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New Yorker article by Zadie Smith about Jerry Dantzic’s new Billie Holiday book

Posted on July 3, 2017 by APAG in News

Crazy They Call Me

By Zadie Smith

Billie Holiday, 1957; Photograph by Jerry Dantzic

Audio: Zadie Smith reads.

Well, you certainly don’t go out anyplace less than dressed, not these days. Can’t let anybody mistake you for that broken, misused little girl: Eleanora Fagan. No. Let there be no confusion. Not in the audience or in your old man, in the maître d’ or the floor manager, the cops or the goddam agents of the goddam I.R.S. You always have your fur, present and correct, hanging off your shoulders just so. Take back your mink, take back your pearls. But you don’t sing that song, it’s not in your key. Let some other girl sing it. The type who gets a smile from a cop even if she’s crossing Broadway in her oldest Terylene housedress. You don’t have that luxury. Besides, you love that mink! Makes the state of things clear. In fact—though many aren’t hip to this yet—not only is there no more Eleanora, there isn’t any Billie, either. There is only Lady Day. Alligator bag, three rows of diamonds nice and thick on your wrist—never mind that it’s three o’clock in the afternoon. You boil an egg in twinset and pearls.

They got you holed up in Newark for the length of this engagement, and one day the wife of the super says to you, So you can’t play New York no more, huh? Who cares? To me, you always look like lady. She’s Italian. She gets it. No judgment. She says, I look after you. I be your mother. God bless her, but your daughter days are done. And if a few sweet, clueless bobby-soxers, happy as Sunday, stop you on 110th to tell you how much they loved you at Carnegie Hall, how much they loved you on “The Tonight Show,” try your best not to look too bored, take out your pearl-encrusted cigarette box and hand them a smoke. Girl, you must give away twenty smokes a day. You give it all away, it streams from you, like rivers rolling to the sea: love, music, money, smokes. What you got, everybody wants—and most days you let ’em have it. Sometimes it’s as much as you can do to keep ahold of your mink.

It’s not that you don’t like other women, exactly, it’s only that you’re wary. And they’re wary of you right back. No surprise, really. Most of these girls live in a completely different world. You’ve visited that world on occasion, but it’s not home. You’re soon back on the road. Meanwhile they look at you and see that you’re unattached—even when you’re hitched—they see you’re floating, that no one tells you when to leave the club, and there’s nobody crying in a cot waiting for you to pick them up and sing a lullaby. No, nobody tells you who to see or where to go, and if they do, you don’t have to listen, even when you get a sock to the jaw. Now, the women you tend to meet? They don’t know what to do with that. They don’t know what to do with the God-blessed child, with the girl that’s got her own, who can stay up drinking with the clarinet player till the newspaper boys hit the corners. And maybe one of these broads is married to that clarinet player. And maybe the two of them have a baby and a picket fence and all that jazz. So naturally she’s wary. You can understand that. Sure.

And you’ve always been—well, what’s the right term for it? A man’s lady? Men are drawn to you, all kinds of men, and not just for the obvious. Even your best girlfriends are men, if you see what I mean, yes, you’ve got your little gang of dear boys who aren’t so very different from you, despite appearances: they got nobody steady to go home to, either. So if some lover man breaks your heart, or your face, you can trust in your little gang to be there for you, more often than not, trust them to come round to wherever you’re at, with cigarettes and alcohol, and quote Miss Crawford, and quote Miss Stanwyck, and make highballs, and tell you that you really oughta get a dog. Honey, you should get a dog. They never doubt you’re Lady Day—matter of fact, they knew you were She before you did.

You get a dog.

Women are wary, lover men come and go and mostly leave you waiting, and, truth be told, even those dear boys who make the highballs have their own thing going on, more often than not. But you’re not afraid to look for love in all kinds of places. Once upon a time there was that wild girl Tallulah, plus a few other ladies, back in the day, but there was no way to be in the world like that, not back then—or no way you could see—and anyhow most of those ladies were crazier than a box of frogs. Nobody’s perfect. Which is another way of saying there’s no escape from this world. And so sometimes, on a Friday night, after the singing is over and the clapping dies down, there’s simply no one and nothing to be done. You fall back on yourself. Backstage empties out, but they’re still serving. You’re not in the mood for conversation.

