LOOK3 is a photography festival in Charlottesville, Virginia, created by photographers to celebrate their passion of the still image. It runs from June 7-9, 2012.
LOOK3 Festival of the Photograph will be “3 days of peace, love and photography.” The Festival features exhibits and on-stage appearances of three “INsight” photographers, as well as exhibitions, outdoor projections, workshops and interviews over three days and nights.
Featured INsight Artists
At the core of LOOK3′s programming are the INsight Conversations held in the historic Paramount Theater. This three-night event celebrates and honors the careers of the most influential living photographers of our time, and offers audiences the rare opportunity to listen to and learn from the artists who have helped define the art of picture-making. Large-scale projections of the artist’s work accompany these on-stage, one-on-one conversations between the artist and interviewer. Each INsight Artist also exhibits a special solo show at one of Charlottesville’s downtown art galleries.
Stanley
Greene has brought back haunting images from troubled places like
Croatia, Rwanda, and the post-Katrina Gulf Coast.
His photographs are
iconic, but they can also make you sweat: drug addicts squat in a
hovel in Kabul; men flee a fiery explosion in Kirkuk, Iraq; a dirty
American flag is draped over a pew in a New Orleans church still in
ruins two years after Hurricane Katrina.
Greene has covered wars,
migrations, drug-use, and long invasions, perhaps most notably in his
work in Chechnya.
A firm believer that photographers should not just
parachute into a place and then leave when the next story comes
along, Greene spent more than a decade documenting Chechnya’s
struggle for independence from Russia.
Donna
Ferrato has a gift for exploration, illumination, and
documentation coupled with a commitment to revealing the darker sides
of humanity.
Her photographs of domestic violence and its aftermath
have become landmark essays in the field of documentary photography,
challenging social attitudes and putting a spotlight on the
devastating impact of everyday violence.
Ferrato’s current
project offers a unique look at the New York neighborhood of TriBeCa.
With an intimate, artistic sensibility, the project is capturing one
of New York City’s most historic and, now, one of its most
exclusive neighborhoods.
The photographs reveal the generations of
immigrants, gangsters, captains of industry and artists who walked
the century-old, cobblestone streets, and captures the manners and
mores of today’s denizens who, lured by its old-world grace and
simplicity, have made the TriBeCa of today an urban Ground Zero.
Alex
Webb’s photos tell stories.
Some contain entire novels.
Battered cars and dusty bare feet, shadows and silhouettes, dogs and
roosters, soccer balls and upside-down kids–Webb’s images
are brimming with color, movement, and life.
He arrived on the scene
at a moment when photographers were looking for new ways of seeing
and working in color.
Webb had felt like he’d reached a dead
end with the black and white photos he’d been shooting in New
England and around New York.
That’s when he happened upon a
copy of The Comedians, the Graham Greene novel set in the
violent world of Papa Doc’s Haiti.
The novel inspired Webb to
board a plane to Port-au-Prince.
The trip transformed Webb and his
photography.
Today Webb is widely recognized as one of the most
important and influential color photographers in the last four
decades.
Featured TREES Artist
The TREES exhibit is a hallmark of the LOOK3 Festival that features images from nature suspended on banners high in the trees along Charlottesville’s outdoor pedestrian mall.
David
Doubilet has changed the way we see our planet’s rivers and
oceans and influenced the way photographs are made of it.
Over the
last four decades, he has brought us face to face with an underwater
world of mesmerizing landscapes and mysterious creatures.
He has
snorkeled the Jardine River in Australia in search of saltwater
crocodiles and dived the Pacific near the Galapagos Islands to
document ghostly hammerhead sharks seeking colder waters.
A pioneer
and advocate, Doubilet’s passion for the sea is matched only by
his compassion for it.
Humans have only been going under the sea for
50 years, he says, and “we are in a race between discovery and
destruction.”
Featured Masters Artists
These artists will give workshops on subjects relating to their work in photography.
Ernesto
Bazan was born in Palermo, on the island of Sicily, in Italy, in
1959.
He received his first camera when he was fourteen years old and
began photographing daily life in his native city and in the rural
areas of Sicily.
To Bazan, photography has been more than a
profession: It is his true passion, his mission in life.
From 1992 to
2006, Bazan lived in and photographed the island of Cuba, documenting
the unique time in Cuban history called the Special Period.
In 2002,
Bazan created his own photographic workshops, providing special
emphasis on Latin America.
Teaching has become his ruling devotion.
Hundreds of students have studied with him in the last ten years.
Lynsey
Addario is a documentarian of conflict and humanitarian crises
reporting from some of the world’s roughest places —
Darfur, the Congo, Iraq, Afghanistan, and Libya.
Her work is
insightful, intimate and powerful.
Addario goes beyond conflict,
revealing the very problems and conditions that account for so much
of the world’s violence.
Her work exposes the terror of
self-immolation in Afghanistan, the unspeakable pain of rape
survivors in the Congo, and the horror of maternal mortality in
Sierra Leone.
