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04 April, 2009

David Trautrimas


The future of architecture has arrived.
I have found one of it's potential architects.
David Trautrimas has my vote.
Clever, creative, inventive and just a little bit off, as well as almost hospitable. Someplace I could call home. I don't know if it is the simplicity of the design, his household objects as his materials, or the open space around each building, the fact that there is green. The trash can in Sprinkler House is a nice touch. ecologically conscious, no wall-e here needed. Blade Runner meets Norman Bel Geddes.
He has had a recent show at KlompChing gallery in NY, in their group Visual Morphology show, and is coming up at Photo-Eye in July with our own Mitch Dobrowner, and that should be a great show.

images shown - Waffle Iron Heights, Iron Apartments, The Fishing Complex and Sprinkler
House



27 March, 2009

Sarah Wilson

At PhotoNola last December I kept hearing this phrase - Have you seen the blind prom pictures? You gotta see these images...


Well I tracked Sarah down, and was really all the better for it. I found them so beautiful, rich in color. Her subjects, The Texas School for the Blind students, so full of life, I didn't want to stop looking at them. She took the PhotoNola Review Prize and I look forward to seeing more and greater things from her.

I enjoy deconstructing the ideas we have about beauty, strength, our weaknesses and flaws. We spend our time so used to understanding beauty as a view of a supermodel, and here we have young adults who are so compellingly radiant, we want to be part of their joy. I want to know them, be part of their lives.

Based in Texas after graduating from NYU's Photo program, she has another compelling project based on Jasper, Texas called the Road to Redemption. Shot in Black & White, she captures the tension and questions the issues of race, justice, the Death Penalty and ultimately a certain level of forgiveness. I'll save that for another time.






26 March, 2009

Yet another opportunity-



NYMPHOTO
(a Collective of Women Photographers) is pleased to announce it's forth group show and firs call for entries o be exhibited at the Sasha Wolf Gallery. Nymphoto is looking for the best in female contemporary and emerging photography. Work will be curated by the core members of the collective, in conjunction with highly respected curator and gallery owner, Sasha Wolf. Works selected will be included in "Nymphoto Presents at Sasha Wolf Gallery" and be on view from May 23 to June 6, 2009. Sasha Wolf Gallery is located in lower Manhattan, conveniently located and easily accessible from both Chelsea and Dumbo, two of New York's artistic centers.

Eligibility: Any woman working in photography.

Deadline: Midnight (EST) April 3, 2009.

For more information, go here.

NYMPHOTO is also publishing there first book: "Since we've grown in readership from our blog with our interviews, we've decided it was time to take the publishing step. There's no real publication dedicated to contemporary women photographers so we decided it needed to be done. We've made a curatorial selection from our long list of artists we've interviewed and was fortunate enough to meet gallery owner, Sasha Wolf, who approached us to collaborate in an exhibition to coincide with the book.

Our book is simply titled "Nymphoto: Conversations Volume I."

Including work by Michele Abeles, Juliana Beasley, Rona Chang, Michal Chelbin, Nina Buesing Corvallo, Candace Gottschalk, Jessica M. Kaufman, Klea McKenna, Talia Greene, Maria Passarotti, Susana Raab, Emily Shur, Tema Stauffer, Jane Tam, Garie Waltzer & Jennifer Williams."

25 March, 2009

Photo-Op at PCNW


I know its early - but send those entries in! Its a great space to exhibit and the juror is Jen Bekman. What do you have to lose?


The Photographic Center Northwest's 14th Annual Photographic Competition Exhibition, Photo-Op, will be chosen by Ms. Jen Bekman. This annual juried exhibition draws entries from across the country and around the world, and remains among the most popular shows in PCNW's annual schedule. Selected entries will be exhibited at PCNW in Seattle from July 13th - September 4th, 2009. First, second, and third prize winners will take home $1000, $500, and $250 as well as $75 Gift Certificates of Blurb Scrip for each winner. The competition is open to all photographers, all photographic processes, and all themes. The juror is looking for work that represents a larger, cohesive body of work and will be selecting a short series from each photographer chosen.

Here's the fine print - The entry fee is $47 for a minimum of five jpegs & artist statement file. Additional jpegs will be accepted if accompanied by a seven dollar per jpeg fee, up to ten jpegs total.

All entries must be received by Friday, May 15, 2009.

24 March, 2009

Bootsy Holler - Ruby & Willie

Bootsy has created a beautiful, poignant series, Ruby + Willie, documenting the home of her grandparents. I have been looking for a way to showcase these images for years, and we are now working to get the series online and into the gallery. As a document and testament to the lives of her family, she has captured the essence of these two people who shared their lives for so long.















We started previewing the series with a limited edition image, Chandelier, from Ruby + Willie in our Collectible group, and prints are still available.

















We are excited to work with our friends at City Catering Company to celebrate Bootsy, and showcase Ruby + Willie.
























