Archive for the 'Photography' Category



Venetia Dearden Joins VII Network

“Venetia brings a different eye to VII and it’s exciting to see her strong documentary style applied in different areas such as fashion and lifestyle,” says VII Photo’s managing director Stephen Mayes. “It’s particularly refreshing to see documentary photographers finding interesting things to say without straying far from home, and Venetia’s work on the Glastonbury music festival is shot on her doorstep yet taps into global culture. We are delighted to add her existing work to the archive and excited to see what she produces next.”

Source: BJP

NH Accident Scene Photographer Arrested

We posted on Brian Blackden a few months back — he’s the freelance photographer who works crime and fire scenes in Concord, NH for the First Responder newspaper and web site. At a fatal traffic accident in August, a state trooper confiscated Blackden’s camera, and then an investigation was launched into whether or not he was interfering in the scene and impersonating an emergency responder. (Blackden likes to wear safety gear that may resemble an emergency responder’s, but his helmet clearly says photographer.)

Well, now the results of that investigation are in — and Blackden’s been arrested. He’s been charged with two misdemeanors: obstruction of government administration and impersonating rescue personnel, in addition to two motor vehicle violations.

Blackden is apparently well-known among local media, emergency responders and police, and usually is able to photograph incidents with no problem. He’s also an enthusiast, no doubt. The state police didn’t know him though, and as happens so often, they overreacted. Because the fact of the matter is, if the guy has media credentials AND is photographing in public, there doesn’t seem to be laws that are being broken here.

According to Blackden’s lawyer, the state police sent seven officers — 7! — along with the second in command to execute a search and arrest warrant at Blackden’s home, even though he’d already volunteered to turn himself in.

If nothing else, that tells you right there this is more about the police department’s ego and assumed self-importance than the rights guaranteed in the constitution.

Source: WMUR

Cop Illegally Confiscates iPhone at TSA Checkpoint

From YouTube:

While legally filming a TSA enhanced screening pat-down at Nashville International Airport I was confronted by an Airport Police Officer and told to stop filming. The officer later removed my iPhone from my hands, despite my protests, saying “I don’t need a warrant.”

When TSA officials told him I was within my rights to shoot footage of the checkpoint, he gave the phone back to me. As I was leaving, TSA agents insisted that I could not show the footage without their permission, which is false.

This occurred at Nashville International Airport in Nashville, Tenn., Monday November 22, 2010. at 5:30pm CT.

ALSO: Blogger/photographer Steven Frischling writes that he was harassed by the TSA at Bradley International Airport in Hartford, CT. While photographing TSA checkpoints, he was stopped by a Connecticut State Trooper who informed him that “photographing a TSA security checkpoint was illegal, and specifically a ‘Federal Offense.'”

Frischling knows his rights, though and informed said trooper specifically that, “the TSA publicly states that photography of checkpoints is legal, with limited restrictions.” (Uh….just how do you think all those photos of celebs going through airport security get into Us Weekly?!) The officer accused Frischling of hiding and concealing his camera, then detained him, and then another plainsclothes TSA employee in some unidentified capacity showed up — which is when Frischling speed-dialed the TSA communications office.

Less than 20 minutes after I was told I was being detained and that I was not free to leave the terminal the TSA agent approached the State Trooper, whispered something in the Trooper’s ear and I was quickly apologized to … with that both the TSA agent and the Trooper quickly leaving me alone.

The TSA has a major image problem right now, if you hadn’t heard. They’re already treading on a perilously thin line, quickly heading into invasion-of-privacy territory. So you’d think they’d train their officers, employees and the state police that work the airports of their clearly stated photography regulations. And maybe then those TSA personnel could instead focus on feeling up passengers.

agosto in città

Photo by pierodemarchis

Photographing Dutch Vignettes in Iowa


Photo by Rene Clement

Rene Clement is a Dutch documentary photographer living in New York City. In 2004, on an assignment in Iowa, he happened upon Orange City, a town founded by Dutch immigrants in 1870, and was overwhelmed by its pastoral beauty and landscapes dotted with windmills and tulips. He thought it was “more Dutch than Holland.” He took photos of the locals dressed up in traditional costume for their annual Tulip Festival, and then proceeded to  travel there again and again, imploring the townspeople to pose in somewhat fanciful situations, which they did. The result is a series of photos of what, he says, the town would “look like if its inhabitants, like the Amish, had clung fiercely to the past.”

Clement has started a Kickstarter campaign to help him raise $9,900 to publish his book chronicling the project, called “Promising Land.” As of this morning, he has $3,732.

We asked him to give us his favorite photo from the project, and this is what he said: “It is hard to choose one picture, but Dutch St. Nick, known as Sinterklaas, in the snow is one of my favorites. In Holland, St. Nick is the children’s friend who comes on horseback every 5th of December and brings presents and sweets. For the picture I wanted him more like a lonesome rider like in westerns or the song from the Doors, “Riders on the Storm.” I borrowed the cloth from the Dutch Consulate in New York. We shot this picture outside Orange City, close to a farm, it was below zero and the wind was hard. I photograph with on old Pentax 67 and it would freeze to my hands. We were with a lot of people, people from the farm, and the rider came out with his family. Everybody was excited and patient. I shot several scenes, but at the end of the day, when the sun set and the cold was the most brutal, I shot St. Nick alone against the setting sun. I love the light and the shadows, how the wind goes through his hair and the solitude of the ice field.”

Source: Des Moines Register

Face of SS Rights on Sitcom?!

Photo by Shawn Nee / discarted

Look who showed up in the CBS comedy “$#*! My Dad Says” as a member of the gay men’s choir – Bill Bowersock, featured in Shawn’s mini-doc “Thank You For Your Call.” It’s nice to see he’s getting some good gigs. (On a side note, Frasier’s dad looks terrible!)

Watch it here.

Candid Hot Hollywood, as Shot by Leo Fuchs

Photographer Leo Fuchs got a front row seat during Hollywood’s heyday and shot some of the biggest stars of the 50s and 60s – Paul Newman, Marlon Brando, Frank Sinatra, Audrey Hepburn – on film sets, between takes and after hours.

Special Photographer: From the Golden Age of Hollywood is a compilation of Fuchs’ never-before-seen images from those times. The book is on sale now, or you can get a preview by watching the slideshows on Gawker and GQ.

College students, 1966, Tacoma

Photo by James Eugene Frank

Photography Link Roundup


Photo by Sacha Goldberger

• A grandson decides to cheer up his 91-year-old depressed Hungarian grandmother by dressing her in a superhero costume and photographing her in outlandish settings. Her depression lifts, she has a MySpace page, all is well! [My Modern Met via Boing Boing]

• “Cuba in Revolution” documents the island nation’s epic rebellion through 30 photojournalists’ photos from the 50s and 60s. Now through Jan. 9 at the International Center of Photography. [New York Times]

• A retrospective of California governor-elect Jerry Brown’s style. Or, the loss of hair over four decades. [LA Times]

• The 65th College Photographer of the Year went to Ohio University’s Rachel Mummey. See her work here. [NPAA]

• This is just disturbing: An NYU photography professor is getting a camera surgically implanted in his head as part of art exhibit. The images, taken at one-minute intervals, will be transmitted to a museum in Qatar. [Wall Street Journal]

total solar eclipse in Reims

Photo by Rene Collin


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