Wednesday, November 6, 2013

Catching the Sun


IPC Visual Lab student Tomas Hauff is fascinated by the sun as it slowly ascends into the the morning sky.  For past few months, Hauff has transformed his morning cycling escapades into a subject of visual enterprise.  "No two sunrises are the same" proclaims Hauff as he documents the ordinary into spectacular collective images of sunrises.  Hauff makes the sun his primary subject hoping to catch the visual promise of a better day.  




Hauff quickly learned of the upcoming hybrid eclipse and knew that the capturing of this eclipse would require research and technical improvisation. So began the great experiment of placing sheets of wielding glass together and mounting them in front his zoom lenses. Though Hauff had preferred to have long glass, the experiment yield still an amazing image of the special hybrid eclipse of 2013.






The Greek poet, Homer, understood the power and beauty of the sun and wrote about its travels as the Greek god, Helios, who gives light both to gods and men: he rises in the east from Oceanus, though not from the river, but from some lake or bog (limnê) formed by Oceanus, rises up into heaven, where he reaches the highest point at noon time, and then he descends, arriving in the evening in the darkness of the west, and in Oceanus. (Il. vii. 422, Od. iii. 1, &c., 335, iv. 400, x. 191, xi. 18, xii. 380.) Source: http://www.theoi.com/Titan/Helios.html



On Sunday, November 3, 2013 at 6:48am Hauff captured the hybrid eclipse of 2013 from Matheson Hammock just as the sun and the moon emerged from behind the low hanging thick clouds that was covering the horizon. It was a partial solar eclipse, one of only two this year. It started in Africa, crossing the Atlantic. In the US it could only be seen from the East Coast as this was the end of the eclipse's path.  The hybrid eclipse of 2013 was visible from only within a thin corridor, which traverses the North Atlantic and equatorial Africa. It was seen within the much broader path of the Moon's penumbral shadow, which includes eastern North America, northern South America, southern Europe, the Middle East and Africa according to NASA official website.

Thursday, October 10, 2013

Beach Ballot 2

Vote in the comments - which one of these images would you include in an installation highlighting the color and character of South Beach in the early mornings?
 
Jennifer Kay has embarked on this multimedia project exploring her neighborhood in video and still images. She started this project to share the South Beach she experiences every day, focusing on the elements of light and space in the early mornings. 
 
In preparation for an exhibition, we are asking the public to assist in the selection of final still images to accompany the video "Sunrise Beach." In this second installment, which of these three images from Ocean Drive would you select for an exhibition? Before making your selection, please view the video that inspired this project: http://vimeo.com/74517861


Monday, October 7, 2013

Beach Ballot 1


Jennifer Kay has embarked on this multimedia project exploring her neighborhood in video and still images. She started this project to share the South Beach she experiences every day, focusing on the elements of light and space in the early mornings. 

In preparation for an exhibition, we are asking the public to assist in the selection of final still images to accompany the video "Sunrise Beach." In this first installment, which of these three images from South Pointe Park would you select for an exhibition? Before making your selection, please view the video that inspired this project: http://vimeo.com/74517861

Vote in the comments!

Thursday, October 3, 2013

Young Teacher

What does a 4-year old knows?  More than you think.

Miles a curious, self determined, and precocious 4-year old tagged along for a 90-minute
photography class at the Little Haiti Cultural Center.  At first, like most children, Miles bounced
around peering, pulling, and pushing objects but not being too disruptive as the instructors conducted class.  To our amusement, Miles often echoed phrases and words he heard during instruction.

After the tutorial period, each student was given an specific color to photograph and was released out to the neighborhood in search of their subjects.  I thought maybe it would be interesting to hand over my precious Lumix camera to Miles in order to give him an activity to occupy his time and his endless source of energy.

Miles quickly grabbed the camera and started pressing the buttons while gazing at the Lumix as if it was a puzzle.  Little fingers all over the front glass, Miles looked up and smiled.  I wondered what are
his expectations?  What would he capture and would there be anything worth viewing?

