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Winner: Critical Mass Top 50, 2011

Wirschern Sisters' Christmas Dinner. 2011

Light Display. 2011

Happy Birt Jesus. 2011

Beyond the glowing green and red lights, past the shimmering silvery tinsel, around the fragrant pine boughs, another Christmas lingers, a Christmas of contradictions.


This Christmas is complex and at times, uncomfortable. It’s awkward and sometimes bleak. But it is also sincere and celebratory, colorful and creative.


This is the Christmas I capture in this first chapter of a photographic exploration of the biggest event on the American calendar. I grew up in a secular home and at times felt like a Christmas outsider, never connected to the holiday’s religious importance, or its more extreme cultural trappings. But in these photos, I become a Christmas insider, working to discover and reveal what holiday magic, or mania, compels so many to devote thousands of hours to hanging lights, to carving and painting figurines, to building miniature villages, to converting their homes, yards, garages and cars into monuments to merriness.


Initially inspired by the absurdity of a five story inflatable Santa who appeared to be guarding a tree lot, I have launched this survey of uniquely American Christmas traditions. “Christmas in America” is an unvarnished examination of the ways people mark the holiday’s meaning.


My apologies for the lack of news and blog posts. I have been traveling for a six weeks for portfolio events, show openings, and university guest lectures. I am proud to announce that Christmas In America: Happy Birthday, Jesus is a winner in Photolucida’s Critical Mass 2011. As I previously wrote, Critical Mass is an annual juried project competition and always a great source of inspiration. Over 200 international gallery owners, curators, publishers, and editors serve as jurors creating a unique level of exposure.


This year’s is no different.  I am discovering photographers and projects not before seen, inspiring me with new narratives and a fresh aesthetic. Winners come from all corners of the globe and explore a wide variety of subjects with unique opinions and point of view. Below is a brief selection of work from fellow winners who I was unfamiliar with until now.  I feel honored and excited to be in the same company.


Evgenia Arbugaeva


Tiksi is a small village located on a shore of Arctic ocean in Russia. It was built in USSR by people who believed in the future of the Arctic and were coming here from all over the country: scientists, explorers, the military. I was born in here and after fall of Soviet Union my family, as most of the population left Tiksi. But I could never forget this place with it’s vast tundra blown off with winds so strong that if you are a little girl it can easily pick you up and bring to places. My playground with stars during Polar night, lighthouse in a blizzard… This year I came back to my home village for the first time in twenty years. It was a journey to surreal childhood memories. Some people say that Tiksi will be closed in near future because it doesn’t serve a purpose anymore. Before that happened I wanted to capture this special place “in the middle of nowhere.



Jeroen Hofman

Playground #1

Playground#10

Playground#4

My new project is called Playground. The Netherlands have several training facilities where members of the Fire Brigade, the Police Force and the Ministry of Defense are trained and prepared for a wide range of possible scenarios. Within the boundaries of these grounds it’s all just practice or ‘play’. Outside of them however, things are a lot more serious. My aim was to capture these facilities and the people who are trained there. GHOST TOWN Training facilities like these have a very basic and functional design. Factories and houses have been recreated to make training conditions as realistic as possible, but unlike a real town they are completely devoid of any personal decorations or human touch. This makes for a completely surreal atmosphere like that of a ghost town. PROCEDURE I employed quite a static approach using a large format camera, a tripod and a cherrypicker, to position myself over the terrain. My aim was to get the best possible perspective on ‘the game’ inside a broad view of the training facilities. Light conditions were crucial in all of this, which meant I did not always get the desired result right away and in some instances had to return to the same position several times. I originally started out photographing at a training facility for industrial fire fighting in Rotterdam. These first images were framed in such a way as to create the illusion of reality. After gaining access to more and more of these types of facilities I gradually started distancing myself from the exercises that were taking place in front of me. I named my project Playground to emphasize the fact that different services get to practice various scenarios in a controlled environment without any real threat to the safety and lives of their personnel. This project addresses much more than just a few training facilities in The Netherlands. It is about risk-analysis, conformity in groups and my personal view of that hidden world.