Later, you’ll open your vanity case and take a trip on the light fantastic—but right at this moment you’re grateful for your little dog. You did have a huge great dog, a while back, but she was always knocking glasses off the side tables, and then she went and died on you, so now you got this tiny little angel. Pepi. A dog don’t cheat, a dog don’t lie. Dogs remind you of you: they give everything they’ve got, they’re wide open to the world. It’s a big risk! There are people out there who’ll kick a little half-pint dog like Pepi just for something to do. And you know how that feels. This little dog and you? Soul mates. Where you been all my life? He’s like those dogs you read about, that sit on their master’s grave for years and years and years. Recently, you had a preview of this. You were up in the stratosphere, with no body at all, floating, almost right there with God, you were hanging off the pearly gates, and nobody and nothing could make you come back. Some fool slapped you, some other fool sprayed seltzer in your face—nothing. Then this little angel of a dog licked you right in your eye socket and you came straight back to earth just to feel it, and three hours after that you were on a stage, getting paid. Dogs are too good for this world.

Maybe a lot of people wouldn’t guess it but you can be the most wonderful aunt, godmother, nursemaid, when the mood takes you. You can spot a baby across a room and make it smile. That’s a skill! Most people don’t even try to develop it! People always telling these put-upon babies what to do, what to think, what to say, what to eat. But you don’t ask anything at all from them—and that’s your secret. You’re one of the few who just like to make a baby smile. And they love you for it, make no mistake, they adore you, and all things being equal you’d stay longer if you could, you’d stay and play, but you’ve got bills to pay.

Matter of fact, downstairs right this moment there’s five or six of these business-minded fellows, some of them you know pretty well, some you don’t, some you never saw before in your life, but they’re all involved in your bills one way or another, and they say if you don’t mind too much they’d like to escort you to the club. It’s only ten blocks, but they’d like to walk you there. I guess somebody thinks you’re not going to get there at all without these—now, what would you call them? Chaperons. Guess somebody’s worried. But with or without your chaperons you’ll get there, you always get there, and you’re always on time, except during those exceptions when exceptional things seem to happen which simply can’t be helped. Anyway, once you open your mouth all is forgiven. You even forgive yourself. Because you are exceptional, and so exceptions must be made. And isn’t the point that whenever a lady turns up onstage she’s always right on time?

Hair takes a while, face takes longer. It’s all work, it’s all a kind of armor. You got skinny a while back and some guys don’t like it, one even told you that you got a face like an Egyptian death mask now. Well, good! You wear it, it’s yours. Big red lips and now this new high ponytail bouncing around—the gardenias are done, the gardenias belonged to Billie—and if somebody asks you where exactly this new long twist of hair comes from you’ll cut your eyes at whoever’s doing the asking and say, Well, I wear it so I guess it’s mine. It’s my hair on my goddam head. It’s arranged just so around my beautiful mask—take a good look! Because you know they’re all looking right at it as you sing, you place it deliberately in the spotlight, your death mask, because you know they can’t help but seek your soul in the face, it’s their instinct to look for it there. You paint the face as protection. You draw the eyebrows, define the lips. It’s the border between them and you. Otherwise, everybody in the place would think they had permission to leap right down your throat and eat your heart out.

People ask: What’s it like standing up there? It’s like eating your own heart out. It’s like there’s nobody out there in the dark at all. All the downtown collectors and the white ladies in their own fancy furs love to talk about your phrasing—it’s the fashion to talk about your phrasing—but what sounds like a revolution to others is simple common sense to you. All respect to Ella, all respect to Sarah, but when those gals open their mouths to sing, well, to you it’s like someone just opened a brand-new Frigidaire. A chill comes over you. And you just can’t do it like that. Won’t. It’s obvious to you that a voice has the same work to do, musically speaking, as the sax or the trumpet or the piano. A voice has got to feel its way in. Who the hell doesn’t know that? Yet somehow these people don’t act like they know it, they always seem surprised. They sit in the dark, drinking Martinis, in their mink, in their tux. People are idiots. You wear pearls and you throw them before swine, more or less. Depends what pearls, though, and what swine. Not everybody, for example, is gonna get “Strange Fruit.” Not every night. They’ve got to be deserving—a word that means a different thing depending on the night. You told somebody once, I only do it for people who might understand and appreciate it. This is not a June-Moon-Croon-Tune. This song tells a story about pain and heartache. Three hundred years of heartache! You got to turn each room you play into a kind of church in order to accommodate that much pain. Yet people shout their requests from their tables like you’re a goddam jukebox. People are idiots. You never sing anything after “Strange Fruit,” either. That’s the last song no matter what and sometimes if you’re high, and the front row look rich and stupid and dull, that’s liable to be your only song. And they’ll be thankful for it! Even though it’s not easy for them to listen to and not easy for you to sing. When you sing it you have been described as punishing, you have been described as relentless. Well, you’re not done with that song till you’re done with it. You will never be done with it. It’ll be done with you first.

