W. o’ W.: Nobuyoshi Araki

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…from his statement at the selection meeting for the Canon New Cosmos Award Grand Prize:

“Looking at the entries made me think that photography might be finished.

Overall, I didn’t feel that there was much love for or homage to the subjects. Photographs shouldn’t project your own image, they should pay homage to the subject. There didn’t seem to be any identification with the subjects, and I wondered why the subjects hadn’t been depicted more beautifully.

The raw emotions of the artists don’t come across in the photographs. It’s as though the sweaty relationship between photographers and subjects has disappeared. The pictures aren’t even cool. They feel a bit a cold, a bit dry.

I think all this is a result of the shift to digital photography. Many of the entries highlight the way digital photography has changed how people take pictures. In the film era, the camera was so close to the photographer’s face that it almost became an eye. But the digital cameras of today are nothing more than objects. So when I said “finished,” I meant that with the world moving to digital, photographic expression as our generation knew it is finished.

Nevertheless, this might not be something to feel sad about. This new era has arrived, and it might be what the New Cosmos of Photography had always been aiming for. Perhaps these cold and dry pictures will get hotter in the future.”

http://www.canon.com/scsa/newcosmos/interview/2008/masanori_hata/index.html

Happy Birthday, Ornette Coleman!

Ornette Coleman Jazz

Born in 1930.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5Sq9PE-2JVA

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8CoPGDfMWFc

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WhXlwdkcLc4

W. o’ W.: Matt Shipp

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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sO5d3y1uJ9Q

W. o’ W.: “Charles Carson!”

“The business of life is the acquisition of memories; in the end that’s all there is.”

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W. o’ W.: Mark Steinmetz (examples included)

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“It’s important to be cultivated. In my opinion, reading and considering great literature is the best way to do this, but there are many ways to deepen your understandings and your capacity to feel and notice. If you are cultivating yourself, the chances are greater that the work you end up doing will be worth doing as far as others are concerned. It’s best not to ask how your work will be received by the world or how it might boost your reputation. Just stay close to your own guidance and see what comes. Be authentic and natural – it sounds easy enough but it actually takes some discipline and courage.”

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W. o’ W.: Dick Cavett

 

This is for you. (You know who you are.)

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“Depression is epidemic because it’s still so undiagnosed. And even my analyst made the mistake of saying to me — after I’d told him I wished he knew for a minute what my depression felt like — he said, ‘Oh, that’s all right, I was pretty low when my dad died.’ I sat up and said, ‘You think grief is even close to this?’ He apologized.”

 

 

 

W. o’ W.: Wynton

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“I believe that there’s a lot of what I call root American music, and root American musics are all joined together. Those are the blues, gospel, the American popular song, what we call country and western, and bluegrass. Sometimes bluegrass and country western are lumped together, but the two are different. They come out of two kind of different feelings of the same tradition, so I feel that all of those root tributaries feed into jazz. You find jazz musicians collaborating with all musicians. Louis Armstrong inspired Hoagy Carmichael when he was a kid in Chicago, and he gave great readings of the American popular song. Willie Nelson made a great recording singing songs like “Stardust,” and “Stardust” is written by Hoagy Carmichael, who Louis Armstrong spent his birthday party [with at] the Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles. So we could go on through the bloodlines. Eric Clapton comes from that whole kind of Anglo-Celtic relationship that all Afro-Americans have, that when people use to hear spirituals in the 19th century they’d say it sounded like Irish music to them. When August Wilson, who’s the preeminent Afro-American playwright, passed away, I played at his funeral. He requested that I play “Danny Boy” and that I learn the words. It’s all of these interesting relationships we all have. Our bloodlines are all tied into roots, but when the music becomes a product then all of the segregation and ignorance comes into it, because what it takes to make something is very different than what it takes to sell it. Many times you’re selling an image and other things that have absolutely nothing to do with what it took to make. That’s what I strive for with every collaboration I do; we meet each other on a very human level. We’re not coming together just to make products, we coming together just to make music.”

http://www.readthehorn.com/lifestyle/music/84716/a_conversation_with_wynton_marsalis

More of a Link Than an Actual Post

“You have to focus on what you are doing, not just as a photographer, but as a human being.”

gemini

http://erickimphotography.com/blog/2012/08/27/10-things-anders-petersen-can-teach-you-about-street-photography/

There is something for everyone in this text.

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The following link is also in the text, but here it is anyway: http://vimeo.com/34125446

W. o’ W.: William S. Burroughs

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“The word ‘should’ should never arise.” http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3TC6V6D8yUs

Lee Tanner, 1931-2013

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“It’s been disappointing to find that even some of the best candid photographers set up some of their pictures. “But then again, I take artistic liberties after the fact in the darkroom.”