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Hovering by helicopter above land and water, Italian photographer Olivo Barbieri gazes down at the coastline of the historic Adriatic Sea, where once the Romans and the Byzantines made their homes. From his perch amongst the heavens, he notices as throngs of tourists assemble and scatter in the shallow tide; they’re dancing, following the lead of some anonymous guide, and Barbieri is watching, transfixed by the bizarre ceremony.
Zanele Muholi's new paintings are vivid political memoirs wallpaper.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from wallpaper.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Photographer fashions 'visual vocabulary for Black selfhood' centraljersey.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from centraljersey.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
How David Alekhuogie Navigates the Colonial Past The LA-based photographer speaks about Walker Evans, Black aesthetics, and how a frightening encounter with the police informed his thinking about art. David Alekhuogie, Interviews - April 30, 2021 For his recent exhibition at Yancey Richardson Gallery, David Alekhuogie worked with photography, collage, and sculpture to produce a visual meditation on his artistic and cultural lineage. His source materials—cotton jersey fabric, wax print fabric, the 1935 exhibition catalogue of Walker Evans’s photographs of African sculptures—are varied and all approached with a tendency towards abstraction. In one series, titled To Live and Die in LA (2018), his fascination is with the body as landscape and with the ways that the body, when photographed, can indicate the tensions and vulnerabilities of its stance. The most acclaimed of his photographs in that series show the midriff area of Black male bodies, the subject of his earlier work
Artist Sandi Fifield shows fresh new works from her newly settled Island life A sampling of the artist’s works. Sandi Haber Fifield and her husband, John, settled full-time in Shelter Island three years ago, after living for three decades in Connecticut. They counted themselves lucky to both be able to work at home during the pandemic, he as an architect and she in her studio creating unique works of art, many of which seem to reflect the uncertain time they were living through. “We felt we were safe,” she said, as the Island followed careful practices and kept infections low. Living in a wooded area near the Mashomack Preserve, they’ve enjoyed the views from their windows, “seeing the seasons emerge.”
7 Photobooks That Consider Black Lives and Artistic Visions From Carrie Mae Weems and Ming Smith to “Black Is Beautiful” and “The New Black Vanguard,” here are essential Aperture publications for our moment. Kwame Brathwaite, A school for one of the many modeling groups that had begun to embrace natural hairstyles in the 1960s, ca. 1966 Courtesy the artist and Philip Martin Gallery, Los Angeles Featured - February 11, 2021 Carrie Mae Weems, Courtesy the artist and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York Copublished by Aperture and Peabody Museum Press To Make Their Own Way in the World is a profound consideration of some of the most challenging images in the history of photography: fifteen daguerreotypes of Alfred, Delia, Drana, Fassena, Jack, Jem, and Renty—men and women of African descent who were enslaved in South Carolina. Photographed by Joseph T. Zealy for Harvard University professor Louis Agassiz in 1850, the images were rediscovered at Harvard’s Peabody Museum in 1976.