Michael Marten

Crosby, Liverpool. 5 and 7 April 2008. High water 12 noon, low water 9am

Harbour, Berwickshire. 22 August 2005. Low water 11am, high water 6pm

Perranporth, Cornwall. 29 and 30 August 2007. Low water 12 noon, high water 8pm

‘Sea Change’ is a study of the tides round the coast of Britain. The views in each diptych are taken from identical positions at low tide and high tide, usually 6 or 18 hours apart. I am interested in showing how landscape changes over time through natural processes and cycles. The camera that observes low and high tide side by side enables us to observe simultaneously two moments in time, two states of nature. Recent landscape photography has often focused on human shaping (and reshaping) of the environment – agriculture, urbanisation, globalisation, pollution. Even when this approach is critical and committed, it also serves to emphasise, even glamorise, humankind’s power over nature. I’m interested in rediscovering nature’s own powers: the elemental forces and processes that underlie and shape the planet. The tides are one of these great natural cycles. I hope these photographs will stimulate people’s awareness of natural change, of landscape as dynamic process rather than static image. Attending to earth’s rhythms can help us to reconnect with the fundamentals of our planet, which we ignore at our peril. ‘Sea Change’ also comments on climate change. The tide floods in and quickly recedes again, but rising sea levels will flood our shores and not recede for thousands or millions of years. Many of the views in these pictures may have disappeared in 100 years’ time. ‘Sea Change’ is an example of ‘comparative photography’, where two or more images show development in time (or other dimensions). The ‘rephotography’ of Mark Klett, and Nicholas Nixon’s portraits of the Brown sisters, are well-known examples.



Rizwan Mirza

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The series Glow explores the modern landscape we inhabit and the artificial light present within it. This bright, artificial and homogenous environment manages to seduce us with its strange, dream like quality – sheltering and comforting us from the darkness surrounding us. We may have breathed life into it, but for many of us this artificial light has always reassuringly been there, living almost independently of us, powered by a seemingly infinite energy source. It lives and breathes. Constantly consuming and growing, twenty-four hours a day. How can we take its presence for granted when we face increasing certainty within our own lives?



This was my first year to enter Critical Mass and have been very grateful for my recent success in the emerging fine art photography market. Congratulations to the winners who I recently had the privilege to meet and personally review their projects, Marry Ellen Bartley, Chris Cappy, and Mitch Dobrowner.  A special thanks to Mary Virginia Swanson for her guidance, support and eternal enthusiasm.

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Selected: ADC Young Guns 9




“Jesse captures our ever-familiar daily life from subtle yet surprising angles. They are stories waiting to be told.” – Qian Qian, YG7

I am extremely excited and honored to announce that I am part of this year’s class of ADC Young Guns 9. ADC Young Guns® is the only international, cross-disciplinary, portfolio-based awards competition that identifies today’s vanguard of young creative professionals age 30 or younger.  Judged on a body of both professional and personal work by a jury of past YG winners, this year’s class represents an impressive global roster of young talent in the fields of graphic design, illustration, advertising and art direction, photography, environmental design, film, animation & video, interactive design, sound design, product design and typography.  If you are in the New York area on October 13 check out the party.  The gallery show of this year’s winners work will be shown at the ADC Gallery from October 13- November 3, 2011.  Go here to see the winner profiles and for more information check out the official press release.

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Update: Phoenix Goddess Temple “Sex Church” Raided By Police

Tracy Elise. 2010

Whisper It's Sexy. 2010

Grand Wizard Jimmy. 2010

Anonymous. 2010

An update to last year’s photo essay documenting the men and women of the Phoenix Goddess Temple. Opponents of the temple where quick to label it as a “sex church” and nothing more than a new age front operating as a brothel. Last week Phoenix Police, arresting 18, raided the temple making it a national new story.

CNN:

Arizona church is house of prostitution, police say

September 09, 2011 By Michael Martinez, CNN

During a Wednesday search of the Phoenix temple and two church-related sites in nearby Sedona, police seized evidence showing that “male and female ‘practitioners’ working a t the Temple were performing sexual acts in exchange for monetary ‘donations,’ all on the pretense of providing ‘neo tantric’ healing therapies,” Phoenix police said.

The alleged brothel generated tens of thousands of dollars a month, Martos told CNN.

