6.30.2011

Microgrant Photographer 3: Daniela Serna

Age: 19
Location: Bello, Colombia
Request: Refurbished Nikon d3100 kit
Grant Status: $544 of $544 raised (100%)
Donate here

Daniela's statement: I was born in Medellín. I am 19 years old and currently live with my parents and my brother. I study visual arts at the University of Antioquia and belong to a research group named Mediators in Education at the Museum of Modern Art of Medellín where for two years I have also worked as a guide and taught workshops.

During my six semesters at the university I've had great interest in photography as a medium. At first I used photography only as a tool to record processes, but I have realized the many possibilities of the photographic image.

I've always had a great interest in books, not only for their literary content, but also as aesthetic objects. My current project focuses on documenting the objects or written notes that I find inside used books. What is found in a book speaks of the people who owned them, how they read them and the different ways they inhabited and transformed them.

Portfolio












6.29.2011

5: Kevin McCollister


Kevin McCollister
Man With Infected Nose
Los Angeles, CA 2010

6.28.2011

f100: Cole Caswell, CJ Heyliger, Caleb Cole, Susan Worsham

© CJ Heyliger, Wreckage, Edison, NJ, 2010, from the series "Dream of Pines"

fototazo has asked a group of 50 curators, gallery owners, blog writers, photographers, academics and others actively engaged in photography to pick two photographers that deserve (more) recognition - the underknown, the under-respected as well as not-appreciated-enough favorites. A little more information on the project is available in the first post in the series here.

We began the series with responses from Nicholas NixonMatt JohnstonBlake AndrewsJohn Edwin MasonAline SmithsonColin PantallMichael WernerLiza FetissovaLaurence Salzmann, Bryan Formhals, Richard Mosse, Shane Lavalette, Amy Stein, Amani Willett, Wayne Ford and S. Billie Mandle.

Today we continue with responses from Leslie K. Brown and Gordon Stettinius

Respondent: Leslie K. Brown is an independent curator and educator pursuing her Ph.D. in art history at Boston University. A former curator at the Photographic Resource Center in Boston, she holds an M.A. from the University of Texas at Austin. Besides working at and guest curating for several museums, Brown has also taught at the Art Institute of Boston, BU and the Rhode Island School of Design and regularly serves as an invited guest critic, juror, reviewer and lecturer. Her recent projects include a solo exhibition of Daniel Ranalli’s work and an essay for photographer Sandi Haber Fifield’s book, Between Planting and Picking. Currently living in Cambridge, MA, she is the product of a Kodak family.

SelectionsCole Caswell and CJ Heyliger. Exploring the boundaries of landscape—literally, geographically, and metaphorically—both photographers are graduates of the Art Institute of Boston. Caswell (Peaks Island, ME) earned an interdisciplinary MFA from Maine College of Art and is an adjunct instructor and active collaborator with the Geographic Observatory and WE ARE X [wax]; Heyliger (Somerville, MA) teaches at AIB and currently works as an assistant for Abelardo Morell and Nicholas Nixon.

In addition to their personal work seen here, together with Bryan Graf, Caswell and Heyliger maintain the blog Swamp Recordings as an archive of their collective ramblings in the wetlands of the east coast and in preparation for their upcoming multi-media installation and interactive/inhabited studio at Bodega in Philadelphia next spring. Jointly, they have also recently launched the publishing venture Sun System.

© Cole Caswell, reservoir, 2011, from the series "Fallen Volume #2"

RespondentGordon Stettinius has been exhibited nationally and internationally, his photography can be found in both private and public collections, and he is a winner of the 2009 Theresa Pollak award for Excellence in the Arts. Stettinius taught at Virginia Commonwealth University until 2009 when he decided to take some time away for teaching to start an independent publishing company, Candela Books.

Selections: Caleb Cole and Susan Worsham

© Caleb Cole, Woman Looking In, 2008, from the series "Other People's Clothes"

Caleb Cole: The first work of his that I was drawn to was "Other People's Clothes," a body of work that involves Caleb finding or borrowing an outfit or a piece of clothing. He then will construct a scenario with himself as subject. It sounds simple, and maybe it is, but he does a brilliant job avoiding campy self-portraiture by adding vulnerability with trace amounts of melodrama. It is hysterical and the more I find myself considering photographers and their very meaningful projects from all over the globe, the more I need work like this to pick myself up again.

