment:

We are looking for a minimum of a two-year commitment following an eight-month training period.

Skill Sets Needed for the position:

-Experience using the following analog and digital camera systems: Canon and Nikon digital 35mm systems, Hasselblad medium format camera system using PhaseOne digital backs, Mamiya RZ, Pentax 67, and the Sinar 4x5 and 8x10 large format systems.

-A strong background in using all types of grip equipment as well as the ability to manage the power needs of large-scale location and studio jobs.

-A high level of technical studio and location lighting experience using Profoto, Dynalite, and Briese lights and light shaping tools.

-Must have a great deal of experience using Photoshop (for retouching and workflow management) as well as Capture One.

-International travel experience (i.e. use of an equipment carnet) as a photo assistant.

-Experience in teching, rating, and developing film.

-Proficiency in traditional black and white printing is a bonus!

Responsibilities of the Full Time Assistants:

The responsibilities outlined below are split between the full time first and second assistants.

-Photoshoot Preproduction: creating equipment budgets, scouting shoot locations, placing equipment orders, building assistant team, and loading and teching film.

-Managing photo equipment rentals as well as overseeing and approving all photo-related billing/purchases.

-Onset management of crew, delegation of tasks, and working with (Photographers name) on-camera.

-Post-production: Low res retouching and compositing images, and overseeing postproduction (working as a liaison between (Photographers name) and client as well as retouching company and client).

-You will be responsible for the organization and maintenance of (Photographers name) extensive (to say the least) array of photographic, digital and camera equipment (including shoot computers), as well as our in-house studio and darkrooms.

Compensation:

Compensation is salary based and highly competitive.

If you meet the criteria outline above please email your cover letter and resume to :

Wednesday, May 12, 2010

THE NEW YORK PHOTO FESTIVAL 2010

THE NEW YORK PHOTO FESTIVAL 2010
Fri, 2010-02-26 15:46 — adminpgr01
Event-Organizer:
The New York Photo Festival (NYPH)
Event-Headline:
THE NEW YORK PHOTO FESTIVAL 2010
Event-Start-Date:
Wed, 2010-05-12
Event-End-Date:
Sun, 2010-05-16
Event-Description:
THE NEW YORK PHOTO FESTIVAL 2010
TO TAKE PLACE MAY 12‹16

Curated by Vince Aletti, Erik Kessels, Fred Ritchin and
Lou Reed

Three Years In, Organizers Have Succeeded AT Creating
the U.S.¹s First International-Level Photography Festival

The New York Photo Festival (NYPH) grew out of a simple and stark conundrum:
New York City, the world¹s capital of photography, had no major photography
festival. In fact, there was no American counterpart to the prestigious
festivals of Europe. To fill the void, Daniel Power of powerHouse Books and
Frank Evers, then the managing director of VII Photo Agency‹both based in
the creative hotbed of DUMBO, Brooklyn‹founded the New York Photo Festival
in 2008. After debuting to international acclaim, the festival grew in 2009,
in spite of the recession. The increasing success, especially given the
circumstances, has affirmed the vital demand for the New York Photo
Festival, as well as its staying power. The third annual festival will take
place May 12‹16, 2010 with expanded programming, more locations across the
city, and extended hours.

To help create NYPH¹10, Power, Evers, and Festival Director Sam Barzilay
have selected four world-class curators to bring their personal visions of
the most provocative and intriguing developments in contemporary photography
to the event¹s main pavilions: Vince Aletti, Erik Kessels, Fred Ritchin, and
Lou Reed. The curators¹ exhibitions will be announced soon.

The New York Photo Festival has become not only an essential destination for
photo professionals, amateurs and students from around the world, but also a
favorite event of art and culture aficionados. The programming includes
exhibitions, panel discussions, artists¹ stage presentations, slideshows and
accompanied projections, in addition to seminars and workshops.

As before, the main festival sites will be in the Brooklyn waterfront
community of DUMBO. However, this year, for the first time, events and
pre-festival activities will also take place in other parts of the city. The
festival organizers will offer free public admission to select exhibitions
in the main pavilions and reduced ticket prices for events. Exhibitions will
be open daily from 12:00 P.M. until 8:00 P.M.

As they have throughout the New York Photo Festival¹s first years, Two Trees
Management is once again acting as a major sponsor of the initiative,
providing sites and funding for festival programming.

About the NYPH¹10 Curators

Vince Aletti reviews photography exhibitions for The New Yorker's Goings On
About Town section and writes a regular column about photo books for
Photograph. He is the winner of the 2005 Infinity Award in writing from the
International Center of Photography, where he is currently an adjunct
curator. Aletti co-curated "Weird Beauty: Fashion Photography Now" with
Carol Squiers and is the curator of "This Is Not a Fashion Photograph," both
at ICP; he and Squiers worked together on ³Richard Avedon Fashion,² the
museum's summer 2009 exhibition, as well as on the catalog published by
Abrams.

Male, a book of photographs and other artwork from Aletti¹s personal
collection, was published by PPP Editions at the end of 2008. The Disco
Files 1973-78: New York¹s Underground, Week by Week, a compilation of record
reviews and club scene roundups by Aletti, was released by DJHistory.com in
2009.

Erik Kessels is a photography curator, writer, and picture anthropologist,
and a founding partner and creative director of KesselsKramer, an
independent, international communications agency located in Amsterdam. He
has curated exhibitions such as ³Loving Your Pictures² at the Centraal
Museum Utrecht, The Netherlands and at Les Rencontres d¹Arles Photographie,
France, and has published several books of his images‹including the In
Almost Every Picture series. Since 2000, he has been one of the editors of
the alternative photography magazine Useful Photography.