A history of neighbor complaints, a recent Phoenix newspaper article, and the temple’s website were among the factors prompting authorities to conduct the undercover investigation, Martos said.

“What’s unusual is that they were trying to hide behind religion or church, and under the guise of religious freedom, they were committing acts of prostitution,” Martos said.

“We certainly respect First Amendment rights. However, religious freedom does not allow for criminal acts,” Martos said.

Regarding the Goddess Temple’s website, he said: “What they would talk about would seem to be religion. At the same time, they were implying or intimating that they were giving sex therapy.”

The website says at one point: “Sex is a holy, sacred and divine healing force at the core (of) our beings. Once we embrace this force instead of deny it, we become successful, happy and powerful manifestors.”

The website also features unclothed women, listed as residing in several states, under a “Goddesses” section.

The investigation focused on the alleged crimes, said acting Phoenix Police Chief Joe Yahner.

Maricopa County Attorney Bill Montgomery added in a statement: “Freedom of religion does not allow individuals to trade sex for money, no matter how the transaction is portrayed.”

The alleged madam, Tracy Elise, who is in her 50s, was arrested and charged with prostitution, illegal control of an enterprise, pandering, and operating a house of prostitution, police said.

The images were originally published in the March issue of Phoenix Magazine and selected for the American Photography Annual 2011 (AP 27) for the year’s best in editorial photography. All photographs are available for licensing. Click the jump for additional images and original article.  Go here for variations of the final edit.

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Critical Mass Finalist 2011 and Photolucida 2011

I am happy to announce that Christmas In America: Happy Birthday, Jesus is a finalist in Photolucida’s Critical Mass 2011. Critical Mass is an annual juried project competition and always a great source of inspiration. Over 200 international gallery owners, curators, publishers, and editors serve as jurors creating a unique level of exposure. Best of luck to the finalists and their projects whom I have had the pleasure of getting to know this year:

Jane Fulton AltSusan A. BarnettRachel BarrettMary Ellen BartleyChristopher CapozzielloJohn FaierAyala GazitKevin KunishiDina LitovskyPaccarik OrueAlexis Pike, Christopher RauschenbergJustin James Reed, and Ian van Coller.



In addition to Photolucida’s annual competition they also hold a biannual five day portfolio review in Portland’s historic Benson Hotel. This has been one of my favorite events for establishing relationships in the fine art photo community. Below are images of the 2011 review taken by friend and Prison Photography’sWired’s Pete Brook.

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New Advertising Work: Charmin Perfect Ending, “The Illiad”

The Illiad is the first image in my latest advertising project, Perfect Ending for Procter & Gamble’s Charmin division. The French held and New York managed, Publicis USA was the agency behind the concept and who commissioned me for the campaign. To illustrate the Charmin slogan, “The Perfect Ending To Every Story,” the agency came up with the clever idea of contextually transposing the subject into the historical setting where our classic novels took place. Showing that the age-old practice of reading on the toilet is best accompanied by Charmin, the campaign is direct, funny, simple, and smart.


To go one step further in tying this all together, it wasn’t till the 1880’s in which proper toilet paper replaced the commonly used pages of magazines, newspapers, books and catalogues. At the turn of the century, the Sears catalogue was commonly referred to as “Rears and Sorebutt.” No joke.


To execute and successfully complete our project I again worked closely with my Frankfurt based digital team, Mainworks. Stay tuned in the coming months for additional concepts transporting our reader to the place of their favorite literary masterpiece.

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New Advertising Work: Cox Business Solutions




I am excited to share a sample of my latest advertising assignment for the Las Vegas based agency,  RR Partners. RR was the creative force behind the widely recognizable and memorable campaign, What Happens in Vegas, Stays in Vegas. For their Cox Communications client, the campaign is to promote their business solutions product by showcasing current clients ranging from large to small, medical to factory. The project has grown to around 30 images and has been a blast. The architectural and abstract nature of the job is a nice change of pace and has been extremely wonderful to have a trusting client whose direction per location is “do your thing.”



The goal of the campaign is to showcase the photography with little copy on top of the image. Aside from the aforementioned direction, below is a sample of the job description provided by the advertising agency.

