Monthly Archives: May 2011
prov·o·ca·tion using ex·ploi·ta·tion?
When we talked about the J.Crew ad that featured a female executive painting her son’s toes pink, the interesting backlash that is coming from it reminded me of an ad campaign that Dolce and Gabbana did while I lived in Italy.
The Dolce and Gabbana Florence store is a corner location with display windows spanning 1/4 block on both sides. These ads were sectioned up to fill the whole window space, the female image on one side and the male on the other.
It was interesting to me that the one featuring the female gained so much more attention (vandalism, broken windows and protestors) than the other (the one featuring the nude male), as both featured what could be viewed as a rape scene, yet the nude male ad hardly gained mention in the press or from any protestors (possibly due to the male’s subdued appearance, while the female appears to be struggling).
In the end, the ad featuring the female was banned in Spain and Italy, and eventually pulled from the campaign altogether, yet the one featuring the male was allowed to run for a short period before the whole campaign was dropped.
D&G PR denies that they intended to show exploitation or rape in any of the campaign images.
Lewis Hine
>.>Martha Cooper<.<
[vimeo http://vimeo.com/23200717]
Martha Cooper is an American photojournalist born in the 1940s in Baltimore, Maryland where she picked up photography at the age of three.She graduated from high school at the age of 16,earned an art degree at age 19 from Grinnell College She taught English as a Peace Corps volunteer in Thailand, journeyed by motorcycle from Bangkok to London and received an ethnology diploma from Oxford. She worked as a staff photographer for the New York Post during the 1970s and is perhaps best known for documenting the New York graffiti scene of the 1970s and ’80s.
For more street art, check out http://verynearlyalmost.com/blog/
Interview with Rineke Dijkstra/ New mother photos
Rineke Dijkstra is mentioned in our text book. The last image of this set is in the textbook but I had actually never seem them all together.
I was randomly looking for her work the other night and I thought I would share some of it with you guys.
She is also really well known for her awkward adolescents on the beach pictures.
Here is an interview with her- rineke-dijkstra.html
Flower Photography
http://www.geofflawrence.com/photography_tutorial_photographing_flowers-2.php
I found this nifty little tutorial on flower photography.
This is the website of the guy who wrote the tutorial (His name is Kev Vincent )
Long Exposures
Simple Tulips
I thought this was a really nice way to make just a simple picture of colorless tulips look dynamic and alive.
http://browse.deviantart.com/photography/?q=tulips&order=9&offset=48#/di4371
Miranda July by Autumn De Wilde
A portrait of Miranda July, one of my favorite artists, by one of my favorite photographers Autumn De Wilde, an American photographer and director, daughter of Jerry De Wilde (known for photos of Jimi Hendrix and Monterey Pop Festival) is known for her commercial work and portraiture. She’s worked in photographing countless musical groups and actors. Everyone from Willie Nelson to Elliot Smith, to Kirsten Dunst and Death Cab. Her style varies with her aims, but she keeps up with the times when it comes to her unconventional sense.
click here for De Wilde’s blog.
I’m having trouble getting the images to show up, but the link should work. These are news stories in photographs.
http://www.boston.com/bigpicture/2011/04/tornadoes_kill_over_200.html