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National Geographic Traveler Magazine Announces Winners of 2015 Photography Contest

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Selected from more than 17,000 entries, an underwater photograph of divers swimming near a humpback whale taken by Anuar Patjane Floriuk of Tehuacán, Puebla, Mexico, has won the 2015 National Geographic Traveler Photo Contest grand prize. Floriuk wins an eight-day National Geographic Photo Expedition to Costa Rica and the Panama Canal for two. Shot near Roca Partida, an island off the western coast of Mexico, the winning photo is titled “Whale Whisperer.”

Diving with a humpback whale and her new born calf while they cruise around Roca Partida Island, in Revillagigedo, Mexico. This is an outstanding and unique place full of pelagic life so we need to accelerate the incorporation of this islands into UNESCO as natural heritage site in order to increase the protection of the islands against the prevailing ilegal fishing corporations and big game fishing.

Diving with a humpback whale and her new born calf while they cruise around Roca Partida Island, in Revillagigedo, Mexico. This is an outstanding and unique place full of pelagic life so we need to accelerate the incorporation of this islands into UNESCO as natural heritage site in order to increase the protection of the islands against the prevailing ilegal fishing corporations and big game fishing.

“The photo wasn’t planned,” Floriuk said. “I was taking photos near the head of the whale, and all of a sudden she began to swim toward the rest of the diving team. The divers gave the whale and her calf space, and I just clicked at the moment when the flow and composition seemed right.”

Faisal Azim of Chittagong, Bangladesh, placed second for his photo “Gravel Workmen.” He will receive a six-day National Geographic Photo Expedition: Winter Wildlife in Yellowstone for two. The third-place photo, “Camel Ardah,” was shot by Ahmed Al Toqi of Muscat, Oman. He wins a six-day cruise for two from Schooner American Eagle and Heritage. Seven merit-prize winners will receive a $200 (USD) gift certificate to B&H Photo and theNational Geographic Masters of Photography course on DVD. All winners will receive a subscription to National Geographic Traveler magazine. The winning photos may be viewed online on the Traveler Photo Contest website.

National Geographic Travel celebrates and illuminates destinations around the globe, and it was exciting to see that same theme captured in the contest entries,” said Maggie Zackowitz, editor-in-chief of National Geographic Traveler magazine. “I was blown away by the creativity of the photographers.

This year’s contest received more than 17,000 entries from photographers around the world. There were four categories: Travel Portraits, Outdoor Scenes, Sense of Place and Spontaneous Moments. Judging consisted of two rounds of evaluation based on creativity and photographic quality.

As grand-prize winner, Floriuk will embark on the National Geographic Sea Lion for the Costa Rica and the Panama Canal Photo Expedition, an eight-day voyage with a National Geographic photographer and a team of photo instructors. Tracing the Pacific coasts of Costa Rica and Panama, guests on board the vessel will explore the Manuel Antonio National Park, Osa Peninsula, Isla de Coiba and much more on the way to the Panama Canal. The trip is provided by National Geographic Expeditions, the travel program of the National Geographic Society, which offers guided trips spanning all seven continents and more than 80 destinations.

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Outdoor Scenes – Third Place – Camel Ardah, Photo and caption by Ahmed Al Toqi. Location: Badīyah, Ash Sharqiyah, Oman.

Camel Ardah, as it [is] called in Oman, is one of the traditional styles of camel racing … between two camels controlled by expert men. The faster camel is the loser … so they must be running [at] the same speed level in the same track. The main purpose of Ardah is to show the beauty and strength of the Arabian camels and the riders’ skills. Ardah [is] considered one of the most risky situations, since always the camels reactions are unpredictable [and] it may get wild and jump [toward the] audience.”

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Outdoor Scenes -Merit Winner – Sauna in the Sky, Photo and caption by Stefano Zardini. A sauna at 2,800 meters high in the heart of Dolomites. Monte Lagazuoi, Cortina, eastern Italian Alps.

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Outdoor Scenes – Merit Winner – Romania, Land of Fairy Tales, Photo and caption by Eduard Gutescu. Location: Bran, Brasov, Romania. White frost over Pestera village.

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Travel Portraits – 2nd Place – Gravel Workmen – Photo and caption by faisal azim. Location: Chittagong, Chittagong, Bangladesh.

“[This] gravel-crush working place remains full of dust and sand. Three gravel workmen are looking through the window glass at their working place. Chittagong, Bangladesh.”

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Sense of a Place – Merit Winner – A Night at Deadvlei, Photo and caption by Beth McCarley. Location: Windhoek, Khomas, Namibia.

The night before returning to Windhoek, we spent several hours at Deadvlei. The moon was bright enough to illuminate the sand dunes in the distance, but the skies were still dark enough to clearly see the Milky Way and Magellanic Clouds. Deadvlei means “dead marsh.” The camelthorn trees are believed to be about 900 years old but have not decomposed because the environment is so dry.”

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Spontaneous Moments – Merit Winner – White Rhinos, Photo and caption by Stefane Berube.

The night before this photo, we tried all day to get a good photo of the endangered white rhino. Skulking through the grass carefully, trying to stay 30 feet away to be safe, didn’t provide me the photo I was hoping for. In the morning, however, I woke up to all three rhinos grazing in front of me. Ziwa Rhino Sanctuary, Uganda.”

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Spontaneous Moments – Merit Winner – Kushti, Indian Wrestling, Photo and caption by alain schroeder. Location: Kolhapur, Maharashtra, India.

Kushti is the traditional form of Indian wrestling. Wearing only a well-adjusted loincloth (langot), wrestlers (pelwhans) enter a pit made of clay, often mixed with salt, lemon, and ghee (clarified butter). At the end of a workout, wrestlers rest against the walls of the arena, covering their heads and bodies with earth to soak up any perspiration and avoid catching cold. This relaxation ceremony is completed with massages to soothe tired muscles and demonstrate mutual respect.”

Traditional haymaking in Poland. Many people continue to use the scythe and pitchfork to cut and sort the hay.

Traditional haymaking in Poland. Many people continue to use the scythe and pitchfork to cut and sort the hay. © Bart Omiej Jurecki / National Geographic Traveler Photo Contest

Two boys are trying to catch a duck near a waterfall. # © Sarah Wouters / National Geographic Traveler Photo Contest

Two boys are trying to catch a duck near a waterfall. # © Sarah Wouters / National Geographic Traveler Photo Contest


Filed under: Photography Tagged: American Eagle and Heritage, Anuar Patjane Floriuk, B&H Photo, Masters of Photography, National Geographic Traveler Schooner, Traveler Photo Contest

Coming Soon to The Museum at FIT: Fashion Underground: The World of Susanne Bartsch

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Susanne Bartsch with Gage of the Boone, 2013. Photo © Wilsonmodels.

Susanne Bartsch with Gage of the Boone, 2013. Photo © Wilsonmodels.

Susanne wearing a dress by Rachel Auburn, Liberty Theatre in Times Square, 2014. Photo by Robin Souma.

Susanne wearing a dress by Rachel Auburn, Liberty Theatre in Times Square, 2014. Photo by Robin Souma.

The Museum at FIT presents Fashion Underground: The World of Susanne Bartsch (Special Exhibitions Gallery, September 18 – December 5, 2015), featuring approximately 80 looks from the underground fashion impresario’s personal collection of clothing and accessories, including designs by Rachel Auburn, The Blonds, Leigh Bowery, John Galliano, Jean Paul Gaultier, Pam Hogg, Stephen Jones, Alexander McQueen, Thierry Mugler, Rick Owens, Vivienne Westwood, and Zaldy, thanks to the generosity of the Couture Council and MAC Cosmetics.

Susanne and François Sagat in Switzerland hosting an AIDS benefit. Dress by Mathu and Zaldy, 2011. © Patrick MettRaux and Lukas Beyeler.

Susanne and François Sagat in Switzerland hosting an AIDS benefit. Dress by Mathu and Zaldy, 2011. © Patrick MettRaux and Lukas Beyeler.

Born in Switzerland, Susanne Bartsch moved to London as a teenager, living there for a decade. “We called her the Swiss Miss,” say old friends from London, where Bartsch was a key figure among the New Romantics. Arriving in New York on Valentine’s Day 1981, Bartsch opened a boutique in Soho while still on a tourist visa. An enthusiastic proponent of 1980s English fashion, she was one of the first New York retailers to import Vivienne Westwood. She also organized fashion shows, such as New London in New York and London Goes to Tokyo, that showcased designers Leigh Bowery, Body Map, and Stephen Jones. But life in 1980s New York was not just a party; AIDS was devastating the community. As her friends began dying, Bartsch notes that she “survived this period by becoming a fundraiser.” In 1989, she organized the Love Ball, one of the first and most important AIDS benefits. Over the next few years, she raised a total of $2.5 million for AIDS research and advocacy.

The catwalk crew at Marquee, 2013. Photo by Jason Akira Somma.

The catwalk crew at Marquee, 2013. Photo by Jason Akira Somma.

Susanne Bartsch has also been the longtime reigning queen of New York City nightlife since the 1980s when she became renowned for creating spectacular parties where she and a diverse mix of individuals—uptown, downtown, gay, straight, multiracial—dressed up in their own versions of high fashion, street style, drag, and Mardi Gras extravaganza. Her first party took place in 1986 at a club near The Chelsea Hotel, where she has lived for many years. “It was about seeing and being seen,” says Bartsch.

Bartsch and her friends have long constituted a fashion underground of creative individuals who take dressing up to the level of performance art. “Style is about expressing yourself,adds Bartsch. “You can be whatever you want to be—a silver-screen star, a Marie Antoinette baroque creature, a Victorian punk. I love that about fashion and makeup.” A muse for fashion designers and makeup artists, Bartsch has also been a catalyst for the cross-fertilization of ideas between creative people in a range of fields. Today, she is increasingly creating events that explicitly link fashion and art.

Photo by Robin Souma

Photo by Robin Souma

Fashion Underground: The World of Susanne Bartsch opens with a small introductory gallery of images and videos about Bartsch and her world. In the main exhibition gallery, the first section focuses on the 1980s English fashions that Bartsch introduced to New York displayed in a tableau evoking her surreally styled boutiques. The second and largest section features a variety of the creations that Bartsch and her friends have worn at her famous club nights at Savage, Copacabana, and Le Bains, with a special section devoted to the AIDS balls. The final section evokes her apartment at the Chelsea Hotel, the center of her creative world. Videos and projected photographs throughout the exhibition document Bartsch’s 30 years of sartorial self-expression and its influence on the global fashion scene.

Susanne at a Swiss dance event at the Tribeca Grand Hotel, January 2015. Photo by Robin Souma

Susanne at a Swiss dance event at the Tribeca Grand Hotel, January 2015. Photo by Robin Souma

Susanne Bartsch, 1990s. Photograph by Andrea Barbiroli.

Susanne Bartsch, 1990s. Photograph by Andrea Barbiroli.

The exhibition, curated by Valerie Steele and Susanne Bartsch and designed by Kim Ackert after a concept by Thierry Loriot, will be accompanied by a book by Steele and Melissa Marra. A two-day symposium will feature a range of designers, performers, and scholars speaking on fashion, creativity, nightlife, and performance art.

The Museum at FIT, which is accredited by the American Alliance of Museums, is the only museum in New York City dedicated solely to the art of fashion. Best known for its innovative and award-winning exhibitions, the museum has a collection of more than 50,000 garments and accessories dating from the 18th century to the present. Like other fashion museums, such as the Musée de la Mode, the Mode Museum, and the Museo de la Moda, The Museum at FIT collects, conserves, documents, exhibits, and interprets fashion, with a mission is to advance knowledge of fashion through exhibitions, publications, and public programs.

The museum is part of the Fashion Institute of Technology (FIT), a State University of New York (SUNY) college of art, design, business, and technology that has been at the crossroads of commerce and creativity for 70 years. With programs that blend hands-on practice, a strong grounding in theory, and a broad-based liberal arts foundation, FIT offers career education in nearly 50 areas, and grants associate, bachelor’s, and master’s degrees. FIT provides students with a complete college experience at an affordable cost, a vibrant campus life in New York City, and industry-relevant preparation for rewarding careers. Visit fitnyc.edu.

The Couture Council is a philanthropic membership group that helps support the exhibitions and programs of The Museum at FIT. The Couture Council Award for Artistry of Fashion is given to a selected designer at a benefit luncheon held every September.


Filed under: Arts & Entertainment, Culture, Dance, Fashion, Lifestyle, Museums & Exhibitions, Photography, Social/Life, Womenswear Tagged: ALEXANDER MCQUEEN, Fashion Underground: The World of Susanne Bartsch, Jean Paul Gaultier, JOHN GALLIANO, Leigh Bowery, MAC Cosmetics, Pam Hogg, Rachel Auburn, Rick Owens, Stephen Jones, Susanne Bartsch, The Blonds, the Chelsea Hotel, The Museum at FIT, Thierry Mugler, Vivienne Westwood, Zaldy

Hennessy And World-Renowned Artist Ryan McGinness Team Up For The New Limited Edition Bottle

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Continuing a legacy of artistic collaboration that spans centuries, Hennessy has partnered with multi-disciplinary artist Ryan McGinness to create the new Hennessy V.S Limited Edition by Ryan McGuinness Bottle, now available for purchase online and at select wine & spirits retailers nationwide. McGinness will also embark on a global tour with Hennessy beginning in August, with four US stops: New York, Miami, Philadelphia and Los Angeles.

Hennessy V.S Limited Edition by Ryan McGinness Bottle and Case

Hennessy V.S Limited Edition by Ryan McGinness Bottle and Case

In 2015, the Maison Hennessy celebrates 250 years of an exceptional adventure that has linked the Hennessy and Fillioux families for seven generations and spanned five continents. It began in the French region of Cognac, the seat from which the Maison has constantly passed down the best the land has to give, from one generation to the next. Hennessy’s success and longevity are also the result of the values the Maison has upheld since its creation: a constant quest for innovation, and an unwavering commitment to Creation, Excellence, Legacy, and Sustainable Development.

The new Hennessy V.S Limited Edition is the fifth in a series that has included critically acclaimed artists, KAWS, Futura, Os Gemeos and Shepard Fairey, the collaboration with McGinness is a perfect embodiment of Hennessy’s 250 years of dedication to the art of blending. McGinness acknowledges the strong similarities between his artistic approach and the creation of Hennessy Cognac: “My process of combining elements and compounds to form mixtures parallels Hennessy’s artful blending of eaux-de-vie to create Cognac. The shared approach to our crafts is part science and part art.

Hennessy V.S Limited Edition Bottle by Ryan McGinness glows in the dark under black lighting

Hennessy V.S Limited Edition Bottle by Ryan McGinness glows in the dark under black lighting


The label on each individually numbered 750ml bottle features an innovative brand first: a radiating pattern in bright fluorescent colors that is illuminated when the bottle is placed under a black light. True to his style, McGinness also re-interpreted icons within Hennessy’s motif, including the brand’s coat of arms, and highlighted the bottle’s metadata – information found on the back of the label in fine print – through unique visual symbology. Known for using the visual language of contemporary symbology, the New York-based McGinness is credited with elevating the status of the icon to fine art. His works have been exhibited in museums around the world.
Ryan McGinness’ work reflects a fresh, energetic use of multiple elements- from colors to icons-to create designs of enduring impact. We are thrilled to be partnering with Ryan McGinness during our 250th Anniversary year. This new Hennessy V.S Limited Edition bottle design embodies his passion and commitment to his craft, the same characteristics Hennessy has pursued since 1765,” said Rodney Williams, Executive Vice President of Spirits, Moet Hennessy USA.
In addition to the 750ml bottle ($32), a limited number of deluxe sets in commemorative gift boxes ($150) are available. The Hennessy V.S Limited Edition by Ryan McGinness Deluxe Set features two individually numbered 750ml bottles with different adaptations of the design by the artist in black and fluorescent colors on a black background. The Deluxe set also includes a keepsake booklet, providing a special inside look at the collaboration, and two exclusive artwork coasters.

Ryan McGinness holds the Hennessy V.S Limited Edition bottle in his Chinatown Studio

Ryan McGinness holds the Hennessy V.S Limited Edition bottle in his Chinatown Studio

American artist Ryan McGinness is one of the most noted visual virtuosos of our time. Amidst a 20-plus year career of professional design work and exhibition, the Virginia-born artist has been heralded as “an art star” and “a leading pioneer of the new semiotics” by internationally regarded publications like The New York Times, Black Book and Vogue. McGinness has created some of the most renowned symbol-driven vernacular in the contemporary art world and his works have graced prestigious galleries and museums in United States and around the world, including the Museum of Modern Art, Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego, the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, MUSAC in Spain, and the Misumi Collection in Japan.
For more information about the Hennessy V.S Limited Edition bottle by Ryan McGinness, visit Hennessy.com


Filed under: celebrations, Culture, Entertaining, Fine Living, Fine Wines & Liqueur, Photography, Social/Life Tagged: Black Book, Hennessy V.S Limited Edition bottle by Ryan McGinness, Hennessy V.S Limited Edition by Ryan McGinness Deluxe Set, Hennessy V.S Limited Edition by Ryan McGuinness Bottle, Hennessy V.S Limited Edition Deluxe Set, Maison Hennessy, Misumi Collection, MUSAC, Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego, Ryan McGinness, The Museum of Modern Art, THE NEW YORK TIMES, the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts

National Geographic Kids Magazine Launches 2015 International Photography Contest

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Young photographers are invited to take part in National Geographic’s International Photography Contest for Kids, with the U.S. grand-prize winner receiving an eight-day National Geographic Grand Canyon, Bryce and Zion National Parks Family Adventure, and the worldwide grand-prize winner receiving a trip to visit National Geographic Society headquarters in Washington, D.C. The worldwide grand-prize-winning photograph and the winning images from each of the four subject categories from the U.S. contest will be featured in the May 2016 U.S. edition of National Geographic Kids magazine. Open to children ages 6 to 14, the contest is hosted by National Geographic Kids magazine in the United States and through 10 local-language editions in Australia/New Zealand, China, Egypt, Germany, Indonesia, the Netherlands, Slovenia, South Africa, Turkey and the United Kingdom.

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U.S. Contest: U.S. contestants may enter now through October 15, 2015, by submitting one photo in any or all of four categories: Amazing Animals (photos of pets, zoo animals, or wild animals); Dare to Explore (photos of outdoor scenery); Weird But True (photos that capture something odd or funny); and Wild Vacation (photos taken during vacation travels). Photos may be black-and-white or color and shot with a digital camera or with conventional film. Entries may be submitted online at natgeo.com/kids/photo-contest or via mail to International Photo Contest for Kids/KB, National Geographic Kids, 1145 17th Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20036-4688.

A panel of National Geographic Kids photography experts will select and announce the U.S. winners in November 2015 and feature them on the National Geographic Kids website. Four first-place winners and four second-place winners will receive digital cameras, memory cards, and a selection of National Geographic Kids books. The first-place winners will compete for the U.S. grand prize of the eight-day National Geographic Grand Canyon, Bryce and Zion National Parks Family Adventure. Their photos will go on to compete against first-place-winning entries from international editions in the worldwide contest.

International Contests: International contest deadlines vary by country, and contestants should check local-language editions for details. More information is also posted here.

Worldwide Contest: In December 2015, each participating international local-language edition will submit its winning entry in each category to National Geographic headquarters to be judged alongside the winning U.S. entries for the grand prize of the global contest: a trip for two to National Geographic headquarters in Washington, D.C. The grand-prize-winning photograph and the winning pictures from the U.S. contest in each category will also be featured in the May 2016 issue of the U.S. edition of National Geographic Kids magazine. The worldwide winners will be featured on the National Geographic Kids website. 


Filed under: Education, Photography, Publications, Social/Life Tagged: National Geographic Kids Magazine's 2015 International Photography Contest

National Geographic Live Announces Fall 2015 Season Lineup. Season Includes First Ever National Geographic Photo Fest

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Hear explorers’ thrilling reports from the field, be inspired by National Geographic photographers, go on assignment with a Pulitzer Prize-winning photojournalist and experience the excitement of Telluride Mountainfilm, all without leaving Washington.

National Geographic Live announced its 2015 fall season lineup of events at National Geographic’s downtown Washington, D.C., headquarters. The fall schedule features 11 fascinating events that reflect National Geographic’s belief in the power of science, exploration and storytelling to change the world, including presentations by Pulitzer Prize-winning photojournalist Lynsey Addario and renowned climber Jimmy Chin. Tickets go on sale Aug. 10 and may be purchased online at natgeolive.org/dc, via telephone at (202) 857-7700 or in person at the National Geographic Museum ticket desk between 10 am. and 6 pm. All events take place in National Geographic’s Grosvenor Auditorium. Free parking is available in the National Geographic underground garage for programs that begin after 6 pm.

National Geographic Live is the live events division of the National Geographic Society, a global nonprofit membership organization driven by a passionate belief in the power of science, exploration and storytelling to change the world. Drawing from a broad roster of talent including renowned photographers, scientists, authors, filmmakers and adventurers, National Geographic Live’s critically acclaimed programs have connected with audiences worldwide for over a century.

We look forward to providing Washingtonians with another season of illuminating programming that offers inspiration and entertainment to audiences of all ages. They will have the opportunity to see, hear and, in some cases, even taste the experiences our incredible explorers and storytellers have to share,” said Andy van Duym, National Geographic’s vice president for National Geographic Live.

The fall season kicks off on Sept. 16 with “Pope Francis and the New Vatican,” a behind-the-scenes look at the making of the August 2015 National Geographic magazine cover story and corresponding book, with National Geographic magazine Editor in Chief Susan Goldberg, writer Robert Draper, photographer Dave Yoder and special guest Archbishop of Washington Cardinal Donald Wuerl. The season closes on Jan. 16 with the first ever National Geographic Photo Fest, where the audience will have the opportunity to meet and be inspired by renowned National Geographic photographers on the heels of the annual invitation-only National Geographic Photography Seminar.

The Nat Geo Live fall schedule also includes two student matinees featuring modified versions of the evening presentations geared toward students. Nat Geo Live’s student matinees are supported by education sponsor Canon U.S.A., Inc., a leader in digital imaging solutions. On Nov. 4, photographer and National Geographic Fellow Joel Sartore will present to students about Photo Ark, his ongoing quest to document biodiversity by photographing the world’s most endangered species before they disappear. A Photo Ark exhibition will be on display in the National Geographic Museum beginning Nov. 5. The fall student matinee schedule wraps up on Dec. 8 with photojournalist Ami Vitale and “Rhinos, Rickshaws & Revolutions.Nat Geo Live’s student matinees are open to school groups for $10 per student, which includes admission to the National Geographic Museum. For tickets or more information on the student matinees, call (202) 857-7281.

SEPTEMBER 2015

POPE FRANCIS AND THE NEW VATICAN

SEPT. 16, 7:30 PM

A week before the first papal visit to the United States since 2008, join National Geographic magazine Editor in Chief Susan Goldberg for a behind-the-scenes look at the August 2015 cover story of National Geographic magazine, “Will the Pope Change the Vatican?National Geographic was given special access to the pope and permission to document his daily life inside the Vatican for the story. Goldberg will moderate a conversation about this remarkable man with writer Robert Draper, photographer Dave Yoder and special guest Archbishop of Washington Cardinal Donald Wuerl. A sale and signing of Draper and Yoder’s recently published book, POPE FRANCIS AND THE NEW VATICAN, will follow. The event is sponsored by The PNC Foundation.

