Wednesday, March 28, 2012
AIPAD OPENS
Thank you to all our friends who joined us at tonight's opening of the 2012 AIPAD Photography Show. We were honored to have renowned photographers Bill Eppridge, John Loengard, Stephen Wilkes, Ida Wyman, and many others in attendance.
The Show continues daily 11 - 7 through Sunday, full details here. We look forward to welcoming you to booth #419
Labels:
9/11,
AIPAD,
Bill Eppridge,
Coney Island,
Rikki Reich,
Stephen Wilkes
AIPAD
Via La Lettre de la Photographie
For its 32nd edition, the annual trade fair organized by the Association of International Photography Art Dealers (AIPAD) follows the evolution of photography and its market. From March 29 through April 2 in New York, the market bubble of the past few years will inevitably remain. Whether it be rare 19th century prints, photography’s most glorious pictures, icons of pop culture from the middle of the past century or the contemporary work from the 1980’s that provoked the boom, its popularity too.
But don’t be mistaken: acquiring an image signed by Cartier-Bresson, Walker Evans or Diane Arbus, even their most renowned, will always cost much less than a picture by Cindy Sherman or Andreas Gursky. Sometimes even 5 times less.
Regrouping some of the most prestigious galleries, AIPAD exposes nearly all of the world’s artists. Beyond the masters, from Steichen to Weston, including Talbot or Levitt, one can find more contemporary talents including Linda Mc Cartney, Alex Prager, Jeff Wall or Nan Goldin. Impossible to ignore another evolution, that of the portrait, a photographic medium omnipresent in contemporary Western visual culture, from magazines to art galleries. Celebrities, rock stars, movie stars: all have a special place on the white walls of the AIPAD. For the wealthy buyer, a picture by Philip-Lorca diCorcia could cost more than $45 000 at the David Zwirner gallery, while other visitors could head to Steven Kasher’s gallery to purchase an image of the Wall Street protestors signed by Accra Shepp for $60. Whether one comes to invest or just to admire, AIPAD remains a beautiful showcase for photography.
Jonas Cuénin
AIPAD 2012
From March 29 to April 2, 2012
643 Park Avenue
New York, NY 10065
For its 32nd edition, the annual trade fair organized by the Association of International Photography Art Dealers (AIPAD) follows the evolution of photography and its market. From March 29 through April 2 in New York, the market bubble of the past few years will inevitably remain. Whether it be rare 19th century prints, photography’s most glorious pictures, icons of pop culture from the middle of the past century or the contemporary work from the 1980’s that provoked the boom, its popularity too.
But don’t be mistaken: acquiring an image signed by Cartier-Bresson, Walker Evans or Diane Arbus, even their most renowned, will always cost much less than a picture by Cindy Sherman or Andreas Gursky. Sometimes even 5 times less.
Regrouping some of the most prestigious galleries, AIPAD exposes nearly all of the world’s artists. Beyond the masters, from Steichen to Weston, including Talbot or Levitt, one can find more contemporary talents including Linda Mc Cartney, Alex Prager, Jeff Wall or Nan Goldin. Impossible to ignore another evolution, that of the portrait, a photographic medium omnipresent in contemporary Western visual culture, from magazines to art galleries. Celebrities, rock stars, movie stars: all have a special place on the white walls of the AIPAD. For the wealthy buyer, a picture by Philip-Lorca diCorcia could cost more than $45 000 at the David Zwirner gallery, while other visitors could head to Steven Kasher’s gallery to purchase an image of the Wall Street protestors signed by Accra Shepp for $60. Whether one comes to invest or just to admire, AIPAD remains a beautiful showcase for photography.
Jonas Cuénin
AIPAD 2012
From March 29 to April 2, 2012
643 Park Avenue
New York, NY 10065
Links
http:/www.aipad.com/Visit Monroe gallery of Photographt, Booth #419
More here
Monday, March 26, 2012
Monroe Gallery at The AIPAD Photography Show 2012
Nina Berman: Afghan Woman with Diploma, Kabul, Afghanistan, 1998
We delighted to return to exhibit at the AIPAD Photography Show in New York March 28 - April 1, 2012. The show is again at the Park Avenue Armory, and Monroe Gallery of Photography will be located in booth 419.
In our expanded booth, Monroe Gallery of Photography will be exhibiting specially selected work from the gallery's collection. Highlights include: new photographs from Stephen Wilkes' acclaimed "Day To Night" series; significant contemporary photographs by Nina Berman; important and historic photojournalism including photographs of the Civil Rights movement and Grey Villet's photographs of Richard and Mildred Loving taken during the landmark Supreme Court case overturning all race-based restrictions on marriage in the United States; and much more.
Show tickets are available for purchase at the Park Avenue Armory during Show hours.
Thursday, March 29 from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m.
Friday, March 30 from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m.
Saturday, March 31 from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m.
Sunday, April 1 from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Stephen Wilkes: Coney Island, Day To Night
Saturday, March 24, 2012
Happy Birthday Steve McQueen
John Domins: Steve McQueen aims a pistol
Steve McQueen would be 82 today.
"Racing is life....everything before and after is just waiting."
La Lettre de la Photographie: Steve McQueen by John Dominis
See John Dominis' photographs of Steve McQueen at the AIPAD Photography Show, Monroe gallery of Photography, booth #419.
Friday, March 23, 2012
Heading East
Margaret Bourke-White: A DC-4 flying over New York, 1939
Looking forward to seeing everyone at The AIPAD Photography Show next week!
