DAM / SOL ABADI

Posted on 19th December 2008 by admin in General news

DAM, marca de indumentaria femenina de diseño, invita a celebrar sus primeros diez años con una muestra de fotos el 11 de diciembre, a las 19, en su local de Palermo.

Para festejar los diez años, la creadora de DAM -Carola Besasso- convocó a diez reconocidos fotógrafos del ámbito de la moda y el arte  - Sol Abadi, Catalina Bartolomé, Paula Cala, Gustavo Di Mario, Gabriela Schevach, Gisela Filc, Nora Lezano, Gustavo Sancricca, Tomi y Cherry y Chino Zavalía – a participar con obras inspiradas en  el espíritu de DAM.

DAM abrió sus puertas en 1998 y fue una de las marcas precursoras en el circuito de Palermo. Con un espíritu lúdico, artesanal y vanguardista, la boutique ofrece prendas únicas de estampados coloridos y materiales inusuales que se combinan de forma inesperada. La moldería está basada en un estilo que conjuga  lo antiguo con lo contemporáneo.

 “Quiero celebrar todo lo que pasó en estos diez años,  DAM es como un hijo que creció más de lo esperado. No hay nada más lindo que hacer un trabajo que te apasione, que refleje una filosofía de vida, y que además sea recibido por el público tal cual es. Mi equipo de trabajo es como una pequeña familia y el clima que se vive dentro de esa familia se refleja en toda la estética de la boutique”, comentó Carola sobre el evento. 

Carola es artista plástica graduada en la Escuela de Arte Gerrit Rietveld Academie de Ámsterdam, ciudad donde pasó varios años, que fueron clave en su formación. Sus conocimientos tienen una fuerte presencia en el estilo de la ropa. En referencia a este tema, asegura que más allá de concebir a DAM como una marca de indumentaria, busca generar, a través de sus diseños, un universo donde se puede expresar y crear libremente.   

Medio: Site Hyper Data Media

Sol Abadi registró en su estudio una idea “en el límite de lo irreal, como un sueño”; una chica-muñeca sostiene un vestido volador que cubre un racimo de globos, parada sobre unos pocos centímetros de pasto sintético.

Medio: La Nación

FABIAN LAGHI / BUENOS AIRES AMOR

Posted on 16th December 2008 by admin in General news

Un día leí  que una de las formas para saber sobre uno mismo, es descubrir de dónde venimos. Quizá, este sea el primer motivo por el cual quise fotografiar a Buenos Aires.

Y más me interesó fotografiarlo con personas reales contándome alguna historia de amor surgida en algún lugar de esta ciudad. Así fue  surgiendo esta muestra, que no es ni más ni menos que un homenaje  a esas personas,  quienes me regalaron parte de su historia, de su pasado y de sus amores.

Fabián Laghi está representado en México por Container One

PARROQUET

Posted on 16th December 2008 by admin in General news

Born out of a lifelong fascination with science photography and nature documentaries, Parroquetshowcases a body of work by fashion photographer Sølve Sundsbø, comprising eight film shorts and a selection of photographs. Keen to produce imagery that didn’t fall into the traditional genres of photography, this project’s central focus is the parroquet, a type of small, slender, long-tailed parrot. This particular subject matter couldn’t be more removed from Sundsbø’s lavish editorial spreads and striking campaign imagery, although his reasons for choosing this particular species do, in a way, relate to fashion. Possessing almost sartorial qualities, it was the bird’s trademark vibrant plumage that piqued the photographer’s interest. Sundsbø looks to this as fashion on an evolutionary scale: compared to the fast-paced, demanding nature of the fashion calendar and the many ‘looks’ each season produces, this creature’s stunning ‘outfit’ has taken centuries to develop.

Conventional fashion photography allows the image-maker to draw on a wealth of outside creative resources -be it a hair-stylist, make-up artist, or fashion stylist - to enable them to realise their intentions. In Parroquet, the subject matter encouraged Sundsbø to take a somewhat different approach, focusing on one specific element: the movement of the bird in flight. It was always Sundsbø’s chief intention to document the parroquet using photography and film; both mediums enabling him to steal moments that would normally be missed. Shot in a controlled studio environment using high-speed cameras, the slow-motion shorts show the bird mid-flight. The distinct physical characteristics of the parroquet –its strong curved bill, and its clawed feet– are all visible, but it is the bird’s feathers that are the central focus. Sundsbø also gives special consideration to the bird’s slender silhouette, by cleverly incorporating shots of its shadow. The photographs present ‘frozen moments’ of the bird’s journey; rather than showing its full body, the cropped viewpoints bring abstract qualities to Sundsbø’s powerful images.