Susan Worsham: There is a resonance in Susan's work that I take in on a level just beneath comprehension. Her work is autobiographical in a way. She writes of family and loss but then photographs the vibrations of these experiences and somehow manages to bring together constructed scenes and familiar people, intimate scenes, but suggests those people and those times that she misses the most. As if the soup will always remember the garden. To see it unfold is subtle and persuasive.

© Susan Worsham, Untitled, from the series "Some Fox Trails in Virginia"

6.25.2011

4: Kevin Thrasher


Kevin Thrasher
Patched Brick Wall
2011

6.23.2011

f100 Martin Brink, Darcy Padilla, Hannah Smith Allen, Anna Shteynshleyger

© Martin Brink, from the series "Trash in Grass"

fototazo has asked a group of 50 curators, gallery owners, blog writers, photographers, academics and others actively engaged in photography to pick two photographers that deserve (more) recognition - the underknown, the under-respected as well as not-appreciated-enough favorites. A little more information on the project is available in the first post in the series here.

We began the series with responses from Nicholas NixonMatt JohnstonBlake AndrewsJohn Edwin MasonAline SmithsonColin PantallMichael WernerLiza FetissovaLaurence Salzmann, Bryan Formhals, Richard Mosse, Shane Lavalette, Amy Stein and Amani Willett.

Today we continue with responses from Wayne Ford and S. Billie Mandle.

Respondent: Wayne Ford is an award winning designer and art director who has created numerous designs for business, consumer and customer magazines, including The Observer color supplement, along with annual reports, books, exhibition catalogues and corporate branding projects, in both print and digital media. A professional and personal interest in photography has allowed him to travel extensively, and contribute to a number of magazines on the subject, as well as being a collector of photography and photographic books and regularly blogging about the photography that he is viewing. He is an awarded member of D&AD and a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts.

Selections: Martin Brink and Darcy Padilla

Martin Brink: "To me, the things that are beautiful and interesting in real life might not be the most interesting to photograph so I’m drawn to subjects that might often be overlooked," remarks Swedish photographer Martin Brink, who documents what many of us take for granted in his various series, including "The Daily Round" and "Walks." These subtle images combine, not to present a dramatic look at modern life, but a memorable look at the everyday that we so often take for granted and barely register in our hectic daily schedules, but which in many ways is more powerful and interesting than the beautiful and picturesque.

© Darcy Padilla, from "The Julie Project"

Darcy Padilla: On the February 28th, 1993, American photojournalist Darcy Padilla first met Julie Baird in the lobby of the Ambassador Hotel in San Francisco. She lived in a neighborhood of soup kitchens and cheap rooms, with Jack the father of her first child, through whom she had contracted AIDS. Several months after Padilla first met Baird, she left Jack in a bid to break away from a life of drug taking. From this initial meeting, Padilla began to document Baird’s "complex story of multiple homes, AIDS, drug abuse, abusive relationships, poverty, births, deaths, loss and reunion,"  following Baird from the backstreets of San Francisco to the backwoods of Alaska, in "The Julie Project," an emotionally powerful and sensitive series spanning 18 years.

Respondent: S. Billie Mandle has a BA in Biology and English from Williams College and an MFA from the Massachusetts College of Art and Design. She was a 2010 NYFA Fellow in photography and teaches at the Massachusetts College of Art and Design and the International Center of Photography. She lives in Brooklyn and Boston.

Selections: Hannah Smith Allen and Anna Shteynshleyger

Hannah Smith Allen: She is a photographer I know in Brooklyn whose work explores the intersection of history and representation. She is amazingly thoughtful and creative. Her images are richly layered - describing and transforming the worlds she explores.

© Hannah Smith Allen, Fired Bullets from the series "Battle Grounds" (in progress)

Anna Shteynshleyger: A photographer whose work I greatly admire - especially her two series "City of Destiny" and "Siberia."

© Anna Shteynshleyger, Axe, from the series "City of Destiny"

6.22.2011

3: Dina Litovsky


Dina Litovsky
Bride (from the ongoing series Bachelorette)
March 2011

6.21.2011

f100: Steven Ahlgren, Jo Ann Walters, Hin Chua, Daniel Traub

© Steven Ahlgren, Commercial Bank, Dultuh, MN

fototazo has asked a group of 50 curators, gallery owners, blog writers, photographers, academics and others actively engaged in photography to pick two photographers that deserve (more) recognition - the underknown, the under-respected as well as not-appreciated-enough favorites. A little more information on the project is available in the first post in the series here.