Kessels is an editorial contributor for both BON International and Identity
Matters, and he has lectured at the D&AD President¹s Lecture and at several
international design conferences in Singapore, Goa, Toronto, and Bangkok. He
has taught communication at Hallo© in Amsterdam and photography at the
Gerrit Rietveld Academie, also in Amsterdam. In 2008 he was an artist in
residence for the Amsterdam Academy of Architecture, where he curated a
celebration of amateurism. For the opening of the world¹s first graphic
design museum, in Breda, Erik organized an exhibition entitled ³The European
Championship of Graphic Design.² For the DVD art project Loud & Clear he
worked with artists such as Marlene Dumas and Candice Breitz. Kessels has
made commercial work for national and international clients such as Nike,
Diesel, J&B Whisky, Oxfam International, Ben Mobile, and the Hans Brinker
Budget Hotel, and has won an Effie, and the Cannes Press Lion (silver) for
Ad Agency of the Year and Ad Director of the Year.

Fred Ritchin is professor of Photography & Imaging at New York University¹s
Tisch School of the Arts. He is the author of After Photography (W. W.
Norton, 2009) and In Our Own Image: The Coming Revolution in Photography
(Aperture, 1990), and has co-authored books such as An Uncertain Grace: The
Photographs of Sebastião Salgado (Aperture, 1990), In Our Time: The World As
Seen by Magnum Photographers (W. W. Norton, 1989), and Mexico Through
Foreign Eyes: Photographs, 1850 1990 (W. W. Norton, 1993). His essays have
appeared in many other books, including Picture Imperfect by Kent Klich and
Under Fire: Great Photographers and Writers in Vietnam by Catherine Leroy.
Currently he is working on a new book, Outside the Frame, concerning
contemporary imagery and social change.

Ritchin is also director of PixelPress, an organization that has created
websites, books, and exhibitions that promote human rights and documentary
experimentation. He is the former picture editor of The New York Times
Magazine and Horizon magazine, former executive editor of Camera Arts
magazine, and the founding director of the Photojournalism and Documentary
Photography fulltime educational program at the International Center of
Photography. Ritchin was nominated for the Pulitzer Prize in public service
by The New York Times for the 1996 website, ³Bosnia: Uncertain Paths to
Peace,² which he co-created with photographer Gilles Peress. He also created
the first multimedia version of the daily New York Times in 1994. Ritchin
lectures and conducts workshops internationally on new and documentary
media.

Lou Reed is a playwright, poet, musician, and photographer whose photographs
have been exhibited worldwide. His third photography book, Romanticism, will
be released later this year on Edition 7L. He was named a Chevalier de
l'Ordre des Arts et des Lettres by the French government and is the
recipient of numerous other awards. He was inducted into the Rock and Roll
Hall of Fame in 1996 and is a founding member of the legendary band, the
Velvet Underground.

Reed released his first suite of electronic meditation music, Hudson River
Wind Meditations, on the Sounds True label in 2007. In late 2008 Reed
released a new album of live electronic music called Lou Reed's Metal
Machine Trio: The Creation of The Universe, which inspired two
extraordinarily well-received performances by the MM3 in New York, in April
of 2009. In December of 2006, Lou Reed premiered the live staging of his
masterwork Berlin at St. Ann¹s Warehouse in DUMBO, Brooklyn; the performance
was filmed by Academy Award-nominated director and artist Julian Schnabel.
Currently Reed is working on several projects including a collaboration with
artist Lorenzo Mattiotti on a graphic novel based on his album, The Raven; a
book of essays on Chen Tai Chi called The Art of the Straight Line, which is
slated for release in 2009; and continues to co-host a weekly radio show
with producer Hal Willner called The New York Shuffle.

About the New York Photo Festival

Designed to be an American counterpart and thematic successor to the
prestigious European photo festivals Les Rencontres d¹Arles, PHotoEspaña,
and Visa pour l¹Image, the New York Photo Festival creates an international
atmosphere of inspiring visual installations, professional and aficionado
fellowship and camaraderie, and news-worthy staged presentations, awards
ceremonies, and symposia over the course of four-and-a-half days during the
busiest photography month in New York City.

The festival was founded by Daniel Power and Frank Evers. The inaugural NYPH
(May 14 18, 2008) proved an astounding success, with over 15,000 tickets
sold, 2,500 industry professionals and artists, 1,000 members of the
international press, packed seating for all day and evening programming
events at St. Ann¹s Warehouse (450 capacity), 20 countries represented in
curated and satellite pavilions, 85,000 clicked site visits, 47,000 blog
posts, 2.5 million unique visits to www.nyphotofestival.com, 49 media
partners, and over 3,000 submissions from 87 countries for the New York
Photo Awards (www.newyorkphotoawards.com)
The New York Photo Festival 2009 (May 13-17, 2009) was bigger in all
respects.

The New York Photo Festival is headquartered in DUMBO, Brooklyn, NY.
Press Contact: Blake Zidell at Blake Zidell & Associates,
718.643.9052 or blake@blakezidell.com.

Event-Contact:
www.newyorkphotoawards.com

DUMBO PHOTO FESTIVAL

A PHOTO STUDENT
CLASS IS NOW IN SESSION...
THE ADVENTURES OF JAMES POMERANTZ IN PHOTO MFA LAND
HomeAbout + FAQsPhoto Writings
New York Photo Festival May 12-16, 2010
NYPH dates and curators have been announced for 2010. It’s always nice to wander around Dumbo on a sunny May afternoon, especially when there’s good photography hanging. There’s also the NYPH Awards which are worth entering.
The New York Photo Festival is pleased to announce—after a very successful and critically acclaimed recession-year festival edition in 2009, and its splendid 2008 debut—the festival curators and exhibition dates for 2010.