Parroquet exhibited August–September 2008 in Gun Gallery, Stockholm and Colette, Paris.

GUY BURDIN´S SHORTS

Posted on 16th December 2008 by admin in General news

 

.. Both his editorial and advertising ventures sought to tinker with the norms of fashion imagery in dramatic new ways. Bourdin staged narratives within his pictures, marked by a fine attention to detail that combined total glamour with an undercurrent of danger, plus erotic pleasure tinged with delicious suspense…

 

James Anderson in I-D, april 2003.

Le rouge Bourdin est devenu un signe de style pour les photographes de mode reconciliés avec une certaine idée de la mise en scène dont ce maître avait fait une profession de foi: “Ton chagrin s’échappant en joyaux de perles et de diamants orne ton corps nu de leur parure étincelante.” Ne parlait-il pas de “la grande Bouche du ciel” ? D’un “escargot sur un billard” ? D’une “ombre embrassant un visage” Il reste que sa vision est irréductible, unique, à l’image de ces silhouettes solitaires, de ces enfants de l’après-guerre, d’une sorte de France année zéro. Précisement ordonnée selon un sens de la composition et des lignes qui font de lui un peintre de la vie moderne.

In Stiletto n°1, Autumne 2003

ANNIE LEIBOVITZ

Posted on 16th December 2008 by admin in General news - Tags:

Annie Leibovitz describes how her pictures were made, starting with Richard Nixon’s resignation, a story she covered with Hunter S. Thompson, and ending with Barack Obama’s campaign. In between are a Rolling Stones Tour, John Lennon and Yoko Ono, Demi Moore, Whoopi Goldberg, The Blues Brothers, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Keith Haring, Mikhail Baryshnikov, Patti Smith, George W. Bush, William S. Burroughs, Kate Moss and Queen Elizabeth. The most celebrated photographer of our time discusses portraiture, reportage, fashion photography, lighting, and digital cameras.

“The first thing I did with my very first camera was climb Mt. Fuji. Climbing Mt. Fuji is a lesson in determination and moderation. It would be fair to ask if I took the moderation part to heart. But it certainly was a lesson in respecting your camera. If I was going to live with this thing, I was going to have to think about what that meant. There were not going to be any pictures without it.” 
—Annie Leibovitz

CHARLIE MAINARDI / BOTICCELLI

Posted on 16th December 2008 by admin in General news - Tags: ,

Del 6 al 23 de noviembre, en el Centro Cultural Borges de la ciudad de Buenos Aires, tuvo lugar la tercera edición de la muestra ARTvertising, arte hecho por publicitarios. Gestada hace ya varios años, fue en octubre de 2006 cuando se consagró, al abrirse como muestra al público en general, bajo el circuito de arte Gallery Nights de Recoleta.

Este año ARTvertising llegó con dos grandes novedades. Por un lado, la muestra se regionaliza: además de la de Buenos Aires en noviembre, durante la primera quincena de diciembre abrirán sus puertas ARTvertising Montevideo (Uruguay), ARTvertising Santiago (Chile) y ARTvertising Lima (Perú). Por otro lado, desde este año todas las Muestras serán temáticas. Se elegirá un tema-base que irá cambiando año tras año. Y para la muestra 2008, ARTvertising se teñirá de “verde”, ya que los temas que convoquen a los publicistas/artistas serán la “ecología”, la “sustentabilidad” y todo lo relacionado con el cuidado del medio ambiente.

 

Charlie Mainardi está representado en México por Container One

Pieter Hugo

Posted on 16th December 2008 by admin in General news - Tags:

THE DOG’S MASTER

These photographs came about after a friend emailed me an image taken on a cellphone through a car window in Lagos, Nigeria, which depicted a group of men walking down the street with a hyena in chains. A few days later I saw the image reproduced in a South African newspaper with the caption ‘The Streets of Lagos’. Nigerian newspapers reported that these men were bank robbers, bodyguards, drug dealers, debt collectors. Myths surrounded them. The image captivated me.