OCTOBER 2015

WHEN TOUGH MEETS TECH: EXPLORATION’S NEW FRONTIER

OCT. 15, 7:30 PM

National Geographic explorer Mike Libecki is on a quest to conquer the world’s last unclimbed peaks. Follow Libecki as he tackles mud and mayhem on the massive Poumaka Tower in French Polynesia, encounters fear and friendship on the Bamiyan slopes of Afghanistan and dodges polar bears while exploring Greenland’s icy waters, all backed by the technology that helps his teams summit and bring the stories back to us. The event is sponsored by Dell.

THE DEFENDERS: INSIDE THE WILDLIFE TRADE

OCT. 22, 7:30 PM

Get an insider’s look at National Geographic’s new Special Investigations Unit (SIU), which was established to expose elephant poaching and combat the illegal wildlife trafficking that’s driving many animals to extinction. The unit’s director, investigative reporter and National Geographic Fellow Bryan Christy, will take the stage to share how the SIU is going undercover to report surprising stories that are making a difference around the globe.

NOVEMBER 2015

BUILDING THE PHOTO ARK

NOV. 4, 7:30 PM

Photographer and National Geographic Fellow Joel Sartore is on a mission to capture portraits of the world’s most endangered species before they disappear. With ingenuity, wit and a serious Midwestern work ethic, Sartore has created the Photo Ark project, the largest archive of its kind, with 5,000 images and counting. Hear about his comical mishaps, endearing encounters and personal stories to document a world worth saving. A Photo Ark exhibition will be on display in the National Geographic Museum beginning Nov. 5.

IT’S WHAT I DO: A PHOTOGRAPHER’S LIFE OF LOVE AND WAR

NOV. 11, 7:30 PM

Go on assignment with Pulitzer Prize-winning photojournalist Lynsey Addario to the world’s most dangerous conflict zones. Addario has survived death threats and two kidnappings to bring back powerful images from hotspots such as Libya, Iraq and Afghanistan for National Geographic magazine and The New York Times. She’ll share the heart-pounding reality of working in war zones and explain what keeps her going back to places to which most of us would never venture.

TELLURIDE MOUNTAINFILM

NOV. 12-14, 7 PM

Over three unique evenings, enjoy a rich selection of films moderated by Telluride Mountainfilm’s director David Holbrooke and the unveiling of National Geographic’s 2016 Adventurer of the Year nominees. Since 1979, this festival held high in the Rockies has been one of the major events in the adventure film circuit, immersing audiences in issues that matter, cultures worth exploring, environments worth preserving, adventures worth pursuing and conversations worth sustaining.

PRISTINE SEAS

NOV. 19, 7:30 PM

National Geographic Explorer-in-Residence Dr. Enric Sala reports on his journey to save the last untouched places in our oceans. Through National Geographic’s Pristine Seas project, Sala and his team work tirelessly to inspire the creation of vast marine protected areas, from tropical paradises like the Seychelles to the Pitcairn Islands. Book sale and signing of PRISTINE SEAS: Journeys to the Ocean’s Last Wild Places will follow. Attendees can also visit the Pristine Seas exhibition in the M Street lobby of the National Geographic Museum to learn more about National Geographic’s Pristine Seas project.

DECEMBER 2015

THE MAKING OF MERU

DEC. 1, 7:30 PM

Join renowned climber Jimmy Chin and filmmaker Chai Vasarhelyi for a behind-the-scenes look at the award-winning film “Meru.” This thrilling feature documentary follows Chin and fellow climbers Conrad Anker and Renan Ozturk’s quest for the summit of Shark’s Fin on Mount Meru in Northern India. Chin and Vasarhelyi share the thrills — and challenges — the climbers faced, including a serious head injury to Ozturk and a terrifying avalanche slide for Chin. Through film clips, never-before-seen images and gripping firsthand accounts, Chin and Vasarhelyi deliver an exciting tale of adventure and inspiration.

THE SCIENCE OF TASTE

DEC. 3, 7:30 PM

Savor a deliciously surprising and delightful evening celebrating the story “The Science of Taste” featured in the December 2015 issue of National Geographic magazine. Awaken your senses and mind with innovative food and drink pairings during this unique event. Also, learn the science and art behind what tastes good, what tastes bad and why we even taste at all.

RHINOS, RICKSHAWS & REVOLUTIONS: MY SEARCH FOR TRUTH

DEC. 8, 7:30 PM

Experience our world through the eyes of award-winning photographer Ami Vitale, whose career has brought her face-to-face not just with violence and conflict, but also with surreal beauty and the enduring power of the human spirit. Her work has taken her to more than 90 countries. She’s lived in mud huts and war zones, contracted malaria and donned a panda suit — all in keeping with her philosophy of “living the story.” Vitale will share her personal odyssey through the images and adventures that have made her a celebrated global photojournalist.

JANUARY 2016

NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC PHOTO FEST

JAN. 16, 9 AM-6 PM

Enjoy a day of inspiration and exclusive access to National Geographic magazine photographers and editors. In the morning, see powerful presentations from the world’s best photographers. Then, choose your own adventure: Go on a Your Shot photo walk; have your portfolio reviewed; or experience live photo shoots and get tips for taking pictures of your own family and pets. Celebrate the day’s close with a not-to-be-missed party.

Currently, National Geographic Live events are held in 32 cities around the world, including New York, Seattle, Chicago, Los Angeles, Hong Kong, Singapore and Sydney. In each of these cities, speakers share behind-the-scenes stories from the front lines of exploration on stage alongside stunning imagery and gripping footage. In 2014, National Geographic Live events were attended by over 150,000 people. For the full fall schedule, visit http://events.nationalgeographic.com/events/washingtondc/dc-fall-2015-events/.

 


Filed under: Books/Publishing, Children, Culture, Documentaries, Eco/Earth/Conservation, Education, festivals, Film, Lifestyle, Living/Travel, Museums & Exhibitions, Music, Non-Profit Organizations, Photography, Publications, Publishing, Science, Social/Life, Tech/Design, Travel Tagged: National Geographic Live

National Geographic Books Unveils Special Access to Pope in New Book, ‘Pope Francis and the New Vatican’

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Since his ascent to the papacy in 2013, Pope Francis has electrified the world and infused the Vatican with unprecedented energy. National Geographic photographer Dave Yoder was given over six months of special access to the pope to document his daily life inside the Vatican. POPE FRANCIS AND THE NEW VATICAN (National Geographic Books, $40) beautifully captures the spirit of the new Vatican and the transformation sweeping through the Catholic Church.

Timely and poignant, POPE FRANCIS AND THE NEW VATICAN reveals this spiritual revolutionary through a new lens. Yoder and Draper take readers on a stunning journey through the complexities of the new Vatican under Pope Francis, his early life and journey to the papacy, and the Church’s relationship with our rapidly changing world.PVAT_DJ_REL2_JH.indd

Through breathtaking photography and exclusive reporting, POPE FRANCIS AND THE NEW VATICAN showcases the pope’s public life and personal convictions as never before. Yoder’s photos and the stories behind them, written by acclaimed author and journalist Robert Draper, highlight the deep love and mercy that lies at the heart of Francis’ ministry. Draper spent a month in Rome interviewing Vatican officials and three weeks in Argentina interviewing dozens of Pope Francis’ lifelong friends, many of whom had never spoken with the media before. Draper’s essays reveal the themes that have been woven through the pope’s entire life.

The Vatican finds the pope to be a paradox. Known as the “available pope,” a contradiction in terms, he is hailed by the press as a reformer, a radical and a revolutionary. Those close to him in Rome say he is all of these things, and yet none of them. The answer to the question reverberating around the world remains a mystery: Will Pope Francis change the Vatican, or will the Vatican change him?

He won’t change doctrine. What he will do is return the Church to its true doctrine — the one it has forgotten, the one that puts man back in the center,” says the pope’s longtime friend, Franciscan priest Ramiro de la Serna.

Publishing just ahead of Pope Francis’ first trip to the United States in September 2015, the book is being released in conjunction with the August issue of National Geographic magazine, which features Yoder and Draper’s work on the pope and the Vatican as the cover story. The magazine is presently available on digital newsstands and print newsstands.

For National Geographic’s youngest fans, National Geographic Kids is simultaneously releasing a Level 1 reader, POPE FRANCIS (978-1-4263-2253-2; $3.99), available in English and Spanish.

National Geographic Books & Home Entertainment creates and distributes books, videos and other print and digital media that inform, engage and entertain diverse audiences about our world. Annually, the group publishes more than 125 new books for adults, families and kids and releases 250+ new DVDs and digital downloads of the Society’s films and TV shows, and these National Geographic titles are available in more than 35 local-language editions. While special photographic and film collections, travel books, nature shows, birding guides and atlases are a core focus of the Society’s products, books and videos dealing with subjects as diverse as animals, the human mind, history, world cultures and the cosmos are also produced. For more information, visit nationalgeographic.com/books.


Filed under: Books/Publishing, Culture, Photography, Publications Tagged: August 2015, David Yoder, National Geographic, national geographic books, National Geographic Books & Home Entertainment, National Geographic Kids, National Geographic magazine, National Geographic photographer Dave Yoder, Pope Francis, POPE FRANCIS AND THE NEW VATICAN, Robert Draper, Vatican

PHOTOS.Com by Getty Images Snaps Up The Collection of Legendary Village Voice Photographer Fred W. Mcdarrah

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New Prints of Classic Greenwich Village Images Available For First Time 

Photos.com proudly announces the addition of the Fred W. McDarrah Collection. His work brings a new and unique selection of images to the collected works of an already world class Photos.com lineup including the legendary works of celebrated photographers Alfred Eisenstadt, Margaret Bourke-White and Ansel Adams.

The Beatles in New York City by Fred W. McDarrah (Image courtesy of Photo.com by Getty Images)

The Beatles in New York City by Fred W. McDarrah (Image courtesy of Photo.com by Getty Images)

Jimi Hendricks (in concert) by Fred W. McDarrah (Image courtesy of Photo.com by Getty Images)

Jimi Hendricks (in concert) by Fred W. McDarrah (Image courtesy of Photo.com by Getty Images)

Coney Island Cyclone Rollercoaster Ride (by Fred W. McDarrah (Image courtesy of Photo.com by Getty Images)

Coney Island Cyclone Rollercoaster Ride (by Fred W. McDarrah (Image courtesy of Photo.com by Getty Images)

For The Fred McDarrah Collection, the editors at Photos.com have selected more than 200 of McDarrah’s most delightful and inspiring images, with an eye towards their ability to work as wall décor. The images shown here (and many others) has been made available to the consumer market for the very first time.

Fred W. McDarrah (November 5, 1926 – November 6, 2007) was the most curious, knowledgeable, and indefatigable chronicler of the New York scene over the second half of the 20th century. He bought his first camera at the 1939 World’s Fair for 39 cents, but he did not start taking photographs as a vocation until he was a paratrooper in occupied Japan following World War II.

He rose to prominence during his 50-year association with the Village Voice newspaper, the house organ of the post-war counterculture. The New York Times has described McDarrah as the “Bachrach of New York’s Bohemia.” I would go even farther and say that he was the “Zelig” of the New York cultural scene at the time. If it happened anywhere in New York City, he was there with his camera memorializing the event.

Untitled Image by Fred W. McDarrah (Image courtesy of Photo.com by Getty Images)

Untitled Image by Fred W. McDarrah (Image courtesy of Photo.com by Getty Images)

Subway Car, 1977: Interior view of a graffiti-covered subway car, New York, New York, February 25, 1977. (Photo by Fred W. McDarrah/Getty Images)

Subway Car, 1977: Interior view of a graffiti-covered subway car, New York, New York, February 25, 1977. (Photo by Fred W. McDarrah/Getty Images)

''Let There Be Neon': Interior view of 'Let There Be Neon' (451 West Broadway), New York, New York, September 28, 1972. (Photo by Fred W. McDarrah/Getty Images)

”Let There Be Neon’: Interior view of ‘Let There Be Neon’ (451 West Broadway), New York, New York, September 28, 1972. (Photo by Fred W. McDarrah/Getty Images)

He photographed the artists, writers, musicians, and actors who frequented the bars, theaters, galleries, and cafes in Greenwich Village. He documented political rallies, museum openings, breaking news, feminism, experimental theater, the rock and folk music scenes, dance, and the civil rights and anti-war movements. In a style simple and direct, McDarrah created street and studio portraits of luminaries, politicians and celebrities that were often definitive and iconic. He was one of the first to photograph Bob Dylan. He photographed people at the time of the Stonewall Riots.


Rolling Stones On Fifth Avenue: View, from below, British musician Mick Jagger of the rock band the Rolling Stones, New York, New York, May 1, 1975. The band announced their 'Tour of the Americas '75' with a performance on a flatbed truck on 5th Avenue. (Photo by Fred W. McDarrah/Getty Images)

Rolling Stones On Fifth Avenue: View, from below, British musician Mick Jagger of the rock band the Rolling Stones, New York, New York, May 1, 1975. The band announced their ‘Tour of the Americas ’75’ with a performance on a flatbed truck on 5th Avenue. (Photo by Fred W. McDarrah/Getty Images)

Untitled Image by Fred W. McDarrah (Image courtesy of Photo.com by Getty Images)

Andy Warhol by Fred W. MacDarrah (Image courtesy of Photo.com by Getty Images)

Untitled Image by Fred W. McDarrah (Image courtesy of Photo.com by Getty Images)

Untitled Image by Fred W. McDarrah (Image courtesy of Photo.com by Getty Images)


But his favorite subject may have been his beloved New York City; often roaming the city on his bicycle, he documented the streets, buildings, landmarks, parks, beaches, pushcarts, subways, architecture, landscapes, churches, signs, cobblestones, storefronts and rooftops.

In his book The Artist’s World in Pictures, co-authored with Thomas B. Hess, McDarrah documented the New York art world, the New York School and the world of Abstract expressionism in New York City during the late 1950s.

His other books include The Beat Scene (Corinth Books, 1960); The Greenwich Village Guide: Sixteen Historic Walks, Includes Soho, Tribeca, and the East Village: Antique Shops, Bookstores, Theatres, Clubs, Restaurants, Art Galleries and More. (Fred W. McDarrah, and Patrick J. McDarrah, Chicago, IL: Chicago Review, 1992); Gay Pride: Photographs from Stonewall to Today. Fred W. McDarrah, Timothy S. McDarrah, and Robert Taylor, Chicago, IL: Cappella, 1994); Kerouac and Friends: A Beat Generation Album (Fred W. MacDarrah and Timothy S. MacDarrah. New York: Thunder’s Mouth, 2002); Anarchy, Protest & Rebellion: And the Counterculture That Changed America (Fred W. McDarrah, Gloria S. McDarrah, and Timothy S. McDarrah, New York: Thunder’s Mouth, 2003), Beat Generation: Glory Days in Greenwich Village (Fred W. McDarrah, and Gloria S. McDarrah, New York: Schirmer, 1996) and Fred A. MacDarrah, Artists and Writers of the 60s and 70s: An Exhibition of Vintage Prints at Steven Kasher Gallery, November 9, 2006-January 6, 2007. New York, NY: Steven Kasher Gallery, 2006.

In 1960, he married Gloria Schoffel; they had two sons, Timothy and Patrick. MaCDarrah died in his sleep at his home in Greenwich Village (he never left) a few hours after his 81st birthday.
McDarrah’s photographs have been exhibited at numerous museums, including the
Whitney Museum of American Art, the Museum of Modern Art (New York), the Wadsworth Atheneum (Hartford, Connecticut) and the Centre Georges Pompidou-Paris; and are in private and public collections including the National Portrait Gallery, the J. Paul Getty Museum, the New York Public Library, the Andy Warhol Museum, and the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art.

Built on Getty Images’ unrivaled archive and exclusive collections from a wide range of world-renowned photographers, Photos.com by Getty Images is a full service printing and framing e-commerce business.  Every image is available in four sizes and five framing options: paper, canvas, acrylic, birchwood & aluminum, and arrives at your doorstep framed and ready-to-hang. With more than 250,000 images spanning current events and famous faces to world culture, contemporary concepts and iconic black-and-white photography, there’s something to inspire and complement every interior style.

Photos.com by Getty Images is not affiliated with the J. Paul Getty Trust or its operating programs including the J. Paul Getty Museum, the Getty Research Institute, the Getty Conservation Institute, and the Getty Foundation.

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Filed under: Americana, Arts & Culture, Communications/Electronic Media, Culture, Photography Tagged: Alfred Eisenstadt, Ansel Adams, Fred W. McDarrah, Gloria S. McDarrah, Margaret Bourke-White, Patrick J. McDarrah, Photo.com by Getty Images, The Fred McDarrah Collection, Timothy S. McDarrah

Annenberg Space For Photography Presents LIFE: A Journey Through Time By Master Photographer Frans Lanting

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The Annenberg Space for Photography (2000 Avenue of the Stars, Los Angeles, CA 90067, www.annenbergspaceforphotography.org) announced a photographic interpretation of life on Earth from the Big Bang to the present by acclaimed National Geographic photographer Frans Lanting. LIFE: A Journey Through Time is based on Lanting’s epic, multi-year project and features more than 70 images with texts and stories about the works, as well as an innovative timeline of life on our planet. Exclusive to the traveling exhibition’s presentation at the Annenberg Space for Photography are an original documentary short film and four short videos that explore the human connection to life around us. On view from October 24, 2015 to March 20, 2016, LIFE explores the story of our planet from its earliest beginnings to its present diversity, captured in images that evoke the complex wonder of nature through time.

We are delighted to bring the majestic work of Frans Lanting to the Annenberg Space for Photography,” said Wallis Annenberg, Chairman of the Board, President and CEO of the Annenberg Foundation. “Lanting’s photographic journey combines provocative storytelling with new scientific insights. His seemingly omnipotent ability to look at situations in the natural world provides us with, to quote Lanting, ‘a window into its past.'”

For The LIFE Project, Lanting set off on a journey of photographic discovery that led him to remote 150112_10150815412425892_1223529129_nlocations such as Western Australia’s Shark Bay and Siberia’s Kamchatka Peninsula to capture primordial landscapes—and into unique museum collections to explore fossils and microscopic life. The result is a celebration of planet Earth that aims to educate and inspire through images and stories of the incredible biodiversity that surrounds us.

Organized in sections, the exhibition begins with “Elements,” to interpret Earth’s early history and show interactions among the five classical elements: earth, air, fire, water and space; “Beginnings” traces life from single-celled origins into more complex forms in the sea; “Out of the Sea” evokes the time when life first ventured ashore; “On Land” covers the period when plants and animals colonized solid ground; “Into the Air” highlights the evolutionary innovations of birds and flowering plants, ending with the cataclysmic events that caused the demise of the dinosaurs; “Out of the Dark” portrays the rise of mammals; and the concluding chapter, “Planet of Life,” envisions the collective force of life as a sixth element shaping our planet. An outdoor component of the exhibition, “Future of Life,” portrays present-day challenges to global biodiversity caused by the impact of humans on the planet in an era many scientists now call the Anthropocene.

The simple idea of looking for the past in the present grew into a challenging photographic undertaking that extended over several years and continues to influence my work today,” said Lanting. “My mission was to create images of nature—from volcanoes to tree frogs—that could evoke a sense of time and origins. I wanted to apply both new scientific ideas to my subjects and new photographic concepts to my images. My approach has been that of a storyteller who draws on characters for the sake of telling a larger tale.”

An original documentary film commissioned by the Annenberg Space for Photography and produced by award-winning director Steven Kochones and Arclight Productions takes viewers on a journey through time via the remarkable images and story of Lanting’s LIFE Project, while recounting Lanting’s own evolution from wildlife photographer to visual chronicler of life on Earth. The film will include interviews with Lanting in his Santa Cruz studio; natural history writer, editor, videographer and longtime Lanting partner and collaborator Christine Eckstrom; horseshoe crab expert Dr. Carl Shuster; Harvard University evolutionary biologist Dr. Andrew Knoll; National Geographic Senior Photo Editor Elizabeth Krist; Ecological Research & Development Group President Glenn Gauvry; Jet Propulsion Lab (JPL) geologist Dr. Abigail Allwood; JPL Mars Program Office Chief Scientist Dr. Richard Zurek; pioneering sociobiologist Dr. Edward O. Wilson; UC Santa Cruz Institute of Marine Sciences Director Dr. Gary Griggs; and renowned primatologist and conservationist Dr. Russell Mittermeier.

For the first time, the Annenberg Space for Photography Skylight Studios will be partnering with explore.org to offer programming to complement the LIFE exhibit. Utilizing content and live camera footage from explore.org, Skylight Studios will offer an immersive environment that celebrates species in the sea, on land and in the air. Skylight Studios will also continue to host the popular Iris Nights lecture series with exhibit-related speakers. The full schedule of events will be announced at a later date. The Annenberg Foundation provides bus funding to Title 1 schools, allowing educators to bring students to the Photography Space, free of charge, to experience LIFE‘s wondrous presentation of natural history. The exhibition-related book LIFE: A Journey Through Time will be available for purchase at the Annenberg Space for Photography and at Skylight Studios.

The Annenberg Space for Photography (2000 Avenue of the Stars, Los Angeles, CA 90067, www.annenbergspaceforphotography.org)

The Annenberg Space for Photography (2000 Avenue of the Stars, Los Angeles, CA 90067, http://www.annenbergspaceforphotography.org)

The Annenberg Space for Photography is a cultural destination dedicated to exhibiting photography. The intimate environment features state-of-the-art, high-definition digital technology as well as traditional prints by both world-renowned and emerging photographers. It is the first solely photographic cultural destination in the Los Angeles area. The Photography Space conveys a range of human experiences and serves as an expression of the philanthropic work of the Annenberg Foundation and its directors.


Hours: Wednesday through Sunday: 11 am–6 pm; closed Mondays and Tuesdays.
Admission is free.
Parking with validation is $3.50 Wednesdays–Fridays and $1.00 on weekends.

Facebook.com/annenbergspaceforphotography
Twitter.com/annenbergspace
Instagram.com/annenbergspace
Youtube.com/annenbergspace


Filed under: Advocacy, Animal Rights & Health, Arts & Culture, Dance, Eco/Earth/Conservation, Education, Living/Travel, Museums & Exhibitions, Photography Tagged: Annenberg Space for Photography Skylight Studios, Christine Eckstrom, Dr. Carl Shuster, Dr. Edward O. Wilson, Ecological Research & Development Group President Glenn Gauvry, Frans Lanting, Harvard University evolutionary biologist Dr. Andrew Knoll, Jet Propulsion Lab (JPL) geologist Dr. Abigail Allwood, JPL Mars Program Office Chief Scientist Dr. Richard Zurek, LIFE: A Journey Through Time, National Geographic Senior Photo Editor Elizabeth Krist, primatologist and conservationist Dr. Russell Mittermeier, The Annenberg Foundation, The Annenberg Space for Photography, UC Santa Cruz Institute of Marine Sciences Director Dr. Gary Griggs

National Geographic Launches 2015 Photography Contest

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National Geographic invites photographers from around the world to enter the 2015 National Geographic Photography Contest. The grand-prize-winning image will be published in National Geographic magazine, and the winning photographer will receive $10,000 (USD) and a trip to National Geographic headquarters in Washington, D.C., to participate in the annual National Geographic Photography Seminar in January 2016.