We began the series with responses from Nicholas NixonMatt JohnstonBlake AndrewsJohn Edwin MasonAline SmithsonColin PantallMichael WernerLiza FetissovaLaurence Salzmann, Bryan Formhals, Richard Mosse and Shane Lavalette.

Today we continue with responses from Amy Stein and Amani Willett

Respondent: Amy Stein is a photographer, teacher and curator based in New York City. Her work explores our evolving isolation from community, culture and the environment. She has been exhibited nationally and internationally and her work is featured in many private and public collections. In 2006, she was a winner of the Saatchi Gallery/Guardian Prize for her Domesticated series. In 2007, she was named one of the top fifteen emerging photographers in the world by American Photo magazine and she won the Critical Mass Book Award. Her first book, Domesticated, was released in 2008. It won the best book award at the 2008 New York Photo Festival.

Selections: Steven Ahlgren and Jo Ann Walters. Amy Stein interviews Steven Ahlgren on her blog here and Jo Ann Walters here

© Jo Ann Walters

Respondent: Amani Willett was featured in the book Street Photography Now and is a member of the iN-PUBLiC collective of street photographers. His photographs have also been included in the books ReGeneration: Telling Stories From Our Twenties and Dawn of the 21st Century: The Millennium Photo Project. He has exhibited at the Museum of Modern Art in New York and the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston among many other places. He was interviewed in January 2011 on fototazo here.

Selections: Hin Chua and Daniel Traub

Hin Chua
Too often, photographic projects suffer from either a lack of concept or uninteresting images.  Hin Chua's pictures get both parts right in equal measure.  In his project "After the Fall," Hin spent three years exploring environments in transition - a journey which took him through the outskirts of 40 cities - the result of which is a stunning body of photographs which examine the areas where man meets nature.

© Hin Chua. From the series "After the Fall"

Daniel Traub

© Daniel Traub

6.20.2011

Notes from Oscar Ulloa, First Microgrant Photographer


We received an email last night from Oscar Ulloa, our first microgrant photographer, with a letter addressed to his donors and the first images from his new camera which was fully funded by the readers of fototazo. The new camera, he writes, "gives me the desire to take photos every day."

To learn more about our microgrant program, please read the about fototazo page. You can learn more about our current microgrant photographer Daniela Serna here.

His letter:

Dear Donors,

I am writing to express my deepest gratitude for your generosity and for what your contribution means to me for my academic and artistic future. It has been incredibly important for the realization of my personal work and for my development during the end of my time at the university during which I have invested all my effort and my interest as a visual artist in creating photographic images. The photograph, perhaps, is our common ground or the manner and language in which we will relate to each other beyond any cultural or geographical barrier.

Thank you very much.

Sincerely,
Oscar Eduardo Ulloa

A selection from the first photos taken with his new camera. This is the continuation of a project he discusses here.





6.18.2011

2: Khaled Hasan


Khaled Hasan
Acid Fatality, 12/11/2010

Dhaka, Bangladesh.
In January 2010, 23-year-old Nasrin’s husband attacked her with acid. He was not satisfied with the dowry her parents paid. After two years of marriage, he wanted more. Her mother, who sells rice cakes to earn a living, refused to pay more. Her husband beat her up till she fainted, and when she was unconscious he threw acid on her face, neck and hands.

6.17.2011

f100: Thomas Bangsted, Bryan Graf, Andrew Miksys, John Houck

© Thomas Bangsted, Fisherman's Wharf, 2009

fototazo has asked a group of 50 curators, gallery owners, blog writers, photographers, academics and others actively engaged in photography to pick two photographers that deserve (more) recognition - the underknown, the under-respected as well as not-appreciated-enough favorites. A little more information on the project is available in the first post in the series here.

We began the series with responses from Nicholas NixonMatt JohnstonBlake AndrewsJohn Edwin MasonAline SmithsonColin PantallMichael WernerLiza FetissovaLaurence Salzmann and Bryan Formhals. Today we continue with responses from Richard Mosse and Shane Lavalette.

RespondentRichard Mosse was born and grew up in Ireland and is now based in New York. He is driven by an ambivalence toward photography and a desire to revisit and even rewrite traumatic cultural histories. Mosse studied at Yale, Goldsmiths and the London Consortium. He was awarded a 2011 Guggenheim Fellowship and has exhibited extensively internationally.