In the end, people don’t want to hear about dogs and babies and feeling your way into a phrase, or eating your heart out—people want to hear about you as you appear in these songs. They never want to know about the surprise you feel in yourself, the sense of being directed by God, when something in the modulation of your throat leaps up, like a kid reaching for a rising balloon, except most kids miss while you catch it—yes, you catch it almost without expecting to—landing on an incidental note, a perfect addition, one you never put in that phrase before, and never heard anyone else do, and yet you can hear at once that it is perfection. Perfection! It has the sound of something totally inevitable—it’s better than Porter, it’s better than Gershwin. In a moment you have written over their original versions finally and completely. . . .

No, they never ask you about that. They want the cold, hard facts. They ask dull questions about the songs, about which man goes with which song in your mind, and if they’re a little more serious they might ask about Armstrong or Basie or Lester. If they’re sneaky with no manners, they’ll want to know if chasing the drink or the dragon made singing those songs harder or sweeter. They’ll want to know about your run-ins with the federal government of these United States. They’ll want to know if you hated or loved the people in your audience, the people who paid your wages, stole your wages, arrested you once for fraternizing with a white man, jailed you for hooking, jailed you for being, and raided your hospital room, right at the end, as you lay conversing with God. They are always very interested to hear that you don’t read music. Once, you almost said—to a sneaky fellow from the Daily News, who was inquiring—you almost turned to him and said Motherfucker I AM music. But a lady does not speak like that, however, and so you did not. ♦

  • Zadie Smith has contributed numerous short stories, nonfiction pieces, and a personal history—“Dead Man Laughing,” about her father’s love of comedy—since first appearing in The New Yorker in 1999.

    Read more »

Len Speier’s passing on February 5, 2017…

Posted on March 8, 2017 by APAG in News
The Eye of Photography

The death of Len Speier, photographer of the human condition

MARCH 2, 2017 – UNITED STATES , WRITTEN BY L’OEIL DE LA PHOTOGRAPHIE

Leonard Speier Dec. 1946 – Mar. 1947 Veterans Portrait Project New York City, NY

© Leonard Speier

© Leonard Speier

© Leonard Speier

© Leonard Speier

© Leonard Speier

© Leonard Speier

© Leonard Speier

© Leonard Speier

© Leonard Speier

© Leonard Speier

© Leonard Speier
Len Speier died on February 5th. He was a New York City photographer who was still going strong at the age of 89. Energized by his recent exhibition at Daniel Cooney Fine Art, Len Speier was looking toward the future and getting ready for new adventures.

Len Speier’s images capture the spontaneous humor and peculiarities of the human condition. Speier delighted in the odd moment, the unexpected juxtaposition, the sudden reveal of a subject’s true self.

Born in New York City in 1927, Speier was taken with photography from the moment he was given a primitive film developing kit for his thirteenth birthday. After college, a stint in the Army with the First Cavalry Division, law school, and a private practice, he managed to return to his first love, the photo arts, and was so engaged for nearly five decades.

Known primarily for his 35mm black and white photographs, Speier shot extensively in New York City, punctuating this lifelong residency with trips to various other parts of the world, including China, Spain, Portugal, France, Italy, Suriname, and Japan.

Speier worked in the street photography genre that developed around Henri Cartier-Bresson, influenced also by the work of contemporaries Robert Frank and William Klein. He saw photography as an ongoing aesthetic (and humanist) adventure – one that allowed him to elevate his natural talent as a communicator into a highly evolved form of social interaction.