National Geographic logo.  (PRNewsFoto/National Geographic Society)

National Geographic logo. (PRNewsFoto/National Geographic Society)

Eligible contestants can visit natgeo.com/photocontest to submit photographs in one or all of three categories: People, Places and Nature. Entries will be submitted through National Geographic’s photography community, Your Shot, where members may comment on and “favorite” photos. The entry fee is $15 (USD) per photo, and there is no limit to the number of submissions per entrant. Entries must be in digital format and must be submitted electronically. The contest ends Monday, Nov. 16, at 12 p.m. EST (U.S.).

National Geographic uses photography to inspire, illuminate and teach our readers about our world and beyond,” said Sarah Leen, National Geographic Magazine’s Director Of Photography. “The National Geographic Photo Contest is an exciting opportunity for our photo community to participate in documenting the Earth, its creatures and its people. We look forward to seeing photographs that are passionate, skillful, surprising and beautiful. I’m very excited about seeing the entries we receive this year.

Judging consists of three rounds of evaluation based on creativity, photographic quality and genuineness/authenticity of the content. One first-place winner will be chosen from each category, and the winning photographs will be published on www.nationalgeographic.com. The overall grand-prize winner, announced in December 2015, will be chosen from the three category winners, and the grand-prize-winning photo will be published in National Geographic magazine.


Filed under: Photography, Publications, Publishing Tagged: 2015 National Geographic Photography Contest, National Geographic, National Geographic Magazine’s Director Of Photography, National Geographic Photography Seminar, Sarah Leen, The National Geographic Photo Contest

“The Art Of Pink” At The Peninsula Hotels Showcases Pink-Themed Art By Global Artists; Plus Inventive Dining And Events To Raise Funds For Global Breast Cancer Charities

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The Peninsula Hotels in Asia, North America and Europe are again thinking pink for a purpose this October, Breast Cancer Awareness Month. Marking its fifth anniversary in 2015, the Peninsula In Pink Charitable Initiative is undergoing a creative makeover to become “The Art of Pink.” In keeping with The Peninsula’s global commitment to the arts, each hotel will exhibit specially commissioned pink-inspired artworks by acclaimed global artists, including internationally celebrated photographer Chen Man in Shanghai, renowned Chinese contemporary painter and installation artist Qin Feng in Beijing, Thailand’s best-known cartoonist Chiratorn Chirapravati in Bangkok, internationally recognized Peruvian artist Grimanesa Amorós in New York, French sculptor Nathalie Decoster in Paris, and prominent Korean artist Choi Jeong Hwa in Chicago.

“The Art of Pink” at The Peninsula Hotels, designed to raise awareness and funds for breast cancer charities in the hotels' local communities. (All Images Courtesy of The Peninsula Hotels Communications Department)

“The Art of Pink” at The Peninsula Hotels, designed to raise awareness and funds for breast cancer charities in the hotels’ local communities. (All Images Courtesy of The Peninsula Hotels Communications Department)

The pink masterpieces exclusively created for Peninsula will be exhibited at each hotel and auctioned, with the proceeds donated to local breast cancer charities.

Supporting innovative public art around the world is an ongoing commitment at The Peninsula Hotels. The Art of Pink Campaign builds on the partnerships each hotel has created with leading art museums, galleries and private collectors to provide guests with privileged access to groundbreaking art by established global masters and emerging local artists.

French sculptor Nathalie Decoster

French sculptor Nathalie Decoster (All Images Courtesy of The Peninsula Hotels Communications Department)

Internationally celebrated Chinese photographer Chen Man

Internationally celebrated Chinese photographer Chen Man (All Images Courtesy of The Peninsula Hotels Communications Department)

Highlights of The Art of Pink in 2015 also include pink-themed gala fundraising events featuring charitable auctions of the pink art masterpieces, plus special Peninsula dining and spa promotions and exclusive items donated by partner brands. Each Peninsula hotel will adopt its own creative theme for the event. Examples of giving back in a fun way include The Peninsula Bangkok teaming up with selected independent restaurants to present an evening of fine cocktails and cuisine in a pop-up format, and The Peninsula Hong Kong partnering with leading global auction house Christie’s for a first-of-its-kind gala and live auction of pink-themed luxury items.

A popular part of every Peninsula in Pink campaign is the Pink Afternoon Tea. This October, guests at The Lobby of each hotel will relish a creatively themed The Art of Pink Peninsula Afternoon Tea, featuring rose-tinted sweet and savory treats served on a tiered silver platter, and accompanied by rosé wines and 252767bubbles.

Guests at Peninsula hotels can also participate by purchasing the specially commissioned pink ribbon pin during October, together with enjoying the collection of pink-infused gourmet dining and spa experiences, with part of the proceeds donated to local breast cancer charities.

The creative theming of each Peninsula In Pink Campaign is designed to raise awareness and funds for breast cancer charities in the hotels’ local communities. In its first four years, the Peninsula in Pink campaign has raised over USD 500,000. A dedicated webpage, www.peninsula.com/pink, will be launched in October featuring information on all Art of Pink initiatives, including the campaign’s history, photographs and videos.

The funds raised by Peninsula in Pink help local organizations to provide improved breast cancer-care facilities and services to patients in need. Examples include The Peninsula Manila, which is supporting the construction of a new and improved Breast Care Center at the East Avenue Medical Center, and The Peninsula Chicago, which helps transport breast cancer patients to and from medical appointments in the hotel’s fleet of MINI Clubman cars.


Filed under: Advocacy, Charity - Women, Culinary/Kitchen, Culture, Education, Fine Living, Fine Wines & Liqueur, Food, Health, Home/Interiors, Hotels and Hospitality, Interior Decorating/Design, Lifestyle, Living/Travel, National Breast Cancer Awareness Month, Photography, Social/Life Tagged: Breast Cancer Awareness Month, Breast Care Center at the East Avenue Medical Center, Peninsula In Pink Campaign, The Art of Pink Peninsula Pink Afternoon Tea, The Peninsula Bangkok, The Peninsula Chicago, The Peninsula Hong Kong, The Peninsula Hotels, The Peninsula Hotels' The Art of Pink Campaign

Cooper Hewitt Announces 2016 Exhibition, “Beauty―Cooper Hewitt Design Triennial”

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Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum (2 East 91st St. at Fifth Avenue in New York City) will present “Beauty—Cooper Hewitt Design Triennial,” the fifth installment of the museum’s popular contemporary design exhibition series, from February 12 through Aug. 21, 2016. With projects ranging from experimental prototypes and interactive games to fashion ensembles and architectural interventions, “Beauty” will fill most of two floors of the museum with more than 250 works by 62 designers from around the globe.

Featuring recent work from the most outstanding voices in the global design scene, ‘Beauty’ will expand the discourse around the transformative power of aesthetic innovation,” said Caroline Baumann, director of the museum. “The exhibition will celebrate design as a creative endeavor that engages the mind, body and senses with works of astonishing form and surprising function.Cooper Hewitt logo

Inaugurated in 2000, the Triennial Series looks at new developments in design as they surface in studios, fairs, shops, galleries and media around the world. In organizing “Beauty—Cooper Hewitt Design Triennial,” the museum engaged a panel of international curatorial advisors early in its process: Adélia Borges (Brazil), Claire Catterall (England), Kenya Hara (Japan), Mugendi M’Rithaa (South Africa), Suvi Saloniemi (Finland), Sarah Scaturro (United States) and Annemartine van Kesteren (Netherlands). The exhibition is designed by Tsao & McKown Architects

Organized by Assistant Curator Andrea Lipps and Senior Curator of Contemporary Design Ellen Lupton, the exhibition explores beauty through seven lenses: EXTRAVAGANT, INTRICATE, ETHEREAL, TRANSGRESSIVE, EMERGENT, ELEMENTAL and TRANSFORMATIVE.

EXTRAVAGANT

Designers use rich materials and shimmering, sometimes deceptive, surfaces to create an aura of luxury, glamour, seduction and excess. Highlights of the works on view include makeup artist PAT MCGRATH’s transformative visages; GIAMBATTISTA VALLI’s candy-colored gowns that beg to be touched, smelled, even tasted; and hair artist GUIDO PALAU, who creates fantastic hairstyles that consistently push the field, and our eye, forward.

Giambattista Valli Spring 2015 Haute Couture gown GIAMBATTISTA VALLI’s Haute Couture Fall 2015 Giambattista Valli Spring 2015 Haute Couture gown

INTRICATE

Performing astonishing feats of craftsmanship and physical construction, designers and artisans create textured or patterned surfaces that engage the eye in a wandering journey. Among the works on view in this section include the voluptuous typography of NON-FORMAT; the textured garments of fashion designer MARY KATRANTZOU, which glisten from a distance and pulse with intimate detail up close; and, the work of STUDIO JOB, featuring patterns that appear traditional at first glance yet give way to a jarring iconography of the everyday—from gas masks and peace signs to syringes and kitchen tools.

Mary Katrantzou Fall 2012 RTW

Mary Katrantzou Fall 2012 RTW

ETHEREAL

Designers create forms that shape space, time, light or air, sometimes defying permanence and weight in favor of ephemeral materials or fleeting effects. Highlights of the designer projects on view include work by scent artist SISSEL TOLAAS, who collects and preserves smell molecules from around the world and has been commissioned by the museum to create a new scent based on Central Park; and a grid of analog clocks that forms a giant digital timepiece whose elements align every 60 seconds to read out the time in numerals made of clock hands, created by the firm HUMANS SINCE 1982.

Editorial / 2009 / Berlin Published in [www.mono-kultur.com linktext:mono.kultur] / Berlin Sissel Tolaas has dedicated her life to something we all take for granted: the sense of smell. Obsessively researching and exploring our most primal and yet unnoticed sense in all its facets, Tolaas has shared her research in many ways: from research projects with hospitals and institutions such as MIT or Harvard, to commercial projects for the likes of Adidas, Comme des Garons and Louis Vuitton, to art exhibitions at the MoMA New York or the Third Berlin Biennial. Tolaas is fiercely passionate and outspoken on the power of smell, and how paying greater attention to it might just change our lives.

Published in [www.mono-kultur.com linktext:mono.kultur] / Berlin
Sissel Tolaas has dedicated her life to something we all take for granted: the sense of smell. Obsessively researching and exploring our most primal and yet unnoticed sense in all its facets, Tolaas has shared her research in many ways: from research projects with hospitals and institutions such as MIT or Harvard, to commercial projects for the likes of Adidas, Comme des Garons and Louis Vuitton, to art exhibitions at the MoMA New York or the Third Berlin Biennial. Tolaas is fiercely passionate and outspoken on the power of smell, and how paying greater attention to it might just change our lives.

TRANSGRESSIVE

Embracing androgyny, antiform, the grotesque, the formless and the fantastic, designers blur established boundaries and definitions, challenging normative standards of beauty, gender, genre or behavior. Works on view include Ana Rajcevic’s Animal headpieces, which partly obscure the face of the wearer, questioning the boundary between humans and animals; NOA ZILBERMAN’s jewelry series Wrinkles, which distributes lines of gold across the artist’s face and cleavage; the unisex clothing collections of RAD HOURANI; and AFREAKS, a collection of fantastical beaded creatures created by the HAAS BROTHERS in collaboration with female beaders from the Khayelitsha informal settlement outside Cape Town, South Africa.

Animal: The Other Side of Evolution by Ana Rajcevic

Animal: The Other Side of Evolution by Ana Rajcevic

 Jewelry That Celebrates Wrinkles Instead Of Hiding Them

NOA ZILBERMAN’s jewelry series Wrinkles: Jewelry That Celebrates Wrinkles Instead Of Hiding Them

Afreaks by Haas Brothers and Monkeybiz

Afreaks by Haas Brothers and Monkeybiz

EMERGENT

Emulating nature and embracing code and mathematics, designers create rules and processes that determine the final outcome of a project, working with data flows and user interactions to create responsive forms. Featured work includes DANIEL BROWN’s digital blossoms, which celebrate the glamour of artifice; NERI OXMAN’s Wanderers, 3-D-printed wearable objects permeated with capillaries and seeded with microorganisms to enable future survival on distant planets; and ALEXANDRA DAISY GINSBERG’s project Designing for the Sixth Extinction, which depicts genetically engineered creatures that could someday clean the air of toxins, neutralize acid in the soil and collect and scatter seeds. Cooper Hewitt has commissioned architect JENNY SABIN to design a knitted, textile structure for the exhibition.

Forest 15 (www.daisyginsberg.com)

ALEXANDRA DAISY GINSBERG’s project Designing for the Sixth Extinction, Forest 15 (www.daisyginsberg.com)

Brown said; “The ‘Love Blossoms’ project gave the opportunity to apply cutting edge generative-art principles to an established, heritage luxury brand and create a seasonal and unique gift for each Mulberry follower. Using prints from the Spring Summer 2011 collection, each flower is generated so that no two blooms are ever the same.”

Brown said; “The ‘Love Blossoms’ project gave the opportunity to apply cutting edge generative-art principles to an established, heritage luxury brand and create a seasonal and unique gift for each Mulberry follower. Using prints from the Spring Summer 2011 collection, each flower is generated so that no two blooms are ever the same.”

Brown said; “The ‘Love Blossoms’ project gave the opportunity to apply cutting edge generative-art principles to an established, heritage luxury brand and create a seasonal and unique gift for each Mulberry follower. Using prints from the Spring Summer 2011 collection, each flower is generated so that no two blooms are ever the same.” Brown said; “The ‘Love Blossoms’ project gave the opportunity to apply cutting edge generative-art principles to an established, heritage luxury brand and create a seasonal and unique gift for each Mulberry follower. Using prints from the Spring Summer 2011 collection, each flower is generated so that no two blooms are ever the same.” Brown said; “The ‘Love Blossoms’ project gave the opportunity to apply cutting edge generative-art principles to an established, heritage luxury brand and create a seasonal and unique gift for each Mulberry follower. Using prints from the Spring Summer 2011 collection, each flower is generated so that no two blooms are ever the same.”

ELEMENTAL

Drawing energy and character from basic materials, designers create serene geometries and uncluttered forms that invite intuitive interaction from users. The exhibition will feature works by SAM HECHT and KIM COLIN, founders of Industrial Facility, who find beauty in the equilibrium of making, use and memory; FORMAFANTASMA and EMILIANO GODOY, who give shape to lava and glass respectively, materials that shift from liquid to solid; and YEONGKYU YOO, whose World Clock rolls to display the time in all 24 time zones.

Formafantasma re-appropriates mount etna lava into experimental objects

Formafantasma re-appropriates mount etna lava into experimental objects

Formafantasma 'denaturafossilium' Small Pillar (www.formafantasma.com)

Formafantasma ‘denaturafossilium’ Small Pillar (www.formafantasma.com)

TRANSFORMATIVE

Brynjar Sigurdarson's, 'Silent Village Collection, Entrance Table', 2013, Galerie kréo.

Brynjar Sigurdarson’s, ‘Silent Village Collection, Entrance Table’, 2013, Galerie kréo.

Buym table by Brynjar Sigurðarson (Sigurdarsonbrynjar, Furnitureproduct)

Buym table by Brynjar Sigurðarson (Sigurdarsonbrynjar, Furnitureproduct)

Under the hand of the designer, familiar materials, vocabularies or forms assume new and surprising identities. Featured projects include the furniture and objects of BRYNJAR SIGURÐARSON, who borrows materials and techniques from Icelandic fishermen; JANTJE FLEISCHHUT’s abstract jewelry, shaped from precious materials and found objects that suggest asteroids and interstellar debris; and LADUMA NGXOKOLO’s line of knitted garments, designed for young men in South Africa’s Xhosa community who have passed through the rite of circumcision.

A 276-page book with 274 images, designed by Kimberly Varella of Content Object Design Studio, is published by Cooper Hewitt and distributed by Artbook | DAP (Distributed Art Publishers), $50.00. The publication “Beauty—Cooper Hewitt Design Triennial” will be available beginning December 2015, in advance of the exhibition.

Beauty—Cooper Hewitt Design Triennial” is made possible by generous support from Edward and Helen Hintz. Additional funding is provided by Margery and Edgar Masinter, May and Samuel Rudin Family Foundation Inc. and Rockwell Group.

In spring and summer 2016, a series of public programs will inspire dialogue about design and beauty. Planned events include Magical Materialism, Beauty + Biology and Graphics + Interaction.

As the only museum in the United States devoted exclusively to historic and contemporary design, Cooper Hewitt educates, inspires and empowers people through design. The museum has recently undergone a transformative renovation resulting in an entirely new visitor experience and 60 percent more exhibition space to showcase one of the most diverse and comprehensive collections of design works in existence.

Hours are Sunday through Friday, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., and Saturday, 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. The new Tarallucci e Vino café is open daily at 8 a.m. The Arthur Ross Terrace & Garden, currently under renovation, opens in early fall 2015 and will be accessible without an admissions ticket through the new East 90th Street entrance. The museum is closed on Thanksgiving Day and Christmas Day. Public transit routes include the Lexington Avenue 4, 5 and 6 subways (86th or 96th Street stations) and the Fifth and Madison Avenue buses. Adult admission, $18; seniors, $12; students, $9. Cooper Hewitt members and children younger than age 18 are admitted free. Pay What You Wish every Saturday, 6 to 9 p.m. The museum is fully accessible.

For further information, call (212) 849-8400, visit Cooper Hewitt’s website at www.cooperhewitt.org and follow the museum on www.twitter.com/cooperhewitt,www.facebook.com/cooperhewitt and www.instagram.com/cooperhewitt.


Filed under: Architecture & Modern Design, Arts & Culture, Beauty & Grooming, Culture, Education, Home/Interiors, Interior Decorating/Design, Lifestyle, Living/Travel, Performance Art, Photography, Science, Social/Life, Tech/Design, Technology, Womenswear Tagged: Adélia Borges (Brazil), AFREAKS, ALEXANDRA DAISY GINSBERG, ALEXANDRA DAISY GINSBERG’s project Designing for the Sixth Extinction, Ana Rajcevic’s Animal headpieces, Andrea Trimarch, Annemartine van Kesteren (Netherlands), Artbook | DAP, Assistant Curator Andrea Lipps, “Beauty—Cooper Hewitt Design Triennial, , BRYNJAR SIGURÐARSON, Caroline Baumann, Claire Catterall (England), Content Object Design Studio, Cooper-Hewitt, DANIEL BROWN’s digital blossoms, EMILIANO GODOY, founders of Industrial Facility, Giambattista Valli, GUIDO PALAU, HAAS BROTHERS, HUMANS SINCE 1982, JANTJE FLEISCHHUT, JENNY SABIN, Kenya Hara (Japan), Kimberly Varella, LADUMA NGXOKOLO, Mary Katrantzou, Mugendi M’Rithaa (South Africa), NERI OXMAN’s Wanderers, NOA ZILBERMAN’s jewelry series Wrinkles, NON-FORMAT, PAT MCGRATH, RAD HOURANI, SAM HECHT and KIM COLIN, Sarah Scaturro (United States), Senior Curator of Contemporary Design Ellen Lupton, Simone Farresin, SISSEL TOLAAS, Smithsonian Design Museum, Studio Formafantasma, STUDIO JOB, Suvi Saloniemi (Finland), Tsao & McKown Architects

Jewish Identities and Celebrity Personas of Andy Warhol Muses Marilyn Monroe and Elizabeth Taylor Focus of Intimate Exhibition Opening September 25

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On view at the Jewish Museum from September 25, 2015 to February 7, 2016, Becoming Jewish: Warhol’s Liz and Marilyn presents a close look at two of Andy Warhol’s muses, Elizabeth Taylor and Marilyn Monroe, exploring the Jewish identities of Warhol’s most celebrated subjects. Becoming Jewish: Warhol’s Liz and Marilyn is organized by Joanna Montoya Robotham, Neubauer Family Foundation Assistant Curator.

Publicity Still of Elizabeth Taylor, Source for Warhol's 'Silver Liz,' 1957. Collection of The Andy Warhol Museum, Pittsburgh. Image provided by The Andy Warhol Museum, Pittsburgh.

Publicity Still of Elizabeth Taylor, Source for Warhol’s ‘Silver Liz,’ 1957. Collection of The Andy Warhol Museum, Pittsburgh. Image provided by The Andy Warhol Museum, Pittsburgh.

Andy Warhol, Liz, 1964, offset lithograph on paper. The Andy Warhol Museum, Pittsburgh; Founding Collection, Contribution The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc. 1998.1.2374. (Credit: The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc/Artist Rights Society (ARS), New York.

Andy Warhol, Liz, 1964, offset lithograph on paper. The Andy Warhol Museum, Pittsburgh; Founding Collection, Contribution The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc. 1998.1.2374. Credit: The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc/Artist Rights Society (ARS), New York.

Marilyn Monroe, Source for Warhol's 'Marilyn' Series, c. 1953. Collection of The Andy Warhol Museum, Pittsburgh. Image provided by The Andy Warhol Museum, Pittsburgh.

Marilyn Monroe, Source for Warhol’s ‘Marilyn’ Series, c. 1953. Collection of The Andy Warhol Museum, Pittsburgh. Image provided by The Andy Warhol Museum, Pittsburgh.

Both Marilyn Monroe and Elizabeth Taylor converted to Judaism in the 1950s. Warhol was fascinated by their star power and used publicity stills to create his now iconic portraits in the early 1960s. This intimate, single-gallery exhibition features several portraits of these renowned actresses alongside a large selection of photographs, letters, and ephemera, shedding new light on their relationships with Judaism and Warhol’s interest in celebrity culture.

John Huston, Marilyn Monroe, Arthur Miller. Image shot 1961. Exact date unknown. Image provided by Photos 12/Alamy

John Huston, Marilyn Monroe, Arthur Miller. Image shot 1961. Exact date unknown. Image provided by Photos 12/Alamy

DN8Y3N Aug. 26, 2002 - MIKE TODD, ELIZABETH TAYLOR and EDDIE FISHER., 1957. (Photo Credit: NATE CUTLER). Images provided by ZUMA Press, INC./ALAMY,  www.ZUMAPRESS.com

DN8Y3N Aug. 26, 2002 – MIKE TODD, ELIZABETH TAYLOR and EDDIE FISHER., 1957. (Photo Credit: NATE CUTLER). Images provided by ZUMA Press, INC./ALAMY, http://www.ZUMAPRESS.com

In 1959, at the age of 27, Elizabeth Taylor converted to Judaism in a ceremony at Temple Israel in Hollywood. She considered converting to Judaism prior to her marriage to theater and film producer Mike Todd, but it wasn’t until after Todd’s death that she began to study with Rabbi Max Nussbaum at Temple Israel. Taylor remained an ardent supporter of Jewish causes throughout her life.

William John Kennedy Homage to Warhol’s Marilyn, 1964  East 47th Street Factory, New York City  Gelatin silver print  28 x 22 in, from William John Kennedy: The Warhol Museum Edition. Courtesy of www.kiwiartsgroup.com and www.warhol.org/editions.

William John Kennedy, Homage to Warhol’s Marilyn, 1964, East 47th Street Factory, New York City, Gelatin silver print, 28 x 22 in, from William John Kennedy: The Warhol Museum Edition. Courtesy of www.kiwiartsgroup.com and www.warhol.org/editions.