SelectionsThomas Bangsted and Bryan Graf. Both are old friends. I've learned so much from each of them. I first met Thomas at Goldsmiths in 2004 and Bryan at Yale in 2006.

Thomas Bangsted
Thomas composited this tableau of pelicans [above] at a wharf in North Carolina from one hundred different 8x10 inch negatives, each one painstakingly drum scanned and worked over. The finished piece is a spectacular 80 x 126 inches and reminds me of a Gustav Le Gray composition. One of the strongest photographs I've ever encountered.

© Bryan Graf, from the series "Shot/Reverse Shot"

Bryan Graf
In his new series titled Shot/Reverse Shot (title taken from Jean-Luc Godard), Graf poses in shrubbery by night with a sheet of black and white fiber paper, which he then exposes with the flash of his Polaroid camera. In a single instant, this exchange of flash light results in two unique prints showing a mirror image of subject/object, mise en abyme. The work brings to mind Velazquez's Las Meninas and Foucault's meditation on it.

© Bryan Graf, from the series "Shot/Reverse Shot"

RespondentShane Lavalette is a photographer and the Founder, Publisher and Editor of Lay Flat, an independent publisher of limited edition photography books and multiples. He currently lives and works in Somerville, MA. His photographs have been shown widely, including national and international exhibitions. He was commissioned by the High Museum of Art to create a new body of work as part of the "Picturing the South" series, from which a selection of photographs will be exhibited in 2012.

SelectionsAndrew Miksys - Buses and John Houck - Crisis of Accumulation.

© Andrew Miksys, Bus Window #8, Lithuania 2002, from the series "Buses"


© John Houck, Sweep First in Front of Your Own Door, from the series "Crisis of Accumulation"

6.16.2011

Viktoria Sorochinski on Portraiture

© Hellen van Meene

fototazo has asked twelve photographers what makes a good portrait. This is the 12th and last in the series of their responses. The other responses in the series have come from Timothy ArchibaldCori Pepelnjak, Anastasia Cazabon, Margo Ovcharenko, Shen Wei, Lucas Foglia, Susan Worsham, Steve Davis, Elinor Carucci, Mark Powell and Jess T. Dugan.

Viktoria Sorochinski was born in the Ukraine in 1979, lived in Russia from 1982 to 1990, immigrated to Israel in 1990 where she received a high school diploma and finally immigrated to Canada in 1996 where she received a Bachelors of Fine Arts from Concordia University in 2006. Currently she lives and works in New York City where she received a Masters of Fine Arts in 2008 from New York University.

Since 2001 she has been participated in various group and solo exhibitions in Canada, the USA, France, Italy and China. She has been a finalist and winner of several international photography competitions and awards such as Magenta Flash Forward 2009 and 2010, PDN Photo Annual 2010 and 2011, J.M. Cameron Award 2010, WPGA Award 2010, Voies Off Arles 2010, IPA Award 2009 and 2010, ONWARD '10, Review Santa Fe 2010, Descubrimientos PHE 2011 and BluePrint Fellowship 2011. Additionally, her work has been published in many magazines, in print and online, worldwide including The New York Times, PDN and the British Journal of Photography.

© Robert Bergman
Viktoria Sorochinski: A great portrait for me is one that makes me feel or understand something about human beings, one that reveals a kind of "truth" that lies untouched in our unconscious. Something that cannot be expressed in words but only sensed, affecting the deepest layers of our psyche.

Portraits that capture my interest may be very different stylistically. The intimate, fragile and vulnerable portraits of Hellen van Meene, for example, have always intrigued me.

They are alive and breathless at the same time; her subjects are full of fears and idiosyncrasies, almost grotesque in their body language, but at the same time incredibly beautiful. They keep my eyes wondering.

I really admire Robert Bergman's portraits, which may be more conventional in terms of his approach to subjects; often straight forward head shots. However, his work has a kind of honesty and closeness that makes you almost feel that you know the person he captured, you may almost sense their lives.

Another kind of portrait that I'm interested in, and am exploring in my own work, is a psychological/narrative portrait. This kind of portrait becomes more than just a representation of someone's character: it has tension, internal conflict and it suggests a narrative. I like when a portrait has a sort of meditative quality to it, when there is something beyond the visible story. I'm interested in portraits that have a dialog between the subjects or even of a subject with himself, which triggers certain buttons in our unconscious that make us feel this invisible dialog and almost become part of it.