New York City’s premier photography festival will take place May 12–16, 2010; the main festival sites will return to the Brooklyn waterfront community of DUMBO for the third straight year, and the festival will also expand its programming and pre-festival activities, for the first time, into other parts of the city.

Dedicated to the mission of pushing the boundaries of contemporary photography and showcasing ideas of our collective photographic future, the New York Photo Festival and its organizers and co-founders Daniel Power and Frank Evers will be forging down this path once more: NYPH’10 will feature the personal visions of curators Vince Aletti, Erik Kessels, Fred Ritchin, and Lou Reed as they take hold of the many indoor and outdoor sites in the formerly industrial neighborhood.

NYPH’10 will also see new initiatives in programming, including later and extended exhibition hours; reduced fare and open attendance hours for the public; special New York Photo Awards featured presentations; and expanded site programming.




PRESENTING THE NEW YORK PHOTO FESTIVAL 2010 CURATORS:



Vince Aletti reviews photography exhibitions for The New Yorker’s Goings On About Town section and writes a regular column about photo books forPhotograph. He is the winner of the 2005 Infinity Award in writing from the International Center of Photography, where he is currently an adjunct curator. Aletti co-curated “Weird Beauty: Fashion Photography Now” with Carol Squiers and is the curator of “This Is Not a Fashion Photograph,” both at ICP; he and Squiers worked together on “Richard Avedon Fashion,” the museum’s summer 2009 exhibition, as well as on the catalog published by Abrams.

Male, a book of photographs and other artwork from Aletti’s personal collection, was published by PPP Editions at the end of 2008. The Disco Files 1973-78: New York’s Underground, Week by Week, a compilation of record reviews and club scene roundups by Aletti, was released by DJHistory.com in 2009.





Erik Kessels is a photography curator, writer, and picture anthropologist, and a founding partner and creative director of KesselsKramer, an independent, international communications agency located in Amsterdam. He has curated exhibitions such as “Loving Your Pictures” at the Centraal Museum Utrecht, The Netherlands and at Les Rencontres d’Arles Photographie, France, and has published several books of his images—including the In Almost Every Pictureseries. Since 2000, he has been one of the editors of the alternative photography magazine Useful Photography.

Kessels is an editorial contributor for both BON International and Identity Matters, and he has lectured at the D&AD President’s Lecture and at several international design conferences in Singapore, Goa, Toronto, and Bangkok. He has taught communication at Hallo© in Amsterdam and photography at the Gerrit Rietveld Academie, also in Amsterdam. In 2008 he was an artist in residence for the Amsterdam Academy of Architecture, where he curated a celebration of amateurism. For the opening of the world’s first graphic design museum, in Breda, Erik organized an exhibition entitled “The European Championship of Graphic Design.” For the DVD art project Loud & Clear he worked with artists such as Marlene Dumas and Candice Breitz. Kessels has made commercial work for national and international clients such as Nike, Diesel, J&B Whisky, Oxfam International, Ben Mobile, and the Hans Brinker Budget Hotel, and has won numerous international design awards.




Fred Ritchin is professor of Photography & Imaging at New York University’s Tisch School of the Arts. He is the author of After Photography (W. W. Norton, 2009) and In Our Own Image: The Coming Revolution in Photography(Aperture, 1990), and has co-authored books such as An Uncertain Grace: The Photographs of Sebastião Salgado (Aperture, 1990), In Our Time: The World As Seen by Magnum Photographers (W. W. Norton, 1989), and Mexico Through Foreign Eyes: Photographs, 1850–1990 (W. W. Norton, 1993). His essays have appeared in many other books, including Picture Imperfect by Kent Klich andUnder Fire: Great Photographers and Writers in Vietnam by Catherine Leroy. Currently he is working on a new book, Outside the Frame, concerning contemporary imagery and social change.

Ritchin is also director of PixelPress, an organization that has created websites, books, and exhibitions that promote human rights and documentary experimentation. He is the former picture editor of The New York Times Magazine and Horizon magazine, former executive editor of Camera Artsmagazine, and the founding director of the Photojournalism and Documentary Photography fulltime educational program at the International Center of Photography. Ritchin was nominated for the Pulitzer Prize in public service by The New York Times for the 1996 website, “Bosnia: Uncertain Paths to Peace,” which he co-created with photographer Gilles Peress. He also created the first multimedia version of the daily New York Times in 1994. Ritchin lectures and conducts workshops internationally on new and documentary media.



Lou Reed is a playwright, poet, musician, and photographer whose photographs have been exhibited worldwide. His third photography book, Romanticism, will be released later this year on Edition 7L. He was named a Chevalier de l’Ordre des Arts et des Lettres by the French government and is the recipient of numerous other awards. He was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1996 and is a founding member of the legendary band, the Velvet Underground.

Reed released his first suite of electronic mediation music, Hudson River Wind Meditations, on the Sounds True label in 2007. In late 2008 Reed released a new album of live electronic music called Lou Reed’s Metal Machine Trio: The Creation of The Universe, which inspired two extremely well received performances by the MM3 in New York, in April of 2009. In December of 2006 Lou Reed premiered the live staging of his masterwork play Berlin at St. Ann’s Warehouse in DUMBO, Brooklyn; the performance was filmed by Academy Award-nominated director and artist Julian Schnabel.