Evelyn Hofer Andy Warhol standing in the Factory with a Liz painting and several screens in the background, January 29, 1964 Gelatin silver print  Overall: 14 x 11 in. (35.6 x 27.9 cm) The Andy Warhol Museum, Pittsburgh; Founding Collection, Contribution The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, TC31.115.8. Images provided by the estate of Evelyn Hofer.

Evelyn HoferAndy Warhol standing in the Factory with a Liz painting and several screens in the background, January 29, 1964, Gelatin silver print, Overall: 14 x 11 in. (35.6 x 27.9 cm) The Andy Warhol Museum, Pittsburgh; Founding Collection, Contribution The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, TC31.115.8. Images provided by the estate of Evelyn Hofer.

Prior to her wedding to playwright Arthur Miller, Marilyn Monroe expressed interest in converting to Judaism. She was impressed with Jewish ideals and she studied with Miller’s rabbi, Robert Goldburg, to learn more about Judaism. Rabbi Goldburg performed Monroe’s Ceremony of Conversion preceding the couple’s wedding in June 1956. Although Monroe and Miller divorced in 1961, Monroe expressed to the rabbi her unwavering commitment to the Jewish faith.

Becoming Jewish: Warhol’s Liz and Marilyn is divided into three sections—“Celebrity,” focused on Marilyn Monroe and Elizabeth Taylor’s public image; “Conversion,” detailing their personal lives and Jewish identities; and “Myth & Legend,” exploring Warhol’s fascination with these celebrities and the impact of his work on their iconic status.

Elizabeth Taylor on the cover of Screen Stories, September 1959

Elizabeth Taylor on the cover of Screen Stories, September 1959

Marilyn Monroe on the cover of Modern Screen, November 1956.

Marilyn Monroe on the cover of Modern Screen, November 1956.

The “Celebrity” section features photographs, newsreels, and magazine covers demonstrating the public’s fascination with Monroe and Taylor. Highlights include video clips of Taylor’s Oscar speech, Monroe performing for American troops in Korea, and fan magazines such as Modern Screen, Screen Stories, and Motion Picture that surfaced in the 1950s to feed the public’s hunger for celebrities. Photographs and newsreel excerpts illustrate the public’s obsession with the actresses’ movie feats, love affairs, and broken hearts, as well as their struggles with the limelight.

12 May 1959, Las Vegas, Nevada, USA --- Original caption: 5/12/1959- Las Vegas, NV- Eddie Fisher and Elizabeth Taylor are shown after their wedding at Temple Beth Shalom. No pictures were allowed during the actual wedding ceremony. --- Image by © Bettmann/CORBIS

12 May 1959, Las Vegas, Nevada, USA — Original caption: 5/12/1959- Las Vegas, NV- Eddie Fisher and Elizabeth Taylor are shown after their wedding at Temple Beth Shalom. No pictures were allowed during the actual wedding ceremony. — Image by © Bettmann/CORBIS

1975, Jerusalem, Israel --- Elizabeth Taylor at Western Wall --- Image by © David Rubinger/CORBIS

1975, Jerusalem, Israel — Elizabeth Taylor at Western Wall — Image by © David Rubinger/CORBIS

Conversion” traces the Jewish journeys of Monroe and Taylor, featuring a case of conversion-related material including a rarely-heard audio recording of Elizabeth Taylor’s conversion ceremony and a facsimile of Monroe’s Certificate of Conversion. This section will also explore the actresses’ Jewish lives through ephemera such as her musical menorah, letters from Rabbi Goldburg describing his relationship with the Marilyn Monroe and the Miller family, and documentation of Taylor’s lifelong commitment to Jewish philanthropy.

Andy Warhol, Marilyn, 1967, screen print on paper. The Andy Warhol Museum, Pittsburgh; Founding Collection, Contribution The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc. 1998.1.2374. (Credit: The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc/Artist Rights Society (ARS), New York.

Andy Warhol, Marilyn, 1967, screen print on paper. The Andy Warhol Museum, Pittsburgh; Founding Collection, Contribution The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc. 1998.1.2374. (Credit: The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc/Artist Rights Society (ARS), New York.

Andy Warhol, Blue Liz, 1963, synthetic ink on canvas. Private Collection.  The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc/Artist Rights Society (ARS), New York.

Andy Warhol, Blue Liz, 1963, synthetic ink on canvas. Private Collection. The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc/Artist Rights Society (ARS), New York.

The exhibition concludes by examining the legacy of Monroe and Taylor through the lens of Andy Warhol’s now-iconic portraits. Featuring four Warhol works—two paintings and two prints—the “Myth & Legend” section reveals how the portraits reflect the glamorous yet complex identities of these subjects. Monroe and Taylor represented themes of great interest to Warhol: glamour, beauty, scandal, death, and media spectacle. His canvases of the actresses in the early 1960s coincided with his initial explorations of silkscreen painting and serial imagery. The repeated use of a single image altered slightly, either at the hand of the artist or due to the silkscreening process, enhanced Warhol’s exploration of the celebrity persona as illusion. Warhol’s artistic process in creating these portraits is explored through photography and ephemera from his studio, further demonstrating the artist’s obsession with celebrity and with Monroe and Taylor in particular.

Becoming Jewish: Warhol’s Liz and Marilyn is made possible, in part, by the Neubauer Family Foundation.

Located on Museum Mile at 1109 Fifth Avenue at 92nd Street (Fifth Avenue and 92nd Street), the Jewish Museum is one of the world’s preeminent institutions devoted to exploring art and Jewish culture from ancient to contemporary, offering intellectually engaging, educational, and provocative exhibitions and programs for people of all ages and backgrounds. The Museum was established in 1904, when Judge Mayer Sulzberger donated 26 ceremonial objects to The Jewish Theological Seminary as the core of a museum collection. Today, the Museum maintains a collection of over 30,000 works of art, artifacts, and broadcast media reflecting global Jewish identity, and presents a diverse schedule of internationally acclaimed temporary exhibitions.

Museum hours are Saturday, Sunday, Monday, and Tuesday, 11am to 5:45pm; Thursday, 11am to 8pm; and Friday, 11am to 4pm. Museum admission is $15.00 for adults, $12.00 for senior citizens, $7.50 for students, free for visitors 18 and under and Jewish Museum members. Admission is Pay What You Wish on Thursdays from 5pm to 8pm and free on Saturdays. For information on The Jewish Museum, the public may call 212.423.3200 or visit the website at TheJewishMuseum.org.


Filed under: Arts & Culture, Culture, Museums & Exhibitions, Photography Tagged: Arthur Miller, Becoming Jewish: Warhol’s Liz and Marilyn, Elizabeth Taylor, Joanna Montoya Robotham, Marilyn Monroe, Neubauer Family Foundation Assistant Curator at The Jewish Museum, Rabbi Max Nussbaum, The Jewish Museum, the Neubauer Family Foundation

Art News: Ocean of Images: New Photography 2015 at The Museum of Modern Art

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November 07, 2015–March 20, 2016

Edward Steichen Photography Galleries, The Agnes Gund Garden Lobby, and the Bauhaus Staircase

Lele Saveri (Italian, born 1980). The Newsstand. 2013-14. Mixed medium installation, approximately 11 ft. 4 7/8″ x 11 ft. 8″ x 9 ft. 9″ (347.7 x 355.6 x 297.2 cm) overall. Courtesy the artist. ©2015 Lele Saveri

Lele Saveri (Italian, born 1980). The Newsstand. 2013-14. Mixed medium installation, approximately 11 ft. 4 7/8″ x 11 ft. 8″ x 9 ft. 9″ (347.7 x 355.6 x 297.2 cm) overall. Courtesy the artist. ©2015 Lele Saveri

New Photography, MoMA’s longstanding exhibition series of recent work in photography and a vital manifestation of the Museum’s contemporary program, will return this fall in an expanded, biannual format. On the occasion of its 30th anniversary, New Photography is expanding to 19 artists and artist collectives from 14 countries, and includes works made specifically for this exhibition. Ocean of Images: New Photography 2015 will be on view throughout the entirety of the Museum’s Edward Steichen Photography Galleries, as well as The Agnes Gund Garden Lobby and the Museum’s Bauhaus Staircase.

Katharina Gaenssler (German, born 1974). Model for Bauhaus Staircase. 2015. Site-specific photo installation (work in progress). Laser prints and wall paper paste, 12′ 5″ × 32″ (378.5 × 975.4 cm). © Katharina Gaenssler and Barbara Gross Gallery, Munich, Germany

Katharina Gaenssler (German, born 1974). Model for Bauhaus Staircase. 2015. Site-specific photo installation (work in progress). Laser prints and wall paper paste, 12′ 5″ × 32″ (378.5 × 975.4 cm). © Katharina Gaenssler and Barbara Gross Gallery, Munich, Germany

Since its inception in 1985, the New Photography series has introduced the work of nearly 100 artists from around the globe early in their careers, including Philip-Lorca diCorcia, Rineke Dijkstra, Rachel Harrison, and Wolfgang Tillmans. This year’s edition explores contemporary photo-based culture, specifically focusing on connectivity, the circulation of images, information networks, and communication models.

John Houck (American, born 1977). Copper Mountain. 2014. Pigmented inkjet print, 22 × 27″ (55.9 × 68.6 cm). The Museum of Modern Art, New York. The Photography Council Fund. ©2015 John Houck

John Houck (American, born 1977). Copper Mountain. 2014. Pigmented inkjet print, 22 × 27″ (55.9 × 68.6 cm). The Museum of Modern Art, New York. The Photography Council Fund. ©2015 John Houck

Natalie Czech (German, born 1976). A Poem by Repetition by Allen Ginsberg. 2013. Three chromogenic color prints, three frames, museum glass, overall 55 3/16 × 96″ (140.1 × 243.9 cm). Courtesy Capitain Petzel, Berlin and Kadel Willborn, Düsseldorf. © 2015 Natalie Czech/VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn

Natalie Czech (German, born 1976). A Poem by Repetition by Allen Ginsberg. 2013. Three chromogenic color prints, three frames, museum glass, overall 55 3/16 × 96″ (140.1 × 243.9 cm). Courtesy Capitain Petzel, Berlin and Kadel Willborn, Düsseldorf. © 2015 Natalie Czech/VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn

Ilit Azoulay (Israeli, born 1972). Shifting Degrees of Certainty (detail). 2014. Installation view Herzliya Museum of Contemporary Art. Pigmented inkjet prints, individually framed, 8′ 3″ × 29′ 7″ (251.5 × 901.7 cm) overall. Courtesy the artist, Andrea Meislin Gallery, New York, and Braverman Gallery, Tel Aviv.. ©2015 Ilit Azoulay

Ilit Azoulay (Israeli, born 1972). Shifting Degrees of Certainty (detail). 2014. Installation view Herzliya Museum of Contemporary Art. Pigmented inkjet prints, individually framed, 8′ 3″ × 29′ 7″ (251.5 × 901.7 cm) overall. Courtesy the artist, Andrea Meislin Gallery, New York, and Braverman Gallery, Tel Aviv.. ©2015 Ilit Azoulay

Probing the effects of an image-based post-Internet reality, Ocean of Images examines various ways of experiencing the world: through images that are born digitally, made with scanners or lenses in the studio or the real world, presented as still or moving pictures, distributed as zines, morphed into three-dimensional objects, or remixed online. The exhibition’s title refers to the Internet as a vortex of images, a site of piracy, and a system of networks, which is reflected in the work of the 19 included artists and collectives. Ocean of Images presents new and recent bodies of work that critically redefine photography as a field of experimentation and intellectual inquiry, where digital and analog, virtual and real dimensions cross over. Coinciding with the opening of the exhibition, MoMA will also launch an online platform housing the live archive of the New Photography series, featuring documents and images from its history.

Anouk Kruithof (Dutch, b. 1981). Subconscious Travelling (detail). 2013. Installation view Het Nederlands Fotomuseum, Rotterdam, 2013. Installation of 99 photo stickers and 5 pieces of coloured glass, each 9 1/16 × 7 1/16″ (23 × 18 cm). Photo credit: Dennis Guzzo. Art © 2015 Anouk Kruithof

Anouk Kruithof (Dutch, b. 1981). Subconscious Travelling (detail). 2013. Installation view Het Nederlands Fotomuseum, Rotterdam, 2013. Installation of 99 photo stickers and 5 pieces of coloured glass, each 9 1/16 × 7 1/16″ (23 × 18 cm). Photo credit: Dennis Guzzo. Art © 2015 Anouk Kruithof

Basim Magdy (Egyptian, born 1977). The Hollow Desire to Populate Imaginary Cities. 2014. Installation view Art in General, New York. 30 chromogenic color prints from chemically altered slides on metallic paper, each 13 3/8 × 20 1/16″ (34 × 51 cm). Photo: Charles Benton. Commissioned by Art in General, New York and HOME, Manchester, U.K. ©2015 Basim Magdy

Basim Magdy (Egyptian, born 1977). The Hollow Desire to Populate Imaginary Cities. 2014. Installation view Art in General, New York. 30 chromogenic color prints from chemically altered slides on metallic paper, each 13 3/8 × 20 1/16″ (34 × 51 cm). Photo: Charles Benton. Commissioned by Art in General, New York and HOME, Manchester, U.K. ©2015 Basim Magdy

David Hartt (Canadian, born 1967). Belvedere I. 2014. Chromogenic color print, 36 × 48″ (91.4 × 121.9 cm). © 2015 David Hartt, Courtesy David Nolan Gallery, New York

David Hartt (Canadian, born 1967). Belvedere I. 2014. Chromogenic color print, 36 × 48″ (91.4 × 121.9 cm). © 2015 David Hartt, Courtesy David Nolan Gallery, New York

Lucas Blalock (American, born 1978). Strawberries (forever fresh). 2014. Pigmented inkjet print, 16 × 20″ (40.6 × 50.8 cm). Courtesy the artist and Ramiken Crucible, New York. ©2015 Lucas Blalock

Lucas Blalock (American, born 1978). Strawberries (forever fresh). 2014. Pigmented inkjet print, 16 × 20″ (40.6 × 50.8 cm). Courtesy the artist and Ramiken Crucible, New York. ©2015 Lucas Blalock

The artists in Ocean of Images are: Ilit Azoulay (Israeli, b. 1972), Zbyněk Baladrán (Czech, b. 1973), Lucas Blalock (American, b. 1978), Edson Chagas (Angolan, b. 1977), Natalie Czech (German, b. 1976), DIS (Collective, founded in New York in 2010), Katharina Gaenssler (German, b. 1974), David Hartt (Canadian, b. 1967), Mishka Henner (Belgian, b. 1976), David Horvitz (American, b. 1982), John Houck (American, b. 1977), Yuki Kimura (Japanese, b. 1971), Anouk Kruithof (Dutch, b. 1981), Basim Magdy (Egyptian, b. 1977), Katja Novitskova (Estonian, b. 1984), Marina Pinsky (Russian, b. 1986), Lele Saveri (Italian, b. 1980), Indrė Šerpytytė (Lithuanian, b. 1983), and Lieko Shiga (Japanese, b. 1980).

Yuki Kimura (Japanese, born 1971). KATSURA. 2012. Installation view 2012 São Paulo Biennial. Nine gelatin silver prints mounted on alpolic, frames, iron, and plants, 15 x 17 ft. (4.57 x 5.18 m) overall. The Museum of Modern Art, New York. Committee on Photography Fund. ©2015 Yuki Kimura

Yuki Kimura (Japanese, born 1971). KATSURA. 2012. Installation view 2012 São Paulo Biennial. Nine gelatin silver prints mounted on alpolic, frames, iron, and plants, 15 x 17 ft. (4.57 x 5.18 m) overall. The Museum of Modern Art, New York. Committee on Photography Fund. ©2015 Yuki Kimura

Ocean of Images is organized by Quentin Bajac, the Joel and Anne Ehrenkranz Chief Curator of Photography, Roxana Marcoci, Senior Curator, and Lucy Gallun, Assistant Curator, Department of Photography, MoMA.

Zbyněk Baladrán (Czech, born 1973). Diderot’s Dream (still). 2014. Two channel HD video. Courtesy the artist and Hunt Kastner, Prague. ©2015 Zbyněk Baladrán

Zbyněk Baladrán (Czech, born 1973). Diderot’s Dream (still). 2014. Two channel HD video. Courtesy the artist and Hunt Kastner, Prague. ©2015 Zbyněk Baladrán

Major support for the exhibition is provided by MoMA’s Wallis Annenberg Fund for Innovation in Contemporary Art through the Annenberg Foundation. Generous funding is provided by the Annenberg Foundation, The Contemporary Arts Council of The Museum of Modern Art, David Dechman and Michel Mercure, and Courtney Finch Taylor. Education programs for this exhibition are made possible by a partnership with Volkswagen of America.


Filed under: Arts & Culture, Culture, Museums & Exhibitions, Photography Tagged: Anouk Kruithof (Dutch, Basim Magdy (Egyptian, Courtney Finch Taylor, David Dechman and Michel Mercure, David Hartt (Canadian, David Horvitz (American, DIS (Collective, Edson Chagas (Angolan, Edward Steichen Photography Galleries, founded in New York in 2010), Ilit Azoulay (Israeli, Indrė Šerpytytė (Lithuanian, John Houck (American, Katharina Gaenssler (German, Katja Novitskova (Estonian, Lele Saveri (Italian, Lieko Shiga (Japanese, Lucas Blalock (American, Lucy Gallun, Marina Pinsky (Russian, Mishka Henner (Belgian, MoMA’s Wallis Annenberg Fund for Innovation in Contemporary Art, Museum of Modern Art, Natalie Czech (German, New Photography series, New Photography Series at MoMA, Ocean of Images: New Photography 2015, Quentin Bajac, Roxana Marcoci, The Agnes Gund Garden Lobby, The Annenberg Foundation, the Bauhaus Staircase, The Contemporary Arts Council of The Museum of Modern Art, the Joel and Anne Ehrenkranz Chief Curator of Photography, Volkswagen of America, Yuki Kimura (Japanese, Zbyněk Baladrán (Czech

Opening Soon: Guggenheim Examines New Developments in Contemporary Photography in Photo-Poetics: An Anthology

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Venue: Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, 1071 Fifth Avenue, New York

Location: Tower Levels 2, 4, and 5

Dates: November 20, 2015–March 23, 2016

The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum presents Photo-Poetics: An Anthology, an exhibition documenting recent developments in contemporary photography and consisting of photographs, videos, and slide installations by ten international artists. With more than 70 works by Claudia Angelmaier, Erica Baum, Anne Collier, Moyra Davey, Leslie Hewitt, Elad Lassry, Lisa Oppenheim, Erin Shirreff, Kathrin Sonntag, and Sara VanDerBeek, the exhibition runs from November 20, 2015–March 23, 2016, and presents a focused study into the nature, traditions, and magic of photography in the context of the rapid digital transformation of the medium.

Lisa Oppenheim, The Sun is Always Setting Somewhere Else, 2006 Slide projection of 15 35 mm slides, continuous loop, dimensions variable Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York Purchased with funds contributed by the Photography Committee, 2009 2009.60

Lisa Oppenheim, The Sun is Always Setting Somewhere Else, 2006, Slide projection of 15 35 mm slides, continuous loop, dimensions variable, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, Purchased with funds contributed by the Photography Committee, 2009. 2009.60

Moyra Davey, Les Goddesses, 2011, HD color video, with sound, 61 min., Courtesy the artist and Murray Guy, New York. © Moyra Davey

Moyra Davey, Les Goddesses, 2011, HD color video, with sound, 61 min., Courtesy the artist and Murray Guy, New York. © Moyra Davey

Organized by Jennifer Blessing, Senior Curator, Photography, with Susan Thompson, Assistant Curator, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, Photo-Poetics: An Anthology offers an opportunity to define the concerns of a new generation of photographic artists and contextualize their work within the history of art and visual culture. These artists mainly pursue a studio-based approach to still-life photography that centers on the representation of objects, often printed matter such as books, magazines, and record covers. The result is often an image imbued with poetic and evocative personal significance that resonates with larger cultural and historical meanings.

Anne Collier, Crying, 2005, Chromogenic print, 99.1 x 134 cm, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, Purchased with funds contributed by Mr. and Mrs. Aaron M. Tighe 2005.47 © Anne Collier

Anne Collier, Crying, 2005, Chromogenic print, 99.1 x 134 cm, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, Purchased with funds contributed by Mr. and Mrs. Aaron M. Tighe 2005.47 © Anne Collier

Erin Shirreff, UN 2010, 2010, HD color video, silent 17 min., Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, Purchased with funds contributed by Erica Gervais, 2010.29 © 2010 Erin Shirreff

Erin Shirreff, UN 2010, 2010, HD color video, silent 17 min., Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, Purchased with funds contributed by Erica Gervais, 2010.29 © 2010 Erin Shirreff

The artists in the exhibition attempt to rematerialize the photograph through meticulous printing, using film and other disappearing photo technologies. Drawing on the legacies of Conceptualism and invested in exploring the processes and techniques of photography, they are also deeply interested in how photographic images circulate. Theirs is a sort of “photo poetics,” an art that self-consciously investigates the laws of photography and the nature of photographic representation, reproduction, and the photographic object. The works in the exhibition, rich with detail, reward close and prolonged regard; they ask for a mode of looking that is closer to reading than the cursory scanning fostered by the clicking and swiping functionalities of smartphones and social media. Both the exhibition and its accompanying catalogue are conceived as anthologies, as independent vehicles to introduce each artist’s important and unique practice.

Erica Baum, Jaws, 2008 (from the series Naked Eye), Inkjet print, 47 x 41.6 cm, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, Purchased with funds contributed by Mr. and Mrs. Aaron M. Tighe, 2011 2011.48 © Erica Baum

Erica Baum, Jaws, 2008 (from the series Naked Eye), Inkjet print, 47 x 41.6 cm, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, Purchased with funds contributed by Mr. and Mrs. Aaron M. Tighe, 2011
2011.48 © Erica Baum

Photo-Poetics: An Anthology is accompanied by a fully illustrated catalogue featuring an introduction, afterword, and ten monographic essays by Jennifer Blessing that provide focused, contemplative readings of each artist’s work. The catalogue’s design, in which each artist’s practice is presented individually, reflects the exhibition’s structure as a series of solo presentations. The catalogue will be available for $50 at the Guggenheim Store and online at guggenheimstore.org.

Leslie Hewitt, Riffs on Real Time (3 of 10), 2006–09, Chromogenic print, 76.2 x 61 cm, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, Purchased with funds contributed by the Photography Committee, 2010. 2010.55

Leslie Hewitt, Riffs on Real Time (3 of 10), 2006–09, Chromogenic print, 76.2 x 61 cm, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, Purchased with funds contributed by the Photography Committee, 2010. 2010.55

Elad Lassry, Untitled (Woman, Blond), 2013, Chromogenic print in walnut frame with four-ply silk, 36.8 x 29.2 x 3.8 cm, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, Purchased with funds contributed by the Photography Committee, 2013.72 © Elad Lassry

Elad Lassry, Untitled (Woman, Blond), 2013, Chromogenic print in walnut frame with four-ply silk, 36.8 x 29.2 x 3.8 cm, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, Purchased with funds contributed by the Photography Committee, 2013.72 © Elad Lassry

To coincide with the exhibition, the Guggenheim will host a series of panel discussions featuring the participating artists. Moderated by Jennifer Blessing, these conversations will address the issues raised by the exhibition. Each discussion will be preceded by short talks from the featured artists. Details about the public programs presented in conjunction with Photo-Poetics: An Anthology will be posted on guggenheim.org/calendar.

