Archive Page 80

$10K Available for Amateur Photography Project

POYi (Picture of the Year International) just announced their “Emerging Vision Incentive” to help fund and showcase documentary photography work. The recipient gets $10,000 to devote to their project, which should focus on “daily life, social issues, cultural trends or news events.” The recipient also gets the opportunity to display their proposal at the 67th POYi competition at the Annenberg Space for Photography  in LA in June and their own exhibition in 2011.

You have to be an amateur of semi-professional and the project can’t have been previously published. The application process starts today and goes through May 31, 2010.

Get more info and the application here.

The No Photo Policy of Pittsburgh’s PPG


Photo by JP.Harron

PPG Place in Pittsburgh is a dazzling skyscraper and plaza complex that houses shops, restaurants, a glass-enclosed event space and ice rink. It also has a stringent no photography policy. After hearing numerous complaints over the years, a couple of writers from The Globe, the paper of Point Park University, decided to challenge that and brought their cameras to the plaza.

They were indeed approached by security and asked to leave. Puzzlingly, they were even told they could only take photos at eye level, not looking up. When they asked why, another guard gave the usual: ““Since 9/11, they don’t want people taking pictures here. You know what 9/11 is, right?” Right.

The thing is, even though the complex is privately owned, it’s an odd policy to enforce given its many public uses — and the fact that one could legally take photos of anything visible from a public sidewalk. The policy seems not only counter-intuitive but futile. Said photojournalism professor Chris Rolinson:

It’s a public space. They treat it as such,” Rolinson said. “The Constitution says there is no expectation of privacy in public because it is a public place, and people should be allowed to take pictures there.

And then the real head-scratcher was the statement from PPG’s owner, Grubb & Ellis, which said in part:

We will not prohibit that Kodak moment; we have never prohibited that at PPG. … We have eased up on photography, but not to the point where we would allow it.

Come again?

Article from The Globe

MOPLA Group Show Opening

Photo by discarted

If you haven’t been celebrating April as the Month of Photography Los Angeles (MOPLA), now is the time to start. Tomorrow night the MOPLA Group Show opens with a free reception and work from a select group of Los Angeles photographers that will include an array of genres, from editorial to fine art to documentary. Curated by Hossein Farmani of the Lucie Foundation and Dee DeLara of Smashbox Studios, the show will run for the next three weeks.

Our own Shawn Nee is in the show with his image “Up, Up, and Away!”.

Thursday, April 29th, 7-9pm, Smashbox Studios, 8549 Higuera Street, Culver City, CA 90232. Email groupshow@monthofphotography.com to RSVP.

Talking to…Photographer Clayton Patterson


Photo by Elsaa Rensaa (via Gerry Visco)

For 30 years, Clayton Patterson has doggedly documented the streets and culture of the Lower East Side, compiling a massive archive of the neighborhood and its denizens, from punks to pushers to police. And he’s had had a big impact too: His footage of the 1988 Tompkins Square Park protests and subsequent riot lead to major reforms in the NYPD.

We posted on Patterson’s most recent brush with the law at a crime scene last month and thought it would be interesting to talk to this photographer/artist/activist about his experiences with the police and being arrested a whopping 14 times. We were right.

Being arrested 14 times is outrageous! Do you attribute those largely to having a camera, or were there other circumstances involved?
Both. The camera intimidates many cops; firemen tend not to care. It is odd because the world we live in is documented from so many different directions, however most of the cameras are corporate or government.

What is your frame of mind when photographing crime scenes and/or police? Do you have to go in preparing yourself for a confrontation?
One never wishes for a confrontation. The goal is to avoid the conflict. You are there to document the scene, not create one. However, you must never let your rights be violated. You must protect your civil rights. That is a social obligation that all of us are responsible for protecting.

Do you feel like it’s not worth photographing the cops anymore because there will likely be a confrontation and you’ll be arrested for the 15th time?
I have been threatened with arrest 15, 16 times – yes, I am tired of it. I would like an easier path, however nobody else documents my area like I do. It is a forgotten piece of Manhattan real estate, so if not me, then who? There has to be a record and a moderator of the local events.

