August 30, 2024
Friday, August 30, 2024
Gallery photographer Ed Kashi photographs for Smithsonian Magazine feature
Tuesday, August 27, 2024
Des Moines city manager says free press is important as part of protest lawsuit settlement
August 27, 2024
Des Moines leaders agreed to a mid-trial settlement last week with Mark "Ted" Nieters, a photojournalist who has covered conflict zones around the world. As part of the settlement, Nieters is set to receive $100,000, and City Manager Scott Sanders and Des Moines police spokesperson Sgt. Paul Parizek are required to issue statements about the importance of the free press.
Nieters' case stemmed from his arrest on June 1, 2020, when he was working as a freelance news photographer covering a large protest outside the Iowa Capitol. Police eventually ordered members of the crowd to leave and dispersed those who didn't, using tear gas.
Sanders fulfilled his requirement in a statement Tuesday, which reads:
"The City is grateful to the jury and the federal court for their time in a recent case they helped bring to a resolution. While the City Council will vote to approve the proposed settlement at its September 16 meeting, we are happy to put this case behind us and continue our important work moving the Des Moines Police Department forward in our continuing pursuit of excellence. The City acknowledges the importance of free press for our community, and the value and appreciation that the City has for the work the press does."
Friday, August 23, 2024
Gallery Photographer Mark Peterson: Scenes from Chicago For New York Magazine
August 23, 2024
Thursday, August 22, 2024
Welcome to the "Resilience - Stories of Women Inspiring Change" Special Exhibition Features Gallery Photographer Anna Boyiazis
Via Mongolian National News Agency
August 22, 2024
Ulaanbaatar, August 22, 2024 /MONTSAME/. The Opening Ceremony of the “Resilience - Stories of Women Inspiring Change” Special Exhibition was held at the Lkham Gallery, Ulaanbaatar City, Mongolia, on August 21, 2024.
The World Press Photo Foundation and the Kingdom of the Netherlands present a selection of stories, awarded in the World Press Photo Contests from 2000 to 2021, that highlight the resilience and challenges of women, girls, and communities around the world.
This exhibition promotes women’s rights, gender equality, and justice. Multiple voices, documented by 17 photographers of 13 different nationalities, offer insights into issues, including sexism, gender-based violence, reproductive rights, and access to equal opportunities. The selection of stories explores how women and gender issues have evolved in the 21st century and how photojournalism has developed in the ways of portraying them. The photographs show the power of visual storytelling to create mutual understanding and to influence or change our views.
At the Opening Ceremony, Cultural and Public Diplomacy Counsellor of the Netherlands to Mongolia Ingrid de Beer noted, “We are grateful to present the Resilience Photo Exhibition in cooperation with the Dutch Foundation World Press Photo and Lkham Gallery of Mongolia. The exceptional selection of photographs illustrates women and girls from all over the world—women and girls who face difficult challenges, even violence. Yet, instead of focusing on their challenges, these images highlight their personality, strength, and resilience. The women in Ulaanbaatar that I met today demonstrated their determination and perseverance to create change. I hope you enjoy the Resilience Photo Exhibition and that it serves as an inspiration to further our collective efforts toward a gender-equal society.”
Delgermaa Byambasuren, Honorary Consul of the Netherlands in Mongolia, said, “I'm delighted to welcome the World Press Photo exhibition to Mongolia for the first time. The "Resilience" exhibition features photographs by 17 photographers from 13 countries, highlighting women's rights, gender equality, and the evolution of women's issues in the 21st century. We are deeply grateful to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Netherlands and the World Press Photo Foundation for their commitment to women's rights. We also extend our thanks to Lkham Gallery and our other partners for their meticulous work in making this exhibition a reality.”
Gender equality and justice are fundamental human rights critical in supporting cohesive societies. Yet, women around the world face deeply entrenched inequality and remain underrepresented in political and economic roles. In 2021, women represented just 26.1% of some 35,500 parliament seats, only 22.6% of over 3,400 ministers, and 27% of all managerial positions. Violence against women prevails as a serious global health and protection issue. An estimated one in three women will experience physical or sexual abuse in her lifetime.
The gender imbalance is also evident in photojournalism. Data collected by Women Photograph in 2020 shows that an average of just 20% of lead photographs published by eight of the world’s most widely read newspapers were taken by women. The number of female entrants to the World Press Photo Contest has increased over the past five years from 15% to 20% in 2022. This data underlines the need for us to continue working on reducing gender injustice. We need women's perspectives to contribute to a diverse and balanced representation of the world.
The “Resilience - Stories of Women Inspiring Change” Exhibition will be open to the public until September 18, 2024, at the Lkham Gallery in Ulaanbaatar.
