NewsletterNewsletterTo sign up, enter your email address here: NewsDaylight/CDS projection @ Golden BeltThanks to all who joined us at Golden Belt for a wonderful evening of multimedia projections featuring audio/visual presentations of contemporary photography projects. June 11, 7:30-9:30 p.m., Durham, NC 7:30 p.m., drinks, snacks, and conversation 8:30 p.m., Daylight Multimedia Screenings and a special slide presentation of applicants’ work from the 2010 Daylight/CDS Photo Awards! Lightstalkers Network For Global PhotographersLightstalkers is a network of uncoventional travelers. The core of its membership is made up of photographers, but also counted are journalists, aid workers, military and security professionals, and information techs, among others. Lightstalkers was created to help its members by serving as a central hub for a mobile, global crew of explorers and operators. Using the site as a virtual base camp, members can track others' movements and projects, exchange unique, real-time information, and assist each other with advice and feedback. For more information visit: www.lightstalkers.org/ Adoramapix.com Online Photographic ServicesAdoramaPix is all about high quality prints, attentive service and the best prices around. AdoramaPix started out as the 1 hour photo lab for Adorama Camera more than 10 years ago and quickly became the go-to lab for film processing in New York. An online presence since 2004, the AdoramaPix website was designed with the user in mind, offering easy ways for the professional and casual photographer alike to upload, organize and order the best quality digital photo prints at the best prices. For more information or to begin using Adorama's services visit: http://adoramapix.com NYC FotoWorks 2010Announcing the biggest professional networking event of the year... The NYCFotoWorks 2010 Portfolio Review Event is hosted at Sandbox Studios in Tribeca NYC. Reviewers include editors, creative directors, photo reps, art buyers and gallery representatives...all under one roof! For more details, please visit www.nycfotoworks.com The professional world of photography comes together for one weekend...be there! The Singapore International Photography FestivalThe Singapore International Photography Festival (SIPF) is the first event of its kind in Southeast Asia. This biennial festival strives to provide a platform for Southeast Asian artists to showcase their works alongside their international peers at various venues across Singapore. The three main festival components are the official exhibitions, workshops and a 2-day portfolio review session for 50 selected Southeast Asian photographers. For more information visit: http://www.sipf.com.sg/web/ |
Night Vision, Lynn SavillePost No Bills, 1999 Written by Minny Lee
“From his photographs, he learned that the appearance of the world was richer and less simple than his mind would have guessed. He discovered that his pictures could reveal not only the clarity but the obscurity of things, and that these mysterious and evasive images could also, in their own terms, seem ordered and meaningful.”
- John Szarkowski from The Photographer's Eye North Carolina-born and New York-based photographer, Lynn Saville, is a night photographer. Saville prefers to photograph at twilight and dusk, the transitional time between day and night. If photography is an exchange of a secret between the photographer and the subject, Saville's exchange of secrets is with places often overlooked by the majority of people: driveways, barns, walkways, benches, narrow streets, garages, warehouses, and buildings with the sky as a crescendo. Things that are almost invisible during the day get their own shape and place in Saville's photographs. Saville's night vision eschews the mundane normality of the day. Saville's black and white night photographs are gathered in Saville's first book, "Acquainted with the Night" (Rizzoli, 1997). Photos taken in various cities around the world are accompanied by selection of poems. Using black and white, Saville photographed some of the iconic buildings in New York City like the Brooklyn Bridge, Rockefeller Center, and the New York Public Library. Influenced by her childhood in Durham, North Carolina, Saville also photographed suburban landscapes of barns, trees and backyard scenes. All the photos have a poetic and melancholic quality. Saville exposes her films in order to enhance details for both shadows and highlights and she develops the prints herself to ensure perfection. The result is a vast range of tonalities. Saville's focus shifted to industrial places and places on the brink when she shifted to color photography several years ago. Building structures, bridges, archways, metal structures, deserted factories, narrow streets, signs, and nature within the cityscape are her visual elements. Many of these places are undergoing change and Saville feels an almost urgency to photograph them before they disappear. Saville's color photographs are published in her second book, "Night/Shift" (Random House/The Monacelli Press, 2009). This book showcases her love affair with New York City and the surrounding areas. Most of the photos do not include human subjects thus creating a feeling of a deserted and abandoned arena. Even when people walk into the frame, they are dark and blurry. In Saville's photographs, there is a balance between the seen and unseen and the clear and obscure. Mysteries and stories exist. Pictures are titled after the names of the streets and neighborhoods leaving the viewer with room to imagine the stories of each locale. Saville transforms the complex and busy cityscape into a calm and quiet – almost meditative – nightscape.
Ed’s Barn, 1998
You are famous for your
night photography. Why do you have such an affinity for the nighttime? You photograph from high vantage points many times like from a building
roof.
Rockefeller Center, 1993 What are the childhood
memories that have affected your photography? Awnings and Light, Rialto Bridge, 2001 Your major was not
photography at Duke University. How did you start photography? How did the experience at Pratt affect your photography?
