Willy Ronis

September 13th, 2009

French Photographer, Willy Ronis, died September 12th 2009. A contemporary of Henri Cartier-Bresson and Robert Doisneau, Ronis was best known for his portrayals of life in post-war Paris and Provence, displaying a ‘humanist’ approach to photography.

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(info from www.magnumphotos.com)

ArtFair circuit

September 7th, 2009

If you are a photographer, or collect photography, a great place to see new work is at any of the many photo art fairs that happen throughout the year.  My favorite one is ParisPhoto, which happens every November.  They host it in the basement of The Louvre in Paris. This year will be my third visit.

In January 2010, I will be flying to Los Angeles for Photo L.A.  This fair will be hosted at Barker Hangar in Santa Monica, CA.

In March, check out AIPAD in NYC.  This is grand daddy of photo fairs in the USA.  This will be my third year attending.  Last year was the first year I actually purchased a piece for our collection.

The Picture of Dorian Gray

September 4th, 2009

In continuing my fascination with the topic of the gaze, I read The Picture of Dorian Gray by Oscar Wilde.
Here is a portrait of the author.

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Birthday Camera

September 1st, 2009

We gave her a kids digital camera for her birthday.  Here’s her reaction.  Her mother tells us that she hasn’t put it down yet.

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Nora @ Five

August 29th, 2009

My niece turns 5 on Monday.  She’s one of the most interesting individuals I know.  I’m glad she lets me photographer her sometimes.

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All Eyes on TRIIIBE: The Interview

August 25th, 2009

Jason Landry: Alicia, Sara, Kelly and Cary…you are performance artists who go by the name Triiibe. What makes Triiibe unique and how do you fit into the genre of performance artists?

Triiibe: We need to start off by saying that we, being Alicia, Sara and Kelly are performance artists and Cary is the photographer. Triiibe is unique because first off, we are triplets. We have always been part of a walking performance. We become artists when we change our clothes. When we began making artwork as individuals, we realized that people didn’t give the same attention to the work that we were making as opposed to us walking down the street together. So, we started using us as a tool. We enjoy doing public performances and people don’t necessarily know about the events in advance. We enjoy making work that catches people off guard and by surprise.

JL: Jeffrey Keough, former Director of Exhibition at the Massachusetts College of Art recalled that during your undergraduate studies, you once created an art piece that measured the perimeter of MassArt similar to the Smoot measurement on the Mass Ave Bridge. Do you recall the first time you collaborated on an art project or performance?

Triiibe: The project we did at MassArt was a public installation where we used a pair of size 10 women’s shoes and painted feet to represent each person at the school. There were over 1,000 pairs of feet, which we identified by using each students id number. It wasn’t meant to be a measurement, but a way to create unity with all of the students at the school. As for our first collaborative performance, we dressed up as identical businesswomen and went to work every Wednesday for 10 weeks in a row in downtown Boston. We would do synchronized actions like sipping our coffee and marching in a row. That was in 2001.

JL: Cary…you took a different route during your career, first being a National Geographic photographer for over 30 years, now a member of Triiibe. How did this collaboration begin?

Cary: I took a different route because I wasn’t a triplet, and it was much tougher…(laughter). I started as a photographer when I was a kid and then straight through college at Boston University. I had a darkroom at BU and was involved with the BU newspaper and yearbook. While at BU, I took a job with the Boston Globe, which launched my career in photojournalism and lasted close to 35 years with National Geographic. During that time, my interest in photography changed from pure photojournalism to conceptual photography. By the time I retired from The Geographic in 2006, I was well beyond what the National Geographic found acceptable. In my own mind, what I wanted to create for them and what they found acceptable for their magazine was beginning to part ways.

The collaboration with Alicia, Sara and Kelly began with the retirement of George Greenamyer. My close friends Rick and Laura Brown were having a retirement party for George. George is kind of famous for looking a little like Santa Claus. He’s got a big white beard and he always wears overalls. So this character dressed like George came into the party. And then another one came in and then George came in. I turned to Rick and said, “Who are they?” He said, “Oh, those are some of my students.” I then said, “I’d really like to meet those twins.” Rick then said, “it’s better then that, they’re triplets.” He then arranged a dinner for all of us to meet.

JL: Who came up with the name Triiibe?

Triiibe: It started as “tri-be” which was our email address a while ago, and I don’t remember who actually came up with it. We changed it to Triiibe to have the three “i”’s representing the triplets.

JL: Do all of your ideas come from the collective, or do you ever take suggestions from outsiders?

Triiibe: We always take suggestions from outsiders. Our make-up artist Rae Bertellotti gives us suggestions and so does Cary’s wife Babs and their son Yari who also work with us. So far, we haven’t picked an idea from friends or someone’s initial concept and done something yet from scratch because we have a long list of our own we haven’t got to yet.

JL: How do you go about creating work that isn’t about being triplets?

Triiibe: Well, we’re kind of over the fact that we are triplets. We want to make work that is about identity and social issues.

JL: I have been watching your careers blossom since 2008. First at the Photographic Resource Center Benefit Auction, then at the interactive performance “Profile” at Samson Projects, and most recently I learned that Triiibe was awarded one of the 2009 Massachusetts Cultural Council Artist Fellowships. Do you feel things are finally starting to align for the collective?

Triiibe: Yes. We’re starting to get our work and name out there. We’re going to be in a group show in New York this October and we’ll have a show at Gallery Kayafas in the spring of 2010. But, yeah it’s nuts!

JL: Rumor has it that Boston University’s College of Fine Arts has offered you a solo exhibition in the 808 Gallery in November 2010. How do you plan to fill that place?

Triiibe: That’s the big question. We feel that space is unique and a great opportunity for us. It has a lot of windows that opens up to the public. So initially, we have been thinking of doing an installation, performance and photography, but we can’t go into specifics because we just don’t know yet.

JL: There was a political slogan that was very dominant during the 2008 Presidential Campaign and it read, Change is Coming to America.” As artists who use social and political commentary as part of their message, what concerns you the most about the future of our country?

Cary: I think the thing that concerns us most is that Obama will get bipartisanship, that people will start talking to each other, that everyone will be happy, the country will calm down, and there will be nothing to do as artists anymore that is politically interesting. That’s a big concern of ours.

This interview also appears in Big Red and Shiny, Issue #112.

Saving The Polaroid Collection

August 22nd, 2009

There have been numerous stories lately regarding the fate of The Polaroid Collection.  On A.D. Coleman’s blog, he has suggested that photographers who have work in the Polaroid Collection send in writing a letter to the bankrupcy judge who is handling the case this upcoming week laying claim to your work so it doesn’t get sold.

As a photographer, collector and someone who has been to the Polaroid Collection and seen first hand how wonderful and special this collection is, my only wish is that some entity, such as a large university in the Boston area could somehow acquire the collection and keep it in tact.

Harry Callahan @ the MFA, Boston

August 21st, 2009

Here is another great show coming to the Museum of Fine Arts,Boston in the fall.

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Alec Soth at MassArt

August 20th, 2009

Alec Soth will be coming to MassArt this fall for a lecture on Monday, October 26th.  MassArt will also be exhibiting his project Dog Days Bogata from September 9 - November 28th, 2009 in the Stephen D. Paine Gallery.

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Out for a stroll

August 11th, 2009

The Back Bay Sun recently published some photos from the “2009 PRC Collectors Stroll”.  This event, hosted by the Photographic Resource Center was an opportunity to stroll through the homes of some of Boston’s fine art photography collectors.  Hey that’s me!

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(photo by Roger Farrington)