Why don’t you carry something like a wearable recording device (like a Vievu) to document your encounters?
I have no idea what a Vievu is. My best defense was my backup, Elsa Rensaa, the woman I have lived with since 1972. But there is only so much you can do. It is not always the arrests that are the worst. It can be the charges and the beatings. I have been knocked unconscious, had teeth knocked out, and so on. And I have continuously been in court since 1988 with one case or another. I have one remaining case, a federal case. We are talking many years in court, and it is just another day for the cops and the court, meanwhile for me it is a serious undertaking, which also has many potential dangers connected to it, as well as the expense and the time. Remember, the moment of glory is short. All the noise and glamour is gone in an instant. The court cases go on and on.  Alone, on and on, for years. It gets isolating.

Does it sometimes feel like it’s a big game – i.e., “They’ll arrest me for taking pictures of them and throw on some BS charges, which will just get dropped, and then I’ll sue”?
Never. It is never just a game or just for fun. There are always consequences and always the potential of physical danger. I am getting too old to get beaten up.  I am tired of the constant stupid struggle. And remember, suing is bad for their career. The cops, through court and other such systems, can work angles in their favor, but costing the city money is a big no-no. And suing can take years. It is never easy to find a lawyer who will sue the cops. That is a rare specialty area.

Just to get a lawyer, the case must be very clear-cut. The evidence in your favor must be clear-cut, and often they want indisputable video or recorded evidence in your favor. It’s what made me such a nuisance. I was good at getting the evidence with the video camera. By using the camera I got more cops in trouble than anyone else has in the history of America. It’s what made me stand out. I had the guts and drive to do it, as well as the skills to get the shot. To get the shot, you have to be right where the action is.

Continue reading ‘Talking to…Photographer Clayton Patterson’

More Tequila Party Nonsense in Arizona

OSU Photographer Cuffed During Cow Incident

I guess if you’re going to be detained for something ridiculous like taking photos in a public place, there should be something extra ridiculous involved — like cows.

While on assignment for the school paper, The Lantern, Ohio State photographer Alex Kotran was shooting two cows that had gotten loose on some athletic fields, but the police and some agriculture department employees were insistent he didn’t have a right to be there. A campus police officer told him it was dangerous and asked him to leave. When he didn’t, he was handcuffed, detained and charged with a misdemeanor for trespassing.

“He told me I was under arrest,” Kotran said. “I advised him that I was on public property, and he started talking about Supreme Court cases and stuff.”

Kotran said he was detained “for about 10 minutes.” Linton went through his pockets to get his wallet. The officer needed identification to write a report.

Three are three things that are unbelievable about this: 1) he was on assignment as a photojournalist; 2) this took place on not only public property, but at a public institution — one that’s funded by taxpayers and students, including Alex Kotran!; and 3) he was taking photos of cows.

(On a side note, on The Lantern’s original article about the cows’ escape, there is a poll asking readers “Are you afraid of another cow attack?” At the time of this post, it was — amazingly — split down the middle.)

Read the whole account at The Lantern

Tequila Party Member Harasses of Videographer

It’s extremely ironic when the man in the black jacket raises concerns about the videographer’s “moral compass,” since it’s very clear that the moral compasses of the people entering the United States illegally have been broken since the day they arrived.

Tequila Party Member Slaps Videographer

Film Crew Gets Into It With Vandals

An Australian film crew busted up some ne’er-do-well taggers and got busted up themselves.

The crew was working on a documentary about taggers when they came upon a guy spray painting a traffic box in North Hills, CA. The man fled, but came back soon after with a friend and proceeded to beat one of the crew members with brass knuckles. And they got it all on tape.

The two suspects have been apprehended and arrested.

From NBC Los Angeles

Photographers’ Rights Protest in So Cal May 1

Photographers in Southern California are urged to come out on May 1 to the 2010 College Swimming State Championships at Mt. San Antonio College in Walnut, CA, to show their solidarity and support for photographers’ rights at public sporting events. 

It all stems from a recent incident where a photographer was singled out at a swim meet in the same venue and asked to leave by security, who told him the coaches would prefer he not take photos, apparently because of the looks of his equipment.

Bring all your cameras, still and video, bring your long lenses, monopods, etc. Let’s make it obvious that we are serious photographers exercising our rights to take pictures in public.

From Photography Is Not a Crime (via War on Photography)


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