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Archive for the ‘newspapers’ Category

NY Times Readers Picture the Recession

Thursday, April 2nd, 2009

Today’s edition of the online New York Times features “Picturing the Recession: An Interactive Slideshow of Readers Photos” a presentation that attempts to show in images, the effect of the recession on the readers of the paper. The slideshows are broken down into categories, family, business, home, work, transportation, and sacrifice, and the truth is that some of photography struck me as being surprisingly good– much better than one would expect in a feature of this type. For example, this from Times reader Ben DeFlorio:

 

bendeflorio

 

Cutting your own hair is a great way to save, and a nice art project. If you like Ben’s photography you can find more of it here:
QOOP.com where Ben has his stock photography.

 

Here is an image from Tom Jenz

 

jenz You can see more of Tom’s professional work here..

 

There is this from Shawney Cohen in Canada:

 

tawney We tracked down Shawney on this comedy website where it is disclosed that Cohen “is allergic to most types of metal, but not even one type of wood.”Great stuff, and who needs a resume to be a journalist.

 

Andy Cook contributed an image. You can see his work at Andy Cook Photography.

 

Photographers need all the help they can get these days, and even if the Times wants you to think that these are snapshots from average readers, here at 100eyes we want to help out!

 

Joe Josephs had a great shot and you can buy his book on Central Park from Blurb Books.

 

Andrea Girolamo was laid off from “Kitchen and Bath Design News” and contributed a nice image of her now empty workplace.

 

There is Joe Forte who has a classic image from Detroit, showing a man camping by an auto plant. And one from artist David Schalliol whose website I thought pretty much says it all–photography and sociology are both priced at fifty cents.

 

AP Photographer Groll at Nastasha Richardson Funeral

Monday, March 23rd, 2009

Some captivating  images have been made by photographer Mike Groll at actress Nastasha Richardson’s funeral in Millbrook, NY, after the tragic ski accident that claimed her life last week in Quebec.    The stark images of the simple traditional Irish funeral, shot with a long lens, look as though  that could have been framed by a cinematographer.   Vanessa Redgrave and Nastasha’s husband Liam  Neeson walk across the top of a cemetery hill,   with Redgrave walking ahead and looking back at Neeson, in a posture that Shakespeare might have conjured up, with lighting that Nestor Alemandros would have appreciated.

Here, where life apparently imitates art, or perhaps meets it,  the lens of photographer Groll, a photographer from Albany,  NY, brings us a powerful image,  especially as seen in the cropped version  at the close of a slideshow on the Huffington Post photo page. Redgrave’s mournful  gaze brings back memories of Jackie Kennedy as she stood in 1963 draped in a veil, in Washington, DC under the distant and unforgiving eye of hundreds of news photographers.

You can see the uncropped version here. (ed,  Since this item was published the Guardian site has also cropped the image.)

Iconic images like this one have a life of their own, and I wonder if a cinematographer in Hollwood has made a mental note of the tableaux, to perhaps utilize in a future case, of art imitating life imitating art? Or is there really no distinction between the two?