Sara VanDerBeek, From the Means of Reproduction, 2007, Chromogenic print, 101.6 x 76.2 cm, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, Purchased with funds contributed by the Photography Committee 2007.138 © Sara VanDerBeek

Sara VanDerBeek, From the Means of Reproduction, 2007, Chromogenic print, 101.6 x 76.2 cm, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, Purchased with funds contributed by the Photography Committee 2007.138 © Sara VanDerBeek

This exhibition is supported in part by Affirmation Arts Fund and The Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation. Additional funding is also provided by the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum’s Photography Committee.

The Leadership Committee for Photo-Poetics: An Anthology is gratefully acknowledged for its support, with special thanks to Erica Gervais and Ted Pappendick and Chair Rona Citrin as well as to Angelo K H Chan and Frederick Wertheim, Manuel de Santaren, Toby Devan Lewis, Ann and Mel Schaffer, Patty and Howard Silverstein, Cristina von Bargen, Tanya Bonakdar Gallery, Ann Cook and Charley Moss, Susan and Arthur Fleischer, Miyoung Lee and Neil Simpkins, Lauren and Scott Pinkus, and Barbara Toll.

Kathrin Sonntag, Mittnacht, 2008 (detail) , Slide projection of 81 35 mm slides, continuous loop, dimensions variable , Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York , Purchased with funds contributed by the Photography Committee and Manuel de Santaren 2011.15  © Kathrin Sonntag

Kathrin Sonntag, Mittnacht, 2008 (detail) , Slide projection of 81 35 mm slides, continuous loop, dimensions variable , Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York , Purchased with funds contributed by the Photography Committee and Manuel de Santaren 2011.15 © Kathrin Sonntag

Founded in 1937, the Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation is dedicated to promoting the understanding and appreciation of art, primarily of the modern and contemporary periods, through exhibitions, education programs, research initiatives, and publications. The Guggenheim network that began in the 1970s when the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, was joined by the Peggy Guggenheim Collection, Venice, has since expanded to include the Guggenheim Museum Bilbao (opened 1997), and the Guggenheim Abu Dhabi (currently in development). The Guggenheim Foundation continues to forge international collaborations that celebrate contemporary art, architecture, and design within and beyond the walls of the museum, including the Guggenheim UBS MAP Global Art Initiative and The Robert H. N. Ho Family Foundation Chinese Art Initiative. More information about the Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation can be found at guggenheim.org.

VISITOR INFORMATION

ADMISSION: Adults $25, students/seniors (65+) $18, members and children under 12 free. The Guggenheim’s free app, available with admission or by download to personal devices, offers an enhanced visitor experience. The app features content on special exhibitions as well as access to more than 1,500 works in the Guggenheim’s permanent collection. Additionally, information about the museum’s landmark building is available in English, French, German, Italian, and Spanish. Verbal Description guides for select exhibitions are also included for visitors who are blind or have low vision. The Guggenheim app is supported by Bloomberg Philanthropies.

MUSEUM HOURS: Sun–Wed, 10 am–5:45 pm; Fri, 10 am–5:45 pm; Sat, 10 am–7:45 pm; closed Thurs. On Saturdays, beginning at 5:45 pm, the museum hosts Pay What You Wish. For general information, call 212 423 3500 or visit the museum online at: guggenheim.org


Filed under: Arts & Culture, Culture, Photography Tagged: Affirmation Arts Fund, Angelo K H Chan and Frederick Wertheim, Ann and Mel Schaffer, Ann Cook and Charley Moss, Anne Collier, Barbara Toll, Claudia Angelmaier, Cristina von Bargen, Elad Lassry, Erica Baum, Erin Shirreff, Guggenheim Abu Dhabi, Guggenheim Museum Bilbao, Guggenheim UBS MAP Global Art Initiative, Jennifer Blessing, Kathrin Sonntag, Lauren and Scott Pinkus, Leslie Hewitt, Lisa Oppenheim, Manuel de Santaren, Miyoung Lee and Neil Simpkins, Moyra Davey, Patty and Howard Silverstein, Peggy Guggenheim Collection/Venice, Photo-Poetics: An Anthology, Sara VanDerBeek, Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum/New York, Susan and Arthur Fleischer, Tanya Bonakdar Gallery, The Robert H. N. Ho Family Foundation Chinese Art Initiative, The Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation, the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum’s Photography Committee, Toby Devan Lewis

Chicago’s Pritzker Military Museum & Library Unveil ‘FACES OF WAR’ Exhibit on Vietnam War

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Exhibit Honors The Work of U.S. Army Combat Photographers

Alert and Alive, 1968. A soldier with the U.S. Army 82nd Airborne Division keeps a watchful eye for the enemy at Phu Bai Combat Base, south of Huế in central Vietnam. Photo by Sergeant First Class Howard C. “Harry” Breedlove, U.S. Army.

Alert and Alive, 1968. A soldier with the U.S. Army 82nd Airborne Division keeps a watchful eye for the enemy at Phu Bai Combat Base, south of Huế in central Vietnam. Photo by Sergeant First Class Howard C. “Harry” Breedlove, U.S. Army.

Captured by the Special Operations Photographers of the Department of the Army Special Photographic Office (DASPO), These Photos Provide A Unique Perspective Of The War.

Original photographs and motion pictures by the men of Department of the Army Special Photographic Office (DASPO) are at the center of a new exhibit, FACES OF WAR: Documenting the Vietnam War from the Front Lines, by the Pritzker Military Museum & Library on the Vietnam War, now on view. This collection of photographs and motion pictures captures the Vietnam War as it was experienced by some of the 3.4 million Americans who served in the Southeast Asian Theater—the aggression, the misery, and the hope—as well as the millions more who attempted to carry on as the conflict waged at their doorsteps. Produced in partnership with the DASPO Combat Photographers Association, the Museum & Library’s new FACES OF WAR exhibit and permanent online gallery are largely supported by the contributions of private donors and the DASPO veterans themselves.

Rootin' Tootin' Raspberry, 1969. A member of the U.S. Army 101st Airborne Division sets smoke for a helicopter extraction near Tam Kỳ in the Quảng Tín Province. Photo by Captain Roger Hawkins, U.S. Army.

Rootin’ Tootin’ Raspberry, 1969. A member of the U.S. Army 101st Airborne Division sets smoke for a helicopter extraction near Tam Kỳ in the Quảng Tín Province. Photo by Captain Roger Hawkins, U.S. Army.

Digging In, 1965. Photo by Second Lieutenant James R. Lowell, U.S. Army.

Digging In, 1965. Photo by Second Lieutenant James R. Lowell, U.S. Army.

The exhibit—titled FACES OF WAR: Documenting the Vietnam War from the Front Lines—includes dozens of rarely seen photos and motion pictures from Vietnam; a collection of artifacts, including original cameras, gear, and equipment; and an audio tour with commentary by DASPO veterans on their experiences and the legacy of their work. The men of DASPO were dedicated professionals who took pride in documenting United States Army activities around the world. Putting their lives on the line, these still photographers and motion picture cameramen covered every United States Army campaign of the Vietnam War.

The Vietnam War (1955-1975) traces its roots to the colonization of Vietnam by France in the late 19th Century. In 1884, all of Vietnam fell under French rule; in 1887, it was fully integrated into French Indochina. France developed a Western system of education throughout its colonies, propagated Roman Catholicism, and developed a plantation economy to promote the export of tobacco, indigo, tea, and coffee. French settlers moved mostly into southern Vietnam and based themselves around the city of Saigon. Independence movements against French rule developed at the start of colonization, but France maintained control of Vietnam until World War II (1941-1945), when Japan occupied the country.

Anticipation, 1968. A Huey UH-1D helicopter carrying members of A Company, 5th Battalion, 7th Cavalry, U.S. Army 1st Air Cavalry Division approaches a landing zone. Photo by Specialist 5 Richard A. “Dick” Durrance, U.S. Army.

Anticipation, 1968. A Huey UH-1D helicopter carrying members of A Company, 5th Battalion, 7th Cavalry, U.S. Army 1st Air Cavalry Division approaches a landing zone. Photo by Specialist 5 Richard A. “Dick” Durrance, U.S. Army.

Base Camp Operations, 1968. Members of the U.S. Army 82nd Airborne Division pass sand bags down the line at Phu Bai Combat Base, south of Huế in central Vietnam. Photo by Sergeant First Class Howard C. “Harry” Breedlove, U.S. Army.

Base Camp Operations, 1968. Members of the U.S. Army 82nd Airborne Division pass sand bags down the line at Phu Bai Combat Base, south of Huế in central Vietnam. Photo by Sergeant First Class Howard C. “Harry” Breedlove, U.S. Army.

During World War II, a national liberation movement formed under the direction of communist revolutionary leader Ho Chi Minh to combat the French and the occupying Japanese forces. The Viet Minh, as they were known, coordinated their efforts with Allied troops fighting in the war’s Pacific Theater until the eventual defeat of Japan in 1945. After the war, the Viet Minh moved to the city of Hanoi in northern Vietnam and proclaimed national independence under a provisional government—a move that would lead to the outbreak of the First Indochina War (1946-1954) as France sought to reclaim its colony.

Captain Richard M. Griffith, U.S. Army First Lieutenant John G. Gilroy, U.S. Army Private First Class Cliff Hopps, U.S. Army Sergeant First Class Kazuo 'Charlie' Uchima, U.S. Army 241c98ef34b6e12a06f2f49995a85eea_f8924 Sergeant First Class Thomas J. Schiro, U.S. Army Specialist 5 Gregory L. 'Greg' Adams, U.S. Army Specialist 5 James E. Shaw, U.S. Army Specialist 5 Phillip R. 'Randy' Smith, U.S. Army Staff Sergeant George W. LeFever, U.S. Army First Lieutenant Thomas H. Wilson, U.S. Army Master Sergeant Al Chang, U.S. Army 86e07242328bc44732f1cf2a9b2b0c7c_f8928 Staff Sergeant Grant Tom Lingle, U.S. Army Specialist 6 Lawrence 'Larry' Sullivan, U.S. Army Specialist 5 John E. 'Sandy' Sandri, U.S. Army

Backed by communist governments in the Soviet Union and the newly formed People’s Republic of China, the Viet Minh held their ground. In 1950, the fighting escalated to a Cold War crisis as the Korean War raged to the north. At the Geneva Conference of 1954, an accord was reached with the hope of finding a peaceful resolution, calling for the separation of Vietnam at the 17th parallel with French loyalists moving to the south and communist sympathizers moving to the north. The Geneva Accords stipulated that Vietnam be reunified by a national election in 1956, but as unification efforts stalled and Cold War tensions continued to build, the United States became increasingly involved. In addition to contributing equipment and millions of dollars in financial aid, the U.S. soon deployed a contingent of non-combat personnel with its Military Assistance Advisory Group (MAAG) to train Republic of Vietnam (RVN) forces and to oppose the spread of communism into South Vietnam.

Home Cookin' 1967. A member of the U.S. Army 101st Airborne Division eats his first hot meal in five days after operating in the Quảng Ngãi Province. Photo by Specialist 5 Robert C. Lafoon, U.S. Army.

Home Cookin’ 1967. A member of the U.S. Army 101st Airborne Division eats his first hot meal in five days after operating in the Quảng Ngãi Province. Photo by Specialist 5 Robert C. Lafoon, U.S. Army.

Hoochmate, 1968. An infantryman with the 1st Battalion, 12th Infantry, 2nd Brigade, U.S. Army 4th Infantry Division displays above his tent a skull that he found on patrol near Camp Warrior in Pleiku Province. Photo by Specialist 5 Richard A. “Dick” Durrance, U.S. Army.

Hoochmate, 1968. An infantryman with the 1st Battalion, 12th Infantry, 2nd Brigade, U.S. Army 4th Infantry Division displays above his tent a skull that he found on patrol near Camp Warrior in Pleiku Province. Photo by Specialist 5 Richard A. “Dick” Durrance, U.S. Army.

I'm Walkin' 1968. An infantryman with the U.S. Army 1st Air Cavalry Division carries an M-60 machine gun on a road approaching LZ Stud in Quảng Trị Province, in north Central Vietnam. Photo by Specialist 5 Richard A. “Dick” Durrance, U.S. Army.

I’m Walkin’ 1968. An infantryman with the U.S. Army 1st Air Cavalry Division carries an M-60 machine gun on a road approaching LZ Stud in Quảng Trị Province, in north Central Vietnam. Photo by Specialist 5 Richard A. “Dick” Durrance, U.S. Army.

With the Soviet Union similarly supporting its communist allies in North Vietnam—officially called the Democratic Republic of Vietnam (DRV)—and stepping up its Cold War rhetoric with the U.S. government, tensions continued to mount over the next several years. In early August 1964, the controversial Gulf of Tonkin incidents—during which the United States alleged two separate confrontations with the North Vietnamese Navy, including an unprompted attack on USS Maddox by a trio of torpedo boats—gave the impetus for the passage of the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution by Congress, enabling President Lyndon Johnson to authorize direct military action without a formal declaration of war.

Drained, 1967. An exhausted soldier from the U.S. Army 25th Infantry Division takes a break inside a M113 Armored Personnel Carrier near Củ Chi. Photo by Specialist 5 Robert C. Lafoon, U.S. Army.

Drained, 1967. An exhausted soldier from the U.S. Army 25th Infantry Division takes a break inside a M113 Armored Personnel Carrier near Củ Chi. Photo by Specialist 5 Robert C. Lafoon, U.S. Army.

By February, 1965, the U.S. had begun sustained bombing raids throughout North Vietnam and, after several attacks on air bases, deployed 3,500 United States Marines to Southeast Asia. In spite of this support, the Army of the Republic of Vietnam (ARVN) continued to suffer significant losses, leading U.S. Army General William Westmoreland—then the head of Military Assistance Command, Vietnam (MACV)—to advise President Johnson to increase the presence of American ground forces in June.

Established Perimeter, 1968. Members of B troop, 2nd Squadron, 17th Cavalry, U.S. Army 101st Airborne Division operate north of Huế. Photo by Sergeant First Class Alfred “Bat” Batungbacal, U.S. Army.

Established Perimeter, 1968. Members of B troop, 2nd Squadron, 17th Cavalry, U.S. Army 101st Airborne Division operate north of Huế. Photo by Sergeant First Class Alfred “Bat” Batungbacal, U.S. Army.

Fire Dragon, 1969. An M42 40 mm Self-Propelled Anti-Aircraft Gun in an open turret provides road security along Highway 19 between Qui Nhơn and Pleiku. Photo by Captain Roger Hawkins, U.S. Army.

Fire Dragon, 1969. An M42 40 mm Self-Propelled Anti-Aircraft Gun in an open turret provides road security along Highway 19 between Qui Nhơn and Pleiku. Photo by Captain Roger Hawkins, U.S. Army.

For most of 1965, American troops were limited to Search and Destroy missions to combat the guerilla warfare tactics used by the DRV, which often relied on ambushes and hit-and-run attacks to surprise their targets—a practice used throughout the war, leading many veterans to question whether the conflict ever had a “front line” at all. Finally, on November 14, the first conventional engagement and major battle of the Vietnam War was waged as members of the United States 1st Air Cavalry Division clashed with DRV units in the Ia Drang Valley of the Central Highlands. Both sides considered the battle a victory.

As the U.S. continued its efforts to expand, equip, and train South Vietnam’s forces and to gradually assign them an increased combat role, the numbers of U.S. troops in Southeast Asia were steadily reduced. By the end of 1970, American ground forces had participated in their final major operation of the war and their total numbers stood around 330,000. A year later, that number had been reduced by more than half to 150,000.

The peace talks originally begun in 1968 progressed slowly until January 1973, when representatives of the United States, the DRV, the RVN, and South Vietnam’s Provisional Revolutionary Government met in Paris to sign the “Agreement on Ending the War and Restoring Peace in Vietnam.” Negotiated primarily by U.S. National Security Advisor Henry Kissinger and North Vietnamese politician Lê Đức Thọ—who were jointly awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for their efforts—the Paris Peace Accords of 1973 ended direct U.S. military involvement and resulted in a temporary ceasefire between North and South.

With the U.S. no longer standing in its way, North Vietnam quickly began to rebuild its military infrastructure and to reestablish its vital supply lines to the south. In March 1975, the PAVN and the Viet Cong launched a large-scale series of attacks that quickly overwhelmed the South Vietnamese defenses, and on April 30, the capitol city of Saigon was captured. In its final act of non-military aid, the United States helped evacuate more than 130,000 refugees whose lives were at risk in South Vietnam. With martial law in effect, many more would lose their lives trying to escape.

Civilian Casualties, 1968. Injured civilians flee their homes in Da Nang on the first day of the Tet Offensive. Photo by Specialist 5 Richard A. 'Dick' Durrance, U.S. Army.

Civilian Casualties, 1968. Injured civilians flee their homes in Da Nang on the first day of the Tet Offensive. Photo by Specialist 5 Richard A. ‘Dick’ Durrance, U.S. Army.

Refugee, 1975. A South Vietnamese refugee cries upon her arrival at Eglin Air Force Base near Valparaiso, Florida. Photo by Specialist 5 Bryan K. Grigsby.

Refugee, 1975. A South Vietnamese refugee cries upon her arrival at Eglin Air Force Base near Valparaiso, Florida. Photo by Specialist 5 Bryan K. Grigsby.

In the years immediately following the war, more than one million South Vietnamese were forced to enter reeducation camps, where they were imprisoned for years without formal charges or trials. A million more, mostly city dwellers without direct ties to the military or government, were forced from their homes to the jungles, where they were made to develop farmland. Tens of thousands were tortured or killed. As a result of these practices, some two million “Vietnamese Boat People” fled their homeland between 1975 and 1995, seeking asylum in neighboring countries and leading to a humanitarian crisis that ended with more than half of the refugees being resettled in the United States.

Today, after decades of reforms that began in earnest in 1986, Vietnam’s economy is one of the fastest growing in the world. The Vietnamese government has established strong dipolomatic relations with the United States, even allowing American citizens—including Vietnam War veterans—to visit recreationally. Meanwhile, the Vietnamese-American community has prospered in the United States, with thousands serving in the U.S. military—including U.S. Army Brigadier General Viet Luong, who in 2014 became the first Vietnamese-born general in the history of the American armed forces.

Burning Hooch, 1966. Members of B Company, 2nd Battalion, U.S. Army 14th Infantry look for signs of the Viet Cong as they search a deserted farmhouse in the Xa Ba Phuoc Province during Operation Wahiawa. Photo by Sergeant First Class James K.F. Dung, U.S. Army.

Burning Hooch, 1966. Members of B Company, 2nd Battalion, U.S. Army 14th Infantry look for signs of the Viet Cong as they search a deserted farmhouse in the Xa Ba Phuoc Province during Operation Wahiawa. Photo by Sergeant First Class James K.F. Dung, U.S. Army.

This exhibit is a reflection of the Vietnam that every American soldier witnessed firsthand—from the jungles to the cities and everywhere in between,” said Museum & Library President & CEO Kenneth Clarke. “And it’s thanks to the extraordinary courage and dedication of the special operations photographers of DASPO that the Museum & Library is able to share their stories with the public.”

First activated by President John F. Kennedy in 1962 with the objective of providing non-biased information to the U.S. Department of Defense, the Department of the Army, the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and the United States Congress, DASPO had a permanent unit stationed in Southeast Asia by 1968. Deploying aboard helicopters, Air Force C-130s, and even non-military aircraft, teams of DASPO photographers operated much like civilian journalists covering the war, but with nearly unlimited access—producing some of the most iconic and important images from Vietnam.

Sawadee, 1967. General William C. Westmoreland, Commander of United States Military Assistance Command in Vietnam, attends ceremonies welcoming the Royal Thailand Volunteers. Photo by Specialist 5 Robert C. Lafoon, U.S. Army.

Sawadee, 1967. General William C. Westmoreland, Commander of United States Military Assistance Command in Vietnam, attends ceremonies welcoming the Royal Thailand Volunteers. Photo by Specialist 5 Robert C. Lafoon, U.S. Army.

Wingman, 1969. Members of the U.S. Army 1st Infantry Division (Mechanized) prepare to chase Viet Cong units in Bình Dương Province. Photo by Captain Roger Hawkins, U.S. Army.

Wingman, 1969. Members of the U.S. Army 1st Infantry Division (Mechanized) prepare to chase Viet Cong units in Bình Dương Province. Photo by Captain Roger Hawkins, U.S. Army.

Zonked, 1969. A member of B Troop rests after night guard duty at Box Bridge. Photo by Specialist 5 Bryan K. Grigsby, U.S. Army.

Zonked, 1969. A member of B Troop rests after night guard duty at Box Bridge. Photo by Specialist 5 Bryan K. Grigsby, U.S. Army.

I’m proud of the men of DASPO with whom I’ve served, and we are grateful to the Pritzker Military Museum & Library for supporting us and giving us the opportunity to inform the American public about who we were as combat photographers and what we and our fellow veterans went through,” said Bill San Hamel, a former captain in the U.S. Army who now serves as president of the DASPO Combat Photographers Association.

San Hamel and fellow DASPO veteran Ted Acheson—each of whom will participate in the Citizen Soldier program along with photographer Dick Durrance—were instrumental in helping to plan and execute the exhibit, raising more than $30,000 to cover operating costs from members and supporters of the association. Additional funds were raised through private donations and a Kickstarter campaign, which remains active.

The exhibit is scheduled to run until May 2016 and is accompanied by an online gallery of images that will remain viewable indefinitely at http://www.pritzkermilitary.org/DASPO. Learn more about “FACES OF WAR” or register to attend the exhibit opening by visiting http://www.pritzkermilitary.org.

The Pritzker Military Museum & Library is open to the public and features an extensive collection of books, artifacts, and rotating exhibits covering many eras and branches of the military. Since opening in 2003, it has become a center where citizens and Citizen Soldiers come together to learn about military history and the role of the Armed Forces in today’s society. The Museum & Library is a non-partisan, non-government information center supported by its members and sponsors.


Filed under: Arts & Culture, Culture, Film, Museums & Exhibitions, Photography Tagged: DASPO, DASPO Combat Photographers Association, FACES OF WAR: Documenting the Vietnam War from the Front Lines, Pritzker Military Museum & Library, the Department of the Army, the Joint Chiefs of Staff, The Vietnam War (1955-1975), U.S. Department of Defense, Vietnam War

Kate Hudson Stars as Leading Lady in 2016 Campari Calendar, the ‘Bittersweet Campaign’

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Campari®, the iconic red Italian bittersweet apéritif, today reveals Hollywood actress and entrepreneur Kate Hudson as the star of its 2016 Calendar, with the full unveil taking place on 18th November.

Campari 2016 Calendar The Bittersweet Campaign starring Kate Hudson. Behind The Scenes images by Francesco Pizzo

Campari 2016 Calendar The Bittersweet Campaign starring Kate Hudson. Behind The Scenes images by Francesco Pizzo

The BitterSweet Campaign theme for the 2016 Campari Calendar is multi-faceted: first, it is inspired by the instantly recognizable iconography of a presidential election, using the classic theme as a metaphor for the duality of two opposing sides. The Calendar capitalises on the nature of any election, asking people to take a stand, express an opinion and vote for a side. With Campari’s unique taste serving as the epitome of duality, the Calendar cleverly asks people which aspect of the classic apéritif they identify with more: Bitter vs Sweet.

