Showing posts with label photography. Show all posts
Showing posts with label photography. Show all posts

Thursday, June 6, 2013

Annie


BREAKING NEWS!

American portrait photographer Annie Leibovitz is someone I quite admire and it turns out I will soon be able to ogle her work up close and personal.  It has been announced that the Art Gallery of Nova Scotia will become a permanent home to an exhibit of her magnificent work.  The exhibit, described as a private donation will be a HUGE coo for our gallery and for me, a personal delight.  I have been appreciative of her work since I was a child and consider it a tiny bucket list item to be able to see her work in person.  How thrilling!

I look forward to discovering which of her iconic photos will be included.

One of so many amazing portraits by Annie Leibovitz, Patti Smith.

In propinquity,

Nic

Thursday, May 9, 2013

Profundities & Oddities, Discovering Vivian Maier

Vivian Maier, undated.  Self portrait.


Chicago historian and collector John Maloof discovered an art world wonder.  After acquiring a collection of street photographs in 2007, he was oblivious to the fact that it would turn out to be one of the most enigmatic and significant art discoveries of our time.  Maloof bought the contents of an abandoned storage unit for a meager price tag of $400 and inside were photographic riches beyond his wildest imagination.  He accidently unearthed over 100,000 negatives and roughly 700 undeveloped rolls of film snapped by one of the United States most talented and unknown photographers, Vivian Maier.

Vivian Maier is a miraculous modern day mystery, a woman who spent the better part of 40 years capturing the landscape and faces around her, in their purest form, on film.  Maier was a deeply private woman, by where many of the people who knew her had absolutely no idea that she would spend countless hours roaming around documenting a beatific logic, in persons and places.  All in secret.  Her work is raw and literal, unambiguous and engaging.  My fabulous artist friend, Kelly Thompson, who is a marvel in her own right, introduced me to the work of Vivian Maier and I’m so glad she did.  I have been pouring over her images and her story all morning and cannot seem to get enough.  Her uncanny ability to make the ordinary extraordinary is breath-taking.

From the puzzle pieces currently assembled, Vivian Maier was guarded and private, an unmaterialistic sort and sternly independent but not all too shy to share her liberal worldview to anyone who listened.  While much of her life story is slowly being unraveled, we know she worked as a nanny for most of her life while surreptitiously amassing a large body of photographic work, mostly with a Rollieflex camera.

I find her work just as polarizing as her person.  She is fascinating and I wonder, for being such a private artist, what she would think of all the posthumous success and accolades that accompany her work and name.  Her body of work is a prime example of the human spirit’s ability to triumph through art.  It is a rare thing for an artist to be so prolific and talented and lack arrogance and the need for attention.  I suppose her pretentions are evident through her solitary enjoyment of taking photographs but I have to wonder if she even knew how brilliant she was.  I love that she did it for the sheer love of the act, not for the rewards.  Her eccentricities are a dime a dozen it seems but her capacity for seeing the world through a camera was overwhelmingly sublime.

I look forward to discovering more of this woman’s story, researching, reading and admiring her stunning photographs.

The whole reason I became enamored with Vivian Maier was because Kelly shared a movie trailer about her on Facebook.  Maloof and ‘Bowling for Columbine’ filmmaker Charlie Siskel made a film that chronicles her life and impact she’s had on the art world posthumously.  After viewing the trailer I curled up trying to fall asleep excited to wake up so I could learn everything about her.  Her work has earned comparisons to critically acclaimed artists like Henri Cartier-Bresson and Diane Arbus and rightly so.

I am moved by her quietude.  I am besotted by her keen eye.  I am intrigued by her life story and grateful that John Maloof purchased the contents of an abandoned storage unit that housed an artistic miracle, one I am reveling in and will share with everyone I know. 

Maier lost ownership of her storage locker for non-payment causing her to be seperated from her life's work.  The children she cared for ultimately became her caregivers in the autumn of her life.  She died at 83 in 2009.  A formidable woman, a talented artist, with no formal training and no network of peers.  Amazing.

In propinquity,
Nic

I was JAZZED to see the bank's name.  So cool!

Friday, January 11, 2013

I See The Sun

(Photo by Kiersten Bree Johnston 2012)


I am making it my goal to commit myself to writing and editing this weekend.  I plan to plant myself somewhere for a period of time, with a constant cup of something steamy, a mess of paper, a red pen and my thoughts.  I am making strides with my current piece of short fiction and scarily enough, I have another idea brewing.  Writing prompts can be a powerful tool.  I stumbled across a photograph that I quite liked and have decided since a name came, I’d work at writing something out.  It’s still percolating but it is coming slowly in essence and flashes.  I am a stickler for a good first line.  Much like readers with stories, I feel myself drawn in to a writing piece when I have formulated a solid first sentence, solid to me at least.

I am looking forward to my artist date.  Looking forward to spending quality time in my head, with my weapons of mass creation, in the world where I can overhear, observe and report.  My well needs a bit of water, time to absorb.

I submitted three poems yesterday for The Yeah Write Review’s 2013 Winter Issue.  My writer friend alerted me to the opportunity as she has also submitted a prose piece.  I admit to being a tad obsessive about watching the progress of my submission.  The way it is set up you are able to monitor the status, whether it’s been accepted, declined etc.  It’s a shot in the dark but if you don’t try, you’ll never succeed, right?  Right.  I have spent some time scrolling around Yeah Write and it’s pretty neat and encompasses all sorts of writings and varied interests ranging from the super literary to Harry Potter references.  There are prompts and photos galore and serves as a ripe breeding ground for inspiration. 

Check it out if you are so inclined:


A little poem for your Friday:


I See The Sun

slow to promise reward

songs too short to sing
dance too brief to bare
poems too poor to pay

for you I

foster a soliloquy
of full forgiveness

&

acknowledge

the bright spaces
of your canvas
are more plentiful
than the dark corners

I depend on
your secret
pleasures

no one knows
I write for you

to come alive

in you
I see
the sun

**


It’s strange; I have a funny feeling in my bones today, like I’m forgetting something. Perhaps it’s just the residual effects of my lingering flu bug or maybe that it’s Friday and I’m pumped about my date with me tomorrow. Whatever it is, it’s conjuring up a swell of restlessness in my tummy.  I hate those feelings.

Happy weekend, friendly readers.  Go out and do something nice for yourself.  You deserve it.

In propinquity,
Nic

PS - It should be noted that the accompanying photo today was taken by my friend, a talented writer and photographer, Kiersten Bree Johnston.  She should be famous.