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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

    Facebook – facebook.com/BlackAmericaTV
    Twitter – @blackamerica_tv
    Instagram – @blackamerica_tv

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.

Image may contain: 1 person , closeup
Art Zelin

Yousuf Karsh portrait of Castro on cover of TIME

Posted on December 6, 2016 by APAG in News

Portrait of Fidel Castro by Yousuf Karsh on cover of TIME magazine 12/12/16

http://time.com/magazine/

Conversation 11/30/16 for Richard Sandler’s book with Regina Monfort

Posted on November 27, 2016 by APAG in News

powerHouse Books Launch: The Eyes of the City by Richard Sandler in conversation with Mark Bussell and Régina Monfort

 powerHouse Books Launch: The Eyes of the City by Richard Sandler in conversation with Mark Bussell and Régina Monfort

Wednesday Nov 30, 2016
7:00 pm – 9:00 pm

POWERHOUSE [Brooklyn/DUMBO]
28 Adams St.
Brooklyn , NY 11201

For more information, please call 718.666.3049

RSVP appreciated: RSVP@powerHouseArena.com

Street photographer and documentary filmmaker Richard Sandler will be joined in conversation with picture editor Mark Bussell and Régina Monfort for an unforgettable event celebrating Richard’s stunning new book.

About The Eyes of the City:

Timing, skill, and talent all play an important role in creating a great photograph, but the most primary element, the photographer’s eye, is perhaps the most crucial. In The Eyes of the City, Richard Sandler showcases decades’ worth of work, proving his eye for street life rivals any of his generation.

From 1977 to just weeks before September 11, 2001, Richard regularly walked through the streets of Boston and New York, making incisive and humorous pictures that read the pulse of that time. After serendipitously being gifted a Leica camera in 1977, Sandler shot in Boston for three productive years
and then moved back home to photograph in an edgy, dangerous, colicky New York City.

In the 1980s crime and crack were on the rise and their effects were socially devastating. Times Square, Harlem, and the East Village were seeded with hard drugs, while in Midtown Manhattan, and on Wall Street, the rich flaunted their furs in unprecedented numbers, and “greed was good.”

In the 1990s the city underwent drastic changes to lure in tourists and corporations, the result of which was rapid gentrification. Rents were raised and neighborhoods were sanitized, clearing them of both crime and character. Throughout these turbulent and creative years Sandler paced the streets with his native New Yorker’s eye for compassion, irony, and unvarnished fact.

The results are presented in The Eyes of the City, many for the first time in print. Overtly, they capture a complex time when beauty mixed with decay, yet below the picture surface, they hint at unrecognized ghosts in the American psyche.

About the Author and Moderator:

Richard Sandler is a street photographer and documentary filmmaker. He has directed and shot eight non-fiction films, including The Gods of Times Square, Brave New York, and Radioactive City. Sandler’s still photographs are in the permanent collections of the New York Public Library, the Brooklyn Museum, the New York Historical Society, and the Houston Museum of Fine Art. He was awarded a New York Foundation for the Arts fellowship for photography, a John Simon Guggenheim Foundation fellowship for Filmmaking, and a New York State Council on the Arts fellowship also for Filmmaking.

Mark Bussell is the former Picture Editor of The New York Times and of The New York Times Magazine. He currently teaches at New York University Tisch School of the Arts.

Régina Monfort is a photographer and photo editor focusing on long-form narratives. Since joining FotoEvidence in 2010, she has edited a number of books including Daniella Zalcman’s Signs of Your Identity and Marcus Bleasdale’s The Unravelling.

New Book from Wynn Bullock

Posted on November 27, 2016 by APAG in News
OD REVIEW
od review

Relativity: Wynn Bullock & Albert Einstein

relativity

21st Editions / Od Review is proud to present our newest book, Relativity: Wynn Bullock & Albert Einstein!

Relativity includes

– Einstein’s letters and his paper on special relativity (1905).
– (9) Bound Bullock platinum estate prints.
– (9) Loose Bullock platinum estate prints.
– (1) Vintage, signed Bullock silver-gelatin print (exceedingly rare).
– Binding by Peter Geraty
– Handmade paper throughout by TwinRocker and Hook Pottery Paper.
– Signed by all the artisans and Wynn Bullock’s two daughters.

Relativity is in a class by itself. It also marks a new era for 21st Editions. With this book, we begin a new collection and an even greater investment in the art of the book.

bullock_dsc2940-2

Ariel Borremans new book

Posted on October 3, 2016 by APAG in News

Jack Mitchell photographs included in the collection of the new Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture

Posted on October 2, 2016 by APAG in News

 

'Jack Mitchell Archives Executive Director Craig B. Highberger and Associate Director, Dr. Andrew R. La Barbera''Craig B. Highberger with the wall of Jack Mitchell Alvin Ailey Company photographs at the Smithsonian NMAAHC'Craig B. Highberger's photo.Craig B. Highberger's photo.

Jack Mitchell Archives at the Smithsonian NMAAHC

Saturday September 17, 2016 Jack Mitchell Archives Executive Director Craig B. Highberger and Associate Director, Dr. Andrew R. La Barbera attended the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture’s Collection Donor Preview and Reception in Washington D.C.

In June 2016 the museum acquired twenty-five Jack Mitchell photographs of important African American artists and performers, a number of which were donations. But there is a previous acquisition that is also an important part of the museum. In August 2012 the Alvin Ailey Dance Foundation, Inc. purchased the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater Jack Mitchell Collection.