Campari Calendar 2016 The BitterSweet Campaign (Behind the scenes photographer: F. Pizzo)

Campari Calendar 2016 The BitterSweet Campaign (Behind the scenes photographer: Francesco Pizzo)

This positive duality is brought to life in the Calendar’s images through a collaboration between Kate Hudson, who will embody and personify the two souls of Campari: the captivating bitterness versus a more subtle, intriguing sweetness and fashion photographer, Michelangelo Di Battista.

A unique and unmistakable recipe has characterized Campari, the aperitif par excellence, for over 150 years. The inimitable Campari recipe, used as the basis of many cocktails served worldwide, has been kept the same since its inception and remained a closely guarded secret, passed down over the years.

Campari 2016 Calendar starring Kate Hudson. Behind The Scenes  images by Francesco Pizzo

Campari 2016 Calendar The Bittersweet Campaign starring Kate Hudson. Behind The Scenes images by Francesco Pizzo

Campari 2016 Calendar starring Kate Hudson. Behind The Scenes  images by Francesco Pizzo Campari 2016 Calendar starring Kate Hudson. Behind The Scenes  images by Francesco Pizzo Campari 2016 Calendar starring Kate Hudson. Behind The Scenes  images by Francesco Pizzo Campari 2016 Calendar starring Kate Hudson. Behind The Scenes  images by Francesco Pizzo Campari 2016 Calendar starring Kate Hudson. Behind The Scenes  images by Francesco Pizzo Campari 2016 Calendar starring Kate Hudson. Behind The Scenes  images by Francesco Pizzo

Campari was the result of Gaspare Campari’s experiments in concocting new beverages. It is still produced today with the same ingredients and following the confidential recipe which remains a secret known only to the very few people in charge of the production process.

Campari is the result of the infusion of herbs, aromatic plants and fruit in alcohol and water; these last two being the recipe‟s only known ingredients. Many have guessed simply at the number of ingredients: some say there are 20 or 60, but others list the ingredients at 80.

Over time, appreciation and respect has grown for this historic and unique brand, which is now recognised and appreciated worldwide.

The history of Campari began in Novara in 1860. About forty years later, Campari’s first production plant was opened in Sesto San Giovanni and the company began to export the brand overseas. It was the beginning of a success story that today still has no sign of stopping.11949294_10153030677571440_6055920904781604556_n

In continuous evolution, an image of fashion, international, and constantly cutting-edge, with a style that defines and precedes trends and fashions. Campari persistently follows sophisticated atmospheres that are stylish and emotional. Campari has always been distinguishable thanks to its style, class and elegance.

On starring in the 2016 Campari Calendar, Hudson comments, “I was honored to be invited to shoot the 2016 Campari Calendar. This year’s theme plays off the upcoming election, which is the perfect metaphor for the many Campari flavour choices. I loved working with Michelangelo to create two distinctive characters embodying bitter and sweet.

2016 Campari calendar Photographer Michaelangelo Di Battista with Kate Hudson. Behind The Scenes  images by Francesco Pizzo

2016 Campari Calendar Photographer Michaelangelo Di Battista with Kate Hudson. Behind The Scenes images by Francesco Pizzo

Michelangelo Di Battista also comments on his involvement in this year’s project, “Campari is a brand that has always had a clear sense of aesthetic and well-defined style, which is exactly what I pride myself on. Kate’s enthusiasm and ability to switch between the two personalities allowed me to create images I hope are fresh, inspiring and imaginative.”

Campari 2016 Calendar starring Kate Hudson. Behind The Scenes  images by Francesco Pizzo

Campari 2016 Calendar The Bittersweet Campaign starring Kate Hudson. Behind The Scenes images by Francesco Pizzo

Campari 2016 Calendar starring Kate Hudson. Behind The Scenes  images by Francesco Pizzo

Campari 2016 Calendar The Bittersweet Campaign starring Kate Hudson. Behind The Scenes images by Francesco Pizzo

Bob Kunze-Concewitz, CEO of Gruppo Campari sums it all up by adding, “Celebrating and personifying the flavor complexity of Campari and building on the bittersweet trend makes this year’s calendar unique. Each month embodies the different profiles Campari embodies, alongside Kate Hudson’s incredible talent and ability to switch from approachable, welcoming and sensual to audacious and seductive. Michelangelo’s beautiful photography and strong styling brings to life all of the different elements with ease and elegance. With all this in mind, we’re very much looking forward to unveiling it later in the year.


Filed under: Books/Publishing, Fashion, Photography Tagged: 2016 Campari Calendar Photographer Michaelangelo Di Battista, Bob Kunze-Concewitz, Francesco Pizzo, Gruppo Campari, Kate Hudson, The Bittersweet Campaign

Meet the 2015 MacArthur “Genius Grant” Fellows

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(All Portrait Images courtesy of the John D. & Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation)

The John D. & Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation today announced the Class of 2015 MacArthur Fellows and it’s a list rich with diversity and achievement. The MacArthur Fellows Program awards unrestricted fellowships to talented individuals who have shown extraordinary originality and dedication in their creative pursuits and a marked capacity for self-direction. There are three criteria for selection of Fellows: exceptional creativity, promise for important future advances based on a track record of significant accomplishment, and potential for the fellowship to facilitate subsequent creative work.logo@2x

The MacArthur Fellows Program is intended to encourage people of outstanding talent to pursue their own creative, intellectual, and professional inclinations. In keeping with this purpose, the Foundation awards fellowships directly to individuals rather than through institutions. Recipients may be writers, scientists, artists, social scientists, humanists, teachers, entrepreneurs, or those in other fields, with or without institutional affiliations. They may use their fellowship to advance their expertise, engage in bold new work, or, if they wish, to change fields or alter the direction of their careers.

Although nominees are reviewed for their achievements, the fellowship is not a reward for past accomplishment, but rather an investment in a person’s originality, insight, and potential. Indeed, the purpose of the MacArthur Fellows Program is to enable recipients to exercise their own creative instincts for the benefit of human society.

The Foundation does not require or expect specific products or reports from MacArthur Fellows, and does not evaluate recipients’ creativity during the term of the fellowship. The MacArthur Fellowship is a “no strings attached” award in support of people, not projects. Each fellowship comes with a stipend of $625,000 to the recipient, paid out in equal quarterly installments over five years.

How Fellows are Chosen

Each year, the MacArthur Fellows Program invites new nominators on the basis of their expertise, accomplishments, and breadth of experience. They are encouraged to nominate the most creative people they know within their field and beyond. Nominators are chosen from as broad a range of fields and areas of interest as possible. At any given time, there are usually more than one hundred active nominators.

Nominations are evaluated by an independent Selection Committee composed of about a dozen leaders in the arts, sciences, humanities professions, and for-profit and nonprofit communities. Each nomination is considered with respect to the program’s selection criteria, based on the nomination letter along with original works of the nominee and evaluations from other experts collected by the program staff.

After a thorough, multi-step review, the Selection Committee makes its recommendations to the President and board of directors of the MacArthur Foundation. Announcement of the annual list is usually made in September. While there are no quotas or limits, typically 20 to 30 Fellows are selected each year. Between June of 1981 and September of 2013, 897 Fellows have been named.

Nominators, evaluators, and selectors all serve anonymously and their correspondence is kept confidential. This policy enables participants to provide their honest impressions independent of outside influence. The Fellows Program does not accept applications or unsolicited nominations.

Eligibility

There are no restrictions on becoming a Fellow, except that nominees must be either residents or citizens of the United States.

These 24 delightfully diverse MacArthur Fellows are shedding light and making progress on critical issues, pushing the boundaries of their fields, and improving our world in imaginative, unexpected ways,” said MacArthur President Julia Stasch. “Their work, their commitment, and their creativity inspire us all.”

And the 2015 MacArthur Fellows are:

CEO of the Ashesi University College Patrick Awuah. On the day of September 17th 2015 at Brekuso in the Eastern Region of Ghana. (Credit: John D. & Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation. )

CEO of the Ashesi University College Patrick Awuah. On the day of September 17th 2015 at Brekuso in the Eastern Region of Ghana. (Credit: John D. & Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation. )

Patrick Awuah, Education Entrepreneur, Founder and President

Ashesi University College, Accra, Ghana

Age: 50

www.macfound.org/fellows/929/

Patrick Awuah is an educator and entrepreneur building a new model for higher education in Ghana. Ashesi University, which Awuah founded in 2002, is a four-year private institution that offers a core curriculum grounded in liberal arts, ethical principles, and skills for contemporary African needs and opportunities. Awuah, a native of Ghana, was educated at American universities and began a successful career as a Microsoft engineer, but a vision for better higher education in Ghana drew him home. He saw a stark contrast between his college experience, which stressed critical thinking and problem solving, and the rote learning common in Ghana’s educational system. He was also convinced that a focus on ethical leadership in the next generation of Ghana’s leaders was the best means for combating pervasive corruption.

Students at Ashesi choose among degree programs in business management, computer science, management information systems, and engineering. All students participate in a four-year leadership seminar on ethics, collaboration, and entrepreneurship that concludes with a service-learning component. Fostering ethical leadership is central to the university’s ethos, and in 2008, students established an honor code holding themselves responsible for ethical behavior, the first of its kind in African universities. In addition, Awuah places an emphasis on ethnic, economic, and gender diversity in the Ashesi community, and the recently opened school of engineering will focus on gender parity in its admissions.

In a little over a decade, Ashesi is already firmly established as one of Ghana’s premier universities. Every one of its graduates has found quality employment, and almost all remain in Africa, where many have started much-needed information technology businesses. Awuah’s innovation in higher education is not only empowering individual students; it also has the potential to transform political and civil society in Ghana and other African nations by developing a new generation of leaders and entrepreneurs.

Patrick Awuah received B.S. and B.A. degrees (1989) from Swarthmore College and an M.B.A. (1999) from the University of California at Berkeley. He was an engineer and program manager at Microsoft (1989­–1997) prior to founding Ashesi University in 2002 in Accra, Ghana. In addition to serving as president of Ashesi, he is also a fellow of the African Leadership Initiative of the Aspen Global Leadership Network and a member of the U.S. Council on Foreign Relations.

Kartik Chandran Associate Professor, Dept. of Earth and Environmental Engineering at Columbia University, New York,NY. Photographed at Columbia University and by the Hudson river. on September 19, 2015 in New York, NY.

Kartik Chandran Associate Professor, Dept. of Earth and Environmental Engineering at Columbia University, New York,NY. Photographed at Columbia University and by the Hudson river. on September 19, 2015 in New York, NY.

Kartik Chandran, Environmental Engineer

Associate Professor, Department of Earth and Environmental Engineering

Columbia University, New York, New York

Age: 41

www.macfound.org/fellows/930/

Kartik Chandran is an environmental engineer integrating microbial ecology, molecular biology, and engineering to transform wastewater from a troublesome pollutant to a valuable resource. Traditional facilities for biologically treating wastewater remove pathogens, organic carbon, and nutrients (where necessary) through decades-old technology that requires vast amounts of energy and resources, releases harmful gases into the atmosphere, and leaves behind material that must be discarded. Chandran approaches wastewater treatment with the goal of producing useful resources such as fertilizers, chemicals, and energy sources, in addition to clean water, in a way that takes into account the climate, energy, and nutrient challenges we face today.

The key insight of Chandran’s research and applications thereof is that certain combinations of mixed microbial communities, similar to those that occur naturally, can be used to mitigate the harmful environmental impacts of wastewater and extract useful products. For example, Chandran has determined an optimal combination of microbes (and associated wastewater treatment technologies) to remove nitrogen from waste while minimizing the release of nitrous oxide, a potent greenhouse gas. This approach also involves reduced chemical and energy inputs relative to traditional treatments and has the added benefit of preventing algal blooms downstream by maximizing nitrogen removal. More recently, using ammonia-oxidizing bacteria, Chandran has enabled the transformation of bio-generated methane gas into methanol, a chemical that is both easily transported and widely useful in industry (including the wastewater industry).

Chandran imaginatively tailors his solutions to be locally appropriate. In rural Ghana, in conjunction with his Engineers without Borders students, he has re-engineered source-separation toilets to both provide sanitation and recover nutrients for use in agriculture. In Kumasi, Ghana, he is testing the large-scale conversion of sludge into biofuel while also providing new training opportunities for local engineers and managers. Through his groundbreaking research and its practical applications, Chandran is demonstrating the hidden value of wastewater, conserving vital resources, and protecting public health.

Kartik Chandran received a B.S. (1995) from the Indian Institute of Technology at Roorkee (formerly, University of Roorkee) and a Ph.D. (1999) from the University of Connecticut. He was a senior technical specialist (2001–2004) with the private engineering firm Metcalf and Eddy of New York, Inc., before returning to academia as a research associate (2004–2005) at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University. Currently an associate professor in the Department of Earth and Environmental Engineering at Columbia University, his work has been demonstrated in New York City and Ghana and has been published in such journals as PLoS ONEEnvironmental Microbiology, Environmental Science & Technology, and Biotechnology and Bioengineering, among others.

Paris, France. September 14, 2015. Ta-Nehisi Coates is seen at Cercle Kadrance in Paris, on Monday, September 14, 2015 in Paris, France. Antoine Doyen/AP Images for John D. & Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation

Paris, France. September 14, 2015. Ta-Nehisi Coates is seen at Cercle Kadrance in Paris, on Monday, September 14, 2015 in Paris, France. Antoine Doyen/AP Images for John D. & Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation

Ta-Nehisi Coates, Journalist

National Correspondent, The Atlantic, Washington, District of Columbia

Age: 39

www.macfound.org/fellows/931/

Ta-Nehisi Coates is a journalist, blogger, and memoirist who brings personal reflection and historical scholarship to bear on America’s most contested issues. Writing without shallow polemic and in a measured style, Coates addresses complex and challenging issues such as racial identity, systemic racial bias, and urban policing. He subtly embeds the present—in the form of anecdotes about himself or others—into historical analysis in order to illustrate how the implications of the past are still experienced by people today.

In a series of blog posts about the Civil War and a long-form print essay on “The Case for Reparations” (2014), Coates grapples with the rationalizations for slavery and their persistence in twentieth-century policies like Jim Crow and redlining—the practice of denying loans and other financial services to African Americans. In “Reparations” Coates compellingly argues for remuneration for the economic impact on African Americans denied the ability to accumulate wealth or social status for generations. At once deeply felt and intensely researched, the essay prompted a national conversation.

Coates opens a window to the formation of his worldview in his memoir, The Beautiful Struggle (2008), a reflection on race, class, and masculinity told through the lens of growing up in Baltimore as the son of a former Black Panther. Coates describes the evolution of his views on constructions of race in Between the World and Me (2015). In this passionate and lyrical book-length essay addressed to his teenage son, he unflinchingly articulates the physical and mental experience of being a black man in America today. A highly distinctive voice, Coates is emerging as a leading interpreter of American concerns to a new generation of media-savvy audiences and having a profound impact on the discussion of race and racism in this country.

Ta-Nehisi Coates attended Howard University. His articles have appeared in local and national publications, including the Village Voice, the Washington City Paper, the Washington Post, the New York Times MagazineTime MagazineThe New Yorker, and The Atlantic, where he is currently a national correspondent. He was a Martin Luther King Jr. Visiting Scholar at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 2012 and a journalist-in-residence at the City University of New York Graduate School of Journalism in 2014.

Gary Cohen, Environmental Health Advocate

Co-Founder and President, Health Care Without Harm, Reston, Virginia

Age: 59

www.macfound.org/fellows/932/

Matthew Desmond sits on his desk in his office in Cambridge, Mass. on Thursday, Sept. 10, 2015. Desmond has been named a 2015 MacArthur Foundation Fellow in recognition of his work in Sociology.

Matthew Desmond sits on his desk in his office in Cambridge, Mass. on Thursday, Sept. 10, 2015. Desmond has been named a 2015 MacArthur Foundation Fellow in recognition of his work in Sociology.

Matthew Desmond, Urban Sociologist

Associate Professor of Sociology and Social Studies, Department of Sociology, Harvard University

Cambridge, Massachusetts

Age: 35

www.macfound.org/fellows/933/

Matthew Desmond is a social scientist and ethnographer revealing the impact of eviction on the lives of the urban poor and its role in perpetuating racial and economic inequality. In his investigations of the low-income rental market and eviction in privately owned housing in Milwaukee, Desmond argues persuasively that eviction is a cause, rather than merely a symptom, of poverty.

He created the Milwaukee Area Renters Study, examined court records, and conducted extensive ethnographic fieldwork to construct a vivid picture of the remarkably high rates of eviction and the ways in which it disrupts the lives of low-income African Americans, in particular. His findings indicate that households headed by women are more likely to face eviction than men, resulting in deleterious long-term effects much like those caused by high rates of incarceration among low-income African American men. He also captures how landlords, local government, and city police interact with tenants, as well as the constrained choices and lack of agency suffered by low-income renters. For example, Desmond exposed the fact that women reporting domestic violence in Milwaukee were often evicted—the result of a local ordinance that classified such reports as “nuisance calls.” The ordinance has since been reconsidered, and Milwaukee has changed its policy of fining landlords whose tenants repeatedly called the police. The American Civil Liberties Union has challenged similar policies elsewhere.

Desmond is also taking a fresh look at the survival strategies of struggling families, overturning the longstanding assumption among policymakers that the destitute turn to extended kin for assistance. Today, poor families often form intense, but brief relationships with strangers, creating a network of “disposable ties” to meet pressing needs. As Desmond brings his findings beyond academic circles in editorials and his forthcoming book, Evicted: Poverty and Profit in the American City (2016), he is shedding light on how entrenched poverty and racial inequality are built and sustained by housing policies in large American cities.

Matthew Desmond received two B.S. (2002) degrees from Arizona State University and an M.S. (2004) and Ph.D. (2010) from the University of Wisconsin at Madison. He was a Junior Fellow at the Society of Fellows at Harvard University (2010­–2013), before joining the faculty of Harvard’s Department of Sociology and Committee on Degrees in Social Studies in 2012. In addition to publishing articles in such journals as American Journal of Sociology and American Sociological Review, he is the author of the award-winning book, On the Fireline (2007), coauthor of Race in America (2015) and The Racial Order (2015), and editor of the forthcoming inaugural issue ofRSF: Russell Sage Foundation Journal of the Social Sciences, on the theme of severe deprivation.

2015 MacArthur Foundation Fellow, William Ditchtel, photographed at Cornell University, Tuesday, September 15, 2015.

2015 MacArthur Foundation Fellow, William Ditchtel, photographed at Cornell University, Tuesday, September 15, 2015.

William Dichtel, Chemist

Associate Professor, Department of Chemistry and Chemical Biology,

Cornell University, Ithaca, New York

Age: 37

www.macfound.org/fellows/934/

New York, NY. Sept 5th 2015. Michelle†Dorrance Tap dancer and Composer is photographed in recognition for her MacArthur award for 2015. Photography Christopher Lane

New York, NY. Sept 5th 2015. Michelle†Dorrance Tap dancer and Composer is photographed in recognition for her MacArthur award for 2015. Photography Christopher Lane

Michelle Dorrance, Tap Dancer and Choreographer

Founder and Artistic Director, Dorrance Dance/New York, New York, New York

Age: 36

www.macfound.org/fellows/935/

Michelle Dorrance is a tap dancer and choreographer breathing new life into a uniquely American art form in works that combine the musicality of tap with the choreographic intricacies of contemporary dance. Dorrance uses her deep understanding of the technique and history of tap dancing to deconstruct and reimagine its artistic possibilities.

Tap is primarily an aural dance form, with dancers creating complex syncopations through technical feats of footwork. In a high-contrast physical style, Dorrance maintains the essential layering of rhythms in tap but choreographs ensemble works that engage the entire body: dancers swoop, bend, leap, and twist with a dramatic expression that is at once musical and visual. In SOUNDspace (2011), she shapes the architecture of the stage space by moving dancers in and out of view; the dancers create an acoustic chamber as the audience is surrounded with textured rhythms created by leather, wood, and metal taps on the stage, backstage, and balcony.

Dorrance has moved beyond the episodic nature of traditional tap pieces—with solo dancers competing for the most audacious phrase—to craft evening-length ensemble works that tell compelling stories through rhythm and the arrangement of visual information. The Blues Project (2013) is an encyclopedic depiction of the history of the blues as told through tap-based works as well as an active collaboration between the dancers and the musicians who accompany them. In ETM: The Initial Approach (2014), Dorrance creates a fusion of acoustic and electronic sound. The dancers perform on platforms that are activated by their contact to emit sounds and enable electronic looping, allowing a real-time exploration of how movement and sound affect each other. Dorrance’s choreographic sense of tap as a musical and visual expression is bringing it to entirely new contexts and enhancing the appreciation of tap as an innovative, serious, and evolving art form.

Michelle Dorrance received a B.A. (2001) from the Gallatin School at New York University. A member of the faculty of the Broadway Dance Center since 2002, Dorrance has performed with preeminent tap companies and has taught and choreographed for institutions and groups across the United States and abroad. She toured with the Off-Broadway production of STOMP (2007–2011) before founding Dorrance Dance/New York. The troupe has performed Dorrance’s choreographic works at such venues as Jacob’s Pillow Dance Festival, the Joyce Theatre, and Danspace Project, as well as at numerous festivals throughout North America and Europe.

Nicole Eisenman is seen at her studio in Brooklyn, New York on Friday September 18, 2015. Adam Lerner / AP Images for Home Front Communications

Nicole Eisenman is seen at her studio in Brooklyn, New York on Friday September 18, 2015. Adam Lerner / AP Images for Home Front Communications

Nicole Eisenman, Painter, New York, New York. Age: 50

www.macfound.org/fellows/936/

Nicole Eisenman is an artist who is expanding the critical and expressive capacity of the Western figurative tradition through works that engage contemporary social issues and phenomena. Over the course of nearly four decades and working across various media, including painting, sculpture, drawing, and printmaking, Eisenman has restored to the representation of the human form a cultural significance that had waned during the ascendancy of abstraction in the twentieth century.

She draws on narrative and rhetorical modes—including allegory and satire—to explore such themes as gender and sexuality, family dynamics, and inequalities of wealth and power. At the same time, she stages dialogues with artists from the past, both by referencing specific works and by employing stylistic and thematic approaches derived from art historical movements. In a series of paintings of beer-garden scenes (2008­– ), for example, Eisenman updates Renoir’s tableaux of bourgeois leisure, replacing the nineteenth-century French characters that populate Renoir’s originals with a dense, New York crowd. The Triumph of Poverty (2009) presents a complex allegory of contemporary economic conditions. Eisenman’s skill as a painter of imaginative compositions is evidenced not only through the array of social types represented but also through the bold contrasts of color that inject the work with emotional and psychological intensity.

As a draftswoman, Eisenman deftly conveys the weight and movement of the human body through skillful manipulations of line and shading. In her print Man Holding His Shadow (2011), she uses lithography, a medium at one remove from the artist’s hand, to reflect on the limits of representation while maintaining her painterly style of mark making. More recently, she has brought her wry, intelligent vision to sculpture, proving that she is equally adept at imagining and shaping forms in three dimensions. In her challenging engagement with the human figure and investigation of social meaning, Eisenman is developing new conventions of figuration to address enduring themes of the human condition.