Speier also taught photography at various New York City venues – The New School, New York University and, for over 16 years, the Fashion Institute of Technology. For ten years, Speier mentored children of color in the art of photography for the NAACP’s ACT-SO program.

In later life, Speier embraced digital technology, trading his darkroom for a high-end inkjet printer. He continued to shoot and print until his death in February 2017.
Speier’s work is in the Permanent Collection of the International Center of Photography, the Bibliothèque Nationale de France, the Erie Art Museum, the Museum of the City of New York, the Photo Archive of the New York Public Library, and numerous private collections. He exhibited widely; digital prints of Speier’s iconic images are currently on view at the Blank Wall Gallery in Athens, Greece, and a retrospective exhibition of vintage black and white prints was held last year at Daniel Cooney Fine Art in Chelsea. Speier lived in New York City but saw himself as a citizen of the world.

http://www.lenspeier.com/

John Zimmerman’s new book

Posted on March 8, 2017 by APAG in News

Shoeshine contest, Wilson, North Carolina, 1952

A Rare Look at the Early Photographs of John G. Zimmerman

Liz Ronk  Feb 15, 2017

“There’s no such thing as an impossible picture. If you can visualize a picture in your mind, you can make the camera do it.” – John G. Zimmerman

Many know the work of John G. Zimmerman in the context of his groundbreaking sports photography. He was the first photographer to place the camera above a basketball hoop and was known for using his equipment in new and innovative ways to get the shot he wanted. He was among the first staff photographers for Sports Illustrated, photographing 10 Olympics and many covers for the famous SI Swimsuit Issue.

But, as the new book America in Black and White illustrates, his archive goes much deeper than that. The book (like its companion exhibit) offers a new look at Zimmerman’s early humanist photography, focusing on his career between 1950 and 1975, including famous pictures like the Mariner Church relocation (slide 7 above) as well as images shot for LIFE and Ebony in their coverage of the Jim Crow South. Many of the images — which were selected by Belgian scholar Arne De Winde with the input of Zimmerman’s family — have never been seen or published before, and they show a thoughtful eye and attention to detail that would later inform his sports photos.

Front cover of America in Black and White: Selected Photographs of John G. Zimmerman. Published by Hannibal.
America in Black and White: Selected Photographs of John G. Zimmerman. Published by Hannibal. John G. Zimmerman Archive 

His career in photography began at Freemont High School in California, where Hollywood cinematographer C.A. Bach led a photo program that produced no fewer than 8 LIFE staff photographers, including John Dominis, George Strock and Mark Kauffman. His professional career was jumpstarted when he happened to capture an attempted assassination of President Truman, the photos of which would be published in both TIME and LIFE in 1950.

One of the rarer stories in the book shows a shoeshine contest in Wilson, N.C., in 1952. Speaking with TIME, Zimmerman’s daughter Linda recalled getting this set from the TIME-LIFE archives with little information on what she was seeing. Because the story had not been published, the magazine had not collected extensive caption issue. Intrigued by the subject matter, she worked with local librarians and archivists in North Carolina over the course of several years to identify and locate the winner of the contest, Curtis Phillips.

Zimmerman’s early assignments in the 1950s for Ebony, photographing the segregated south, clearly influenced the way he would photograph in the years to come — and this look behind the scenes makes clear the pervasive reach of that time. For example, the fifth photograph above, showing a young African-American girl receiving polio treatment in Montgomery, Ala., was not published. But a similar Zimmerman photo of a young white girl ran in TIME magazine in 1953.

Linda Zimmerman notes that her father, who died in 2002, always worked in a linear fashion, always looking ahead, so the book’s focus on his early work is “a wonderful surprise” that contextualizes his entire career and offers a look at work rarely seen.

http://time.com/4658857/america-black-and-white-zimmerman/

Jerry Dantzic’s Photographs of Billie Holiday in The New Yorker

Posted on March 8, 2017 by APAG in News

So excited to share the New Yorker’s Q&A with Zadie Smith about her Reflection entitled “Crazy They Call Me: On Looking at Jerry Dantzic’s Photos of Billie Holiday” from my father’s upcoming book “Billie Holiday at Sugar Hill” !! #billieholiday #zadiesmith #jerrydantzic Grayson Dantzic#thames&hudson #jazz #newark