© Viktoria Sorochinski

6.15.2011

1: Shen Wei



Shen Wei
untitled self-portrait (Touch)
2010

fototazo Gallery launches

The fototazo Gallery launches today, June 15th, with an image from Shen Wei.

On Wednesdays and Saturdays we will be publishing a photograph to be added to the gallery.

The gallery project offers photographers the opportunity to share their work with an international readership. Gallery images are composed of a combination of community submissions and images chosen for the space by fototazo.

To submit your work for consideration please:

- format the image as an sRGB JPG, 750 pixels on the longer side at a resolution of 72ppi
- title the JPG with your name and the month in which you send the image (e.g. dianeArbusJune2011.jpg).
- include the title, date, caption information (if applicable) and your website address in the body of the email
- email the image to fototazo@gmail.com with "gallery submission" in the subject line

Submissions not adhering to these guidelines will not be considered for publishing.

Submissions are limited to one image per month per photographer. All images submitted will remain active in the selection pool indefinitely unless you specify otherwise. Photographers retain the copyright on submitted materials.

6.13.2011

f100: Jason Francisco, Kathleen Laraia McLaughlin, Alex Leme, Raoul Gatepin


© Kathleen Laraia McLaughlin, Petru and the Claie, Sarbi, Maramures, 1999

fototazo has asked a group of 50 curators, gallery owners, blog writers, photographers, academics and others actively engaged in photography to pick two photographers that deserve (more) recognition - the underknown, the under-respected as well as not-appreciated-enough favorites. A little more information on the project is available in the first post in the series here.

We began the series with responses from Nicholas NixonMatt JohnstonBlake AndrewsJohn Edwin MasonAline SmithsonColin PantallMichael Werner and Liza Fetissova. Today we continue with selections from Laurence Salzmann and Bryan Formhals.

Respondent: Laurence Salzmann is a Philadelphia-based documentary photographer and filmmaker. Among many other collections, his work is in the Philadelphia Museum of Art, International Center of Photography, George Pompidou Center in Paris, Brooklyn Museum of Art and Yale University. He is the recipient of a Fulbright Fellowship to Romania as well as a Pew Fellowship. His book "The Last Jews of Radauti" is available here.

Selections: Kathleen Laraia McLaughlin and Jason Francisco


© Jason Francisco

RespondentBryan Formhals is the Founder of LPV Magazine as well as a photographer and digital media consultant. He lives in Brooklyn.

Selections: Alex Leme and Raoul Gatepin

© Alex Leme, Peeking, 2010

© Raoul Gatepin, from the series Piramid

6.12.2011

fototazo Gallery Launch will be Wednesday June 15th

The first 100 submissions for the fototazo Gallery have been received and the gallery launch will be this Wednesday, June 15th.

On Wednesdays and Saturdays we will publish a submitted photograph in the gallery. The gallery project intends to establish an ongoing forum for the presentation of images of a high standard from across the photographic spectrum to our international community of readers which include blog writers, curators, photography academics, gallery owners and other photographers. Submissions for the gallery are rolling and submission guidelines can be found here.

6.10.2011

f100: Fee Hollmig, Anne Lass, Sergey Maximishin, Dmitry Sokolenko

© Fee Hollmig. From the series "Ich Bin Hier"

fototazo has asked a group of 50 curators, gallery owners, blog writers, photographers, academics and others actively engaged in photography to pick two photographers that deserve (more) recognition - the underknown, the under-respected as well as not-appreciated-enough favorites. A little more information on the project is available in the first post in the series here.

We began the series with responses from Nicholas Nixon, Matt Johnston, Blake Andrews, John Edwin Mason, Aline Smithson and Colin Pantall. Today we continue with responses from Michael Werner and Liza Fetissova.

Respondent: Michael Werner is a photographer and publishes the blogs Two Way Lens and The Truth of Beauty. He was selected for inclusion in "The Collector's Guide to Emerging Art Photography," published by Humble Arts Foundation, New York in 2009 and his work has been exhibited internationally.

Selections: Fee Hollmig and Anne Lass; both are Berlin-based photographers.

© Anne Lass Untitled (Barcelona 2011)

RespondentLiza Fetissova is Founder and Director of the Russiantearoom Gallery in Paris.

Selections: Sergey Maximishin and Dmitry Sokolenko

Sergey Maximishin is simply one of the best photojournalists; his work is much more that its initial presentation. He captures the very essence of Russia, he does what Gogol would do if he were a photographer.