Join us on
8 April 2009
5.30-7.30pm
City Catering Company
1318 E Pine St
Seattle
206.721.0334

for more information, please contact the gallery or City Catering Company

12 March, 2009

aaron hobson



Aaron Hobson's work is mesmerizing.

I grew up with a mystery writer (my mother), which leads me down the very twisted path of my imagination that really connects with this work. The sense of darkness, foreboding and a strange sense of dry wit really compels me to look at this work over and over and over.

I first saw the work on Aline Smithson's great blog
Lenscratch, and then again during my review of Critical Mass, from the great group at PhotoLucida.

Information about Cinemascapes -
Hobson's work is created by combining several sequential, vertical images, thereby offering more visual information and an obscured rendition of any moment depicted by a single image. These preserved moments straddle between the contexts of fictitious, universal and isolated autobiographical experiences. At times inspired by scenery near the artist's residence in the Adirondack mountains, the work contains narratives steeped in the everyday-from the machismo American cowboy to the disheveled Wall Street staffer. In a fashion comparable to that of feminist portraiture the figure in the image is always the artist whose signified identity morphs through changes in attire and ever-changing elusory surroundings. The nuanced details in the photographs are not forced, whether the interior of a '64 Mercury or a seemingly unconscious figure, and lack excessive or immediately shocking details. Rather, the restive energy that pervades the artist's work unexpectedly draws and subsequently arrests the viewer as the narrative unfolds exposing sensual, disturbing, and onerous undertones. The incredibly intricate and open-ended narratives are at once left to the interpretation of the viewer and restrained by details conveying the intentions of the artist; in the end, leaving the onlooker to ponder happenings within the frame incessantly.





09 March, 2009

Imagine - Jurored by Susan Burnstine at Spring Arts Collective


One of our represented artists, Susan Burnstine, juried a new exhibition, Imagine, opening Wednesday the 11th and running through 4 April.

Do not miss this outstanding collection of work. Susan did a fabulous job of curating this show. We were so excited to see Polly Chandler take top honors, Ann Texter, who I hadn't seen before, as well as Jonathon Luckhurst head the list of outstanding work on the walls of the Deborah Martin Gallery.

I have been a huge fan of Polly's work since meeting her in Portland two years ago. She has been part of our New Directions 07 show, as well as having a work in Collectible, our collection of affordable art.

Don't miss the opening extravaganza on the 11th (yup - that's this week)

for more information contact the Deborah Martin Gallery for details, and congratulations to all those involved.

04 April, 2009

David Trautrimas


The future of architecture has arrived.
I have found one of it's potential architects.
David Trautrimas has my vote.
Clever, creative, inventive and just a little bit off, as well as almost hospitable. Someplace I could call home. I don't know if it is the simplicity of the design, his household objects as his materials, or the open space around each building, the fact that there is green. The trash can in Sprinkler House is a nice touch. ecologically conscious, no wall-e here needed. Blade Runner meets Norman Bel Geddes.
He has had a recent show at KlompChing gallery in NY, in their group Visual Morphology show, and is coming up at Photo-Eye in July with our own Mitch Dobrowner, and that should be a great show.

images shown - Waffle Iron Heights, Iron Apartments, The Fishing Complex and Sprinkler
House



27 March, 2009

Sarah Wilson

At PhotoNola last December I kept hearing this phrase - Have you seen the blind prom pictures? You gotta see these images...


Well I tracked Sarah down, and was really all the better for it. I found them so beautiful, rich in color. Her subjects, The Texas School for the Blind students, so full of life, I didn't want to stop looking at them. She took the PhotoNola Review Prize and I look forward to seeing more and greater things from her.

I enjoy deconstructing the ideas we have about beauty, strength, our weaknesses and flaws. We spend our time so used to understanding beauty as a view of a supermodel, and here we have young adults who are so compellingly radiant, we want to be part of their joy. I want to know them, be part of their lives.

Based in Texas after graduating from NYU's Photo program, she has another compelling project based on Jasper, Texas called the Road to Redemption. Shot in Black & White, she captures the tension and questions the issues of race, justice, the Death Penalty and ultimately a certain level of forgiveness. I'll save that for another time.






26 March, 2009

Yet another opportunity-



NYMPHOTO
(a Collective of Women Photographers) is pleased to announce it's forth group show and firs call for entries o be exhibited at the Sasha Wolf Gallery. Nymphoto is looking for the best in female contemporary and emerging photography. Work will be curated by the core members of the collective, in conjunction with highly respected curator and gallery owner, Sasha Wolf. Works selected will be included in "Nymphoto Presents at Sasha Wolf Gallery" and be on view from May 23 to June 6, 2009. Sasha Wolf Gallery is located in lower Manhattan, conveniently located and easily accessible from both Chelsea and Dumbo, two of New York's artistic centers.

Eligibility: Any woman working in photography.

Deadline: Midnight (EST) April 3, 2009.

For more information, go here.

