Archive for April, 2009

Inspired

Tuesday, April 28th, 2009

Man lately it has been quite a long road!  I’m unemployed, my girlfriend’s unemployed, we’re both living at our respective parents’ homes.  It’s been difficult and most likely won’t get any easier for awhile.  But tonight I became really excited.  For change.  For photography.  For new beginnings.  I have a feeling we’re heading towards a mountain but it’s going to be grand adventure.  It always is.  I’m hard at work on the Africa work and will have it online soon.  I hope you’re as excited as I am.

Working on it…

Tuesday, April 28th, 2009

100% crop of an image from Africa that I’m working on.

Location scouting

Monday, April 27th, 2009

Working on a new series that will be much more produced than my previous work… stay tuned!

Be a Better Thinker

Saturday, April 25th, 2009

10. Think about thinking. Metacognition, as this is known, is a crucial skill. Many scientists argue that the best predictor of good judgment isn’t intelligence or experience; it’s the willingness to engage in introspection. The brain is like a Swiss Army Knife, full of different tools. When picking out a couch, we can trust our emotions, but we should rely on the rational brain when scrutinizing the fine print of a mortgage. Unless you think about which mental tool is best suited for the task at hand, you could end up flustered, even sweating, in the sofa aisle at Ikea.

via 10 Ways to Be a Better Thinker.

Autism and horses

Friday, April 24th, 2009

Wonderful story here about a boy with autism and his life-changing experiences with horses.

NY Times article here with the photograph below.

Erin Trieb for The New York Times

Wall Street Journal

Monday, April 20th, 2009

The photographs I made for the Wall Street Journal ran today.  Check out the article here and pictures here.   Thank you’s to my editor Matt Craig at the WSJ, Matt Eich, Jim Mains, and Paul Lackey for the opportunity to be a part of this unfortunate story in need of being told.

UPDATE: audio slideshow here.  Listen!

Jim Mains, General Manager, Forest Industries, Fryeburg, Maine

Yeah Yeah Yeahs

Tuesday, April 14th, 2009

New album titled “It’s Blitz” released from the Yeah Yeah Yeah’s. I’m loving the song “Skeletons”. Have a listen.

New Work from Alec Soth to Premiere at High Museum

Monday, April 13th, 2009

“F.P., Resaca, Georgia,” 2006. © Alec Soth

The High Museum of Art has commissioned twelve new works by Minneapolis-based photographer Alec Soth for the Museum’s “Picturing the South” photography series. For this distinctive initiative, the High commissions established and emerging contemporary photographers to produce work inspired by the American South. Past participants include Sally Mann, Dawoud Bey, Richard Misrach, Emmett Gowin and Alex Webb, whose commissions have all been added to the High’s permanent collection.

For “Picturing the South” Soth produced a series of twelve large archival pigment prints exploring spiritual and hermetic life in the rural South. The first works by the artist to enter the High’s collection, the photographs will premiere in an exhibition at the Museum this summer. “Alec Soth: Black Line of Woods” will be on view at the High from August 8, 2009, through January 3, 2010.

“This initiative offers a rare opportunity to add twelve new works by Alec Soth to our collection,” said Michael E. Shapiro, Nancy and Holcombe T. Green, Jr. Director of the High Museum of Art. “The pieces acquired through ‘Picturing the South’ allow the High to build a collection of contemporary photography that resonates deeply with our regional audience, and which reinforces our position as the premiere art museum in the southeastern United States.”

“Alec Soth is one of the most talented and original photographers working today. His keen powers of observation and lyrical sensibility are richly evident in this new series, which is both compelling and conceptually relevant,” added Julian Cox, Curator of Photography at the High. “With this commission the High has acquired a significant new body of work that complements our existing holdings of photographs that address the spirit and matter of the Southern landscape.”

Soth’s suite of photographs travels through Southern backwoods, capturing flora, fauna and an unusual cast of characters living outside mainstream society in the Deep South. For this commission Soth traveled extensively throughout the South to photograph landscapes, manmade structures (tree houses, forts, cabins and tents) and people who choose to live on the outskirts of organized society (hermits, monks, campers and survivalists). Soth’s series was inspired by the writings of Flannery O’Connor, the Georgian writer whose Southern Gothic style explored social issues and revealed the cultural character of the American South. Like O’Connor’s stories, Soth’s photographs combine warmth and insight with narrative elements that convey the unique spirit of the region.

From the High Museum’s press release.

(via ACP Now!)

Leonard Cohen

Sunday, April 12th, 2009

Watch here.

Life is good.

Saturday, April 11th, 2009

Vermont was grand!  Great friends, delicious dinners, soulful photography, studio visits, deep lakes, vast forest.  What more do you need?  Plus, a signed copy of Harry Callahan’s Water’s Edge.  Thanks for everything, Don and Debbie!  And a big thanks to Stephen Schuab for having Don and I out to his incredible studio.  It’s safe to say that life is good.

Untitled, Adirondacks, New York, 2009