© Sergey Maximishin, Theological College, 2008.

Dmitry Sokolenko uses photography that is fractal in nature to push abstract art to the next level; a new visual language is invented. He puts images into semantic fields. Every title is not random, it consists of the common knowledge between creator and spectator that is explored and whose essence is presented via the image. The resulting image is a quintessence of a phenomenon, and the image contains the totality of this semantic phenomena. Through Sokolenko images our world is recoded, like a Mendeleev's table.

© Dmitry Sokolenko, The Gift from the series "Zizou", 2006

6.09.2011

Interview: Elinor Carucci


Interviewed by phone in New York City on May 4th, 2011

New York City-based Elinor Carucci (b 1971) is an Israeli-American photographer. She won a Guggenheim Fellowship in 2002 and the NYFA Award in 2010. She was chosen by Photo District News as one of its "30 Under 30" in 2000 and won the International Center of Photography’s "Infinity Award" for Best Young Photographer in 2001.

She is currently working on a body of work about her children. Previous bodies of work include Closer which was published as a monograph in 2002 by Chronicle Books and republished in 2009 with a forward from Susan Kismaric. A second book entitled Diary of a Dancer was published by SteidlMack in 2005. Her work is included in the collections of The Museum of Modern Art in New York, The Jewish Museum (New York), the International Center of Photography, The Brooklyn Museum of Arts, The Houston Museum of Fine Arts, The Museum of Israeli Art in Ramat Gan, Israel, the Herzlia Museum of Contemporary Art and The Haifa Museum of Art.

In this interview, we have tried to add to the already extensive number of interviews with Carucci that exist online. Among the best of the many interviews are those with Rachel Been on Slideluck Potshow, the community interview with Matt Johnston on A Photo Student that features a selection of student questions and also two video interviews, one a film by Christian Klinger on amadelio and a second produced by artis in 2009. A Google search will turn up another dozen.

After reading through those interviews, we decided to focus this interview on areas of her life and work less covered previously: the role of Israeli culture in her work, questions about the images themselves that complement questions in previous interviews and also on her role as an educator.

THE ROLE OF ISRAELI CULTURE IN HER WORK

fototazo: Elinor, people often talk about your work in terms of intimacy, family and also your own life experience, but as I was looking through your images, it also seems to me your work is just as much about your culture. How much do you think your work is a reflection and commentary of being Israeli in terms of family dynamics, comfort with the body, parenting...

Elinor Carucci: Yes, when I started to take pictures, I didn't think about it at all, because I took for granted who I am, and who my family was, but especially after I moved to America, I realized that a lot of this is cultural. A lot of it is how, as you were just saying, how much more easier we are with nudity, and how intimacy is being expressed, especially among women in the Middle East. I realized that even though I wasn't intending to talk about Israeli culture, or Middle Eastern culture, my work ended up reflecting this culture because it's who I am and where I'm from.


f: Do you think you would be making the same images, or similar images, if you were still living in Israel full-time?

EC: Nope, no. I mean my work reflects my reality and today I have two children that were born and raised in America, they're Americans, and I'm photographing much more outside, so the New York streets [are] in my images, and also I'm a little different. So my life is different, and if my life is different, then my work is different.

f: Have you found a difference in how you're thought of as a photographer in Israel and in the US? And in the critical response you've received between the two countries?

EC: I think I have been better received in America. And I, even though I try to understand why it happened, I haven't figured it out...yet. Sixteen years here and I haven't figured it out! In America and in Europe my work gets a lot of attention, I have a lot of shows and good reviews, and in Israel it's been a struggle, I don’t know why.

f: Maybe it relates to the previous question about culture - that you have something to share in the U.S. and Europe that people are less familiar with that adds a charge to the work. Maybe in Israel, the world and life you show is something more common and the work is related to differently.

EC: I don't know. I mean I know that in Israel it's a smaller market, and the market is more conceptual. I definitely think some of it is trying to be seen as very sophisticated, and because we're a small country, maybe the art world wants to show that it's as good as America and Europe, and it's trying hard to be very conceptual, very sophisticated, and ends up being much colder.

It's coming from insecurity actually, so you see a lot of like, weird conceptual installations, and people think they're really cutting edge, and they will not accept work that has simplicity, and my work has...I don't know if it's simple, but it's straightforward. So it's seen less as like "fine art." But I'm trying not to give it a lot of thought, because it makes me angry.