In her essay ‘Veiled Rebellion,’ Addario
revealed the lives of Afghan women, whose everyday existence is a
struggle against tribalism, poverty and war.
Hank
Willis Thomas is an artist who gets people talking–about
pop culture, history, and race.
For his series, Branded, he
co-opted the language and logos of advertisements to produce images
that are both personal and provocative.
In one piece, the Nike swoosh
symbol is etched like a scar on the side of a man’s bald head.
In another, the famous Mastercard “Priceless” slogan
appears across a photograph of a family at a graveside funeral.
“Gold
chain: $400,” the text says.
“Bullet: 60 cents.
Picking
the perfect casket for your son: Priceless.”
The family in the
photo is the artist’s own, and they are grieving for his
cousin, who was “murdered over a petty commodity,” a gold
chain.
Thomas’s images can make you uncomfortable, but they
raise important questions about violence, identity, and
generalizations reinforced by decades of advertisements.
In one
series, he removes all headlines and text from 1960s magazine ads
that feature African-Americans.
By stripping away the words, he
reveals images that are both humorous and horrifying; images that at
a core level, he says, “are a reflection of the way culture
views itself or its aspirations.”
Robin
Schwartz might have created a whole new genre of photography: the
interspecies family portrait.
Pairing her daughter, Amelia, with a
variety of animals–gibbon apes, dogs, kangaroos,
llamas–Schwartz produces images that are both familiar and
fantastical.
In one image, a sleepy-eyed Amelia cuddles with a
hairless cat on a white bedspread.
In another, she clings to a
clothed monkey the way a sister hugs a brother.
“The
photographs are not documents,” Schwartz says.
“They are
evidence of an invented world and the fables we enact in that world.”
It is a world in which “the line between human and animal
overlaps or is blurred.”
Camille
Seaman’s photographs exude the raw power of the natural
world.
Seaman captures images that are dramatic and at times ominous,
says guest curator David Griffin.
“She made storm clouds and
icebergs into living, breathing things.”
Seaman has said her
iceberg photographs are like portraits of ancestors, each with a
unique personality.
Most of the polar ice in her earlier photographs
has now either broken apart or melted into the sea.
She is fond of
quoting a Nick Cave song: “All things move toward their end.”
In other words, everything is in a constant state of transformation.
Bruce
Gilden says you’re looking at a street photograph if you
can smell the street.
Gilden’s photos stimulate all the senses.
Wandering city streets around the world with a camera in one hand and
a flash in the other, he captures explosive black and white images of
places and people.
He finds the individuals who stand out in a crowd,
the ones with stories to tell.
At the beach in Coney Island, his
subjects are men and women in bathing suits, their bodies sunburned
and freckled, skinny and flabby.
In Tokyo, he illuminates the city’s
homeless, its biker gangs and prostitutes, and members of the
Japanese mafia, the yakuza.
In Haiti, a place he photographed for
more than a decade and to which he returned following the 2010
earthquake, he depicts electrifying scenes of celebration and
violence.
One of Gilden’s recent projects focuses on the
effects of foreclosures in America.
He has traveled to places like
Florida, Detroit, and Nevada, documenting the dilapidated homes that
families have been forced to abandon.
The houses, many of them
falling apart and broken-down, reveal the physical and symbolic
effects of the mortgage crisis.
Meet these artists and explore their work at LOOK3. Come to be inspired!
All photos and text taken with permission from http://look3.org/.
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Jessica Phillips is an English major with a focus on business… (more)
Jessica Phillips is an English major with a focus on business… (more)
I wonder how many people attend this every year? It looks
like a great way to see a lot of interesting pieces of art
and learn more about the craft!
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I am a Magazine Journalism major from Kent State University. … (more)
I am a Magazine Journalism major from Kent State University. … (more)
it is popular — It sold out last year (1000 tickets to the Masters classes). About 20,000 come out to view the exhibits (no charge for that).
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I’m the head/founder of Fairness.com LLC. I really hope you l… (more)
I’m the head/founder of Fairness.com LLC. I really hope you l… (more)
Lots of restaurants and shops, usually some street musicians playing… very pleasant!
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I’m the head/founder of Fairness.com LLC. I really hope you l… (more)
I’m the head/founder of Fairness.com LLC. I really hope you l… (more)
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Jessica Phillips is an English major with a focus on business… (more)
Jessica Phillips is an English major with a focus on business… (more)
I wonder what cultural insight it would reveal if you took
away headlines/text for current magazine images? There can be many messages sent by a single image in an advertisement, even if they don’t match the textual intent.
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I’m the head/founder of Fairness.com LLC. I really hope you l… (more)
I’m the head/founder of Fairness.com LLC. I really hope you l… (more)
This venue hosts LOOK3’s outdoor evening projections, SHOTS and WORKS.
LOOK3 creates an immersive arts experience accessible to the entire community and its visitors.
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I am a Magazine Journalism major from Kent State University. … (more)
I am a Magazine Journalism major from Kent State University. … (more)
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