APAG - American Photography Archives Group
  • Home
  • About
    • APAG Board
  • Membership
    • Members Only
  • News
  • Resources
  • Members Gallery
  • Conference
  • Education
  • Contact

News

 

Photo District News published an article in the April 2015 issue titled “Planning now for your archive’s future”

Photo District News published an article on the planning, organizing, appraising, and digitizing that goes into the formation a photo archive. Mary Engel is quoted on p. 33 about the Orkin/Engel Film and Photo Archive. Read the scanned article below or on PDN’s website. The article is featured in the April 2015 issue.

 

PDN.April2015.ArchivesFuture.pg1 PDN.April2015.ArchivesFuture.pg2 PDN.April2015.ArchivesFuture.pg3 PDN.April2015.ArchivesLegend.pg4

Harold Feinstein’s Valentines Day blog

http://www.haroldfeinstein.com/grateful-heart-valentines-day-2015/

HF.1 Kissing-on-the-river-Paris, 1988  Irish-men-inthe country side, Ireland, 1987   HF. Kissing-at-the-wall-in-Paris-1987

Linda Troeller talking at Bluestockings about Orgasm: Photographs & Interviews on 2/11

Award-winning, New York-based photographer Linda Troeller collaborated with writer and ethnographer Marion Schneider to produce “Orgasm: Photographs & Interviews,” continuing “the investigation into female sexuality” started by Troeller and Schneider with their 1998 publication, The Erotic Lives of Women. The book involved the participation of 25 women from all types of backgrounds sharing intimate and candid stories about their own sexual experiences. Troeller will participate in an interview at Bluestockings on the Lower East Side (172 Allen St.) on Wednesday, February 11 at 7PM. More information about the event can be located on the Bluestockings Events page, and for more details about the book and the story behind its creation, please visit the book’s site.

orgasm_title-796x1024

Ron Sherman Archive acquired by Emory University Library Archives

A blog post from Emory University’s Manuscripts, Archives, and Rare Book Library (MARBL) discusses the 748 silver gelatin prints taken by Atlanta-based photographer Ron Sherman, mostly during the 1970s. Sherman — depicting American culture since the 1960s — photographed historically groundbreaking events and subjects, such as Hank Aaron’s 715th home run; Coretta Scott King, the King family, Mayor Maynard Jackson, Congressman Andrew Young, and Cesar Chavez at Martin Luther King, Jr.’s tomb in 1974; and Jimmy Carter’s campaign.

An excerpt from the blog: “When asked about what message he had for the students who would be looking at his images, Sherman hopes that students will be able to examine past events through photographs, by being able to see the setting and characters in this remarkable collection.”

 

 

 

 

Joseph Rodriguez’s e-book “Romania” released, profiled on Lens Blog

20150121-lens-romania-slide-9UY2-superJumbo

Photographs from documentary photographer Joseph Rodriguez’s just-released e-book with FotoEvidence was featured in the New York Times Lens Blog on January 22, 2015. Rodriguez took these photos between 1990 and 1996, following the execution of Nicolae Ceausescu and sparking a revolution to overthrow one of the most brutal Communist regimes in the world. The photographs reflect the jarring industrial landscape; children in orphanages and psychiatric institutions; and — a “lighter side of Romania” — daily life in the countryside.

Rodriguez has been working as a photographer for over 25 years, and has published monographs about communities in New York City, Los Angeles, Sweden, Mexico City, and many other cities and countries around the world. He has published several books in addition to “Romania,” and is a faculty member at the International Center of Photography. Rodriguez recently had a show at Hardhitta Gallery featuring some of his photographs of inner-city life in New York and Los Angeles.

The e-book can be purchased via the FotoEvidence website or the iTunes bookstore.

Photographs of the Rhinovault at the Jack Mitchell Archives

Craig Highberger sent APAG some photographs of the Rhinovault Security Structure that he had installed to house the Jack Mitchell Archives in Alabama.

