Panasonic releases Lumix DMC-TS10 rugged compact
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Panasonic officially announces DMC-LX5 premium compact
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Fujifilm unleashes Finepix Z800EXR with Hybrid autofocus
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Panasonic launches Lumix DMC-FZ40 / FZ45 digital superzoom
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Panasonic premieres Lumix DMC-FZ100 high-speed superzoom camera
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Panasonic announces Lumix DMC-FX700 touch-screen compact
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Fujifilm unveils F300EXR compact superzoom with Hybrid autofocus system
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Fujifilm launches world’s smallest 18x zoom lens compact camera
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‘I Shall Return’
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Gone Fishin': I hate leaving TOP alone for as much as a day, much less a week, but I'm taking some time off to recharge my batteries and, cliché of clichés, work on my novel. I've given myself a deadline of one year to finish my attempt at a thriller, and, despite being a preposterously front-loaded work project with a ludicrously low prospect of ever paying off, I've decided to do it, just for the experience. Like seeing the Grand Canyon. Which I have also never done, unless seeing it from 28,000 feet on the way to L.A. counts.
It's possible that when I get to the second draft I'll post it here, chapter by chapter, so I can get feedback. (That presumes I'll get the first draft draft done, though, which is a big presumption. As we used to say when I was a kid, don't hold your breath or you'll turn blue and die.)
So, anyway, TOP will be quiet for a week. But, like some sort of Socialist-Internationalist-Environmentalist* MacArthur**, "I shall return."
Note that comments will not be posted in the interim. I have to go cold turkey, albeit temporarily.
Vanessa Winship: Regular readers might recall that Vanessa Winship is one of my favorite contemporary photographers (based mainly on her book Schwarzes Meer [Black Sea], which still can't be purchased in the U.S. but is now available in the U.K. and can mostly be seen online [see "Black Sea: Between Chronicle and Fiction" parts 1 and 2]). Amazingly, she's having her very first U.S. show in the city right next door to me, Milwaukee, at Deb Brehmer's Portrait Society gallery. The opening is on Friday, July 23rd, from 6 to 9 p.m. I understand Vanessa will not be there, although she might come for a visit during the run of the show.
The Portrait Society is located in Milwaukee’s Third Ward on the fifth floor of the Marshall Building, 207 E. Buffalo
Street, Milwaukee, Wis.,
53202. Call 414/870-9930 for information, or see the gallery's blog.
Also opening the same night is John Shimon and Julie Lindemann's "Real Photo Postcard Survey." I don't really know a great deal about this interesting pair of artistic collaborators, but I own, and like, their quirky, thoughtful little book of portraiture, Unmasked and Anonymous (available in the U.S.
and in the U.K.
).
BP Propaganda: AmericaBlog has been following the dispiriting but oddly entertaining saga of BP's hamhanded attempts to create plausible propaganda photographs to illustrate its narrative of the "American Chernobyl" it created in the Gulf of Mexico. I could do a better job of Photoshop than this, and I'm no good at all with photo illustration techniques.
Quick, how many submarines in Idaho? Did you know Stan Banos got an Amex Grant?
Phil Davis online: Fred Newman, who is truly a nice man, has put up a small portfolio by our late mutual friend Phil Davis, of a selection of the environmental portraits Phil did in and around the town of Dexter, Michigan, mostly in the '70s. Phil was mainly known as an educator, textbook
author, and the developer of Beyond the Zone System
, which takes Ansel Adams and Fred Archer's fairly crude Zone System to a much more rigorous level as sensitometry. But he was also quite a talented and certainly an accomplished photographer, a fact that is too little known because his philosophical stance was that the pleasure in photography was in the process rather than the result. His commercial advertising photographs of Detroit automobiles from the 1950s and 1960s were wonderful.
Quite coincidentally, as a professor of photography at the University of Michigan he taught Peter and David Turnley.
Piff Paff Puff: I saw a really nice little movie a few nights ago, streamed from Netflix. The title in English is "Everlasting Moments," a phrase which refers to photographs. Photography plays a very prominent part in the story, although it's really a feminist film in the best sense. It recounts the true story told by Maja Larsson, an elderly and distant relative of the director, about her parents, especially her mother, Maria, who, despite heavy domestic responsibilities and an abusive husband, attempted to "find herself" as both a creative and an independent individual by learning and practicing photography.
Stories that are true can have a bracing effect on movies, because reality is a bad writer. Revenge is never quite satisfying, bad characters have their good sides, longed-for events never come about, characters persist in not doing what we can very plainly see they should do, latent romances are never fulfilled, and the wrong people die in the end. Any screenwriter worth his union card wouldn't have been able to resist torquing this story around into sentimentalist piffle. Reality insists on throwing wrench after wrench into the plotline. It keeps the film from falling into formula, gives the narrative a useful awkwardness. I like that.