Riverside Park Fog, 1995
Your black
and white photographs have very good tonal ranges and they are well printed.
Needless to say it is important to get a proper exposure at the time of
shooting. What is your know-how from exposure to printing to get your beautiful
prints?
Long Island City, 2007
You have been working
with color for few years. What are the differences between working with black
and white versus color?
Pepsi Cola Sign, 2008 You teach a “New York at Twilight” workshop at ICP and NYU. How did you start and what is it about? I invented the “New York at Twilight” workshop 5 or 6 years ago. At ICP, it is a 5-week course and at NYU, it is an 8-week course. We go photographing around different parts of New York and students show their work in class for critiques. Most time students use tripod with long exposures and they seem to quickly learn the techniques of overcoming the problems like noise and flare. The curriculum consists of more outings than class time. I ask students to bring small prints so we can look at them on locations. If it is too bright during twilight – early part of the evening – then we can go to a café and look at the photos. People teach each other. I like the connection to the students and I formed some nice long-term friendships to some of my students. It is really nice to have a connection to a group of photography-oriented people. I find it very enriching. In the summer, students come from different states and countries, age range from teens to 70s. It is a great experience for me to meet with this diverse group of people and get to know them.
Mike & Cathy, 2008 You published a photography book with a selection of poems by your poet husband. How was the process of making the book? My first book is called “Acquainted with the Night” (Rizzoli, 1997). I had an exhibition at the Columbia School of Architecture and through the curator I was introduced to an editor at Rizzoli. I presented a book proposal and soon after I got a contract. When I went to see the editor for the first time, he asked about my husband. I told him that my husband is a poet. The editor suggested doing a book with selections of poems made by my husband. He said, “Night photographs in black and white have a feeling of meditation so poems would suit well with your photographs.” I called my husband from the editor’s office and he gladly accepted the proposal. We really had a good time doing it. One of the best parts was sequencing the pictures. I printed images in 4”x6” size. I have a whole lot of prints and we just didn’t have enough space in the apartment. So we decided to go away for a romantic weekend. We were lucky because they gave us a room with two big beds with a white cover on them. We put the ‘Do not disturb’ sign on the door and started laying out these little pictures all around the beds. The best way to sequence was looking at pictures upside down. Shapes went together and pictures didn’t need to be sequenced by place. We decided to do it in visual and it really worked well. My husband reads a lot and he has an amazing memory and he loves poetry. He was very quick on selecting poems to accompany my pictures. We didn’t want the picture to illustrate the poem or the poem to be a verbal version of the picture. We wanted it to be conversational. It wasn’t one to one. A lot of pictures don’t have poems by them.
Central Park Trees, 2008 Your photographs were exhibited as part of the Public Art Program in 2006 and 2007. Public art has a concept of offering art in public space so that the public can enjoy the art at no cost. In New York City, the MTA offers public art through its program called MTA Arts for Transit. One day, the curator at MTA Arts for Transit called me. He honored me by requesting a proposal for specific subway stations. I was stationed at Bryant Park Station because I already had a lot of photographs from the area. Images were printed on transparent material called Duratrans and placed with backlit lighting. Seven of my images were exhibited for 1 ½ year as lightbox installations. It was at least 6 feet tall. I love the experience working on public art because tons of people walk by there. I met people I’ve never met before. Red Rock West, 2002 In 2007, you had two exhibitions in museums. How were the exhibitions at museums different from the exhibitions at galleries? It was a very different experience from galleries. There was a long lead-time like a year or two. In 2007, I had an exhibition at the Pensacola Art Museum in Pensacola, Florida and the Mint Museum in Charlotte, North Carolina. The Mint Museum is well-respected museum and after me, William Eggleston’s exhibition was scheduled. The Mint Museum showed my work before the Pensacola Art Museum. After Pensacola, the show traveled to Cleveland and then to Montgomery. Museums don’t sell photos. There are a lot of educational outreach effects in museums I found very exciting. They asked me to address to docents and they were very sophisticated. I was impressed by their effort to connect to the public. Museums hold pictures for a longer time. Museums also have bigger spaces in general so I was able to exhibit bigger sizes in more complete series. I showed 38 photos in 20”x24” at Pensacola.
Red Hook, 2008
Your second
monograph of color photography entitled "Night/Shift" was published
in this May. What is the central theme of the book and what compelled you
Number 39, 2006
To learn more about Lynn Saville’s works, visit her website at www.lynnsaville.com.
Lynn Saville’s color work Night/Shift will be exhibited at following venues: Yancey Richardson Gallery at 535 West 22nd Street 3rd Fl., NY, NY (July 9 - August 28, 2009) Gallery Kayafas at 450 Harrison Avenue, #37, Boston, MA (September 10 - October 17, 2009) - opening & book signing on September 12th - book signing on the occasion of the “First Friday” on October 2nd Kopeikin Gallery at 8810 Melrose Avenue, West Hollywood, CA (Dates to be determined)
All images © Lynn Saville. B&W images are all Gelatin Silver Prints and color images are all C-Prints.
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