QUESTIONS ON THE IMAGES

f: I would like to ask some questions about your work as well, starting with beauty, the body, and taking images. How important do you think your body and your beauty is to making images? Do you think you would be able to make, or be interested in making, the same images and statements with your work if you weren't so blessed?

EC: A. Thank you and B: My recent work, which you've just seen very little of on my website because I haven't showed it yet, I am not showing my body in a beautiful way at all - after pregnancy and the stretch marks and the sagging breasts, and all kinds of not really beautiful things. I think Closer was me in my twenties with a more beautiful body, but it's changing and my body's changing and I'm aging.

I mean, in my work, I'm trying to talk about many different things, and not all of it has to be beautiful, but, I have...and I don't think I'm beautiful at all, so...this question is funny to me! But I think the work is about the body and intimacy and the weaknesses and the flaws of the body, but I don’t know, I am who I am and the family that I am, so...


f: If you start with beauty, and then you show stretch marks and you show the passage of time, than maybe starting with beauty allows for tension in the images, that you see the change affecting beauty and that makes the images successful. Maybe if you started with a different body, showing damage wouldn't have the same tension and the same impact, the same success, perhaps, as an image.

EC: I don’t know. I'm trying to photograph my own experiences, but I think a lot of what I'm photographing is very universal and for every woman it's a painful process - with all the joy of having a baby - to lose the old body that you had. I think it's a painful process. For some it's not so bad and for some it's worse, and it also depends if you have twins, how your body is reacting to childbearing and pregnancy, but I think we all are beautiful when we are 18, and we're 30-something after pregnancy then birth. No matter what kind of body we started with, it's a difficult, painful process.

f: I also want to ask you about the history of your images and if you're strategies for, and ideas about, image-making have changed a lot over time.

EC: The more you learn and are exposed to more imagery and more artists, it's more absorbed in your life...I think I'm much more clear with what I want today with my work than I was twenty years ago, or fifteen years ago.


f: So that clarity has also been a process within your own work and looking at other people's work and living with your own images?

EC: No, I think the clarity comes from age and experience. I would have been more clear in what I think and what I want to say whether or not I'm an artist. Because I'm an artist it ends up in my work. I think when you're 40, and I'm almost 40, you are a different person than when you are 20 and 24. So I think I'm more opinionated today in many ways. I know what I think, I know what want, I know what I want to say.

f: Has becoming clearer in thoughts and ideas with age changed the images formally?

EC: I see the changes as I look at my work in retrospect. I see changes that happen as a result...even light, there's not much in the Manhattan apartments in New York, so I started using a lot of artificial light. I am more indoors here because the winter. I think I came to loosen the work up, it used to be much more controlled, and now I try to give more room for things to just happen. And also, you know, the point of view. I'm a mom, I'm a mother of two, I've immigrated from one country to another, which can be a very painful experience, and a very complicated one. So it's a combination I guess of many different things that I'm not even aware of at the time.


f: I was reading in an interview with you that with time you've accepted staging images more, and become comfortable with the truth and the kind of the reality that that can show. Have you ever felt that if you're going to stage the images, you might look at making medium or large format images? Why have you decided to stay with 35mm?

EC: I know that was written, but it was a little...I guess people misunderstood me, I don't really stage images. I sometimes maybe arrange them more...so also maybe it's my lack of better English.

f: Well, we can correct the record in this interview!

EC: [laughs] I never stage an image completely, but I'll sometimes just slightly interfere with the situation or bring a light, but the images are not staged, they're not staged. And I need to be able to hold a camera and hold the baby in the other hand and so the quickness and the lightness of the 35mm was good for me, even though some of my work was done with a 4x5 camera, and today I'm using the MarkIII which is not really 35, it's heavier.

But to work exclusively with 4x5 I couldn’t do it because many of the images that are happening in the moment while I'm in the moment, I need the immediacy of the 35.


f: You talked in one interview about Mary Ellen Mark being a strong, early photographic influence. I wanted to ask you about what influence film, music, literature or other creative sources have had on your work.

EC: I'm mostly, I guess, aware of photography, but also I think that film directors have influence on me, but it’s hard to connect it directly to my work, but there's people whose work I just love. Doug Lerman, the film director, and Matilde Matilde, and the Israeli director, Ari Feldmen, just people whose work really touched me...and maybe influenced me somehow.

f: And this is a straightforward question: why do you take pictures?