Through a journalist friend I eventually tracked down a Nigerian reporter, Adetokunbo Abiola, who said that he knew the ‘Gadawan Kura’ as they are known in Hausa (a rough translation: ‘hyena handlers/guides’).

A few weeks later I was on a plane to Lagos. Abiola met me at the airport and together we took a bus to Benin City where the ‘hyena men’ had agreed to meet us. However, when we got there they had already departed for Abuja.

In Abuja we found them living on the periphery of the city in a shantytown - a group of men, a little girl, three hyenas, four monkeys and a few rock pythons. It turned out that they were a group of itinerant minstrels, performers who used the animals to entertain crowds and sell traditional medicines. The animal handlers were all related to each other and were practising a tradition passed down from generation to generation. I spent eight days travelling with them.

The spectacle caused by this group walking down busy market streets was overwhelming. I tried photographing this but failed, perhaps because I wasn’t interested in their performances. I realised that what I found fascinating was the hybridisation of the urban and the wild, and the paradoxical relationship that the handlers have with their animals - sometimes doting and affectionate, sometimes brutal and cruel. I started looking for situations where these contrasting elements became apparent. I decided to concentrate on portraits. I would go for a walk with one of the performers, often just in the city streets, and, if opportunity presented itself, take a photograph. We travelled around from city to city, often chartering public mini-buses.

I agreed to travel with the animal wranglers to Kanu in the northern part of the country. One of them set out to negotiate a fare with a taxi driver; everyone else, including myself and the hyenas, monkeys and rock pythons, hid in the bushes. When their companion signalled that he had agreed on a fare, the motley troupe of humans and animals leapt out from behind the bushes and jumped into the vehicle. The taxi driver was completely horrified. I sat upfront with a monkey and the driver. He drove like an absolute maniac. At one stage the monkey was terrified by his driving. It grabbed hold of my leg and stared into my eyes. I could see its fear.

Two years later I decided to go back to Nigeria. The project felt unresolved and I was ready to engage with the group again. I look back at the notebooks I had kept while with them. The words ‘dominance’, ‘codependence’ and ’submission’ kept appearing. These pictures depict much more than an exotic group of travelling performers in West Africa. The motifs that linger are the fraught relationships we have with ourselves, with animals and with nature.

The second trip was very different. By this stage there was a stronger personal relationship between myself and the group. We had remained in contact and they were keen to be photographed again. The images from this journey are less formal and more intimate.

The first series of pictures had caused varying reactions from people - inquisitiveness, disbelief and repulsion. People were fascinated by them, just as I had been by that first cellphone photograph. A director of a large security company in the USA contacted me, asking how to get in touch with the ‘hyena group’. He saw marketing potential: surely these men must use some type of herb to protect themselves against hyenas, baboons, dogs and snakes? He thought that security guards, soldiers and his own pocket could benefit from this medicine.

Many animal-rights groups also contacted me, wanting to intervene (however, the keepers have permits from the Nigerian government). When I asked Nigerians, “How do you feel about the way they treat animals”, the question confused people. Their responses always involved issues of economic survival. Seldom did anyone express strong concern for the well-being of the creatures. Europeans invariably only ask about the welfare of the animals but this question misses the point. Instead, perhaps, we could ask why these performers need to catch wild animals to make a living. Or why they are economically marginalised. Or why Nigeria, the world’s sixth largest exporter of oil, is in such a state of disarray.


Text by Pieter Hugo 

MIRANDA!

Posted on 10th December 2008 by admin in Photo Production Services

 
Stop Motion
Titulo: Hola
Cliente: MIRANDA!
Director: Antonio Balseiro
Fotógrafo: Santiago Melazzini

“MAKING OF”

 

For more information about Antonio Balseiro contact Container One

Laboratorio

Posted on 5th December 2008 by admin in Photo Production Services

For more information about Gazz contact Container One

Gazz “Making of”

Posted on 5th December 2008 by admin in Photo Production Services

For more information about Gazz contact Container One

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