Your Northern California source for fine-arts printing, digital imaging, and photography mentoring and tutoring

Tag Cloud
a day in the life abandoned places abstract activism alaska alchemy altered realitiy alternative process apes architecture atmosphere autumn backyard photography bad photography bblack and white beards beauty black and white bob dylan business California camera accesories car windows celebrity chicago chipmunks christmas city civil liberties clock collaboration collections color competition conceptual photography contemporary figure photography contemporary photography contemporary portrait photography creativity advice creepy cropped depth of field destruction disassemble do it yourself documentary dogs dollhouse doorway double exposure educational endangered species environment essays everyday exhibitng your work fabric facedowns falll fantasy female photographers film film versus digital food photography form gesture graphic henri cartier-bresson houses humor inspiration interactive art ipad photography iphone john baldessari just for fun kodak landscape photography large format lens lighter side lighting long exposure macro mechanics memories monkey movement mundane musicians mysterious nasa national geographic nature nature videos new york night sky numbers occupy movement ocean octopus oxymoron painting vs photography participatory patterns people photo technology photoblog photogram photographers block photojournalism pinhole camera pink places polariods portraits public art red retrospective rights san francisco seasons self portrait series simple photo exercises smoke space sponge bob sports star wars street photography streetview sunprints the mundane the nude the sublime things time lapse tintype tokyo tourist snapshots tutorial urban landscape video tutorial videos wet plate wildlife winter world war 2 wtf xray yosemite youth
Lauren's Galleries

News, Views & Clues on today's photography by Lauren Odell Usher

Photography Now

Entries in everyday (3)

Friday
Nov042011

Paul Graham: "Photography is Easy; Photography is Difficult."

It’s so easy it’s ridiculous. It’s so easy that I can’t even begin – I just don’t know where to start. After all, it’s just looking at things. We all do that. It’s simply a way of recording what you see – point the camera at it, and press a button. How hard is that? And what’s more, in this digital age, its free – doesn’t even cost you the price of film. It’s so simple and basic, it’s ridiculous.

It’s so difficult because it’s everywhere, every place, all the time, even right now. It’s the view of this pen in my hand as I write this, it’s an image of your hands holding this book, Drift your consciousness up and out of this text and see: it’s right there, across the room – there… and there. Then it’s gone. You didn’t photograph it, because you didn’t think it was worth it. And now it’s too late, that moment has evaporated. But another one has arrived, instantly. Now. Because life is flowing through and around us, rushing onwards and onwards, in every direction.

But if it’s everywhere and all the time, and so easy to make, then what’s of value? which pictures matter? Is it the hard won photograph, knowing, controlled, previsualised? Yes. Or are those contrived, dry and belabored? Sometimes. Is it the offhand snapshot made on a whim. For sure. Or is that just a lucky observation, some random moment caught by chance? Maybe. Is it an intuitive expression of liquid intelligence? Exactly. Or the distillation of years of looking seeing thinking photography. Definitely.

more paulgrahamarchive.com

Wednesday
Aug242011

Erin Hanson is a Recovering Lazyholic

I appreciate the humor of Erin Hanson's work. She has found a unique way to approach life and art and all that comes in between. She introduces the work as somewhat of a hobby and a life tool, but it feels as though it is just a part of who she is. I am jealous of her idea to use art as a functional form of life. I have tried to get myself to do that time and again and have hardly succeeded. Perhaps her website is the push I needed.

more recoveringlazyholic.com

Tuesday
Aug232011

My Home is Where My Tipi Sits (Crow Country)

The first solo exhibition in a museum for Wendy Red Star shows the collection and documentation of her native home in a Crow Indian Reservation near Billings, MT. This series becomes more about patterns in culture and comfort in the artist's everyday surroundings.

This exhibition is on display at the Missoula Art Museum.

more article artdaily.org