"Everlasting Moments" (the original title is "Maria Larssons eviga ögonblick") is a 2008 film by the Swedish director Jan Troell, in Swedish, with subtitles. It will seem European to people used to Hollywood—especially Hollywood lately. One internet troglodyte I encountered called it a "mopefest," which presumably means that although it has explosions, carnality, and violence against women, it doesn't have enough explosions, carnality, and violence against women. It does indeed move at a slowish pace, though, and takes time to linger on the purely photographically beautiful, which many directors would dare not do these days. The film was shot on 16mm converted to 35mm to heighten the period feeling, but I think it adds to the photographic interest of the cinematography.
Anyway, assuming you typically don't lack patience for langorously-paced movies with subtitles, warmly recommended. It would probably make most anybody's list of the top ten movies about photography or for photographers.
Addie and Mose, one more time: And finally, speaking of cinematography...purely on a whim, I watched Peter Bogdanovitch's "Paper Moon" again last night. It remains a curious movie, a genre-bender, but I've always liked the fact that it is sentimental, humorous, lyrical, and elegiac while at the same time remaining resolutely amoral. (Such a movie today might be the opposite—harder, more bitter, much more graphic, but sanctimonious.) The combination is just as odd—and as oddly satisfying—as it ever was. A highly structured meander, it never resolves half its story lines, never relinquishes its McGuffins (we never do find out for sure whether Addie is Mose's illegitimate child), and never implies a well-adjusted transition to adulthood in store for Addie, who is, really, a harder criminal at nine than her guardian has the stones to be.
It's also as amazing as it ever was to see an entire movie carried by the virtuoso acting performance of such a young child. To this day Tatum O'Neal remains the youngest-ever winner of a major acting Oscar—and one of the most deserving.
(If you want to read more, there's an informative review at DVD Verdict—although, naturally, it talks about the no-longer-current Paramount DVD.)
I might insert something here like "I wish they still made movies like this," but of course they never did. Even Bogdanovitch's other movies most like this one—"The Last Picture Show" and his attempted reprise with the O'Neals, "Nickelodeon"—are nothing like it.
The reason for photographers to watch it? For the cinematography of the great László Kovács. (Himself the subject of a movie I want to see, called "No Subtitles Necessary.") Although a trifle overlit in spots—possibly the result of the director's intent to mimic the look of real '30s films—generally it is coolly elegant, influenced more by Dorothea Lange and the FSA than by the excesses of film noire. If you have any fondness for the great American interior or harbor any nostalgia for the 1930s, "Paper Moon" is surely one of the prettiest movies ever put on film.
See you in a week, and thank you for reading my site.
Mike
(Thanks to Oren Grad, Bob Burnett, and Art Elkon)
*John Camp's fond (?) epithet for me.
**Only without the shades, cool hat, and corncob pipe.
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Original contents copyright 2010 by Michael C. Johnston and/or the bylined author. All Rights Reserved.
2nd Annual San Francisco Photo Contest
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Theme: San Francisco or the Bay Area.
Photographs may include landscape, locales, activities, people and/or animals, but must convey the allure of San Francisco.
Prizes:
- One Grand Prize Winner will have his/her photograph prominently featured on sfTravel.com and receive $100 USD.
- Three Runner-Up Winners will have their photographs featured on pages of sfTravel.com and will win $25 USD each.
How to enter this photo contest
If you like this web site about photo contests, please help us spread the word about it!
We greatly appreciate if you add a link to www.photocompete.com in your blog or MySpace. Thanks!
Olympus updates ‘ib’ software
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Peter Turnley’s Paris
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Many years ago, a young man from Fort Wayne, Indiana followed his muse to Paris, and stayed for a quarter of a century. Paris became home base for Peter Turnley's worldwide travels as a top-echelon photojournalist. But even at home, he never stopped working—for three decades, Peter has photographed in the streets, bistros, and bars of his adopted city, along the banks of the Seine, from high windows, wherever he found himself. He photographed rooftop vistas, forgotten details, and, always, the people—friends and strangers, the famous and the unknown—people working, playing, traveling. And, everywhere, lovers—keeping company, flirting, kissing, holding hands, walking together, drinking together, laughing.
A portion of his extensive body of black-and-white work from Paris was published in 2000 in the book Parisians
, with forewords by Robert Doisneau and Edouard Boubat. Recently, Peter's been planning a second book from this large body of work.
I'm really hugely pleased to tell you that three of the most famous and most romantic of Peter Turnley's pictures of Paris will comprise TOP's last 2010 Collector Print sale, this coming fall.
The master printer
But that's not even all. Decades ago, when I first learned that Henri Cartier-Bresson didn't print his own photographs, I heard that his prints were made by a master printer living in Paris. When Josef Koudelka began exhibiting and selling prints, the same man was chosen to make the prints. The man was Voja Mitrovic. Apart from being Cartier-Bresson's printer for very close to thirty years and the main printer of Koudelka's work, Voja (the "j" is pronounced like a "y") printed for, among many others, Rene Burri, the Eugene Atget archive, Sebastiao Salgado, Marc Riboud, Edouard Boubat...