“Crazy They Call Me”

Fiction: “Not only is there no more Eleanora, there isn’t any Billie, either. There is only Lady Day.”
NEWYORKER.COM

Ben Fernandez protest photographs

Posted on March 8, 2017 by APAG in News

http://www.slate.com/blogs/behold/2014/05/09/ben_fernandez_the_60s_decade_of_change_chronicles_fernandez_s_career_covering.html?wpsrc=sh_all_tab_fb_top

Behold
THE PHOTO BLOG
MAY 9 2014 11:16 AM
Incredible Images of 1960s Protests
 By David Rosenberg
Solidarity march honoringDr. Martin Luther King,Jr. after hisassassination. Memphis,Tennessee, April 6, 1968.
Solidarity march honoring Martin Luther King Jr. after his assassination, Memphis, April 6, 1968

Copyright Benedict J. Fernandez

Siiri Fernandez paints a picture of her husband, the photographer Benedict J. Fernandez, as a man who communicates predominately through his images. “On our very first date he showed up with a slide projector and a tray of slides of the Brooklyn Bridge at nighttime he wanted me to see.  I was properly impressed because they were amazing,” she said in a joint interview with her husband.

Siiri and Ben were married in 1957. In the beginning, photography was a hobby for Fernandez, but it soon became his profession after he was laid off from his job at the Brooklyn Navy Yard with a wife and two kids to support. Fernandez credits New York Times photo editor Ursula Mahoney for giving him some assignments and supporting the way in which he looked at the world. From there he received more assignments and began finding his own stories as well, eventually focusing on the protest movement. When he began to teach, he was equally as invested; Siiri recalled many weekends when Fernandez was away with students on trips, helping them discover their own visions.

“He started photographing protest movements before they were protests,” Siiri explained about her husband’s curiosity and tenacity. “He would hear about something and start taking pictures, no matter what side of the movement. … He is a historic chronicler through pictures.”

Left: Pro-Vietnam Warprotest, circa 1968. Right: Pro-Vietnam War protest.Union Square, New YorkCity, May 1964.
Left: Pro–Vietnam War protest, circa 1968. Right: Pro–Vietnam War protest, Union Square, New York City, May 1964.

Copyright Benedict J. Fernandez

Construction workersclash with police during apro-Vietnam Wardemonstration.New York, 1970.
Construction workers clash with police during a pro–Vietnam War demonstration, New York, 1970

Copyright Benedict J. Fernandez

Left: Allen Ginsberg at the Women’s House of Detention, New York, March 1964. Right: Poor People’s Campaign, Washington, summer 1968.
Left: Allen Ginsberg at the Women’s House of Detention, New York, March 1964. Right: Poor People’s Campaign, Washington, summer 1968.

Copyright Benedict J. Fernandez

Fernandez created his most recognized body of work during the civil rights movements of the 1960s. Along the way, Fernandez also became friends with Martin Luther King Jr.; he documented some of King’s private moments with his family. Currently, a selection of Fernandez’s work from the 1960s is on view at the Bronx Documentary Center in an exhibit titled “The ’60s: Decade of Change.”

Fernandez’s love of photography and teaching led him to become the founder of the Photo Film Workshop at the Public Theater, which started with the goal to educate inner-city children about photography. He also established the photography program at Parsons The New School and built a curriculum that viewed the teaching of photography in a more holistic approach, rather than simply one that was technical.

“If you have a purpose in which to make a statement with photography … go out and start doing what your point of view is. The more you see your personal point of view, the better it is,” he said. “We don’t need repetition, we need your point of view. That’s what I try to teach.”

“The ’60s: Decade of Change” is on view at the Bronx Documentary Center in New York City until July 20.

Dr. Martin Luther King,Jr. with his daughterBonnie at EbenezerBaptist Church. Atlanta,Georgia, February 1968.
Martin Luther King Jr. with his daughter Bonnie at Ebenezer Baptist Church, Atlanta, February 1968

Copyright Benedict J.Fernandez

Left: Protest against the U.S.invasion of the DominicanRepublic. Circa 1965. Right: Solidarity Day,Washington D.C., June1968.
Left: Protest against the U.S. invasion of the Dominican Republic, circa 1965. Right: Solidarity Day, Washington, June 1968.