The teacher was transformed to student, as I followed this visual curious young person and started relearning the importance to photograph with curiosity.  He pointed to the left, right, up, down, through, and over objects.  Never saying much but just watching and probing.

Not once did I see any frustration or disappointment.  Miles just kept on being the curious boy and I became more fascinated about the outcome of his endeavors.

Later, I presented some of the images shot by this young visual story teller to the class and was astonished by his honesty, perspective, and curiosity.   Judge for yourself!  Let us know your thoughts?

Class dismissed!


Friday, September 27, 2013

Who Am I?


IPC Visual Lab students are encouraged to engage in visual discovery of self.  IPC Visual Lab student Andriana turns her camera upon herself and giving us a slight view of the complexity of her identity as she transforms to being a photojournalist.  

Who am I? What defines me, what sets me apart? A question, the answer to which might seem so obvious, but nevertheless complex. Who you are is who you learn to be in an everlasting process of transformation…

TO BE A WOMAN… Such a wonderful world is that of a woman. It’s about abundance and intensity of emotions, vulnerability, passion and compassion, beauty and love, tears and laughter – unfortunately often mistaken for weakness.  A woman is a creature always alert, always alive, always in search. She can be the artist, the scientist, the leader; or she can be a mom, a wife, a grandma; she can also be a lover, a girlfriend or somebody’s passion. But what makes her stand out – is that often she can be many of the above performing all with greatness. A woman’s world is very broad – it’s never simple. It’s a destiny of struggle on attaining perfection in everything she does. A woman is a layered creature; to underestimate her power is foolish and mischief.



TO BE IN LOVE… Doing what you love can wear you out at times.  There are such days when… you wake up at 5 am to be on location for the sunrise to photograph that surfer who will ride the wave of his life. The winds are perfect, the sky is clear enough. You are excited to greet another amazing day. What can be better than call this work? You get to the beach, unload your truck, a few heavy bags full with lenses and gear press on your shoulder, a tripod is balancing on the other, cameras are hanging on your neck defying gravity – you sprint like a foal. You rush to get that golden hour. The sky is still clear, only a small cloud is looming but you don’t think it’s going to come your way. The surfer is warming up, catching small waves, incrementally pumping the adrenaline. The sun is almost perfectly aligned. You are all set to catch him wrapped in the wave, but the sun is still short on shining through the cyan clear water. Everything seems perfect but that cloud. It looks like it stubbornly shifts his anger toward you. He is lonely in the sky; you can’t blame him for wanting some attention. Can you be mad with nature? How can you? You welcome him and let him pour his deep emotions. It’s overwhelmingly serendipitous. The only thing is that you can’t share the glory. It’s his time to shine.  Such is the nature of your work. You can’t say you didn’t show up for work – but you have nothing to show for your results. You realize that the only thing that keeps you trying is doing what you LOVE! You get home; you are tired, but soon ready to take on another shot.


TO BE A LEARNER… Life is such a blessing, so surprising; always ready to prove you that you don’t know enough. It’s generous to teach you everything you need to know to face it with more wisdom and perhaps more joy. How lucky are we to have the testimonies of those who passed along? Those who thought about the things, way too important to ignore? Those who made mistakes enough to learn a better way… and then share it with those willingly to take on the relay race, to build upon… Books, photographs, tapes – comprise a history, experiences; they are the voice that lives forever. You identify with that; you live YOUR life, you make your own conclusions. And then it’s time for you to do the same. Cause a change, share, excite, and make work that matters – ‘cause then you die. And what is it that you leave behind?

                                                                                      Andriana M.

Friday, September 20, 2013

Sunrise Beach





Video by Jennifer Kay

South Beach. Everyone thinks they already know everything about it. Topless beaches, grisly crimes, restless crowds, flashy cars, neon and police sirens, plastic people and pastel buildings. It’s the South Beach that’s rude and bold and famous. 

People ask me why I live at the beach, and I think they expect an answer that glitters. Something about the beach’s frenzy or the Art Deco or the way everyone looks in the heat.