Currently Reed is working on several projects including a collaboration with artist Lorenzo Mattiotti on a graphic novel based on his album, The Raven; a book of essays on Chen Tai Chi called The Art of the Straight Line, which is slated for release in 2009; and continues to co-host a weekly radio show with producer Hal Willner called The New York Shuffle.
Share/Save
This was written by James Pomerantz. Posted on Monday, November 2, 2009, at 6:00 pm. Filed under Awards, Contemporary Art, Extracurricular Activities, Random. Bookmark the permalink. Follow comments here with the RSS feed. Post a comment or leave a trackback.
3 Comments

TIMOTHY BRINER wrote:
http://dsheaphoto.net/blog/?p=830

Tuesday, November 3, 2009 at 5:03 pm | Permalink
JAMES POMERANTZ wrote:
Frank Evers, Co-Chair/Co-Founder of NYPH posted the following
over at whatsthejackanory about their decision on this year’s curators:

We are thrilled with our curatorial choices, including Lou Reed, who I believe is really going to surprise a lot of people with his deep and current knowledge of contemporary photography. Along with his fellow festival curators, Erik Kessels, Vince Aletti and Fred Ritchin, this group represent as cerebral and thoughtful a team as we could possibly come up with this year. Considering that the twin pillars of NYPH are Ideas and Discovery, I am confident that this group will help make NYPH’10 a rousing success, while challenging and presenting us with works by an exciting new roster of important international artists.

I understand that some people feel that, regardless of this caliber, an all-male curatorial roster will somehow prevent the festival from showcasing female and international artists, or critical perspectives that ought to be on display. I would ask that such naysayers (including the anonymous ones), look at the festival’s track record both in past curated shows, satellite exhibitions and the Award (NYPHA) winners/honorable mentions. I would gladly match our collective contributions in just two years, in showcasing a diversity of contemporary artistic talent, to any other international festival of its kind. This year, I fully expect us to continue to lead in this area. (I might also add that next year’s roster has two amazing female curators already committed, so people also need to realize that the gender part is really how the cookies crumbles in terms of our ongoing engagement with the curatorial community).

Our ultimate goal is to create a space every year in NYC, where we can all gather to consider a wide range of works by international contemporary artists from around the world (male and female), in a context of scholarship and ideas crafted by our esteemed festival curators, talented satellite curators, and Awards Juries. Additionally, we are hoping that over time the larger photo community will use this event as an annual opportunity to gather, connect, share, and support each other. We are still a very young international festival, with huge expectations. We know that some of the things that we do don’t quite work, some of the ideas and artists don’t quite connect, but we’ve also had our hits too (as Andrew kindly pointed out) and we will continue to strive to improve our batting average over time. We face an ongoing challenge with limited funding and resources, but here we are at the end of the day…we are still standing and committed. We have more people than ever wanting to attend next year and participate, our online activity is already up over 500% over the same time last year (we are increasingly developing a very large international audience), so we know that we are heading in the right general direction, and we are fully committed to continuously improving the experience. We appreciate all the ideas, the concerns and the feedback, even the tough ones

Hang in there with us, and Thanks!

Frank Evers
Co-Chair/Co-Founder
New York Photo Festival (’08, ‘09, ‘10)

Tuesday, November 3, 2009 at 7:01 pm | Permalink
PETER VAN AGTMAEL wrote:
That’s awesome. I love lou reed.

‘If I ran for president
And once was a member of the klan
Wouldn’t you call me on it
The way I call you on farrakhan’

-Lou Reed, Good Evening Mr. Waldheim,

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kurt_Waldheim

Tuesday, November 3, 2009 at 7:19 pm | Permalink

Tuesday, May 4, 2010

QUESTION ON SHOOTING WITH CAPTURE ONE

Okay so say you are using the free version of capture one with the Canon Mark camera, can you shoot tethered with the free version because I cannot seem to get the camera to read.

with the free model can you only shoot using the phaze backs?


help please


PS can we have a review on the tethering kit? I have never received the full kit I do not know what half the wires are supposed to be used for

Monday, May 3, 2010

Dumbo Look Book








My fashion design major was Tina and this was her friend Stephanie, they were great! Jolene was my assistant and the 4 of us made a good team. The shoot was really calm and layed back. We used available light with a reflector and it was perfect until the sun went behind some haze, but it was still so bright that it was fine. It was the easiest fashion shoot I've ever done and it was a great back drop!

ASMP INFO / CHECK IT OUT!

WELCOME TO THE WEBSITE OF THE ASMP NEW YORK CHAPTER.

Quick Links

Events

Get the Most Out of Your ASMP Membership! - May 5th
Epson John Paul Caponigro and R. Mac Holbert event - May 12th
Copyright Society Event - May 12
Adobe Creative Suite Event - May 24
ASMP Fine Art Review 2010 - May 26
Programs and Contests

Image '10 is here - enter now!
ASMP Bestflow
Best of ASMP deadline is May 15, 2010
EVENT - May 5 - Get the Most Out of Your ASMP Membership!

This informative and festive evening will be an opportunity for new, seasoned and prospective ASMP members to discover all that ASMP has to offer:

Online resources Find-A-Photographer & Find-An-Assistant
Liability & Health Insurance discounts
2 Annual Portfolio Reviews
education programs
copyright advocacy campaigns
so much more!
ASMP is a national organization dedicated to supporting professional photographers with Best Business practices, industry advocacy, legal support and a strong community of passionate colleagues. NY chapter board members along with insurance reps and guest speakers will be on hand to answer all of your questions and provide details about ASMP membership benefits. Please strike up a conversation with one of us and enjoy refreshments, music and door prizes.

When
Wednesday, May 5th
7-9pm, doors open at 6:30pm

Where
SOHO PHOTO
15 White Street (between Church Street and West Broadway)
New York, 10013, (212) 226-8571 (MAP)

Costs
Free to all.

