Re: Hello New York

From: steves ^lt;sgshiya@redshift.com>
Date: 05/03/04-08:12:50 AM Z
Message-id: <002901c43118$babde600$2b04e4d8@am.sony.com>

A must see is the International Photography Center. They offer my book
"Carmel-A Timeless Place" so if you could ask for it, look at it and thank
them for having it to see . . . even if you don't buy it that would help :)

Steve Shapiro

P.S. They have some really neat stuff in the gift shop. Not just unusual
frames, but camera cases and other great things. Almost every photo book in
print, is offered there, too.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Marty Wechselblatt" <ksmw@earthlink.net>
To: <alt-photo-process-l@sask.usask.ca>; <alt-photo-process-l@sask.usask.ca>
Sent: Monday, May 03, 2004 3:17 PM
Subject: Re: Hello New York

> Hi Iva,
>
> I'd add to Judy's great list the Prints and Photographs Study Room, Room
> 308, of the the Public Library, main branch, 5th Ave and 42 St.
>
> Marty
>
> > [Original Message]
> > From: Judy Seigel <jseigel@panix.com>
> > To: <alt-photo-process-l@sask.usask.ca>
> > Date: 5/3/2004 2:37:35 PM
> > Subject: Re: Hello New York
> >
> >
> >
> > On Sun, 2 May 2004, lva wrote:
> >
> > > In the end of June, I will be in New York for a few days. For arts
sake
> > > only.
> > >
> > > Any idea where I could see:
> > >
> > > * great gum prints (special interest: Steichen, Demachy, Kaesebier,
> > > actually most of the photographers published in "Camera Work")
> >
> >
> > Hi Iva,
> >
> > In the normal course of events you could visit the permanent collection
of
> > the Museum of Modern Art and see vintage prints of great interest, but
the
> > Modern is undergoing another aggrandizement and is operating temporarily
> > in Queens... I don't know what if any of their permanent collection is
on
> > view there, but presumably they have a web site which might reveal it.
> >
> > Then of course the Metropolitan Museum has a good vintage collection,
and
> > the corridor leading to their print rooms always has works of interest,
> > regardless of what the special shows are -- sometimes prints, sometimes
> > photographs, even last year some early 19th century processes. Again,
you
> > can probably access their calendar by web site, but they wouldn't
mention
> > individual prints.
> >
> > My suggestion in any event would be forget any particular list -- you
can
> > do more for your art and your soul by visiting the medieval, Egyptian,
> > Persian, Indian, Greek, Asian, etc. etc. rooms, corridors, collections,
> > iron work, carvings, tapestries, porcelains, etc. etc. etc. at the
> > Metropolitan Museum than a thousand Ansel Adams could do for you.
> >
> > New York is not an "alternative photography" town, as I've said in these
> > pages many times, and if there's a way to see a Demachy here I'd sure
like
> > to know about it... (though your view of New York is immensely
flattering.
> > I'll try to keep it in mind !)
> >
> > There's also the fact that such shows as there are in private galleries
> > don't generally send their announcements until a week or two in advance,
> > so we wouldn't know now of something that might be coming up in your
time
> > frame... However, there is a website of show announcements, used to be
> > "Photography in New York," now I think just "Photography." And I do
> > happen to have two announcements for shows that will be on then:
> >
> > "Object/Place/Process" will be on May 14 to July 17 at Sepia
> > International, 148 West 24 th St. I don't know about the other three
> > artists in the 4-person show, but Sookang Kim, a former student of mine,
> > does marvelous gum prints -- as she did from her very first one. That
was
> > about 6 years ago, so I figure she's gotten even greater in the interim.
> >
> > One other show I plan to visit from seeing the announcement image is
Luis
> > Gonzalez Palma at Robert Mann Gallery, 210 11th Ave. I know the name,
but
> > little more about his work and the announcement does not tell us
anything
> > so vulgar as the process of the print shown. But it's brown, and out of
> > the ordinary... and Mann is one of the more interesting photo galleries
> > these days. (And both these galleries are in the trendy new Chelsea art
> > district, where almost every doorway has another new gallery.)
> >
> > As for Camera Work, if you take a side trip to Philadelphia (a
relatively
> > short but relatively expensive train ride) you can see a show that
sounds
> > fascinating -- some 64 plates from Stieglitz's "Camera Work" are in a
> > travelling show that will be at the Philadelphia Art Alliance from May
> > until August.
> >
> > But remember that most galleries in NYC are closed Sunday & Monday...
> > and one more thing: I absolutely guarantee, there is nothing about an
> > "Ansel Adams" seen on the wall you couldn't get from seeing it in a
> > book... anywhere.
> >
> > cheers,
> >
> > Judy
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > >
> > > * any other outstanding works in alternative photography
> > >
> > > * original prints by Ansel Adams
> > >
> > > * paintings by Odd Nerdrum (additionally to the works Forum Gallery
will
> > > exhibit in June)
> > >
> > > * paintings by Gerhard Richter
> > >
> > > * anything by Bill Viola
> > >
> > > * shadow paintings and movies by Andy Warhol
> > >
> > > Greetings
> > >
> > > Brahma
> > >
>
>
>
Received on Mon May 3 20:08:48 2004

This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.8 : 06/04/04-01:20:52 PM Z CST