EC: Yes, I don't know. I mean, I don't know why. It's this thing that makes me feel so alive. You know, I can tell you what it makes me feel, but I don't know why photography I guess. It's like asking a woman why you fell in love with this man. It's this very mysterious thing. I love taking pictures, it helps me see my life and see the world around me and it just makes me feel...alive as I said, but I don't really know why photography and not painting or sculpture or...or working as a financial consultant. I don't know. It's just what I love to do.


f: Do you ever have an interest in or kind of a fantasy of being another type of photographer? Do you look at images by certain people and wish you were the photographer that could take those?

EC: I love what I do and I think wishing for doing other things is really fulfilled by shooting a lot on assignment. I shoot for magazines and I've been doing so for the last decade. So I'm [exposed to] many different assignments and different kinds of people. It does fulfill the need to do other things and be inspired by other ideas - and great photo editors push me out of my comfort zone.

TEACHING AND ADVICE

f: I would like to ask you about your role as a teacher. How do your roles as a photographer and educator interact and overlap, what do you get from teaching and also what does it make you give up?

EC: I don't sacrifice anything because I'm not a full-time teacher. I think some of the problems of teaching are the fact that it takes so much of someone's time. I just teach once a week right now and I give workshops every once in a while...so it's not like I devote myself to teaching.


I think the downside of that is that I don't have a full-time position, I don't make income I can rely on from teaching because I'm an adjunct professor. The great thing for me...[is] that it forces me to get out of my work and myself and really think about my students, how they think and how they create. For me this is the challenge. Every time I see someone's work, I don't really know at first what needs to be done in order to help them progress. It's a process. In this process I have to realize who they are and how they think and how they create, and then to try to help them that way, and for me this is the biggest challenge.

f: I thought we could ask a few questions about the general advice you give your students while talking about your role as a teacher. Do you have advice received or learned over the course of your career that you would pass along to them?

EC: Someone once advised me to really go with what I think in terms of editing my work, and what kind of work I'm doing and then, he said, it will be easier to embrace your failures. And this is so true because there are a lot of failures along the way, when you choose to be an artist, photographer, creative person. And to me if you know that you are walking your way, what you do reflects who you are, then if you fail, it's easier to deal with it than if you're trying to chase some kind of idea or trend of what kind of work you should be doing. I think it was a good advice. To just - not "just" because it's not an easy thing - to be me and take the decisions that are right for me.


f: Do you have any advice on starting projects?

EC: Yeah, they should do whatever they feel is right to do. I mean, you can always look at the trends. I don't work this way, some people do and that's fine for them, and sometimes, you know, seeing what has been done around you and trying different things is not a bad thing - but I've given advice because it's a very personal thing.

f: What about on the other end of a project, thinking about how to put these images, that come from different times, different places together, do you have any thoughts about sequences and creating a larger body or work, any thoughts to pass on?

EC: No, I feel it really depends on the work, on the context, on where it is going, and if it's a group show, if it's a book, if it's a page or two pages or eight pages for a magazine, if you want your work to be read as a narrative or not, as a conceptual project or not, so it's not something that generally you can I think you can have one advice for.

f: Do you think that a photograph can tell a narrative?

EC: Yeah, I think it can tell a narrative. I don't know if it can reflect reality as it is, but it can tell a narrative, it can be a narrative that is from the photographer's mind, but it can tell a narrative.


f: Do you have any thoughts about the gallery-museum world and strategies for having successful relationships with them?

EC: I think my only advice is to be really flexible and not to be entitled. Galleries are struggling almost the way we do, you know, you have to take it one step at a time. So I think if you're selling a lot, or if you just got a lot of critical attention, then you can ask for more from the gallery, but you can't ask the gallery to be your parent, you have to be realistic in the fact that these are businesses, they need to make a living, they need to pay the bills, you have to be realistic in what you ask from them. So for me to be flexible and realistic, and not be kind of the whining artist that I sometimes was, that I wish I'd learned earlier on.

f: The last question is to ask you if there's anything you would like to add or to see if there's something you've always wished an interviewer would ask you.

EC: No, I've been asked I think everything!

f: I was surprised how many interviews there are with you online. Hopefully the interview will add a little bit to the existing content about you as a teacher, a little bit more about the role of culture in your work and a little information about images themselves to complement what's out there.

Thanks, Elinor, for your time!

Edited for length, sequence, and clarity.