As per Craig’s email, the Rhinovault is made of welded insulated steel and can withstand extreme weather, falling debris, or even a fire (it is a ballistic protection system). It was delivered on a flatbed 18-wheeler truck and put into place on a concrete slab, and all archival shelving and storage has been installed inside of it.

The Jack Mitchell Retrospective Exhibition, curated by Eric Hornak Spoutz, opened at the Albrecht-Kemper Museum of Art in St. Joseph, MO.

Jack Mitchell Archives Vault 2

Jack Mitchell Archives Vault

Jack Mitchell Archives Vault 3

Jack Mitchell Archives Vault 4

Harold Feinstein’s best photograph – Hanging out Coney Island in The Guardian newspaper

feinstein

 http://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2014/nov/20/harold-feinsteins-best-photograph-hanging-out-coney-island-new-york-1949

Chester Higgins retirement from The New York Times featured in Lensblog

ChesterHiggins

 

A Dance of Rivers

By Chester Higgins, Jr. Dec. 18, 2014

Every photographer brings his or her unique experiences to an assignment — the lens through which we see the world. When I arrived at The New York Times in 1975, I felt the media was immune to any real comprehension of the world I knew well. I wanted to share the history and traditions of the people I grew up with — to help broaden the bridge of understanding between the majority and minority cultures in this country.

On my first trip to Africa in 1971, I fell in love with African people and their cultures. In 1974 I approached The Times with photographs of famine in the Sahel, and the Op-Ed page featured three of these photos. A few months later, I landed a staff position at the paper and continued my focus on issues of African and African-American culture.

In the 1980s, I introduced the newspaper to an ad hoc group of African-Americans, who came together annually at sunrise in Coney Island to honor Africans lost at sea during the Middle Passage. In 1995, I focused attention on an annual weeklong event, created by a Brooklyn church in East New York, to commemorate the untold millions of Africans forced to endure the Middle Passage and enslavement. When Kwanzaa was still a little-known, struggling celebration, I made numerous calls annually to seek out dramatic photographic possibilities.

For me, the focal point of African-American community life is often the church. Over the years I have photographed in many local churches, mostly in Brooklyn, Queens and Harlem, on Sundays to document what a powerful tool tradition can be in helping people maintain emotional and spiritual balance.

Throughout my career at The Times, I have worked to bring to my editors photographic opportunities that highlight ethnic identity. Many of the resulting photos have run in the newspaper and today reside in its archives. I like to think these photographs can work as catalysts for expanding and enriching our understanding of each other.
lens-chester-2-superJumbo

The origin of one of my favorites photos dates to when I was in high school, when my mother introduced me to the poems of Langston Hughes. In college, I came to appreciate the works of Amiri Baraka and then, later, I discovered Maya Angelou’s writings. So when I heard that the New York Public Library’s Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture was honoring the memory of Langston Hughes in an evening ceremony, I reached out to the center’s then-director, Howard Dodson. Learning that Amiri Baraka and Maya Angelou were on the program, I knew I would go. I asked the newspaper’s night editor if there could be space for a photo of the event.

At the conclusion of the program, filled with poetry readings and accolades for Langston Hughes, a jazz combo livened the tempo. As I watched, Amiri Baraka asked Maya Angelou to dance and walked her to the “I’ve Known Rivers” Cosmogram — the focal point of the celebration, newly set into the floor over the ashes of Langston Hughes. As the two poets danced, the energy of the crowd focused on them. The room came alive as everyone applauded.

In this impromptu tribute to Langston Hughes, I believe these two African-American icons created a moment that reflected our collective love for poets of African descent and the continuity of African creative genius.

New Wynn Bullock 2015 Calendars

CoverCover_front

For 2015, we have produced not just one, but TWO collectible Wynn Bullock Calendars.

One features 12 of Wynn’s iconic black-and white images. The other showcases 12 of his stunning Color Light Abstractions.