EVENT - May 24 - Adobe Creative Suite
with Julieanne Kost



Adobe Photoshop CS5 gives photographers a set of breakthrough tools to help you refine your images and get superior results faster than ever before. Learn how Photoshop CS5 redefines the state of the art with a strong focus on photography; breakthrough painting and selection capabilities; and a wide range of workflow and performance enhancements. During Julieanne's session you will see:


New selection technologies and tools
Content-Aware Fill
Superior HDR imaging with HDR Pro
Automated correction of lens distortions, chromatic aberration, vignetting, and more..
Improved raw conversions and state-of-the-art raw photographic noise removal, additive grain, post-crop vignetting, and more-plus support for JPEGs, TIFFs, and over 275 proprietary raw formats-with Adobe Camera Raw 6.
Precise recomposing or repositioning of any photo element for a more visually appealing result with easy-to-use Puppet Warp
Natural and realistic painting with the Mixer Brush and Bristle Tips, which let you easily change a photograph into a painting or create unique artistic effects
The integrated Lab B&W action for an easy and interactive way to convert color images;
An accelerated workflow with faster performance with GPU-enabled cropping, powerful new selection technology, and integrated Adobe® Mini Bridge
Improved integration with Adobe Photoshop Lightroom® for a complete photography solution


Julieanne Kost - jkost.com

Joining Adobe in 1992, Julieanne has learned her craft through hands-on experience and now serves as the Senior Digital Imaging Evangelist. Spanning digital imaging and illustration, her role includes customer education, product development, and market research. She is a frequent contributor to several publications, a speaker at numerous design conferences and tradeshows, and a teacher at distinguished photography workshops and fine art schools around the world.



Herself a passionate photographer, she combines her background in psychology in creating artwork, seen in several showings and published in several magazines. She is also the author behind the Comprehensive Photoshop CS3 training DVDs published by Software Cinema and author of Window Seat: The Art of Digital Photography and Creative Thinking published by O'Reilly.

When
Monday, May 24th
7-9pm, doors open at 6:30pm

Where
Union Square Photo Studios
833 Broadway, 2nd floor (corner of 13th Street)
New York, 10003 (MAP)

Costs
Free ASMP Member Free ASMP Leader
Free ASMP Student*
$30 non-member
$15 non-ASMP member Student*

Register Online:
https://asmp.org/education/event/register?venue_id=336

* At the event, you may be asked to show proof that you are eligible.

EVENT SPONSORS:
















DATE: MAY 26TH
LOCATION: CALUMET - 22 W. 22nd Street, 2nd fl

SCHEDULE:
6:00 Check-in
6:30 Introduction of reviewers
8:00 pm – 10 min break
9:00 pm – end of night

NOTE - THIS EVENT IS FREE AND ONLY AVAILABLE TO MEMBERS OF ASMP.
IN FACT, THIS MAY BE THE ONLY FREE REVIEW EVENT IN THE NEW YORK CITY AREA. WE VALUE THE PARTICIPATION OF SO MANY OUTSTANDING REVIEWERS.

If you are a member, register here: http://www.asmp.org/education/event/register?venue_id=334
If you are interested in participating in the review and are not a member, you may do so by becoming a member of ASMP. This event is just one of many we offer throughout the year - including the members-only Commercial Portfolio Review in the fall.
To become a member of ASMP, join here: https://asmp.org/join/application-form

Suggestions for photographers to read before the portfolio review:
Mary Virginia Swanson
A participant in the Student Program at FotoFest 2010

Suggestions for photographers to prepare for, and information about, the review event:
Photographers will wait in a line behind a reviewer they want to see. If that line is long and you see a reviewer that is available, jump out of line and go see them - you never know!
You will see approx 7 to 10 people, depending on wait time. There is no guarantee which reviewers you will see.

You will have 10 minutes to present your work to each reviewer, listen to their comments, and ask questions. A 'one minute warning' will be given

We recommend bringing one body of work with 10 to 20 images - big enough that they get a sense but not so big that it is difficult to get through in the time available.

No portfolio over 16x20 will be allowed for ease of reviewers.

Make the packing material easy to get through so as not to slow down the review. Time spent on packing/unpacking is included in your 10 minutes.

Bring leave behinds and leave behind your ego! This is about getting advice and making connections - if someone doesn't respond to your work, ask why but don't pressure them- this might be common sense but some people start arguing with reviewers and that doesn't really work out so well.

Bring your resume, bio and statements. These should be easily organized because time spent searching for them is included in your 10 minutes.

Also remember to bring leave behinds for the people you didn't get to see.

Read the reviewer bios, below, some of which list the type of work the reviewers are interested in seeing.
We recommend you 'google' the reviewers ahead of time to learn more about them.

REVIEWERS CONFIRMED as of 4/20/10 - ( list subject to change based on availability)

Elizabeth Avedon - Independent Curator and Consultant
Elizabeth Barragan - Director- Farmani Gallery
Lindsay Blatt - Daylight magazine- multimedia projects and photo editor
Elise Daher - Freelance Art Producer
Elaine Totten Davis - Coach
Jennifer Diamond- Event Space Producer - BH photo
Jeanine Fijol - Senior Photo Edtior - PDN
Julie Grahame - Publisher, A curator
Sara Hendricksen - Publicist- Allsworth press
Aurelie Jezequel- Editor in Chief Resource Magazine
Mia Kaplan- Freelance Art Curator
Stella Kramer - Photography Consultant, writer of ASMP's Sharpen and Stellazine blogs
David Laidler - Artist relations- Aurora select
Ruben Natal-San Miguel - Editor in Chief ARTmostfierce Arts Blog, curator, collector
Alex Niki- Publisher- Resource Magazine
Cara Phillips - Artist, blogger of women in photography
Jayne Rockmill - Book agent
Maggie Soladay - Social media expert, photo editor and SalaamGarage humanitarian media producer
Savannah Spirit- curator, Veaux projects
Courtney Strimple - Exhibitions Coordinator- Mixed Greens Gallery
Mary Virginia Swanson - Fine Art Consultant
Leslie Ann Wigon - Infinity pix- custom art services ( corporate buyer)
Laura Wyss - President, Wyssphoto, Inc.