A young woman learns to float, in the Indian Ocean, off Nungwi, Zanzibar, on 24 November 2016
Traditionally, girls in the Zanzibar Archipelago are discouraged from learning how to swim, largely due to the absence of modest swimwear. In northern Zanzibar, the Panje Project teaches local women and girls swimming skills in an effort to reduce high rates of drowning. Full-length swimsuits are provided. In addition to challenging a patriarchal system, the project has created a sustainable cycle by empowering students to teach other
Tuesday, August 20, 2024
The Vibe-Shifted Democratic Convention in Photos by Gallery Photographer Mark Peterson
August 20, 2024
The first night of the 2024 Democratic National Convention was the scene of a party in transition, looking toward the future while simultaneously providing a final send-off for President Joe Biden as he officially passed the torch to Vice-President Kamala Harris. Attendees in Chicago greeted still-rising stars such as New York representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Georgia senator Raphael Warnock with the same fervor as they gave party veterans such as Hillary Clinton, the last woman to be the party’s presidential nominee, who rousted Democrats to “keep going.” Scenes of the convention so far from Mark Peterson for New York Magazine. Full post here.
Gallery Photographer Nate Gowdy is covering the ins and outs of the Democratic National Convention in Chicago for Mother Jones
August 20, 2024
Photographer Nate Gowdy is covering the ins and outs of the Democratic National Convention in Chicago for Mother Jones. Here is a taste of what he saw: protests outside and an electrified delegation inside.
Monday, August 19, 2024
Tony Hawk Recreates Bill Eppridge's 'Central Park Mystery Skater' Photo From 1965
August 19, 2024
"If you can't solve the mystery, become the mystery."
Brian BlakelyAug 19, 2024
Well, this could certainly be classified as a "full circle moment" if you ask me, at least for Mr. Dan James Rodo (and well, of course, Tony Hawk).
If you were following along earlier this year—around April/May—then you know that The Birdman and Dan sort of forcefully fell down the rabbit hole while attempting to identify the iconic, now legendary "Central Park Mystery Skater" from a 1965 issue of LIFE magazine.
They went above and beyond and truly put in some pretty impressive work to investigate this mysterious, dapper skateboarder from the mid-60s, but what actually came of it was something none of us probably expected. Take a look:
"If you can’t solve a mystery, become the mystery...?," Tony wrote as the caption on the post. "Thanks to @danocracy & @joshuapbrown for meeting me in NYC to recreate the photo that has provided so much entertainment. And to Adrienne Aurichio for sharing the moment while giving us a glimpse into the magic of Bill Eppridge (the original photographer)."
He tacked on, "Watch Dan’s latest edit to see the process of putting this together." And if you haven't seen it yet, check it below!
Sunday, August 11, 2024
George Eastman Museum Acquires David Butow's "Landscape of Destruction" Photograph From 2023 Lahaina Fire
David Butow: The landscape of destruction, Lahaina, Maui, seen on August 24, 2023
The George Eastman Museum in Rochester, NY, has recently added a print by David Butow taken while on assignment for TIME magazine documenting the aftermath of the August, 2023 fires in Lahaina, Maui. David Butow is a freelance photojournalist whose projects and assignments have taken him to over two dozen countries including Afghanistan, Burma, Iraq, Peru, Yemen and Zimbabwe. His work in covering politics in Washington, D.C. resulted in the monograph BRINK, published in late 2021 by Punctum Press.
Born in New York and raised in Dallas, he has a degree in Government from the University of Texas at Austin. After college he moved to Los Angeles and worked in newspapers before beginning a freelance career for magazines in the 1990's.
From the mid-90's through the late-2000's he worked as a contract photographer for US News and World Report magazine covering social issues and news events such as post- 9/11 in New York, the Palestinian/Israeli Intifada, the 2003 U.S. invasion of Iraq and the death of Pope John Paul II at the Vatican. From 2017-2021, he was based in Washington, D.C., doing primarily political assignments at the White House and US Capitol for TIME, CNN, Politico, NBC, the Los Angeles Times, The Guardian, Rolling Stone and other clients. His photographs of events such as the China earthquake in 2008, the funeral of Nelson Mandela, Hong Kong protests of 2019 and various projects in the U.S. have won awards from Pictures of the Year International, Photo District News, American Photography and others.
In early 2022, the new book BRINK was published by Rome-based Punctum Press, 104 photographs over 152 pages, printed in Italy on heavyweight paper with text by Mark McKinnon and Cecilia Emma Sottilotta. BRINK chronicles politics in the United States from the 2016 presidential election through the chaos of the Trump presidency, the turmoil of 2020 and concludes with the insurrection and its aftermath at the U.S, Capitol in January 2021.
Most recently, Butow's photographs from Ukraine, Ulvalde, Texas, and Lahaina, Maui have been published in Politico, Time, and The New York Times.
The George Eastman Museum is located in Rochester, New York, on the estate of George Eastman, the pioneer of popular photography and motion picture film. Founded in 1947 as an independent nonprofit institution, it is the world’s oldest photography museum and one of the oldest film archives. The museum holds unparalleled collections—encompassing several million objects—in the fields of photography, cinema, and photographic and cinematographic technology, and photographically illustrated books. The institution is also a longtime leader in film preservation and photographic conservation.Tuesday, August 6, 2024
Former police chief who launched a raid on a Kansas newspaper office and two homes is expected to be charged with obstruction of judicial process
August 5, 2024
By: Jessica McMaster
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The former police chief who launched a raid on a Kansas newspaper office and two homes is expected to be charged with obstruction of judicial process, according to two special prosecutors who released their findings on the case Monday.