Wednesday, March 21, 2012
Two journalists were handcuffed and detained by Chicago police outside a hospital over the weekend as they waited to speak with the family of a 6-year-old girl who was murdered
“Your First Amendment rights can be terminated if you create a scene. Your First Amendment rights have limitations.” The journalists asked how they were creating a scene, and the arresting officer responded, “Your presence is creating a scene.”
Full article with video here via Reporters Committee For Freedom of The Press
Related: Photojournalist Under Attack
Why This Photograph is Worth $578,500
The art world acknowledges this unique significance and reflects it in the monetary value placed on the works. So is a $4.3 million too much to pay for the world’s most expensive photograph? Considering that it less than two percent of what was paid for the most expensive painting, I’d say it’s a bargain.
Why This Photograph is Worth $578,500
Tuesday, March 20, 2012
Photo: Photojournalist Under Attack
Via Photo District NewsA Sign of Restive Times: Policeman Punches Photojournalist
Although this image of a Greek police officer punching a news photographer at an Athens street protest was shot last fall, it didn’t come to our attention until yesterday. But the passage of several months makes it no less dramatic or shocking. And it remains timely for what it represents: the tensions between police and media all over the world, including the US, where Occupy protests show signs of stirring once again. In this image, shot by Reuters photographer Yannis Behrakis, a police officer punches veteran photojournalist Tatiana Bolari, co-owner of the Greek photo agency Eurokinisi. The incident occurred at an anti-austerity protest on October 5 when police moved against a group of photographers and journalists covering the event, Behrakis told PDN.
Related: Freedon of the Press?
Friday, March 16, 2012
First Look: The AIPAD Photography Show
Via Gotham Magazine
Whether you’re seeking that perfect print by Diane Arbus (you know the one, the identical twin girls in pinafores) or something new from a contemporary photographer, such as a multimedia wall relief made of LED lights by Jim Campbell, you’ll likely find what you’re looking for at the annual photography fair organized by the Association of International Photography Art Dealers, better known as AIPAD. Now in its 32nd year, AIPAD will be held at the Park Avenue Armory from March 29 through April 1, with offerings ranging from rare 19th-century material to the latest works by today’s digital artists.
“AIPAD is definitely worth two or three visits, not one drive-through,” says William Hunt, a top collector in the field.
Thursday, March 15, 2012
THE PHOTO LEAGUE: VIVIAN CHERRY
Vivian Cherry: "Ocu-Lav", Hell's Kitchen, c. 1950's.
Today's New York Times Lens Blog has another wonderful article about The New York Photo League. Photographer Vivian Cherry is quoted in the article:
"Ms. Cherry was drawn to the Photo League because the work of its members tended to avoid the soft-focused, painterly style of the day. “I was in a fantasy world when I was a dancer,” she said. “And this was reality. And so much was going on in that period. And I wanted to be part of it.”
She was interested New York’s poorer neighborhoods. “Maybe I identified with them more,” she said. And she wanted to tell a story. She recalls the shock she felt when she came upon the scene of her 1947 photograph “Playing Lynched” (Slide 8). “The interesting thing about it was that this was in East Harlem,” she said. “And it wasn’t only black kids. They interchanged parts.”
Vivian Cherry: Game of Lynching, Harlem, 1947
Vivian Cherry was born in New York City. While performing as a dancer on Broadway and nightclubs in the early 1940s, she began working as a photographic printer in the darkroom for Underwood & Underwood, a prominent photo service to news organizations. It was here that Cherry became a talented printer. Wanting to further her interest in photography Cherry joined the Photo League, an organization formed by professional photographers in the 1930s to teach and support the art of photography. She studied with Sid Grossman. Soon Cherry was selling her photographic essays to such publications as Life, Look, Popular Photography, Sports Illustrated and Redbook. Then later, she was given assignments by Colliers, Pageant, This Week, Jubilee, Scope, and other magazines. Cherry was one of a handful of women at the time to be given assignments by such major publications. Cherry also made several short films and worked with the photographer Arnold Eagle as a still photographer on a film about Lee Strasberg and the historic drama school, the Actor’s Studio.
Over the years Cherry has traveled and photographed extensively in New York City, West Virginia, Georgia, England and Mexico. Although her photographs cover a wide range of cities, the images are universal. Through her lens she captures everyday life of the children, men and women on the streets of the world. One is hard pressed to distinguish between the old stodgy men on the sidewalks of London and the ones sitting on a bench in Washington Square park. Or to see any differences in the somber and sullied faces of the children in Hell’s Kitchen and the ones in the alleyways of England.
Likewise, the sense of weariness and forlorn gazes are not lost on the viewer when comparing the two images of the elderly woman from the Blue Ridge Mountains in Georgia and the older women riding the Third Avenue El in New York City. It seems that no matter what street corner she is on, Vivian Cherry has the innate ability to look through her camera and produce a portrait that reflects a sense of life that is both timeless and ageless.
In 2000 The Brooklyn Museum of Art presented a major exhibition of Vivian Cherry’s photographs. Vivian Cherry is still actively photographing, and the book “HELLUVA TOWN: Vivian Cherry's New York of the 1940s-1950s”will be published in 2007.
“These photographs are of work done over a half a century by a gifted artist who represents the countless photographers who turned us into a nation of observers who still get most of their information from imagery. This is the personal statement of the impersonal world as viewed by a "Working Street Photographer". -Barbara Head Millstein, Curator of Photographs, Brooklyn Museum of Art
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