Image '10 Call for Entries

Our annual national contest Image '10 is now open for entries.

Image10 is a nationwide photo contest run by the New York chapter of the American Society of Media Photographers and open to all professional, serious amateur and student photographers residing in the United States. Contestants are asked to submit one or more images that were created after January 1, 2009. The deadline for entry submissions is May 1, 2010.

For more information on submissions see How to submit an image.

Everything you need is here: www.image-ny.org









Special thanks to our sponsors, who made it possible to award our winners over $25,000 in prizes!

Categories
This competition has two categories, Professional and Student. Each has a first, second and third place prize awarded.

2010 Judges
Nathalie Kirsheh, Art Director, W Magazine
Katherine Schad, Photo Director, O The Oprah Magazine
Michael Boulia, Creative Director, BBDO
Alex Tasch, Sr. Art Buyer, Euro RSCG Worldwide
Brian Paul Clamp, Gallerist, CLAMPART


An Epson Print event with John Paul Caponigro and R. Mac Holbert
The Fine Art of Digital Printing

May 12th, 2010


11am to 5pm
Calumet Photo: 22 west 22nd street

Find out about the latest advances in digital printing.
You'll learn to evaluate printers, inks, media, RIPs, and profiles.
See the latest Epson printers and media in action.
Take the results home! John Paul and Mac will give a custom poster to every
participant.

Discover what's unique about a fine art workflow designed to maximize
quality.
See it in action.
See it detailed step-by-step.
See the results.
John Paul and Mac will build a file from the ground up and show you the
final results in print.

You'll learn to seamlessly integrate Adobe software Lightroom, Bridge,
Camera Raw, and Photoshop.
You'll learn a variety of tools and techniques that will help improve and
refine both your digital files and prints.
We've heard time and time again, "That one tip was worth the price of
admission." And there are dozens of these!

You'll leave with the knowledge you need to get the results youre looking
for and the confidence that it's the very best.


Topics include
- Evaluating printers
- Comparing media
- Quick Color Management
- How to analyze images to determine an optimum strategy
- Raw Conversion
- Sophisticated color adjustment strategies
- Selections and Masking
- Upsampling
- Noise Reduction
- Sharpening - Input, Creative, and Output
- Softproofing and Proofing
- Equipment maintenance and fine-tuning
- Print finishing and handling
- Fine art market practices

This one day seminar is one of the best values in the industry!

More event info:
http://www.asmp.org/education/event/info?id=95
Register here:
http://www.asmp.org/education/event/register?venue_id=335


Find out more in their DVDs Fine Art Digital Printing and Fine Art Digital
Workflow.
Links
http://www.johnpaulcaponigro.com/store/dvd_FineArtDigitalPrinting.php
http://www.johnpaulcaponigro.com/store/dvd-fine-art-workflow.php


John Paul Caponigro
Author of Adobe Photoshop Master Class and the DVD series R/Evolution, John
Paul Caponigro is an internationally respected fine artist, prolific author,
and highly sought after lecturer and workshop leader whose clients include
Adobe, Canon, Epson, and X-Rite. Learn more by visiting
www.johnpaulcaponigro.com and get over 100 free Lessons plus a free
subscription to his enews Insights.



R Mac Holbert
R Mac Holbert has been at the forefront of the digital printing revolution
since its inception as the master printer at Nash Editions. He's printed for
more top fine artist's than anyone else. An Adobe and Epson alpha tester and
principal of Pixel Genius he's been an important innovator within the
industry. He is the author of Nash Editions Photography and the Fine Art of
Digital Printing and the DVD series Nash Editions Master Class. Learn more
by visiting www.rmacholbert.com
http://www.rmacholbert.com

Learn more in their Fine Art of Digital Printing workshop.
http://www.thefineartofdigitalprinting.com/

Sponsored by Epson.


ASMP dpBestflow is live ...





dpBestflow.org is a rich web resource which includes a series of on-line educational seminars, software & hardware solutions, workflow guides and book references, designed to match a wide variety of working styles. Now, by accessing the web site, photographers and others in the visual arts community have real-world solutions for preserving the quality and integrity of digital images, proven best practices that have been shown to produce superior results, and guidelines for streamlined production workflows.

http://www.dpbestflow.org/



Copyright Society Event

LICENSING IN THE DIGITAL AGE:
DEALS, RISKS, AND CHALLENGES IN PHYSICAL AND VIRTUAL MEDIA

Licensing is a powerful tool generating billions in revenue. However, the risks and complexities of licensing have multiplied in recent years as new technologies have created new marketing platforms in the physical and virtual worlds. To help you understand, navigate and succeed in this new marketplace, the Copyright Society of the U.S.A. has assembled a distinguished panel of licensing practitioners that will provide you the practical guidance you need.

Location and Date of the Program:
May 18, 2010 at Anchin, Block & Anchin LLP
1375 Broadway, New York City, 23rd Floor (located at 37th and Broadway).

Time:
6:00 p.m. — 6:30 p.m. Registration, networking and light refreshments
6:30 p.m. — 8:00 p.m. Program
There is no charge to attend this program.