The images themselves will showcase the business but in an abstract way. None of the shots will be straight on. Angles, colors, patterns and anything that allows the image to be questioned to catch a reader’s eye should be considered.

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New Work: Parker Library for Conde Nast’s Parade Magazine

Jeanne

Tamie

This month my photo essay on the public library in Parker, AZ will be published in Conde Nast’s Sunday Magazine, Parade. The library is considered one of the nation’s best despite scarce state and federal funding. The story explores the volunteers who keep the library up to award winning status. View more to see additional images and outtakes.

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New Advertising Work: New Mexico State Tourism


I was recently commissioned by M&C Saatchi to work on the latest campaign for New Mexico State Tourism. As the copy suggests, the theme is to showcase the modern art and the natural beauty the state has to offer. The agency chose Georgia Okeeffe’s 1935 painting, Ram’s Head White Hollyhock and Little Hills, to symbolize modernity and the natural beauty of Ghost Ranch in Abiquiu, NM. The colorful terrain of Ghost Ranch inspired some of the painter’s most famous landscapes and once wrote: “[the] cliffs over there are almost painted for you — you think — until you try to paint them.” Abiquiu is located 63 miles northwest of Santa Fe and served as Okeeffe’s residence from her first visit in 1934 till her death in 1986.

The goal was to create a scene from the perspective of O’keefe as she faced her finished work and the surrounding landscape, bringing our two themes together. The challenge was, although O’keeffe drew much inspiration from actual physical locations, she worked within the themes of modernism, loosely interpreting with abstraction. With the help of my Frankfurt based digital team, Mainworks, the art department headed by David Baca, and a fortuitous scout day, the concept came together nicely.

Production stills after the jump.

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Wonderful Machine Promos

Last month the folks at Wonderful Machine featured me in their monthly print mailer as well as their email, Photographer Spotlight. The email promo went out to 42,191 art buyers at ad agencies, magazines, and corporations in North America, Europe, Latin America, Asia and Oceania.  The 6″x11″ postcard went out to an additional 2,000 recipients.  There are over 450 photographers in 50 countries listed on Wonderful Machine, and to have a print promo and an email in the same month was a nice surprise.  Wonderful Machine is a unique web portal featuring, promoting, and representing photographers all over the world.  Bellow is the blog entry by WM.

May has come and gone, and another great promo has been mailed to clients. Now that summer is upon us, we felt it appropriate to pay homage to the youthful spirit of adolescence and the adventure seeking mindset—however misguided—that accompanies summer break. Printed by Modern Postcard, our latest promo showcases the work of Los Angeles-Based photographer Jesse Rieser and his young daredevil bike jumper. I had Jesse give me some background on his work:

The image was created for Santy Advertising Agency and their client, Phoenix Children Hospital. The shot was a concept that came from Chris Cavaleri, the art director (who is now at David and Goliath in Los Angeles). The image was part of a campaign of two images selected for a PDN photo annual for best advertising of the year. The campaign depicts common, dangerous, yet humorously familiar children’s activities.

I can attest to the fact that children engage in dangerous activities. I spent the majority of my summers days outside, attempting various foolhardy stunts with friends—some more successful than others. Childhood memories like those are what makes Jesse’s image so relatable, not just for me, but for people across the world. We’ve all done dumb yet memorable things in our lives, and that’s why his photo makes us look twice, and smile.

Here are a couple behind-the-scenes photos showing the two parts of the picture that were later stitched together for the final composite.

Email promo after the jump.

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Arizona’s Wallow Fire as seen from Laguna, NM

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Last Monday while traveling west after Center’s Review Santa Fe as part of the Santa Fe 100, I found myself driving through a surreal landscape fueled by the Wallow Fire 284 miles away in neighboring Arizona. When approaching what seemed to be the thickest of the smoke I opted to exit off interstate 40 which led me to the sparsely populated Laguna, New Mexico. When the images were created, 186,000 acres had been consumed and was the country’s third largest active wildfire with 0% containment. Sadly, today the fire has become the nation’s largest ongoing fire, the second worst in Arizona history, and has grown to 386,000 with 5% containment.

The fire is believed to be the result of an unattended campfire, which began to spread in the afternoon of May 29th. Seven additional images after the jump.

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