November 1st, 2011

Girl in the Bottle, 2011 © Marc Yankus/Courtesy of ClampArt, NYC
In his third solo show with the gallery, native New Yorker Marc Yankus presents new work from Call It Sleep, as well as a series of recent photomontage still lifes. The project derives it’s name from Henry Roth’s 1934 critically acclaimed novel, about a young Jewish boy’s coming of age in the slum of Manhattan’s Lower East Side. Through Yankus’s photographs, he nostalgically portrays the city’s architecture, moody streets and pulse with his unique personal vision. The opening reception for Marc Yankus’s Call It Sleep will be Thursday, November 3, 6–8pm at ClampArt in New York City, the exhibit will be on view until December 17th.
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Tags: Call It Sleep, ClampArt, Marc Yankus
Posted 12:00 pm ET in Architecture, Fine Art, Personal, Photo Galleries by Darren Ching | No Comments »
September 23rd, 2011

All Photos © Inês d’Orey
Photographer Inês d’Orey was commissioned to photograph the interiors of the typical food and wine industries of the Douro region of northern Portugal. The Douro is more than terraces, stone and river. Amid the stunning landscapes of this region are industrial areas where the agricultural bounty is processed for local consumption and export. d’Orey captures the stoves where the Mirandela sausages are smoked, the assembly line of a cheese factory in Lamego and the storage rooms where hams mature. At Peso da Régua and Santa Marta de Penaguião, there are old and contemporary deposits, where the wine patiently ages.
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Tags: Douro region, Inês d'Orey, Portugal
Posted 12:05 pm ET in Architecture, Fine Art by Amber Terranova | 2 Comments »
August 24th, 2011
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| © Valentine Schmidt |
Valentine Schmidt’s series ‘Plunge- The Plight of the London Lido’ was taken during the winter months at four London lidos (outdoor public swimming pools). Schmidt focuses on the relationship between the floor of the pool and the surface of the water. This dynamic of architectural and natural elements is constantly in flux – affected equally by the changing seasons and by the human forces of social policy. Plunge uses the evocative qualities of the surfaces to speak to the history and demise of these beautiful and tranquil spaces. Full, or particularly when bereft of water, the Edwardian bathing spaces are honored in their various states of preservation and dereliction. Contact Zoe Bingham Fine Art for further information or see the entire collection.
-courtesy Zoe Bingham Fine Art.
Tags: London lidos, Valentine Schmidt, Zoe Bingham Fine Art
Posted 12:00 pm ET in Architecture, Fine Art by Amber Terranova | 1 Comment »
August 5th, 2011
All photos © Brian Ulrich. Courtesy Cleveland Museum of Art. Above: Black River Falls, WI, 2006.
Later this month the Cleveland Museum of Art will present the first major museum exhibition of work by contemporary photographer Brian Ulrich. “Copia—Retail, Thrift, and Dark Stores, 2001-11,” is a decade-long examination of the American consumer psyche. From the Latin word for “plenty,” the artist’s “Copia” series explores economic, cultural and political implications of commercialism and American consumer culture. The exhibition, featuring 60 photographs, will be on view from August 27, 2011 to January 16, 2012, in the museum’s east wing photography galleries.
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Tags: Brian Ulrich, Cleveland Museum of Art, Copia
Posted 12:00 pm ET in Architecture, Documentary, Fine Art by Amber Terranova | No Comments »
July 28th, 2011
All photos © Douglas Ljungkvist.
Douglas Ljungkvist first experienced Ocean Beach, New Jersey, in the early Nineties while visiting friends vacationing there. His first impression was that it looked like a work camp, mainly because of the enormous area with its small cottages, all the same size, laid out in a grid with streets made of sand.
Through this work, Ljungkvist takes on the role of visual historian and anthropologist as he works to capture the fast growing minority of cottages that have not yet shed its wood paneling and kitschy beach decorations for generic white sheetrock walls, flat screen TVs, and Wi-Fi Internet access. This may offer vacationers more comfort and conveniences but also sacrifices the strong sense of place and charm that Ljungkvist remembers. He has come here five times since that initial visit in the Nineties and plans to keep coming back.
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Tags: Douglas Ljungkvist, New Jersey, Ocean Beach, sand
Posted 12:00 pm ET in Architecture, Documentary, Fine Art by Amber Terranova | 5 Comments »