To register, please download this registration form. (No online registration.)
Registration deadline is Wednesday May 12, 2010.

Panelists:
Mary Beth Roberts will discuss the dramatic changes in music licensing and how music publishers are attempting to capitalize on them. She will talk about how copyright owners, faced with a decline in traditional royalties caused partially by music piracy, have gained new sources of revenue from third parties who increasingly use music to enhance and exploit their brands.
Mary Beth Roberts founded High Standards Unlimited, a consulting business for international and domestic music licensing. She was formerly VP of Catalogue Development at Sony/ATV and Famous Music Publishing. For over 20 years, she led concept development, copyright placement, marketing, negotiations and licensing of music used in synchronization, consumer products, new media, wireless entertainment and internet marketing.

Joseph Salvo will talk about licensing in the consumer products/entertainment area from a business and legal perspective. He will discuss the negotiating techniques licensors and licensees use to maximize their leverage. Joe will also discuss the legal strategies licensors may wish to use to protect and enhance their company’s intellectual property rights.
Joseph Salvo is Senior Vice President and Global General Counsel at HIT Entertainment, an international entertainment company that owns such pre-eminent pre-school brands as Barney, Thomas the Tank, Bob the Builder and Angelina Ballerina. He is involved in all forms of production and licensing, including television, film, audio, home video and consumer products.

Jonathan Wells will talk about the licensing of photographs and videos in the rapidly evolving physical, digital and virtual markets. Jonathan will also focus on the special concerns that arise when clients license internationally.
Jonathan Wells is the bureau chief of the New York office of Paris-based SIPA Press and oversees its licensing activities and production activities here. SIPA Press covers world news with a staff of photographers, a network of correspondents and distribution agreements with the Associated Press and other agencies around the globe.
Commentator:

Marc Federbush, CPA, is partner-in-charge of Anchin’s Apparel, Textile, Diamond and Jewelry Services Group. He will comment on the strategies that owners and licensees may use to protect themselves from unwanted disputes and costly litigation.

Andrew Berger will moderate the program. He is a copyright/trademark lawyer at the New York firm of Tannenbaum Helpern Syracuse & Hirschtritt. He is also a frequent speaker on intellectual property topics and writes a blog on IP issues at www.ipinbrief.com.
The Copyright Society of the U.S.A. is a center of the U.S. copyright community for business people, lawyers in private practice and in-house, law professors and law students who share a common interest in copyright and related intellectual property rights. A not-for-profit corporation founded in 1953, the Society works to advance the study and understanding of copyright law and related rights, the scope of rights in literature, music, art, theater, motion picture, television, computer software, architecture, and other works of authorship, and their distribution via both traditional and new media.



Working on a memorable photography project? Submit it to the Best of ASMP 2010, before it’s too late!

Now in its sixth year, the ASMP Bulletin’s Best of ASMP issue features memorable projects spanning the full range of our members’ specialty areas, demographics and geographic reach. The 20 photographers selected for this yearly honor are featured both in print and online, where they discuss their technical accomplishments, their valued equipment, the clients they work with and more, in detailed interviews illustrated by their best work. For the Best of ASMP’s 2010 edition, we will accept member entries through May 15, 2010.

Any memorable project currently in progress or completed within the past year — from client assignments to personal work — is eligible for consideration. Memorable aspects could include the following: an opportunity for creative freedom, a rewarding collaboration with a client, an achievement in technical prowess, a logistical challenge overcome, an impossible deadline achieved, a budgetary milestone, a stranger-than-fiction encounter, a promotional best … and so on. Creative solutions will be highly valued and a sense of humor readily enjoyed.

Submissions should be represented by one image and a short text. Please follow the following guidelines in preparing a submission:
WRITE a brief (250 words or less) description about a current or recently completed project and what made it memorable for you.
PREPARE one low-res JPG (500 KB or less), title it with your name and make sure to insert your name and caption info in the IPTC settings (File Info fields of Photoshop).
E-MAIL both items to bestof2010@asmp.org by May 15, 2010.

Please note that due to the number of submissions received, only the finalists, as selected by our editors, will be contacted during the month of June for more details about the submitted projects.
Sort through your database, size up your recent projects and start thinking about your submission now to ensure the submitted image and text will make the final cut.














Member Images





Photograph © Frank Rocco www.frankrocco.com

(click image for detail view)







































Get FOCUSED our e-newsletter
(you don't even have to be a member!)


Our blog:



ASMPNY on:
Facebook
Linkedin
Flickr

Subscribe to:
ASMPNY Calendar
Click on the link and scroll down to subscribe

American Society of Media Photographers New York Chapter

American Society of Media Photographers, New York Chapter, ASMP, ASMPNY, New York Photographers

Sunday, May 2, 2010

Magazine Submissions

I know a lot of you said your files were too large to email, but if you just turn them into level 9 jpegs, that will be fine for printing. Please email as soon as you have your submissions ready. Thank you, I appreciate it!

remit to: kerrydavidson@me.com
call/text me with any questions 917.445.4547

Friday, April 30, 2010

BFA designer













Dumbo 2

Down in DUMBO

scoop overboard


dead end


my car brokedown?


poo face


go...that way


"Down in DUMBO"
DUMBO Brooklyn is currently in disarray, undergoing tons of construction and renovation. The streets are bleak, tractor lined and dust-filled.
This inspired me to shoot an ironic twist on this location with tons of "fun" props and colors. Meanwhile, this girl ends up lost, confused, and out of luck. It describes my style and personality pretty well. Full of contradictions.

Model: Brittany LaBella
Clothing supplied by: Urban Outfitters...miscellaneous brands
Balloons: Balloon Saloon, TriBeCa


Special Thanks to the men at Old Fulton St Garage.