Copyright Benedict J.Fernandez

The National Guard onthe streets of Newark,aftermath of the riots.The Newark riots lasted 6days and left 26 dead.Newark, New Jersey, July1967.
The National Guard out on the streets after riots, Newark, New Jersey, July 1967. The Newark riots lasted six days and left 26 dead.

Copyright Benedict J. Fernandez

Draft card burning inUnion Square, New York.November 1965
Draft-card burning in Union Square, New York, November 1965

Copyright Benedict J. Fernandez

David Rosenberg is the editor of Slate’s Behold blog. He has worked as a photo editor for 15 years and is a tennis junkie. Follow him on Twitter.

Stanley Knap

Posted on February 27, 2017 by APAG in Member Profile

 

Horse and Geraniums
Lady and Man Admiring
Man Praying by Bank

Museum Wheelchair
Building with Arches
Woman Monet

 

Contact Information:  Diane Kramek, 862-226-2112

dianekramek@gmail.com or stanleyknapphotography@gmail.com

Website: www.stanleyknap.net

Stanley I. Knap was born in 1947 in Wildflecken, Germany in a displaced persons refugee camp operated by the US Army.  His parents were liberated from Nazi concentration camps two years earlier and together with 20,000 refugees – primarily Poles – they were given the choice to return to Soviet-controlled Communist Poland or immigrate to the United States.  In 1949, the family landed in Manhattan but eventually settled in New Jersey where Stanley’s father, a talented composer and music director, took a job at a Polish parish in Passaic. His mother, a nurse with RN status in Poland, quickly taught herself enough English to qualify as a LPN in a local hospital.

Stanley identified with his Polish roots as a child but also became Americanized in high school and as a young adult.  He was drawn to photography and began seriously studying it in 1966.  He graduated from The School of Visual Arts, New York in 1969, majoring in both film and photography.  His work – that of the life around him and his beloved city – won him early accolades as he was awarded sponsorship for a Guggenheim Grant and was also one-time assistant to Annie Lebowitz. His work was published in New West Magazine and he was featured in Rolling Stone as being one of the Twelve Hot photographers. He shot a number of album covers: Blossom Dearie, Larry Croce and Sugarcane Harris among others. Stanley’s work touches upon that of Cartier-Bresson and Robert Frank; however, it was Stanley’s mentor and teacher Garry Winogrand who would be the biggest artistic influence in his career.

Stanley preferred working in film photography, never digital, as it allowed a tactile relationship between the photographer, the subject, and eventually, the viewer.  He primarily worked with a 35mm Leica M4 camera with a 28mm lens and Tri-X 400 in black and white film. There was no cropping or special manipulation done in the dark room and all photographs were composed full frame in the camera’s view finder.  His subject matter is his life and observations; much of his work captures the dynamic and gritty realities of New York City in the 60s-80s.

Stanley suffered from a syndrome that many children of adult Holocaust survivors develop.  While it manifests itself in a myriad of ways, for Stanley it halted his ability to pursue photography. In 2009 he began working again. As he was beginning to reestablish himself he was diagnosed with cancer and died in June of 2014. His renewed passion can be seen in personal photographs of his family and friends.

 

APAG 2017 Seminar on March 11 & 12 a success!

Posted on January 30, 2017 by APAG in Seminar

Photo Copyright Ron Sherman

Thank you to everyone who attended the 3rd Annual 2017 APAG Seminar this past weekend! We had 45 attendees and 15 panelists. The response was amazing, and I appreciate all the kind remarks about how inspiring and educational it was! I really appreciate the assistance from our fantastic tech Francesco and Alejandro from ICP, and Efrem, Lily, Pamela and especially Annie, one of our charter members. A huge thank you to my board who is always there when I need them to lend their expertise and unwavering support, Grayson Dantzic, Julie Grahame and Ernest Londa.

I was very pleased to release an advance copy of THE PHOTO ARCHIVE HANDBOOK. Thanks to the contributors to the book, Andrew Smith, Kenneth Falcon, Robin Moore, Julie Grahame and Jennifer Stoots and to the photographers who loaned photos. Also, to my editor Judy Herrmann, and especially my longtime collaborator and wonderful graphic designer, Christine Zamora of CZ Design, whose professionalism, friendly and patient manner always helps us get the job done on deadline! Additional copies will be at our table at AIPAD, and they will also be available online at that time.