They expect the tourist beach. I live at the beach, though, and it’s not the same place.

I set out on this visual journey to share the South Beach that I experience. It’s a quieter place, where people live and work instead of showing off and partying. I set out in the mornings, shortly after sunrise, to highlight the difference between my neighborhood and “South Beach.” In those early hours, the light is softer. You can see the discipline that balances the beach’s hedonism, the workouts that perfect the famously fit bodies and the workers cleaning up the previous night’s activities. There’s room to move in the mornings, and even room and time to pause, because the crowds are still asleep. 

When I moved to Miami, I chose to live on South Beach because, of course, I wanted to live near the water. I also wanted to live in a neighborhood where I could walk around, where I didn’t require a car, where I could feel energized by my environment instead of feeling overwhelmed, and where I could see other people utilizing the beach in similar ways. These images are my reasons for still living on the beach.


Friday, August 16, 2013



Iris PhotoCollective Visual Lab is offering a unique photography course that will examine visual storytelling in the classical vein of photojournalism. Through collaborative exercises, discussions, critiques and lectures, students will develop the skills necessary to reveal a strong visual story in their photographic images. Students will explore the works of photograph masters Henri Cartier-Bresson, Roy DeCarava, W. Eugene Smith, Margaret Bourke-White, and other acclaimed photographers.

This ten-week visual communications course focuses on special techniques and strategies for understanding photography through analytical thinking. The course is led by award-winning photojournalists Carl Juste and C.W. Griffin. A top visual communicator in the field of photography will also contribute as special guest speaker. Three levels are offered from beginner to intermediate and advanced. Weekly classes run Saturdays from September 14 through November 22, 2013 at Little Haiti Cultural Center, 5212 NE 59th Terrace, Miami, FL 33137.

For course information, call Carl Juste at 305.796-4718, or ipcvisuallab@gmail.com. Iris PhotoCollective Visual Lab is a partnership amongst Iris Foundation, Iris PhotoCollective,
The Haitian Cultural Arts Alliance and Little Haiti Cultural Center. 

OPEN HOUSE: September 6, 7pm, at the Little Haiti Cultural Center. Come meet students and teachers and talk about taking your photography to the next level!


Monday, May 6, 2013

Lens Fixed @ 18mm



The day first started with class and then it ended up with a collage of images of babies. Shooting with an 18mm lens is not easy.  Trying to compose correctly becomes
a challenge and makes one yearn for
other focal lengths.  Lens choice is as important as choosing the right tool for the job.





The lighting’s pretty nice on the baby and mom and friend, but there’s too much background distraction.  I wanted some background for context, but it’s too in focus.



The approach in photographing children is to bring the camera down to their perspective.  In other words giving a child's view of the event.  Dad’s busy signing up for more pink tutus and cupcakes.  If I’d waited a bit longer the figure behind the dad might have walked out the picture too, which would have made it simpler, more focused, however by then I might have lost eye contact with the little girl.










I wish I had gotten the light right for this one. I’m trying to stay within the parameters of the camera's suggested exposure.  What caught my eyes was the side light hitting the child's face, catching a poignant expression, and the flow of the colors from mom to baby, with that good burnt orange in the background. We’re missing the mom’s expression though, and that would have pulled it all together. Maybe that tent top should go, and a little shift would have eliminated the tiny head in the background.







What makes this image  is seeing child and how he has his own point of view.  Mom’s attention is one way, the child's another. The focusing could have been sharper on the baby’s eyes; less sharp for the background.








What caught my eye here was all the green - dad in his shirt, his daughter in her green; the green on the table and butterfly











You have to like the candor of baby’s before they learn to pose!  Not bad, not great. A bit flat in perspective.

The image below almost works.  The subject of the image is placed between the foreground interest – the dummy with the pink tutu- and the real subject, that little girl carefully peeling her banana. Too much green on the left takes our attention away. The grid on the right is OK, but it also might be a little too much causing the little girl to get lost in its pattern.



What do you think?  How would you have made similar images with a single focal length?  I guess that is the beautiful struggle when working with a focal length.  Keep in touch and see how I improve.