Click to order your 2015 Fine Art Calendars

Along with our calendars, we have also added a new line of black-and-white notecards to our Wynn Bullock Card Collection.

Click here to order your new sets of Fine Art Greeting Cards

www.wynnbullockphotography.com

 

 

Notebooks from Mystery School – poems by Margaret McCarthy

McCarthy

Photography

 

To press vision through darkness,through glass and metal

and push it through that opening

so small

who would have believed there could be a world on the other side?

The process of casting

sight into silver, the skin of plastic

to be redeemed by water, to cycle

from brilliance to blackness to brilliance –

the mechanics of seeing are everything;

 

and still the shadow of that cloud escaped me,

that light.

 

from: NOTEBOOKS FROM MYSTERY SCHOOL

          Copyright Margaret McCarthy, 2014

 

 

Dear Friends,

 

My poetry collection NOTEBOOKS FROM MYSTERY SCHOOL, finalist for the New Women’s Voices Award, will be published by Finishing Line Press in February 2015. Finishing Line is an award winning small press dedicated to producing quality books spotlighting new poetry. I’m thrilled to be publishing with them.

 

Exploring themes of light and dark, some of the poems are inspired by my background in photography.

 

For my friends in the visual arts, chapbooks lend themselves to collecting because of their small press runs and resulting scarcity; for my literary and theatre friends, many of you have heard these poems read or performed and asked for them in print. I’m happy to offer you an affordable First Edition!

 

The book is now available for pre-sale through December 26th; books ship on February 6. The press run is limited, but determined by pre-sales; so your pre-orders are greatly appreciated! I hope many of you will want to reserve a copy of this first edition from this unique literary press, especially if you’re a collector or would like an affordable way to start collecting.

 

Pre-order on line by clicking here

 

Or download an order by mail form by clicking here

 

The pre-sale period (through December 26) is only 5 weeks; if you’ve received a similar email, I appreciate your understanding. Please feel free to forward this to friends you think might be interested. To those of you who have already ordered, my deepest thanks!

 

Warm Regards,

Margaret McCarthy

We Still Have a Dream
artist@margaretmccarthy.com
www.notebooksfrommysteryschool.com

ABOUT THE BOOK        ABOUT THE AUTHOR

NOTEBOOKS FROM MYSTERY SCHOOL by Margaret McCarthy

Poetry Chapbook; 24 pages

 

A coming of age journey told through poems; our rites of passage, with nature as our greatest school and teacher. A journey through shadow and light, arriving at the ultimate destination: the balance of opposites.

 

“…you yearn to follow into the labyrinthine mystic depths of these luxurious poems.”
–Richard Peabody, editor Gargoyle Magazine

 

“McCarthy’s photographic eye captures the remarkable beauty and resilience that carry us through the sorrows and mysteries of our days.”

–Michele Wolf, author of Immersion and Conversations During Sleep

 

“With the eye of a feminist, she asks what if, instead, it had been Icarus’s sister? Would she know how far to go? In her first collection, NOTEBOOKS FROM MYSTERY SCHOOL, McCarthy shows us that yes, she knows.”

–Susana H. Case, author of 4 Rms w Vu

 

  • «
  • ‹
  • 16
  • 17
  • 18
  • 19
  • 20
  • ›
  • »

APAG

  • Home
  • About
    • APAG Board
  • Membership
    • Members Only
  • News
  • Resources
  • Members Gallery
  • Conference
  • Education
  • Contact

Contact APAG

Contact APAG for membership, information, or with questions:

Visit our Contact Page »

Follow us on Facebook »

All photos on this website are protected by copyright of the individual photographers and archives whose photographs are represented. All rights reserved, and photos are not allowed to be used for any purpose without permission. Please write to the archives or photographers directly for permission requests.

(*) ©2026 APAG – American Photography Archives Group | Site by KPFdigital | Log in