Nicole Eisenman received a B.F.A. (1987) from the Rhode Island School of Design. Her work has been exhibited in solo and group exhibitions at such institutions as the Whitney Museum of American Art, the Museum of Modern Art, the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, the Carnegie Museum of Art, Kunsthalle Zürich, and the Ludwig Museum in Cologne, Germany. In 2014, she was the subject of a midcareer retrospective exhibition organized by the Contemporary Art Museum, St. Louis, and that travelled to the Institute of Contemporary Art, Philadelphia, and the Museum of Contemporary Art, San Diego.

CHICAGO, ILLINOIS, SEPTEMBER 12, 2015 : LaToya Ruby Frazier photographed in Chicago (John D. & Catherine MacArthur Foundation)

CHICAGO, ILLINOIS, SEPTEMBER 12, 2015 : LaToya Ruby Frazier photographed in Chicago (John D. & Catherine MacArthur Foundation)

LaToya Ruby Frazier, Photographer and Video Artist

Assistant Professor, Department of Photography,

School of the Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois

Age: 33

www.macfound.org/fellows/937/

LaToya Ruby Frazier is a photographer and video artist who uses visual autobiographies to capture social inequality and historical change in the postindustrial age. Informed by documentary practices from the turn of the last century, Frazier explores identities of place, race, and family in work that is a hybrid of self-portraiture and social narrative. The crumbling landscape of Braddock, Pennsylvania, a once-thriving steel town, forms the backdrop of her images, which make manifest both the environmental and infrastructural decay caused by postindustrial decline and the lives of those who continue—largely by necessity—to live amongst it.

The Notion of Familya series of unflinching black-and-white photographs, shows her mother, grandmother, and the artist herself in a Braddock unmoored by disinvestment and demographic decline. Frazier’s stark portraits underscore the connection between self and physical space and make visible the consequences of neglect and abandonment—unemployment, environmental health crises, and lack of access to services—for Braddock’s historically marginalized working-class African American community. In a photolithograph and silkscreen print series from 2011, entitled Campaign for Braddock Hospital (“Save Our Community Hospital”), Frazier sets up an ironic juxtaposition between upbeat consumer capitalism and the challenges of working people. Images of Braddock from a 2010 Levi Strauss campaign bearing the slogan “Ready to Work” are set in counterpoint to quotes from Braddock residents about the closure of the town’s only hospital—and its principal employer—that same year.

In more recent photographic work, Frazier documents Braddock from the skies in full-color aerial shots that record the extensive transformations of a community after years of economic collapse. Frazier’s uncompromising and moving work illustrates how contemporary photography can open conversations about American history, class structures, and social responsibility.

 LaToya Ruby Frazier received a B.F.A. (2004) from Edinboro University of Pennsylvania and an M.F.A. (2007) from Syracuse University. She held artist residencies at the Lower Manhattan Culture Council (2009–2010) and the Whitney Museum of American Art Independent Study Program (2010–2011) and was the Guna S. Mundheim Fellow at the American Academy in Berlin (2013–2014) before assuming her current position as assistant professor in the Department of Photography at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. Frazier’s work has appeared in numerous exhibitions, including solo shows at the Brooklyn Museum, the Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston, the Seattle Art Museum, and the Contemporary Arts Museum, Houston. The Notion of Family, Frazier’s first book, was published in 2014.

Ben Lerner is seen in Brooklyn, New York on Monday September 14, 2015. Adam Lerner / AP Images for Home Front Communications

Ben Lerner is seen in Brooklyn, New York on Monday September 14, 2015. Adam Lerner / AP Images for Home Front Communications

Ben Lerner, Writer

Professor, Department of English,

City University of New York, Brooklyn College, New York, New York

Age: 36

www.macfound.org/fellows/938/

Mimi Lien is seen in Brooklyn, New York on Monday September 14, 2015. Adam Lerner / AP Images for Home Front Communications

Mimi Lien is seen in Brooklyn, New York on Monday September 14, 2015. Adam Lerner / AP Images for Home Front Communications

Mimi Lien, Set Designer, New York, New York. Age: 39

www.macfound.org/fellows/939/

Mimi Lien is a set designer for theater, opera, and dance whose bold, immersive designs shape and extend a dramatic text’s narrative and emotional dynamics. Lien combines training in set design and architecture with an innate dramaturgical insight, and she is adept at configuring a performance space to establish particular relationships—both among the characters on stage and between the audience and the actors—that dramatize the play’s movement through space and time. 

In sets for both large-scale immersive works and for more traditional proscenium stages, Lien envelops the audience in a specific mood or atmosphere. For Natasha, Pierre, and the Great Comet of 1812 (2013), Lien designed a full-scale Tsarist Russian salon that summoned up the decadence of early nineteenth-century Moscow and the chaotic emotional lives of the Russian elite. Her simple and stark set for Born Bad (2011)—brown shag carpet, worn wallpaper, and three wooden chairs on a platform that is overhung by a low ceiling—created a claustrophobic environment that heightened the play’s portrayal of family tensions.

For other works, Lien choreographs the movement of set pieces so that they become participants in the dramatic action. She propelled the narrative action forward in An Octoroon (2014), as a series of cascading false walls enacted a sequence of startling set transformations. With surrealist touches such as a sloping floor and an aperture that opened and closed to create a sliver of light suggesting a tightrope, Lien brought to life the eeriness of Hades’ underworld in Eurydice (2008), while also evincing the devotion of Eurydice’s father as he constructs (onstage) a string room for her that is held aloft by helium balloons. In projects that range from large regional theaters, to small experimental, hybrid pieces, to a performance in an 81-acre meadow, Lien is revitalizing the visual language of theater and enhancing the performance experience for theater-makers and viewers alike.

Mimi Lien received a B.A. (1997) from Yale University and an M.F.A. (2003) from New York University. Her designs of sets for theater, dance, and opera have been seen nationally and internationally at such venues as Soho Repertory Theatre, the Public Theater, Lincoln Center Theater, Berkeley Repertory Theatre, the Joyce Theater, Philadelphia Live Arts Festival, the Goodman Theatre, and Perm Opera and Ballet Theatre (Russia), among many others. She is an artistic associate with Pig Iron Theatre Company and The Civilians and co-founder of the performance space JACK.

Lin-Manuel Miranda is seen in New York, New York on Tuesday September 2, 2015.

Lin-Manuel Miranda is seen in New York, New York on Tuesday September 2, 2015.

Lin-Manuel Miranda, Playwright, Composer, and Performer,

New York, New York

Age: 35

www.macfound.org/fellows/941/

Lin-Manuel Miranda is a composer, lyricist, and performer reimagining American musical theater in works that fuse traditional storytelling with contemporary musical styles and voices. Well-versed in the structure and history of musical theater, Miranda expands its idiom with the aesthetic of popular culture and stories from individuals and communities new to Broadway stages.

In the Heights (2007), which Miranda began to write while in college, is set in Manhattan’s Dominican district, Washington Heights, and expresses the pathos of an immigrant community losing its neighborhood to gentrification and its younger generation to assimilation and upward mobility. In the opening scene, Miranda showcases his linguistic dexterity in the character Usnavi (played by Miranda himself), who interweaves song, dance, and narration to introduce the other various characters. They, in turn, express themselves in musical styles ranging from hip-hop to salsa.

Miranda continues to explore the dramatic potential of hip-hop in Hamilton (2015), in which he uses an urban soundscape to tell the story of Alexander Hamilton’s rise from an orphaned West Indian immigrant to America’s first Treasury Secretary. Miranda presents policy battles, love triangles, and duels through high velocity lyrics, replete with false and slant rhymes, that expand the range of both pop and Broadway music. The daring pairing of street culture with America’s founding narrative recalls the youthful, defiant spirit of the American Revolution, and cross-racial casting connects the present day to the diverse immigrant society of the thirteen rebel colonies. Melding a love of the musical with a pop culture sensibility, Miranda is expanding the conventions of mainstream theater and showcasing the cultural riches of the American urban panorama.

Lin-Manuel Miranda received a B.A. (2002) from Wesleyan University. His other theater credits include co-composer and co-lyricist of Bring It On: The Musical (2011); actor in revivals of tick, tick…BOOM! (2014) and Merrily We Roll Along (2012); new original music for a revival of Working (2012); and the mini-musical, “21 Chump Street,” for This American Life (2014). He is also a member of the improv hip-hop group, Freestyle Love Supreme.

Dimitri Nakassis

Dimitri Nakassis

Dimitri Nakassis, Classicist

Associate Professor, Department of Classics,

University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada

Age: 40

www.macfound.org/fellows/940/

Dimitri Nakassis is a classicist transforming our understanding of prehistoric Greek societies. His rare intellectual breadth, comprising philology, archaeology, and contemporary social and economic theory, has equipped Nakassis to challenge the long-held view that Late Bronze Age Mycenaean palatial society (1400–1200 BC) was a highly centralized oligarchy, quite distinct from the democratic city-states of classical Greece.

Instead, he proposes that power and resources were more broadly shared. This thesis, developed in his first book, Individuals and Society in Mycenaean Pylos (2013), is derived from a meticulous reinterpretation of Pylos’s administrative and accounting records (found on clay tablets and written in the early Greek script, Linear B). Standard interpretations of the tablets suppose a rigid political structure in which a small group of palace elites controlled and distributed all resources. Nakassis re-examined this model using a traditional method, prosopography, but through the lens of contemporary theoretical discussions of agency and structure. He determined that some recurrences of a personal name refer to the same individual playing multiple, sometimes competing, roles. This insight offers an alternative picture of the Mycenaean world as a more open society with a dynamic and competitive economic structure that displays some similarities to the democratic polis of classical Greece.

Nakassis is testing his hypothesis through an archaeological survey, the Western Argolid Regional Project, that will reconstruct the settlement history of a core region of the Mycenaean world from prehistory to modern times and clarify how Mycenaean states mobilized labor, incorporated peripheral communities, and expressed power over many centuries. He is also co-directing a new study of the Linear B tablets from Pylos that includes the use of digital imaging technologies (three-dimensional scanning and Reflectance Transformation Imaging, a kind of computational photography) to produce high-quality print and digital editions of these important documents for the first time. Nakassis’s multifaceted approach to the study of Bronze Age Greece is redefining the methodologies and frameworks of the field, and his nuanced picture of political authority and modes of economic exchange in Mycenaean Greece is illuminating the prehistoric underpinnings of Western civilization.

Dimitri Nakassis received a B.A. (1997) from the University of Michigan and an M.A. (2000) and Ph.D. (2006) from the University of Texas at Austin. He joined the faculty of the University of Toronto in 2008, where he is currently an associate professor in the Department of Classics, and he has been a visiting professor at the University of Colorado Boulder (2014­–2015), the Florida State University (2007–2008), and Trinity University (2006–2007). His articles and essays have appeared in the American Journal of ArchaeologyHesperia, and Greek, Roman, and Byzantine Studies, among others.

CHICAGO, ILLINOIS, SEPTEMBER 18, 2015 : John November, photographed at University of Chicago, in Chicago (John D. & Catherine MacArthur Foundation)

CHICAGO, ILLINOIS, SEPTEMBER 18, 2015 : John November, photographed at University of Chicago, in Chicago (John D. & Catherine MacArthur Foundation)

John Novembre, Computational Biologist

Associate Professor, Department of Human Genetics,

University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois

Age: 37

www.macfound.org/fellows/942/

Christopher Re is seen at the Gates Computer Science building on the Stanford University campus, on Tuesday, September 15, 2015 in Stanford, California.

Christopher Re is seen at the Gates Computer Science building on the Stanford University campus, on Tuesday, September 15, 2015 in Stanford, California.

Christopher Ré, Computer Scientist

Assistant Professor, Department of Computer Science, Stanford University, Stanford, California

Age: 36

https://www.macfound.org/fellows/943/

Marina Rustow, Historian

Professor, Department of Near Eastern Studies and Department of History, Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey

Age: 46

www.macfound.org/fellows/944/

Juan Salgado, CEO of Instituto Del Progreso Latino, at his office in Chicago, Tuesday, September 15, 2015. (Photo by Peter Wynn Thompson/ AP Images for John D. & Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation)

Juan Salgado, CEO of Instituto Del Progreso Latino, at his office in Chicago, Tuesday, September 15, 2015. (Photo by Peter Wynn Thompson/ AP Images for John D. & Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation)

Juan Salgado, Community Leader

President and CEO, Instituto del Progreso Latino, Chicago, Illinois

Age: 46

www.macfound.org/fellows/945/

Beth Stevens, Assistant Professor of Neurology at Children's Hospital in Boston, Massachusetts, Friday, September 18, 2015. (John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation)

Beth Stevens, Assistant Professor of Neurology at Children’s Hospital in Boston, Massachusetts, Friday, September 18, 2015. (John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation)

Beth Stevens, Neuroscientist
Assistant Professor of Neurology, F. M. Kirby Neurobiology Center,

Boston Children’s Hospital, Department of Neurology, Harvard Medical School

Boston, Massachusetts

Age: 45

Lorenz Studer is seen at home and Memorial Sloan Kettering Labs on Tuesday September 22, 2015 in New York City, New York.

Lorenz Studer is seen at home and Memorial Sloan Kettering Labs on Tuesday September 22, 2015 in New York City, New York.

Lorenz Studer, Stem Cell Biologist

Director, Center for Stem Cell Biology, Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, New York, New York

Age: 49

www.macfound.org/fellows/947/

Left to Right, Nurit Ozeri, Alex Truesdell, Adam el Sawaf, Danna Jellinek and Rocio Alonso are seen at Adaptive Design Association in New York City on Thursday September 17, 2015. Adam Lerner / AP Images for Home Front Communications

Left to Right, Nurit Ozeri, Alex Truesdell, Adam el Sawaf, Danna Jellinek and Rocio Alonso are seen at Adaptive Design Association in New York City on Thursday September 17, 2015. Adam Lerner / AP Images for Home Front Communications

Alex Truesdell, Adaptive Designer and Fabricator

Executive Director and Founder, Adaptive Design Association, Inc., New York, New York

Age: 59

www.macfound.org/fellows/948/

New York, NY. Sept 10th 2015. Puppet Artist & Director Basil Twist is photographed at the Abrons Arts Center in NYC where Basil puts on his performances with Puppets. John D. & Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation

New York, NY. Sept 10th 2015. Puppet Artist & Director Basil Twist is photographed at the Abrons Arts Center in NYC where Basil puts on his performances with Puppets. John D. & Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation

Basil Twist, Puppetry Artist and Director

New York, New York

Age: 46

www.macfound.org/fellows/949/

Basil Twist is a puppeteer and theater artist whose experiments with the materials and techniques of puppetry explore the boundaries between the animate and inanimate, the abstract and the figurative. Twist’s works range from productions of classic stories to abstract visualizations of orchestral music and are informed by puppetry traditions from around the world, including hand puppets, bunraku, and string-and-rod marionettes.

His best-known work, Symphonie Fantastique (1998), uses a complex choreography of fabric, feathers, tinsel, and cutouts in a 500-gallon tank of water to evoke human characteristics and emotions and illuminate Berlioz’s score in unexpected ways. Twist has brought puppetry to new audiences and venues with a captivating beauty and refinement. He tells the story of La Bella Dormente nel Bosco (Sleeping Beauty in the Woods, 2005) with life-sized marionettes, controlled by puppeteers on an overhead bridge, and onstage singers. In Petrushka (2001), he employs meticulously crafted, life-like puppets moved by puppeteers who are sometimes visible (as in the bunraku tradition) to underscore the theme of tragic manipulation in the love-triangle plot. More recently, Twist has returned to his roots in abstraction in The Rite of Spring (2013); he enacts the intensity of both Stravinsky’s score and the response to the original ballet’s debut in 1913 through cascading curtains of billowing silk, crumpled paper, curling smoke, projections, and just a single dancer.

In addition to his own productions, Twist is a frequent collaborator with renowned opera companies, choreographers, and playwrights, and he has trained and mentored an entire generation of young puppet artists at the Dream Music Puppetry Program based at the HERE Arts Center. Twist’s wide-ranging and trailblazing body of work is revitalizing puppetry as a serious and sophisticated art form in and of itself and establishing it as an integral element in contemporary theater, dance, and music.

Basil Twist received a D.M.A. (1993) from the École Nationale Supérieure des Arts de la Marionnette. His additional works include Master Peter’s Puppet Show (2002), Hansel and Gretel (2006), Dogugaeshi (2004), and Arias with a Twist (2008). He has designed and directed puppets for a number of collaborative theatrical and opera productions, such as Red Beads (Mabou Mines, 2005) and The Long Christmas Ride Home (written by Paula Vogel, 2004), and original dance works, including Darkness and Light (Pilobolus, 2008) and Cinderella (Dutch National Ballet, 2012). Since 1999, he has served as director of the Dream Music Puppetry Program at the HERE Arts Center in New York City.

Ellen Bryant Voigt is seen at her home on Thursday, September 17, 2015 in Cabot, VT. The poet was recently selected as one of the 2015 MacArthur Fellows.

Ellen Bryant Voigt is seen at her home on Thursday, September 17, 2015 in Cabot, VT. The poet was recently selected as one of the 2015 MacArthur Fellows.

Ellen Bryant Voigt, Poet, Cabot, Vermont

Age: 72

www.macfound.org/fellows/950/

Heidi Williams of the MIT Department of Economics in Cambridge, Massachusetts, Tuesday, September 15, 2015. (John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation)

Heidi Williams of the MIT Department of Economics in Cambridge, Massachusetts, Tuesday, September 15, 2015. (John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation)

Heidi Williams, Economist

Class of 1957 Career Development Assistant Professor, Department of Economic

Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts

Age: 34

www.macfound.org/fellows/951/

Peidong Yang is photographed in his lab, office and on campus at UC Berkeley in Berkeley, Cali., Monday, Sept. 14, 2015. Photos by Alison Yin/AP Images for John D. & Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation

Peidong Yang is photographed in his lab, office and on campus at UC Berkeley in Berkeley, Cali., Monday, Sept. 14, 2015.
Photos by Alison Yin/AP Images for John D. & Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation

Peidong Yang, Inorganic Chemist

S. K. and Angela Chan Distinguished Professor of Energy, Department of Chemistry

University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, California

Age: 44

www.macfound.org/fellows/952/

 


Filed under: Computers, Culture, Eco/Earth/Conservation, Education, Health, Museums & Exhibitions, Performance Art, Photography, Publications, Publishing, Science, Tech/Design, Technology, Theater, Web-based Tagged: Adaptive Designer and Fabricator, Alex Truesdell, Basil Twist, Ben Lerner, Christopher Ré, Class of 2015 MacArthur Fellows, Classicist, Computational Biologist, Computer Scientist, Dimitri Nakassis, Economist, Ellen Bryant Voigt, Gary Cohen, Heidi Williams, Inorganic Chemist, John Novembre, Juan Salgado, Kartik Chandran, LaToya Ruby Frazier, Lin-Manuel Miranda, Lorenz Studer, Marina Rustow, Matthew Desmond, Michelle Dorrance, Mimi Lien, Nicole Eisenman, Patrick Awuah, Peidong Yang, Photographer and Video Artist, Puppetry Artist and Director, Stem Cell Biologist, Ta-Nehisi Coates, The John D. & Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, The MacArthur Fellows Program, Urban Sociologist, William Dichtel

‘Photo Ark’ Exhibition to Open Nov. 5 at National Geographic Museum in Washington, D.C.

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Multimedia Exhibition Showcases Photographer Joel Sartore’s Project Documenting World’s Animal Species

Photo Ark” is a multiyear National Geographic project with a simple goal — to create portraits of the world’s species before they disappear and to inspire people everywhere to care. National Geographic will showcase this important project through multiple platforms, including an exhibition that opens at the National Geographic Museum in Washington on Thursday, Nov. 5. Featuring the work of photographer, speaker, author, teacher and National Geographic Society Fellow Joel Sartore, the exhibition will be on display in the museum until April 2016.Print

The “Photo Ark” exhibition will highlight nearly all of the more than 5,000 images that comprise Sartore’s decade-long Photo Ark collection to date. Incredibly, that number doesn’t quite mark the project’s halfway point — Sartore estimates the completed Photo Ark will include portraits of over 12,000 species representing several different animal classes, including birds, fish, mammals, reptiles, amphibians and invertebrates. In what will be the largest single archive of studio-quality photographs of biodiversity ever, Photo Ark continues to move toward its goal of documenting these 12,000 species in captivity, thanks in part to Sartore’s enduring relationships with many of the world’s zoos and aquariums — institutions dedicated to preserving and caring for species of all kinds.PhotoArk-Web-610x343_jpg_610x343_crop_upscale_q85

Photo Ark” exhibition visitors will also get a behind-the-scenes look at Sartore’s methodical process for shooting these stunning photos, oftentimes with comedic mishaps that go along with working with his occasionally temperamental “models.” Video and still portraits throughout the exhibition will capture the essence of these animals, while a cacophony of animal sounds will further bring these precious creatures to life right in downtown Washington. In addition to gripping imagery, the exhibit includes compelling stories about the dedicated people and organizations working to help these animals in an aptly named “Hall of Heroes.” Visitors will also walk through a heartbreaking gallery dedicated to some of the world’s most critically endangered and even extinct species.

Hands-on, interactive elements include video screens, a field station and photo tents that give guests the sense that they are on a shoot with Sartore. Visitors will also learn how they can help support the continuing work of the Photo Ark project as well as the National Geographic Society’s ongoing conservation efforts.

Photo Ark will inspire millions around the world with the message that it is not too late to save some of the world’s most endangered species,” said National Geographic’s vice president of exhibitions, Kathryn Keane. “That is the power of photography — and the perfect way that National Geographic can contribute to this global challenge.”

Sartore will be at National Geographic’s Washington D.C., headquarters on Wednesday, Nov. 4, to celebrate the exhibit’s opening with a special National Geographic Live event. Attendees can preview the exhibit before it officially opens to the public the following day with special extended museum hours for ticket holders. After the evening talk on Nov. 4, Sartore will sign copies of the new “Photo Ark” book from National Geographic Books, which will be available in the National Geographic Store outside the museum. Sartore will also speak to students about the “Photo Ark” project during a student matinee at National Geographic headquarters earlier that day.

The National Geographic Museum, 1145 17th Street, N.W., Washington, D.C., is open every day (except Dec. 25) from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Admission is $15 for adults; $12 for National Geographic members, military, students, seniors and groups of 25 or more; $10 for children ages 5-12; and free for local school, student and youth groups (18 and under; advance reservation required). Tickets may be purchased online at www.ngmuseum.org; via telephone at (202) 857-7700; or in person at the National Geographic Museum, 1145 17th Street, N.W., between 10 a.m. and 5 p.m. For more information on group sales, call (202) 857-7281.

The National Geographic Society is a global nonprofit membership organization driven by a passionate belief in the power of science, exploration and storytelling to change the world. It funds hundreds of research and conservation projects around the globe each year. With the support of its members and donors, the Society works to inspire, illuminate and teach through scientific expeditions, award-winning journalism, education initiatives and more. For more information, visit www.nationalgeographic.com and find the organization on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Google+, YouTube, LinkedIn and Pinterest.