Jack Mitchell was Alvin Ailey’s close friend and photographer of his dance company from the time of its founding until Mitchell’s retirement in 1995. Craig B. Highberger put together the collection acquisition in 2012 with (then) Alvin Ailey Dance Foundation Executive Director Sharon Gersten Luckman.

The entire Jack Mitchell Alvin Ailey collection is housed at the Smithsonian NMAAHC, where a wall of vintage Jack Mitchell Alvin Ailey Company photographs are part of the museum’s permanent exhibition. The museum opens to the public Saturday September 24.

www.nmaahc.org

 

An article about Fred Lyon’s current show at the Leica Store in San Francisco and his new book

Posted on October 2, 2016 by APAG in News

A Conversation With Fred Lyon, San Francisco Photographer Since The 1940s by Lisa Amand

Fred lyon
Photo: Lisa Amand/Hoodline
 Fred Lyon has been shooting San Francisco, the Wine Country and beyond since the 1940s.

Growing up in Burlingame, he attended Art Center College before becoming a Navy pilot then Navy photographer. Sent to the White House to shoot Franklin Delano Roosevelt, he quickly learned how to get important people to sit still for a photo shoot, moving on to document more presidents, movie stars, high-fashion models, musicians, authors and painters.

We caught up with him at his Cow Hollow studio and home on Lyon Street (naturally), jauntily dressed, loquacious, self-effacing and irreverent.

Approaching his 92nd birthday this month, he’s still busy scanning, printing and selling beautiful pictures.

He’s also pleased with his current exhibition at the Leica Store at 463 Bush St. (on view through October 22nd) and renewed interest in his latest book.

Lyon pointing out bassist Percy Heath of Modern Jazz Quartet in a 1958 photo at an after-hours club, after the Monterey Jazz Festival. | (PHOTO: LISA AMAND/HOODLINE)

Q: What has motivated you for the past seven decades?

Lyon: I’ve always had a ravenous camera and my camera would always take me out on these excursions.

Q: Why have you focused on San Francisco?

Lyon: It was right after World War II and everything was happening here. Again, I just backed into that good era where everybody was optimistic… At the end of every month when I was facing the rent, I would try to dream up story ideas for magazines. And I can remember the magazine picture editors had never been to San Francisco and they’d say, ‘Well, what’ve you got out there?’ And I would say, ‘That’s easy. We’ve got steep hills. A couple of bridges that won’t quit. We’ve got cable cars. We have Chinatown. We have fog. And we have Herb Caen.’

PHOTOS COURTESY OF FRED LYON

Q: What does it take to be a good photographer and who do you admire?

Lyon: A lot of European and Hungarian photographers. Atget, Andre Kertesz, Cartier-Bresson. The greatest attribute that any photographer can have is insatiable curiosity.

One of the very first Life Magazine staff photographers was Alfred Eisenstaedt. When I would meet him in the Time-Life Building, he would attack everybody he met because he wanted to know everything that was in their head. He was the ideal photojournalist because he was consumed with curiosity. And it was global… Eisy had no restraint at all… He had nothing but good instincts.

Q: What’s your attachment to the wine country?

Lyon: I had a very small vineyard in the Napa Valley, and I grew very good grapes. They never reaped the prices they deserved but I grew because I wanted to grow them. I bought a seven-acre parcel of vineyard to escape the San Francisco fog and I built a house there. But before I even built the house, I was so in love with wine grapes and the vines and the whole process that I was addicted to growing wine grapes.

Q: Do you still take photographs, and if so, what kind of camera do you use?

Lyon: Not very much any more. I’m having trouble walking these days so that’s limiting. An occasional photograph, but it’s hard to maneuver.

I use a digital camera. I haven’t used film since about 2006. A lot of people are shocked at that, they think I should still be using film. My god, I gave it its chance. And I did everything. Now digital allows us to do things that we couldn’t even dream of, even five years ago. It moves so fast, it’s impossible to keep up.

Q: Is there one photo that you’re most proud of?

Lyon: Probably that one of the couple walking in the fog. It would be my best known.

In those early days, I lived in Sausalito. I had a new bride. We’d been invited upstairs for a cocktail. But earlier in the day, I’d spoken with an editor of a story I was doing on San Francisco and he said, ‘Fred, we’re trying to close this story but we need a fog picture.’ I said, ‘You cannot queue the fog here, we haven’t had a foggy night.’

He said, ‘We‘re holding a space for it, but you better get it soon and you better get it good.’

My wife and I went upstairs to our landlord and he was just about to pour the drink and I looked out the window and I saw the fog snaking in through the Golden Gate.

I said, ‘Don’t pour, we got to take a picture.’ My landlord and my wife said, ‘What do you mean? We’re dying of thirst, we’re ready to drink.’

I said, ‘I promise, we’ll go to the nearest bar if I just get this fog picture. But we’ve got to go right now.’

We went out to where Sutro Baths was…We parked the car there. We got out and it was wonderful, thick fog. That’s an idyllic picture of a couple, very romantic. It’s my landlord and my wife. And what they’re saying: ‘Fred, for Christ’s sake take the goddamn picture, we’re dying of thirst and we’re freezing.’

I said what I learned to say in the White House, “One more please, Mr. President. Let me get a couple more exposures for insurance.”

Q: Are you going to write a memoir?

Lyon: Oh God, no. Why frighten everybody.

Interview with Muna Tseng in Elephant

Posted on September 14, 2016 by APAG in News

https://elephantmag.com/interview-muna-tseng-keeping-legacy-alive/

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