...And Peter Turnley. It turns out that Voja is one of Peter's oldest friends in Paris. How they first met is a great story, but I'll let Peter tell that story himself at a later time—in fact, we'll publish a couple of posts about Voja before the print sale starts.
Voja retired in the late 1990s (Peter also has a wonderful picture of Henri Cartier-Bresson and Josef Koudelka begging Voja not to retire, and we'll publish that here too, eventually).
The good news for us is that, as a special favor to Peter, Voja Mitrovic has agreed to make the prints for the TOP fall Collector Print sale.
Voja Mitrovic and Peter Turnley
Peter himself is a living link to the great photographers of the city. He's known or befriended a great many of the most famous names in French 20th-century photography. He started out as an assistant to the lyrical Paris photographer Robert Doisneau; he knew Cartier-Bresson, and was great friends with Edouard Boubat. Although his eye is distinctly his own, his work is very consciously part of the grand tradition of the photography of Paris.
The exact pictures we've chosen won't be revealed until the sale starts, and I'll give you all the details at a later date. The important thing to say here, now, is that the pictures represent the very best of Peter's long photographic love affair with Paris. They'll be archival fiber-based black-and-white silver prints in the standard European collector size, signed on the front by Peter and on the reverse by both Voja and Peter.
And in their own way, they'll be every bit as much of a bargain as our past sales have been—not quite as inexpensive in absolute dollars, but still very significantly less expensive than you could buy them for any other way.
We're currently planning the posts about Voja for mid-August (and you should look forward to those), and the "Peter Turnley's Paris" print sale will start sometime in the middle third of September, and run for the usual five days.
I'll keep you posted, of course.
Mike
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Original contents copyright 2010 by Michael C. Johnston and/or the bylined author. All Rights Reserved.
Another Take
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TOP reader Mark Muse's portrait of Benita, the subject of Patricia Dalzell's portrait that we talked about in this post. (No one has ever told me Benita's last name—maybe she has just the one, like Cher or Ctein?)
Mike
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Original contents copyright 2010 by Michael C. Johnston and/or the bylined author. All Rights Reserved.
Featured Comment by Mark Muse: "Keller."
Doctor My Eyes (the Coda—and a Caution)
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The other day I went to the optometrist for my final post-operation follow up. I was disappointed to discover that my vision had changed during the healing process. I knew that I would need glasses for reading since the procedure would not rectify that, however, I expected that I would not need glasses for any other purpose. Unfortunately, I am still left with a double astigmatism which keeps me from having the perfect vision that I want. There are lenses that could have been implanted that would have corrected that problem; however, my co-pay would have been $1,500 per eye. The insurance company's reasoning is that you can always continue wearing glasses.
...And so I will. While my vision is good enough to have the restriction removed from my driver’s license, it is not what I anticipated. When I saw the difference a prescription could make and the minimal expense, I chose to continue wearing glasses. Just a cautionary tale for all of you: many doctors will hint that the surgery will leave you with 20/20 vision; just be aware that your mileage may vary. Lens implantation is, regrettably, not a "magic bullet."
Chris
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Original contents copyright 2010 by Michael C. Johnston and/or the bylined author. All Rights Reserved.
Featured Comment by R. Edelman [responding to "se" in the comments]: "Optometrists do not perform eye surgery. They are not physicians. Cataract surgery is done by ophthalmologists. Ophthalmologists are graduates of medical school. Look for the 'MD' (Medical Doctor) or 'DO' (Doctor of Osteopathy) after their names. Ophthalmologists are physicians who specialize in the eyes and the visual sensory system.
"While I am on the topic, there are some ophthalmologists who are also very talented photographers. Off the top of my head I can think of two. One is James Brandt, M.D., who is Director of the Glaucoma Service at the University of California at Davis. Dr. Brandt's photograph of a brown pelican is featured on a United States postage stamp. The other is Howard Schatz, M.D., who was a highly regarded retina specialist before he became a highly regarded professional photographer. My apologies to all of the others that I did not mention."
‘Digital Restoration’ on Sale
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I mentioned in my brief review of Ctein's book that he was planning a sale soon, and that I'd post the alert when it started. For the next month, to celebrate the publication of the second edition, Ctein will be selling autographed copies of Digital Restoration From Start to Finish at a substantial discount. The following prices below include Priority Mail shipping and California sales tax (if due): $39.00 for California; $36.00 for the rest of the U.S.; $43.00 for Canada; and $46.00 for all other countries.
For ordering details, please go here and scroll to the bottom of the page. The sale ends August 15, 2010.
Mike
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