NYMPHOTO is also publishing there first book: "Since we've grown in readership from our blog with our interviews, we've decided it was time to take the publishing step. There's no real publication dedicated to contemporary women photographers so we decided it needed to be done. We've made a curatorial selection from our long list of artists we've interviewed and was fortunate enough to meet gallery owner, Sasha Wolf, who approached us to collaborate in an exhibition to coincide with the book.

Our book is simply titled "Nymphoto: Conversations Volume I."

Including work by Michele Abeles, Juliana Beasley, Rona Chang, Michal Chelbin, Nina Buesing Corvallo, Candace Gottschalk, Jessica M. Kaufman, Klea McKenna, Talia Greene, Maria Passarotti, Susana Raab, Emily Shur, Tema Stauffer, Jane Tam, Garie Waltzer & Jennifer Williams."

25 March, 2009

Photo-Op at PCNW


I know its early - but send those entries in! Its a great space to exhibit and the juror is Jen Bekman. What do you have to lose?


The Photographic Center Northwest's 14th Annual Photographic Competition Exhibition, Photo-Op, will be chosen by Ms. Jen Bekman. This annual juried exhibition draws entries from across the country and around the world, and remains among the most popular shows in PCNW's annual schedule. Selected entries will be exhibited at PCNW in Seattle from July 13th - September 4th, 2009. First, second, and third prize winners will take home $1000, $500, and $250 as well as $75 Gift Certificates of Blurb Scrip for each winner. The competition is open to all photographers, all photographic processes, and all themes. The juror is looking for work that represents a larger, cohesive body of work and will be selecting a short series from each photographer chosen.

Here's the fine print - The entry fee is $47 for a minimum of five jpegs & artist statement file. Additional jpegs will be accepted if accompanied by a seven dollar per jpeg fee, up to ten jpegs total.

All entries must be received by Friday, May 15, 2009.

24 March, 2009

Bootsy Holler - Ruby & Willie

Bootsy has created a beautiful, poignant series, Ruby + Willie, documenting the home of her grandparents. I have been looking for a way to showcase these images for years, and we are now working to get the series online and into the gallery. As a document and testament to the lives of her family, she has captured the essence of these two people who shared their lives for so long.















We started previewing the series with a limited edition image, Chandelier, from Ruby + Willie in our Collectible group, and prints are still available.

















We are excited to work with our friends at City Catering Company to celebrate Bootsy, and showcase Ruby + Willie.
























Join us on
8 April 2009
5.30-7.30pm
City Catering Company
1318 E Pine St
Seattle
206.721.0334

for more information, please contact the gallery or City Catering Company

12 March, 2009

aaron hobson



Aaron Hobson's work is mesmerizing.

I grew up with a mystery writer (my mother), which leads me down the very twisted path of my imagination that really connects with this work. The sense of darkness, foreboding and a strange sense of dry wit really compels me to look at this work over and over and over.

I first saw the work on Aline Smithson's great blog
Lenscratch, and then again during my review of Critical Mass, from the great group at PhotoLucida.

Information about Cinemascapes -
Hobson's work is created by combining several sequential, vertical images, thereby offering more visual information and an obscured rendition of any moment depicted by a single image. These preserved moments straddle between the contexts of fictitious, universal and isolated autobiographical experiences. At times inspired by scenery near the artist's residence in the Adirondack mountains, the work contains narratives steeped in the everyday-from the machismo American cowboy to the disheveled Wall Street staffer. In a fashion comparable to that of feminist portraiture the figure in the image is always the artist whose signified identity morphs through changes in attire and ever-changing elusory surroundings. The nuanced details in the photographs are not forced, whether the interior of a '64 Mercury or a seemingly unconscious figure, and lack excessive or immediately shocking details. Rather, the restive energy that pervades the artist's work unexpectedly draws and subsequently arrests the viewer as the narrative unfolds exposing sensual, disturbing, and onerous undertones. The incredibly intricate and open-ended narratives are at once left to the interpretation of the viewer and restrained by details conveying the intentions of the artist; in the end, leaving the onlooker to ponder happenings within the frame incessantly.





09 March, 2009

Imagine - Jurored by Susan Burnstine at Spring Arts Collective


One of our represented artists, Susan Burnstine, juried a new exhibition, Imagine, opening Wednesday the 11th and running through 4 April.

Do not miss this outstanding collection of work. Susan did a fabulous job of curating this show. We were so excited to see Polly Chandler take top honors, Ann Texter, who I hadn't seen before, as well as Jonathon Luckhurst head the list of outstanding work on the walls of the Deborah Martin Gallery.

I have been a huge fan of Polly's work since meeting her in Portland two years ago. She has been part of our New Directions 07 show, as well as having a work in Collectible, our collection of affordable art.

Don't miss the opening extravaganza on the 11th (yup - that's this week)

for more information contact the Deborah Martin Gallery for details, and congratulations to all those involved.