I am always appreciative to our generous hosts ICP, who help us every step of the way. Including Mark Lubell who has supported APAG and its mission for many years, and Deirdre Donohue and Maya Benton who were fantastic panelists, and Erica Somerwitz who handled all the logistics, and was a pleasure to work with.

– Mary Engel, Founder and President

Just wanted to let you know how much we appreciated the seminar this weekend on legacy management. The panelists, the flow of information, were truly precious. Everybody gained a better understanding of the end of life issues facing us image makers. Chester Higgins Jr. 

Huge appreciation for the most wonderful and beneficial program you made happen. Truly brilliant!! Susan May Tell

All photos copyright Grayson Dantzic

Group photo, Saturday
Lily and Annie
John Pelosi, Eugene Mopsik, Daniel Kramer

John Pelosi
Lisa McCarty
Cynthia Matthews and Stephen Perloff

Andrew Smith, Robert Gurbo
Lauren Wendle, Patricia Fried
Efrem, Lily, Annie and Julie

Mary Engel
W.M. Hunt, Alice Sachs Zimet
W.M. Hunt

Mary Engel, Maya Benton, Alice Sachs Zimet
Alice leading breakout session
Ron Sherman and Eugene Mopsik

Peter Angelo Simon
Grayson, Mary, Daniel Kramer, Gregory and Bob Gruen
Toast at the reception

Deidre Donohue
Daniel Cooney
Stephen Perloff

Emily Bierman, Stephen Perloff, A.D. Coleman
Leslie Squyres, W.M. Hunt
Robin Moore, Robert Gurbo

Saturday, March 11, 2017

Panel: 10:00 – 11:30am

What is the current state of copyright given the political climate, and how do we protect our photographs?

Panelists: Eugene Mopsik, John Pelosi


Panel: 11:45 – 1:15pm

Inside the collector’s mind: branding, marketing and getting your collection…placed.

Panelists: W.M. Hunt, Alice Zimet


Lunch: 1:15 – 2:15pm (on your own)


Panel: 2:30 – 4:00pm

Organizing and working with archives: how to make them accessible for critics, curators, historians and researchers

Panelists: Maya Benton, A.D. Coleman and Douglas Sheer


Breakout Sessions: 4:15 – 5:15pm


Sunday, March 12, 2017

Panel: 10:00 – 11:30am

What are institutions looking for and how do they build their collections?

Panelists: Deidre Donohue, Lisa McCarty, Leslie Squyres


Panel: 11:45 – 1:15pm

Legacy of an archive: how to protect and manage it.

Panelists: Robert Gurbo, Robin Moore, Andrew Smith


Lunch: 1:15 – 2:15pm


Panel: 2:30 – 4:00pm

Auctions, Galleries and the Press 101: What you need to know.

Panelists: Emily Bierman, Daniel Cooney, Stephen Perloff


Breakout Sessions: 4:15 – 5:15pm


SEMINAR FEES:

(Fees include all panels, lite breakfast and afternoon coffee, and Saturday night party!)

See below for info on payment by credit card via PAYPAL, or by check

  • One Day – APAG member $175 / Non-member $200
  • Two Days – APAG member $325 / Non-member $350
  • Two people both days, member $575
  • Two people both days, non-member, $600

Interview with Chester Higgins Jr. on Black America

Posted on December 16, 2016 by APAG in News
Chester Higgins Jr.
NYC: Moslem Woman/Cresent Soul

Original tape date: December 7, 2016.  First aired: December 14, 2016.

In this episode of Black America we sit down with Visual artist and celebrated photo-journalist Chester Higgins, Jr. We talk about his style, his influences and look at examples of his beautiful work in photos.

Chester Higgins, Jr. Visual Artist

  • About this series

  • Black America is an in-depth conversation that explores what it means to be Black in America. The show profiles Black activists, academics, business leaders, sports figures, elected officials, artists and writers to gauge this experience in a time of both turbulence and breakthroughs.

