Saturday, September 5, 2009

Tokyo Photo 3.




The Sartorialist, as popular as he is in America and Europe, is not much known in Japan - but as these pictures hopefully show, not only was his work much admired, but the stylish visitors to Photo Tokyo were only too happy to pose for me.


A young photographer.



My translator, Wakako Masudo, who is writing her graduate dissertation on Madonna.



A young visitor.



A man with rolled up pants.



Shigeo Goto and Sawako Fukai from G/P Gallery.



Kind of a Harajuku girl.



A man with a black straw hat.



A tall woman in shorts.



A cool character with holes in his T shirt.



Two friends.



Two more friends.



This man's T shirt reads "Summer Madness" with a spider hanging off the "S".



A Comme des Garcons type girl.



A young man with black patent leather sandals.



A young woman with elaborate shoes.



A Japan Airline stewardess and her friend.



The fair organizer, Tomo Harada.

Friday, September 4, 2009

Weekend Video




Thanks to the anonymous sender of the link to the above video. It gives a nice sense of the magic feeling of being in Tokyo. And thanks to the film-maker, Emily Nathan. (Please note: it may take a moment to load.)

Thursday, September 3, 2009

Tokyo Photo ctd.



So you walk down Roppongi Street, take the little alley (above) next to the AM/PM store, and you’ll find the Belle Salle Roppongi where Tokyo Photo 2009 is taking place.

It’s beautifully organized by our hosts Tomo Harada and Toru Fukaya, the booths are immaculately built, and the crowds and response on opening night were overwhelming.


The Belle Salle Roppongi.



Here’s a glimpse of my booth. The fair is organized with “Photo America” upstairs. An exhibition anchored by the Museum of Photographic Arts and three American dealers – myself, Rose Shoshana, and Paul Kopeikin. Downstairs are 14 Japanese dealers from whom you’ll see my highlights, below. There’s a predominance of contemporary sized urban, industrial, and forest landscapes – but I guess you could say it’s an accurate representation of the country. There’s certainly not the same amount of personally introspective or constructed work you would see in America.

But going in order round the fair, here are some of the pieces that caught my eye:






Two pictures by Naoki Ishikawa at Gallery Terra.






Two urban landscape by Yurie Nagashima at Scai The Bathhouse Gallery.






Two photographs by Taiji Matsue at Taro Nasu Gallery that turned out to be of a model of Tokyo but were striking and vibrant nonetheless.




"Life's Little Worries" by Tatzu Nishi at Urano Aratani






Two views of Mount Fuji by Ken Kitano at MEM Gallery




Also at MEM, Yasumasa Morimura's "Hand Leonardo da Vinci" from 1996.






And two fairy tale looking forests by Yoshihiko Ueda at G/P Gallery.




And last but not least, a suite of gravures by Hiroshi Sugimoto, not readily available in the U.S., at Hiromiyoshi Gallery.


That's a quick Japanese floor report. More on the U.S. floor and Tokyo life tomorrow.


Wednesday, September 2, 2009

Tokyo Photo



Dear Readers,

I am in Tokyo for the next week participating in the first Tokyo Photo Fair. It's also my first trip to Japan. I arrived last night.

The 13 1/2 hour flight over was surprisingly comfortable and my first taste of Japan was being faced with the above drink machine outside the airport. A difficiult choice, but as you can see I settled on the Mets grapefruit soda (delicious) before going into town on the friendly (and efficient) limousine bus.

We install the show today so stay tuned for regular updates. But if anyone happens to be near the Roppongi district, do come by and say hi. Details are here.





Sunday, August 30, 2009

Think Small




This lattice-shaped image is the first ever close-up view of a single molecule. Scientists from IBM used an atomic force microscope (AFM) to reveal the chemical bonds within a molecule. 'This is the first time that all the atoms in a molecule have been imaged,' lead researcher Leo Gross said.

The researchers focused on a single molecule of pentacene, which is commonly used in solar cells. The rectangular-shaped organic molecule is made up of 22 carbon atoms and 14 hydrogen atoms. In the image above the hexagonal shapes of the five carbon rings are clear and even the positions of the hydrogen atoms around the carbon rings can be seen. To give some perspective, the space between the carbon rings is only 0.14 nanometers across, which is roughly one million times smaller than the diameter of a grain of sand.

'If you think about how a doctor uses an X-ray to image bones and organs inside the human body, we are using the atomic force microscope to image the atomic structures that are the backbones of individual molecules,' said IBM researcher Gerhard Meyer.

The team from IBM Research Zurich said the results could have a huge impact of the field of nanotechnology, which seeks to understand and control some of the smallest objects known to mankind.

Sunday, August 9, 2009

From my iPhone




I was walking along 10th Avenue when I saw this large poster outside the Equinox Gym. I love the picture and the good humored pun. I'm pretty sure this would have been an image that someone picked up from stock rather than commissioned, so it also shows the afterlife of a well executed image in today's fluid picture market. And lastly, in this summer of no summer, it's nice to be cheered up by a funny sunny photo!

Thursday, August 6, 2009

Wonder




After a month of construction on my new space, I was itching to put something on the walls, and while things are pretty slow in Chelsea, I thought I might as well put together some kind of theme show. I had been thinking about how few pictures (as opposed to how many) could make a show and had been mulling over the title "Seven Wonders" which appealed to me because seven seemed the low number and wonder was a quality I particularly enjoy in photography. In the end though, seven relatively small pictures seemed too few and I ended up with ten and the title "Elements of Wonder". Not quite as catchy, I know.

Anyway, the show is up through August 21, Tuesday to Friday if you're around. And this is what I had to say about it in our press release:

Danziger Projects summer show - "Elements of Wonder" – takes as its central theme how the element of wonder so often manifests itself in photography.

Whether in Julia Margaret Cameron's constructed pictures, using her maid and friends' children as her subjects, or in Sze Tsung Leong's technical tour de force view of the Parisian skyline, the images in this show do more than just record a fact - they stop to marvel at what they see or create.

In a selection of ten images spanning over 130 years, the photographs in the show each demonstrate a different kind of wonder. There is Adam Fuss's re-invention of the photogram, Edward Curtis' prefiguring of Sugimoto's "Horizons", and Mario Giacomelli's frozen moment of kinetic energy.

Annie Leibovitz tackles wonder straight on with an image from her 2003 fashion shoot re-imagining Alice in Wonderland, while the wonder of Seydou Keita lies not only in his unconscious echo of August Sander's famous photograph of three farmers, but in the fact that such a marvelous photographer was unknown outside of his own country of Mali until near the end of his life.

In classic images such as Edward Weston's photograph of his wife, Charis, nude on the White Sands of California or the Bechers' picture of a New York water tower, we can appreciate the wonder of these photographic icons. And lastly, Abe Morell ties things up with his inventive connection of the wonder of the camera obscura to the wonder of photography.


And the ten pictures:


Julia Margaret Cameron



Edward Curtis



Edward Weston



Seydou Keita



Mario Giacomelli



The Bechers



Annie Leibovitz



Adam Fuss



Abelardo Morell



Sze Tsung Leong