Sunday, August 4, 2024
A beautiful pursuit: Monroe Gallery exhibit looks through the lens of noted photographer Tony Vaccaro
August 4, 2024
By Kathaleen Roberts
Tony Vaccaro photographed a world of beauty from a crucible of pain.
He photographed World War II from a soldier’s eye, documenting its brutality and horror. After carrying his camera across battlefields, he became one of the most sought-after photographers of his day, capturing everyone from Pablo Picasso to Ali MacGraw on film.
Open at Santa Fe’s Monroe Gallery of Photography, “Tony Vaccaro: The Pursuit of Beauty” includes more than 40 photographs dating from 1944 to 1979.
Born in Pennsylvania, Vaccaro spent the first years of his life in the village of Bonefro, Italy, after his family left America under threat from the Mafia. Both of his parents had died by the time he was 8 years old and he was raised by an uncaring aunt and an abusive uncle. His love of photography emerged in Bonefro, where he began taking pictures with a box camera at age 10.
When World War II broke out, he returned to the States, living with his sister in a New York suburb, where he joined his high school camera club. A teacher spotted his talent and guided him through a year of apprenticeship.
Drafted at 21, Vaccaro was determined to continue photographing in combat. He fought on the front lines for 272 days, camera in hand. He entered Germany in 1944. He developed his photographs in combat helmets at night, hanging the negatives from tree branches.
In 1945, he photographed Adolf Hitler’s both sinister and beautiful window at the dictator’s retreat in the Bavarian Alps.
“That massive window was filled with a very thick pane of glass,” said Sidney Monroe, the gallery’s co-owner. “It’s a haunting picture. It’s the ultimate conquest at the end of the war.”
In the years after the war, Vaccaro remained in Germany to photograph the rebuilding of the country for Stars and Stripes magazine. He returned to the U.S. in 1950 and launched a career as a commercial photographer. He worked for Look, Life, Harper’s Bazaar, Town and Country, Newsweek and more.
After the war, he said he had seen enough carnage. He traded beauty for brutality.
In 1960, Vaccaro spent two weeks at Georgia O’Keeffe’s Abiquiú home, photographing her for Look magazine.
“O’Keeffe was pretty notorious for not wanting to be interviewed or photographed,” Monroe said. “So Tony comes out with a writer and she gave them the cold shoulder. O’Keeffe almost wouldn’t talk to him.
“Tony told us at dinner the conversation shifted to bullfighting. O’Keeffe was a fan of a famous Mexican bullfighter that he had photographed. That broke the ice. They bonded and formed a lifelong friendship.”
The photograph captures O’Keeffe’s legendary iconography, the skull between the canales and her rock collection scattered across a shelf.
“She’s in black and wearing her famous belt,” Monroe said. “It incorporates everything we think of when we think of O’Keeffe.”
The show marks the first time the photo has been exhibited.
“Most of the photographs were never published,” Monroe said. “We encouraged him while he was still alive to go to the files.”
Vaccaro’s famous 1960 “Guggenheim Hat” photograph for Look magazine combines architecture with fashion to make art. The model’s hat mirrors the forms of the Guggenheim Museum.
“The Guggenheim had just really opened,” Monroe said. “At the time, it was sort of an instant classic.”
The model in “Anja on Park Avenue” became Vaccaro’s wife. Her heavily-patterned gown mimics the lights on the Pan Am building behind her. The Swedish designer Marimekko was known for its bold patterning. The photo has never been seen before.
In Venice, Italy, Vaccaro photographed Peggy Guggenheim leaving her home in a gondola in 1968. She was starting her museum in Venice.
“She had a big house there that held her art collection,” Monroe said. “She was fabulously eccentric.”
The photo captures an angry Guggenheim hiding something beneath her blue cape.
Her yard featured a large bronze sculpture of a rearing horse.
The horse has a penis and the penis was removable.
A school group was about to enter the yard.
“She removed the penis,” Monroe said. “That is under the cape. He wanted her to show it; that’s why she looks mad. It’s a wonderful marriage of subject and place.”
In 2022, Monroe and his wife and business partner Michelle celebrated Vaccaro’s 100th birthday in New York. The city of New York declared it “Tony Vaccaro Day” and he was feted at his favorite Italian restaurant. He died eight days later, after surviving the Battle of Normandy and two bouts of COVID. He attributed his longevity to “blind luck, red wine and determination.”
'Tony Vaccaro: The Pursuit of Beauty'
WHEN: 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily; through Sept. 15
WHERE: Monroe Gallery of Photography, 112 Don Gaspar, Santa Fe
MORE INFO: monroegallery.com; 505-992-0800