MCooling

Saturday, May 4, 2013

Ramblin' Road Trip


I took a road trip in March with two friends and creative forces, Tiffany Napper of Bats on Strings and Megan Victoria of Jupiter Lala. We had a plan: roam across the South, from New Orleans to Nashville,  and make magic with whatever the wind blows our way. 


We each had our essentials for the trip: loaded iPods, a grandfather's ukelele, a flask, handcrafted jewelry, favorite boots and Milk Duds. My essential packing list included several cameras and lenses. I wanted to try and document not just the places where we stopped along the way, but also the improvised, whimsical feeling of the whole trip. There were stops at state borders for impromptu dances and sit-downs in coffee shops and boutiques that turned into collaborative sessions for future business ventures. I wanted to capture the invigorating brisk temperatures, the comfort of an old leather sofa, the luxury of time to just ramble at our own pace through the landscape.




I played with several cameras and lenses on the trip, looking for details and light, in color and black and white. I tried to not be the nerd with the oversized camera bag everywhere I went, though; I limited myself, mostly, to one kind of camera for each stop. A Holga, an old film SLR, my DSLR and a point-and-shooting. What are your essentials for shooting while traveling?


JKay

Saturday, April 20, 2013

SNOW DAY

As the north thaw from a cold winter, Jennifer reflects on the images she made
during her Thanksgiving visit back home.  Shooting in harsh climatic weather
can be both frustrating and rewarding.







It’s been a long time since I’ve seen a snowfall, and so I was childishly excited about the  inch-and-a-half of snow that fell while I was in Pennsylvania for Thanksgiving. I had forgotten how snow makes the landscape a soft, blank canvas where footsteps and errands get scribbled with black lines. The snow kept falling, but people in the neighborhood needed to keep up with their lives, going for a run or going to pick up kids at school. What I started to see in the snow was not the snow itself, but the blank spaces left by moving cars and people. No one stayed to enjoy the snow. Even the sky was empty, the sun seemingly just gone, the sky a blank gray. 









JKay

Friday, April 5, 2013

Point-and-Shoot


In January, Leica hosted a workshop at Fairchild Tropical Botanic Gardens for owners of the company’s compact camera systems. I took my V-Lux 20 for a refresher course on all its functions and buttons.



Aside from giving tips on how to maximize the features on my camera, the Leica instructors advised us on how to use our “point-and-shoot” cameras to make pictures of the gardens. 
  • Have a subject, and then give your subject room to move within the frame. 
  • Get physically close to a subject, instead of relying on the camera’s zoom. Take advantage of the macro setting.
  • Light coming from the side reveals texture in a subject.
  • Play with the camera’s white balance to change the tone of an image.
  • Odd numbers of things = interesting.
The workshop reminded me of how powerful my "little" camera really is, and I think I'll be taking it out of my camera bag more often. I'm particularly encouraged by a "high dynamic" setting I had forgotten, which produces images in high-contrast black-and-white.

Do you shoot with a point-and-shoot camera? What settings do you recommend? 





JKay

Friday, January 4, 2013

PUBLIC ART




Art Basel Miami Beach is annual marathon of parties, traffic, crowded exhibition halls and posturing (not that we’re bitter or overwhelmed, or anything). It’s also a long weekend of art on display for free in public spaces, and my favorite part of the frenetic Basel hustle is watching passersby interact with the art around them.







 


They stumbled through the colorful warehouse-and-street-mural maze of Wynwood and lounged outside the honeycombed bar (“Guiro” by Los Carpinteros and ABSOLUT) temporarily set up in Collins Park. A concert and exhibit by singer/songwriter Daniel Johnston unexpectedly turned into a live painting demonstration. Thousands, probably, of social media avatars were created in front of half an installation by Gary Simmons (in whole, it read “I wish it could be morning all day long”.)





Familiar corners took on a new character, and isn’t that point of public art -- to see not just the installation, but to see an ordinary locale in a fresh way?










JKAY