    Black America is hosted by Carol Jenkins, Emmy award winning New York City journalist, and founding president of The Women’s Media Center

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    Twitter – @blackamerica_tv
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http://www.cuny.tv/show/blackamerica/PR2005755

Martin Elkort tribute

Posted on December 6, 2016 by APAG in News

We are sad to announce the recent passing of APAG member, Martin Elkort on 11/19/16 and send our deepest condolences to his family, especially to his daughter Stefani Twyford who made a wonderful film about him, AN AMERICAN MIRROR.

Martin Edward ELKORT

1929 – 2016

Martin Elkort, acclaimed documentary street phographer, thoughtful photography essayist and author, died November 19, 2016, at his Los Angeles home, surrounded by his loved ones. He was 87.

People were important to Martin Elkort: Old and new friends and family, especially beloved life-mate, Edythe, who he lost just 4 months prior, and children, Stefani, Daniel and Alicia. When the end was inevitable, he gathered them all into his company and made time for each and every one; reminiscing, bidding farewell and sharing his boundless love of humor.

Martin was born in New York April 18, 1929 to Esther and Lewis Elkort. Growing up amidst the Great Depression, Martin developed a love of photography at a very young age, selling his first professional image at 10. At the age of 15 Martin contracted polio and spent four months in the hospital. When he returned home to convalesce, his parents bought him his first Ciroflex camera and he set out around Manhattan taking pictures. Throughout the 1940’s and 1950’s, Martin roamed the urban landscape of New York City in search of the perfect picture. His indelible images of simpler times remind us that the human experience can be a joyous one. Poignant and insightful, his photographs reflect the Great American Melting Pot in all its unpolished glory.

While studying painting at Cooper Union in New York City, Martin joined the New York Photo League, an organization of photographers that served as the center of the documentary movement in American photography. There he studied under masters and became adept at what he refered to as ‘stealth photography.’ He developed the skill of walking right up to a person and taking their photo without them even realizing it. After marrying the love of his life, Edythe in 1953, he realized he would have to support his family by means other than photography. He moved to New Mexico where he was an art editor and staff photographer for New Mexico Magazine. His family moved to Los Angeles in the early 1960s where Martin worked in the advertising industry. After a brief time in Alaska the family moved back to New York where Martin worked in the travel industry. In the mid 1970s he relocated to Los Angeles where he and Edythe operated a successful travel agency. After Martin retired in 1996 he wrote several books and magazine articles, worked as a food critic, and re-ignited his interest in photography. Martin Elkort’s work is widely exhibited and can be found in the permanent collections of The Museum of Modern Art, The Getty Museum, The Columbus Museum of Art, The Museum of Fine Arts Houston, The Holocaust Museum in Washington DC, The Jewish Museum in Brooklyn as well as many corporate and private collections.

A documentary exploring his life and work, Martin Elkort, An American Mirror, is a heartfelt tribute created by his daughter, award winning producer Stefani Twyford in 2014. The film can viewed at http://martinelkort.com/.

http://www.legacy.com/obituaries/nytimes/obituary.aspx?pid=182986788

Art Zelin tribute

Posted on December 6, 2016 by APAG in News

Art Zelin, Celebrity Photographer, Dies at 75

We are very sad to announce the recent passing of APAG member Art Zelin on November 3, 2016.

Art Zelin, one of the top paparazzi photographers in New York during the heyday of popular culture in the city, died unexpectedly on Thursday in Manhattan. He was 75.

Known for his cantankerous wit and unstoppable energy, Mr. Zelin amassed a voluminous and diverse collection of celebrity photography captured at hotspots in the 60’s and 70’s such as Studio 54 and the Paramount Theatre. Unlike other paparazzi photographers of the day, Mr. Zelin’s friendly approach endeared him to his subjects, who often went out of their way to accommodate his uniquely intimate portraits by posing when they spotted him nearby. Even the very private Jacqueline Onassis later autographed one of the most famous photos he had taken of her in gratitude.

Art Zelin Collection images have appeared on the covers of Life Magazine, Paris Match and other major publications. His iconic shots of famous people including the Beatles, the Kennedys, sports figures and movie stars, are licensed exclusively through Getty Images.

Mr. Zelin took a bad fall outside his home in Brooklyn this week and died as a result of complications suffered while being treated in the intensive care unit at Mount Sinai Beth Israel Hospital. He is survived by his wife Myrna, son Steven and daughters Pamela and Susan.

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Art Zelin
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