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http://www.johnclearygallery.com/pastshows/smithshow.html
wow. those are fantastic.
what is REALLY freaking me out is that they just had a frida kahlo exhibition and i've been emailing with nickolas muray's daughter and the eastman gallery to get permission to run one of his images of frida kahlo.
wow!
muff_spelunker
05-18-07, 02:26 PM
i liked 'trees' from cumberland island
most of the others gave me an uneasy feeling
i liked 'trees' from cumberland island
most of the others gave me an uneasy feeling
Me too and 'Danille in Boat'.
Bad juju behind 'Untitled, Door'.
Big Mark
05-18-07, 03:04 PM
interesting stuff. I really like b&w photography, it's just so... clean?
I just went back and looked at this a second time and noticed nearly all the pictures are square. I kind of like the idea of a non traditional aspect ratio, but I dont know that I could pull it off effectivly.
rodney smith background:
In a world where color reigns supreme and where trends and fads in technique pace the art world, photographer Rodney Smith's work stands in stark contrast: he works exclusively in black and white. Using a lush palette of monochrome tones and creating prints that can hang beside any on a museum wall, Smith's images reverberate with an elegant, natural beauty.
The son of an enormously successful businessman, Smith was first exposed to serious photography as a teenager. "When I was a young boy, my parents traveled a great deal and there was a German couple that took care of me and the man was very interested in photography," he recalls. "He built this little dark room in a bathroom and I used to watch him developing film and making prints and I loved it. I think in retrospect it was important for me because I've always sort of loved the technical side of photography and I think I got that from him."
Smith's next exposure to photography came while he was an undergraduate: "I remember this day very well. I went to The Museum of Modern Art to the permanent collection," he says. "Edward Steichen was still the curator there and I remember looking at the permanent collection of photography which included Gene Smith, Minor White, Dorothea Lange - and I just looked at these pictures and I said, 'I can do this.' It was pretty arrogant when I look back."
After graduating college, Smith went to Yale University to get his master's degree in, of all subjects, theology - a topic that has been a deep part of his entire adult life. "I guess I've always been very intense, but back then the intensity was sort of manifesting itself as anxiety," Smith recalls. "Because of all this intensity I became really introspective and trying to figure out the cause and the purpose and the resolution to all that anxiety."
It was while he was at Yale that Smith began a serious study of photo technique: "I knew I wasn't through studying theology but I really went there with the total intention of becoming a photographer," he says. "I absolutely knew I wanted to be a photographer, but I didn't feel that studying in an art school or a photography department full time was the way to address the issues that were interesting to me - so I sort of entwined the two."
After graduating, Smith went though a long period of struggling to find both his vision and a way to earn a living. He supplemented prints sales by teaching, putting collections together for corporations and basically living the life of a starving artist. "I never really knew from one month to the next how I was going to live," he recalls. His first break in corporate work came when a friend who owned an ad agency hired him to shoot a black and white ad campaign for Northrop - which was shortly followed by a plum annual report assignment from Heinz - an opportunity that helped transform a lifelong devotion into a prosperous career.
Today Smith shoots for a host of commercial and editorial fashion accounts.
Rene Magritte
http://www.worth1000.com/web/media/22715/Originals/magritte-son-of-man.jpg
Mrs. Click
06-17-07, 05:51 PM
it's beautiful art.
Is it enhanced with Photoshop? It does looks surreal, and I'm curious about that aspect. Like, how in the world is that guy jumping over that hay bale?
it's beautiful art.
Like, how in the world is that guy jumping over that hay bale?
I don't know for a fact, but I would wager he had him jumping on a small trampoline behind the bale and he probably used a long lens which would give you the illusion that the man was over the bale. I really liked a lot of these shots. The one with house bowing to the left with the guy leaning to the left was very clever, especially if you notice the doorway which was straight and a guy standing in it. Then again I like abstract photography.
Superfluous_Nut
06-29-07, 02:49 PM
it's beautiful art.
Is it enhanced with Photoshop? It does looks surreal, and I'm curious about that aspect. Like, how in the world is that guy jumping over that hay bale?
i figure he was just standing on it then jumped when the picture was taken.
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