Filed under: Museums & Exhibitions, Photography Tagged: “Photo Ark” exhibition, National Geographic Society Fellow Joel Sartore, The National Geographic Museum, The National Geographic Society

Arts News: QUEER/ART/MENTORSHIP Announces Its 2015-2016 Fellowship Winners

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ELEVEN EMERGING ARTISTS SELECTED FOR YEAR LONG PROGRAM

Queer/Art/Mentorship, the multi-disciplinary, inter-generational arts program that pairs and supports mentorship between emerging and established LGBTQI artists in NYC, has announced today the eleven Fellows accepted for its 2015-2016 Annual Mentorship Cycle.  unnamed

Each of the Queer/Art/Mentorship Fellows selected (above) is paired with an established New York-based artist within their creative field for the yearlong mentorship. The relationship that develops aims to support the artistic and professional practice of the Fellow, as well as to develop community-wide conversations about what it means to generate and curate queer work in New York City and beyond.

The Fellows chosen in five artistic disciplines are Monstah Black, Eva Peskin and Justine Williams in Performance; Jacob Matkov and Brendan Williams-Childs in Literary; Rodrigo Bellott, Erin Greenwell and Mylo Mendez in Film; Caroline Wells Chandler and Doron Langberg in Visual Arts; and Hugh Ryan in Curatorial.qam.41.53 AM

The Mentors they will be working with for the 2015-2016 Fellowship year are Arthur Aviles and Talvin Wilks in Performance; Jaime Manrique and Sarah Schulman in Literary; Thomas Allen Harris, Silas Howard and Stacie Passon in Film; Angela Dufresne and Avram Finkelstein in Visual Arts; and Shannon Michael Cane in Curatorial.

The 2015-2016 Queer/Art/Mentorship Fellows are:

Rodrigo Bellott was born in Santa Cruz, Bolivia. His breakout film, Sexual Dependency, won over 15 awards in over 65 film festivals around the world and was also Bolivia’s first film competing for “Best Foreign Language Film” at the 2004 Academy Awards. VARIETY magazine named Bellott as one of the “TOP TEN Latin American Talents to Watch”. Bellott will be working with Mentor, filmmaker Silas Howard on the film adaptation of his play Tu Me Manques, that explores contemporary queer identity in the moment of historical change in contrast with the current situations in other parts of the world.

Monstah Black is a multi-disciplinary performing artist and educator and has accumulated numerous awards including the Tom Murrine Performance Award and the BRIC Media Arts Fellowship. He has taught and performed internationally with various dance companies as well as with his own work. He is currently working on a dance film project called “Cotton” sponsored by the New York Foundation for the Arts. Monstah will be working with Mentor, dancer and choreographer Arthur Aviles on a performance project entitled HYPERBOLIC!.

Caroline Wells Chandler is a MFA recipient in painting at the Yale School of Art where he was awarded the Ralph Mayer Prize for proficiency in materials and techniques. With shows nationally and internationally, Chandler’s latest body of work entitled “The Best Little Whore House in Texas” opens this fall at the Roberto Paradise Gallery in San Juan, PR. Chandler will be working with Mentor, visual artist Angela Dufresne on a series of crocheted figurative works and resin paintings.

Erin Greenwell wrote and directed the feature film My Best Daywhich premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in 2012. Her other directing endeavors include Oh Come Ona punk DIY performance video for Kathleen Hanna’s band The Julie Ruin and The Golden Age of Hustlers featuring Justin Vivian Bond‘s remake of the iconic song written by legendary punk chanteuse Bambi Lake. In 2006, Greenwell formed Smithy Productions, a production company, with the aim of cultivating talents from the queer/independent art community under the umbrella of narrative and documentary storytelling. Greenwell will be working with Mentor, director and screenwriter Stacie Passon to develop her narrative feature length script, The Flight Deck, based on the butch/femme lesbian bar scene in Buffalo, NY during the 1950s.

Doron Langberg was born in Israel, and currently lives and works in Queens, NY. He received his MFA from Yale University and holds a BFA from the University of Pennsylvania and a Certificate from PAFA. He is a recipient of the Elizabeth Greenshields Foundation Grant and the Yale Schoelkopf Travel Prize, named as a NYFA Painting Finalist. Langberg’s work was featured in New American Paintings and is in the permanent collection of the PAFA Museum. Langberg will be working with Mentor, visual artist and writer Avram Finkelstein on a series of paintings.

Jacob Matkov writes poetry in Brooklyn, NY where he teaches first year writing and is the coordinator of the English/Creative Writing graduate programs at LIU Brooklyn. He is a co-founding editor of visceral brooklyn and his poems have been published in fields magazinevoicemail poems,Maudlin HousethosethatthisDowntown Brooklyn and others. He received his BA from Arcadia University and his MA and MFA both at LIU Brooklyn. Matkov will be working with Mentor, author Jaime Manrique on a manuscript of poems examining the experience of trauma.

Mylo Mendez is a Texas-born video artist currently based in Brooklyn. Hir work uses humor, narrative, and characters with aberrant bodies to navigate identity, social and geographical borders, and history. Mendez has been featured in group shows in New York City and Austin. Ze received hir MFA from Parsons The New School for Design. Mendez will be working with Mentor, filmmaker Thomas Allen Harris on a film about the intersection of trans and punk identities and communities in New York City.

Eva Peskin & Justine Williams are interdisciplinary artists, performers and culture producers. Joint project, Nothing to See Here is perfect example of their use of civic multi-media performance engaging audience-participants dystopia (co-created with Vanessa Gilbert). Peskin is a member of ANIMALS Performance Group and teaches critical media literacy with The Learning About Multimedia Project while Williams is working on New Mystical Readers, a series of queer vision quests incorporating Jungian archetype theories, quizzes, collage, and stop-motion video. Peskin and Williams will be working with Mentor, playwright, director and dramaturg Talvin Wilks on a performance that rethinks the oath of the first Boy Scout Handbook, questioning accountability, community service and self development with an ethical lens rooted in queer, feminist and anti-racist thought.

Hugh Ryan is a writer and curator in New York City, whose work focuses on queer politics, culture, and history. He is the Founding Director of the  Pop-Up Museum of Queer History, sits on the Board of QED: A Journal in GLBTQ Worldmaking, and has an MFA in Creative Nonfiction from Bennington. Ryan will be working with Mentor, curator Shannon Michael Cane on a forthcoming show of outsider art at La MaMa Galleria.

Brendan Williams-Childs is a short-story writer from Wyoming. His work has appeared on NPR and in Midwestern Gothic Issue Literary Journal. In 2013, he was awarded the Larry Neal Writers’ Award. He co-edits the very small zine and chapbook press Cheap Dates Press. Williams-Childs will be working with Mentor, author Sarah Schulman on an anthology of speculative short stories.

Founded in 2011 by filmmaker Ira Sachs and Pilobolus Co-Executive Director Lily Binns, the program has established itself as an ongoing force within the city’s LGBTQI and arts communities, with an expanding series of public events and exhibitions. The program is a year in length and is largely driven by the unique character of each of the mentor/fellow pairs according to their respective needs and habits of communication, although once-a-month meeting commitments will be suggested. The program coordinators engage in an ongoing dialogue with the mentors and fellows in an effort to ensure that the program best serve its participants.

The entire group of mentor/fellow pairs will also convene for three short meetings throughout the cycle. The goal of the limited group-wide meetings is to encourage dialogues between all levels of participants and between all disciplines. It has been shown in a variety of fields that implement mentor programs that the mentor-to-mentor dialogue that occurs in mentor programs is as significant to the program’s success in developing the field as any that occurs directly between mentor and mentee.

Fellows apply to Queer/Art/Mentorship with a specific project that they would like to undertake during the course of the mentorship. Projects may be in-progress, and they do not need to be “finished” by the end of the program. Proposing a project is a way to introduce oneself to potential mentors, and working on that project in dialogue with a mentor is a way to focus the development of the relationship. Keeping Queer/Art/Mentorship project-based will also provide a manner by which to assess, and modify if necessary, the program’s long-term effectiveness in facilitating and supporting the actual creation of new work.

Queer/Art/Mentorship is one of several ongoing programs run by the larger Queer/Art organization that includes the popular Queer/Art/Film series held monthly at the IFC Film Center in New York. For more information about this and past years’ Fellows and Mentors, visit the program’s website at Queer/Art/Mentorship.


Filed under: Arts & Culture, Culture, Dance, Film, Gay/Lesbian/Bisexual/Transgender/Q Issues, LGBTQ, Movies, Music, Performance Art, Photography, Theater Tagged: Angela Dufresne, Arthur Aviles, Avram Finkelstein, Caroline Wells Chandler, Doron Langberg, Erin Greenwell, Eva Peskin, Hugh Ryan, Jacob Matkov and Brendan Williams-Childs, Jaime Manrique, Justine Williams, Monstah Black, Mylo Mendez, QUEER/ART/MENTORSHIP 2015-2016 Annual Mentorship Cycle, Queer/Art/Mentorship 2015-2016 Fellows, Rodrigo Bellott, Sarah Schulman, Shannon Michael Cane, Silas Howard, Stacie Passon, Talvin Wilks, Thomas Allen Harris

Neiman Marcus Presents The 89th Edition Of Its Legendary Christmas Book

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50ac7416-844f-439f-9869-86c1412cdd60.HRThe 2015 Neiman Marcus Christmas Book Features a Vast Selection of Fantasy Gifts Including an Iris Apfel for Bajalia Trunk of Accessories, A Dream Trip to India, Orphan Barrel Project, as well as a Surprise Fantasy Gift Only Accessible Via the Neiman Marcus App.

The 2015 Christmas Book was unveiled today by luxury retailer Neiman Marcus in Dallas. The 89th edition of this legendary book continues Neiman Marcus’s unmatched tradition of offering its customers a selection of spectacular and unique holiday gifts sure to make even their wildest dreams come true.

The 2015 Neiman Marcus Christmas Book Features a Vast Selection of Fantasy Gifts Including an Iris Apfel for Bajalia Trunk of Accessories, A Dream Trip to India, Orphan Barrel Project, as well as a Surprise Fantasy Gift Only Accessible Via the Neiman Marcus App.

The 2015 Neiman Marcus Christmas Book Features a Vast Selection of Fantasy Gifts Including an Iris Apfel for Bajalia Trunk of Accessories, A Dream Trip to India, Orphan Barrel Project, as well as a Surprise Fantasy Gift Only Accessible Via the Neiman Marcus App.

The arrival of the Christmas Book is considered by many to mark the official start of the holiday shopping season. This year’s edition of the Christmas Book carries on the Neiman Marcus tradition of presenting a refined selection of items across a broad range of categories for everyone on your holiday shopping list. With a new collection of fantasy gifts certain to satisfy even the most indulgent appetites, the Christmas Book features exceptional and distinctive gifts and experiences, including an Arch Motorcycle & Ride Experience, Texas Guitar Trio Gift, Couture Diary, World View Exploration at the Edge of Space, and a tour of Italy with Ippolita & Artemest Craftsmen. This year’s featured car is the Neiman Marcus Limited-Edition Mustang Convertible.

The “His & Hers” fantasy gift tradition continues this year with the Ultimate Children’s Costumes in Mackenzie-Childs Trunks. The first time ever that the His & Her gift is for children.

For the first time ever, Neiman Marcus is offering a gift downloadable exclusively via the NM Shopping app, to unwrap the eleventh gift, download the NM app now.

First published in 1926 as a 16-page booklet, the Neiman Marcus Christmas Book was initially intended as a Christmas card to the store’s best customers. Building on tradition through the years, the book has maintained its personal touch while evolving into a legendary source for alluring and mystical gifts.

As in previous years, Neiman Marcus will donate a portion of the proceeds from each Fantasy Gift purchase to The Heart of Neiman Marcus Foundation which brings enriching art experiences to youth in communities nationwide.

We’re excited to introduce the 2015 collection of fantasy gifts which continue the time-honored tradition of offering our customers the unique and high-quality items they’ve come to know and expect from Neiman Marcus.” said Jim Gold President & Chief Merchandising Officer of Neiman Marcus. “Each year we strive to exceed the expectations of our customers; hopefully they will agree that this year is no exception.”

Neiman Marcus is also thrilled to introduce truly nm a curated collection of exceptional exclusive items chosen by us for our customers. The collection, consisting of pieces of extraordinary luxury, whimsical delight, and state of the art technology, is available online and in stores.

Among The Selection Of Fantasy Gifts In The 2015 Christmas Book Are Some Exceptional Items, Including:

Limited edition KRGT-1 Motorcycle Ride Experience from Arch Motorcycle Company.

Limited edition KRGT-1 Motorcycle Ride Experience from Arch Motorcycle Company.

ARCH MOTORCYCLE & RIDE EXPERIENCE Keanu Reeves and Gard Hollinger make up Arch Motorcycle Company, and the KRGT-1—hailed by one reviewer as “the Zen of motorcycle design“—is their first production bike. Framed of steel and aircraft-grade billet aluminum with carbon fiber fenders and front cowling, it has a 124-cubic-inch v-twin engine that produces 121 horsepower and matching 120 pound-feet of torque. This limited edition comes with custom race-inspired trim, performance suspension, and an exclusive two-day ride experience for two along the California coast with Reeves and Hollinger. Hotel and airfare to California included. With the purchase of the KRGT-1 Motorcycle Ride Experience, Neiman Marcus will donate $5,000 to The Heart of Neiman Marcus Foundation. ($150,000; page 37)

Visit the legendary Stitzel-Weller Distillery in Kentucky for barrel hunting, tasting and creating unique Orphan Barrel variants to be hand-bottled and labeled exclusively for you and five bourbon-curious friends.

Visit the legendary Stitzel-Weller Distillery in Kentucky for barrel hunting, tasting and creating unique Orphan Barrel variants to be hand-bottled and labeled exclusively for you and five bourbon-curious friends.

THE ORPHAN BARREL PROJECT The Orphan Barrel® project was started to share long-forgotten barrels of rare whiskey discovered in old rickhouses and distilleries. Each release is hand-bottled—and once they’re gone, they’re gone forever. You and five bourbon-curious friends will visit the legendary Stitzel-Weller Distillery in Louisville, Kentucky, to go barrel hunting, tasting recently discovered bourbons and creating two completely unique Orphan Barrel variants to be hand-bottled with labels designed exclusively for you. You’ll receive 24 bottles each of the remaining stocks of eight different Orphan Barrel bourbons—including the variants created with you—along with a bespoke whiskey cabinet crafted in Kentucky to house the collection, barware, and a leather-bound book about your whiskey. With purchase of The Orphan Barrel Project, Neiman Marcus will donate $5,000 to The Heart of Neiman Marcus Foundation. ($125,000; page 38)

This two-part adventure takes you and seven companions up 100,000 feet into space in a luxury pressurized capsule where you will experience 360 degree views of Earth.

This two-part adventure takes you and seven companions up 100,000 feet into space in a luxury pressurized capsule where you will experience 360 degree views of Earth.

WORLD VIEW EXPLORATION AT THE EDGE OF SPACE This two-part adventure begins in 2016 with a behind-the-scenes invitation to a World View test flight. The Miraval Resort in Tucson, Arizona, is home for three nights; spend your days with the flight’s chase and recovery team and tour Biosphere 2 with original crew member and World View CEO Jane Poyter. In 2017, you and seven companions will experience 360˚ views of Earth as a high-altitude balloon lifts your luxury pressurized capsule 100,000 feet above our planet. With purchase of the World View Exploration at the Edge of Space, Neiman Marcus will donate $1,500 to The Heart of Neiman Marcus Foundation. ($90,000 per person; page 39)

You and three guests will join jewelry designer Ippolita Rostagno on a seven day art tour of Florence and Venice.

You and three guests will join jewelry designer Ippolita Rostagno on a seven day art tour of Florence and Venice.

ITALY TOUR WITH IPPOLITA & ARTEMEST CRAFTSMEN Experience a side of Italy rarely seen by outsiders. You and three guests will join internationally acclaimed jewelry designer Ippolita Rostagno on a very personal seven-day privileged-access art tour of Florence and Venice. Ippolita will introduce you to acclaimed artists, visit local workshops, enjoy VIP museum tours and dine on authentic Italian cuisine. Parting gifts include special mementos from studio visits and a newfound appreciation for art history in the progress. With the purchase of the Italy Tour with Ippolita & Artemest Craftsmen, Neiman Marcus will donate $10,000 to The Heart of Neiman Marcus Foundation. ($150,000; page 40)

This gift includes lunch and a styling session with 93-year-old fashion icon Iris Apfel.

This gift includes lunch and a styling session with 93-year-old fashion icon Iris Apfel.

IRIS APFEL FOR BAJALIA TRUNK OF ACCESSORIESMore is more, less is a bore!” is the style mantra of 93-year-old fashion icon Iris Apfel. Her souk-meets-haute-couture style earned her a 2005 Metropolitan Museum of Art retrospective. This Ikat-embellished trunk comes filled with accessories and vintage finds handcrafted by women globally and inspired by her own personal collection. Gift includes lunch and a styling session with Iris. With purchase of the Iris Apfel Trunk of Accessories, Neiman Marcus will donate $5,000 to The Heart of Neiman Marcus Foundation. ($80,000; page 41)

The 2015 Neiman Marcus Limited-Edition Mustang Convertible commemorates Mustang's 50th anniversary.

The 2015 Neiman Marcus Limited-Edition Mustang Convertible commemorates Mustang’s 50th anniversary.

NEIMAN MARCUS LIMITED-EDITION MUSTANG CONVERTIBLE The 2015 Neiman Marcus Limited-Edition Mustang Convertible commemorates Mustang’s 50th Anniversary. The GT40 heritage and the aggressive stance of the late ’60s are updated with next-generation styling and raked lines, a 700-horsepower supercharged engine (0-60 mph in 3.5 seconds), racing suspension, carbon-fiber trim, Magnaflow custom-side exhaust, lightweight racing seats, 20″ wheels with Nitto NT05 tires, and exclusive Blue/Black/Silver paint. Gift includes an exclusive Ford Racing School course. Reserve this luxury car by calling 1-888-756-0775, beginning promptly at noon EDT on October 13, 2015. With the purchase of the Neiman Marcus Limited-Edition Mustang Convertible, Neiman Marcus will donate $1,000 to The Heart of Neiman Marcus Foundation. ($95,000; pages 42-43)

This guitar, designed by Billy Gibbons and built by Bolin guitars, is a modern riff on the classic 1961 Gibson SG.

This guitar, designed by Billy Gibbons and built by Bolin guitars, is a modern riff on the classic 1961 Gibson SG.

TEXAS GUITAR TRI0 GIFT From air guitar to heirloom, these are instant classics commissioned by Texas music legends. Designed by rock guitar icon Billy Gibbons, this is a modern riff on the classic 1961 Gibson SG and is the ZZ Top legend’s ultimate dream guitar. For the musician who blends folk, swing, blues, jazz, and gospel with country and western, a rosewood and abalone guitar was handmade by Lyle Lovett‘s longtime colleague Bill Collings. Master luthiers John and Jake Bolin of Bolin Guitars have built this guitar to the exact specifications of the prolific American musician and songwriter Steve Miller. Getting one of these special commissions is really cool, but how you’ll get it is even cooler, backstage at the musician’s concert. With the purchase of each Texas Guitar, Neiman Marcus will donate $5,000 to The Heart of Neiman Marcus Foundation. ($30,000 each; page 44)

Artist Abigail Vogel with hand-paint 20 of the recipient's treasured ensembles, and renowned craftsman Paul Vogel with bind the book in your choice of red or black Scandinavian calfskin.

Artist Abigail Vogel with hand-paint 20 of the recipient’s treasured ensembles, and renowned craftsman Paul Vogel with bind the book in your choice of red or black Scandinavian calfskin.

COUTURE DIARY With this one-of-a-kind Couture Diary, artist Abigail Vogel will hand-paint 20 of the recipient’s treasured ensembles. Each work of art includes 60 custom-made, hand-bordered diary sheets from The Printery for the recipient to record the story behind the style (designer, occasion, guests, and more). Renowned craftsman Paul Vogel will bind the book in your choice of red or black Scandinavian calfskin and personalize it in hand-tooled 24-karat gold. The result is a personal fashion history, housed in a custom-made tonal case, sure to be cherished for generations. With the purchase of the Couture Diary, Neiman Marcus will donate $1,000 to The Heart of Neiman Marcus Foundation. ($10,000; page 45)

Each personalized MacKenzie-Childs trunk features the child’s hand-painted initials and holds a selection of Chasing Fireflies Ultimate Collection costumes. The blue version includes five ©Marvel Super Heroes costumes: Ultimate Light-Up Spider-Man, Ultimate Thor, Star-Lord coat & mask set, Ultimate Captain America®, and Ultimate Light-Up Hulk Buster.

Each personalized MacKenzie-Childs trunk features the child’s hand-painted initials and holds a selection of Chasing Fireflies Ultimate Collection costumes. The blue version includes five ©Marvel Super Heroes costumes: Ultimate Light-Up Spider-Man, Ultimate Thor, Star-Lord coat & mask set, Ultimate Captain America®, and Ultimate Light-Up Hulk Buster.

Each personalized MacKenzie-Childs trunk features the child’s hand-painted initials and holds a selection of Chasing Fireflies Ultimate Collection costumes. The pink version, an equally delightful trunk holds Disney favorites Ultimate Collection Elsa, Ultimate Collection Aurora, Ultimate Collection Sophia the First, and Ultimate Cinderella Ball Gown.

Each personalized MacKenzie-Childs trunk features the child’s hand-painted initials and holds a selection of Chasing Fireflies Ultimate Collection costumes. The pink version, an equally delightful trunk holds Disney favorites Ultimate Collection Elsa, Ultimate Collection Aurora, Ultimate Collection Sophia the First, and Ultimate Cinderella Ball Gown.

“HIS & HERS” ULTIMATE CHILDREN’S COSTUMES IN PERSONALIZED MACKENZIE-CHILDS TRUNKS This year’s His & Hers gifts are designed for children for the first time ever. Each personalized MacKenzie-Childs trunk features the child’s hand-painted initials and holds a selection of Chasing Fireflies Ultimate Collection costumes. The blue version includes five ©Marvel Super Heroes costumes: Ultimate Light-Up Spider-Man, Ultimate Thor, Star-Lord coat & mask set, Ultimate Captain America®, and Ultimate Light-Up Hulk Buster. The pink version, an equally delightful trunk holds Disney favorites Ultimate Collection Elsa, Ultimate Collection Aurora, Ultimate Collection Sophia the First, and Ultimate Cinderella Ball Gown. With the purchase of His & Hers Ultimate Children’s Costume Trunks, Neiman Marcus will donate $1,000 to The Heart of Neiman Marcus Foundation. ($5,000 each; pages 46-47)

For 12 days you and a guest will experience the beauty of India through O'Harani Luxe Experiences.

For 12 days you and a guest will experience the beauty of India through O’Harani Luxe Experiences.

DREAM TRIP TO INDIA For centuries, travelers have been entranced by the rich culture and historic grandeur of India. Now it’s your turn to experience this country’s vast beauty for yourself through O’Harani Luxe Experiences. For 12 days, you and a guest will travel in private planes and vintage cars to the finest hotels, restaurants, and experiences (dinners hosted by royalty, private cricket lessons, a dance lesson on a private Bollywood movie set). From legendary Delhi and the Taj Mahal, to artistic Jaipur, romantic Udaipur, and finally Mumbai, you’ll explore this fascinating country in luxurious style. With the purchase of the India Trip, Neiman Marcus will donate $15,000 to The Heart of Neiman Marcus Foundation. ($400,000; page 48)


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