IMAGE 10 / PHOTOGRAPHY CONTEST

Image10 is a nationwide photo contest run by the New York chapter of the American Society of Media Photographers and open to all professional, serious amateur and student photographers residing in the United States. Contestants are asked to submit one or more images that were created after January 1, 2009. The deadline for entry submissions is May 1, 2010. For more information on submissions see How to submit an image.

Image10 Sponsors

Over $25,000 in prizes!











Special thanks to our sponsors, who made it possible to award our winners over $25,000 in prizes!

Categories

This competition has two categories, Professional and Student. Each has a first, second and third place prize awarded.

2010 Judges

Nathalie Kirsheh, Art Director, W Magazine
Katherine Schad, Photo Director, O The Oprah Magazine
Michael Boulia, Creative Director, BBDO
Alex Tasch, Sr. Art Buyer, Euro RSCG Worldwide
Brian Paul Clamp, Gallerist, CLAMPART
2010 Entry Fees

Entry fees are per image.

Professional Student
ASMP Members: $25 $15
Non-members: $35 $25
About image10
image09 Winners Gallery
image08 Winners Gallery
image07 Winners Gallery
image06 Winners Gallery
image05 Winners Gallery
How to Submit an Image
Official Rules
Contact Us
Create an Account
Login
ASMP NY Home
Join ASMP
image09 Winners:
First Place Professional
Martine Fougeron

First Place Student
Debra Jansen

About image10 image09 Winners Gallery image08 Winners Gallery image07 Winners Gallery image06 Winners Gallery image05 Winners Gallery How to Submit an Image Official Rules Contact Us Create an Account Login ASMP NY Home Join ASMP
Privacy Statement

PRINT SWAP!!!!! / THURSDAY MAY 6th

BIG ED Student & Faculty
PRINT SWAP DAY
Thursday May 6th, 6-9PM
at FOTO CARE NYC
with special guest,
SARAH SILVER


The print swap is an activity that has a long and celebrated history in college and university photography programs. Swappers bring 3 to 5 un-mounted prints of a single image and offer them in trade for the work of others. It’s a great way to begin a photography collection, make contacts, network, and get your work out into the community.

Special Guest SARAH SILVER we be joining us for onsite student portfolio reviews. This will be an excellent opportunity for students to get a chance to show their work to one of the industry’s hottest photographers.

Join Bron Imaging Group, Foto Care, and SARAH SILVER at the First Annual BIG ED Print Swap Day!


Sarah Silver Bio
Sarah's love of photography began as a child when she assisted her grandfather in his studiodarkroom. From that time forward, a camera was never far from her hand. Studying both classical and modern dance from an equally young age, Sarah has always had an appreciation of movement. After completing her first degree in Middle East Studies from Vassar College, she found her true calling combining her two passions: photography and movement. She applied for graduate studies in photography at the School of Visual Arts in New York City.


Sarah's work has been featured in publications including French Vogue, Italian Vogue and Latin Vogue, Harper’s Bazaar, American and British Elle, Marie Claire, V Magazine and The New York Times. Clients include L’Oreal, Revlon, Matrix, Olay, Sephora, Prescriptives, Rimmel, Tresemme, Wella, Schwarzkopf, Clairol, Crystal Light, Neiman Marcus, DKNY, Target, Proenza Schouler, Nike and Nokia.

Sarah has given seminars in countries such as Thailand, Malaysia, India, Singapore, Australia and regularly lectures at School of Visual Arts, FIT, and Parsons in New York City. Sarah recently appeared on CW TV’s America’s Next Top Model.\She lives and works in New York City.






For more info, contact
INFO@BRONIMAGING.COM




43 West 22nd Street
New York, NY 10010
(212) 741-2990

Thursday, April 29, 2010

Kristine: Gleason's Gym, DUMBO.

Location: Gleason's Boxing Gym, Brooklyn
Photographer: Kristine Guzman

So, the purpose of this assignment was to photograph fashion in Dumbo. In my defense, there are many different definitions of the word. Style is represented in ways other than clothing or the material products we drape our appearances with. Fashion can be viewed as a trend within a culture, a behavior that is admired, and a lifestyle that is lived. With my project, I deferred away from the common theme associated with the word, and chose a different approach.

The concept of boxing is rather interesting when you really sit down and dissect it. The practice involves training and nurturing the body, only to risk the body. One may wonder what drives a person to fight for the sake of sport. Is it to satisfy the ego, is it to release anger? Well, I have tried kickboxing (to the best of my ability) and my ego does not need the satisfaction of causing physical damage to another human being, nor am I an angry person. I'm actually pretty calm. However, boxing does provide a sudden jolt of energy, a rush, and a release.. And it will leave every muscle your own sore.

Fashion in all cases is to be admired and is sometimes impractical. Boxers live a lifestyle where they are not judged by their appearance, clothes, equipment, not even by their size. Raw skill, endurance, speed and strength define the athlete and the combination of these characteristics create the image of a true champion. 

Below are some of the images from my shoot last Friday. My friend Jamuel Vaz was one of my models. I met the other man the day before the shoot when I scouted with Charles and he agreed to be my second subject. I also photographed some of the boxers who regularly practice there. This was my first time shooting mainly film for a real shoot in a long time. I also shot digital, and will post more images soon. I have images of my two subjects boxing which were shot digitally because the ring was bouncy and I didn't want to drop the Hasselblad, and because it was hard to quickly frame and focus with that camera when they were moving around so fast -- I had them fight for real in order to get more realistic looking images (Sorry to my friend who isn't a trained boxer).

So, here...










Gang Photography & Rocket Science in Dumbo