Archive for the 'Hot Shots News' Category

Hot Shot Shuli Hallak has Chelsea show

Posted in Hot Shots News on May 12th, 2008 by JenSnow

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CSAV Chicago, New York by Summer ‘07 HHS winner Shuli Hallak

Summer ‘07 Hot Shot, Shui Hallak, has a show at Chelsea’s Moti Hasson Gallery. The gallery will show work from the same series that won her a coveted HHS spot.

CARGO, a solo exhibition of photographs by SHULI HALLAK is up from MAY 8-JUNE 29, 2008 at Moti Hasson.

Congratulations, Hot Shot!

Shuli Hallak’s recent photographs document cargo in its state of transit between production and consumption. Almost every manufactured product humans consume spends time in a shipping container, yet consumers remain largely unaware of the process by which goods are actually transported. Hallak describes a cargo ship as a “sublime, moving city” and finds beauty in the fundamental necessity of the shipping industry, in the romance of travel over sea, and in the raw, precise, purely functional architecture of ports. In “Cargo,” Hallak unveils an essential stage in the delivery of goods from manufacturer to consumer and invites viewers to share in her process of discovery and in her fascination with what she finds.

Visit Shuli’s HHS page, her website, and her current show.

Hey, Hot Shot! We need a break.

Posted in Announcements, General, Hot Shots News on April 24th, 2008 by JenSnow

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By Summer ‘06 Hot Shot Kate Bingaman-Burt.

The past few weeks have been great, but, look, we need a break.

And, by “break,” I mean a short pause here as we get ready, technically, to launch the first Hey, Hot Shot! edition of 2008.

So grab your portfolio, and start working on your statement and bio; I look forward to seeing them when we return.

20×200 photographer Luke Strosnider a friend of HHS

Posted in Hot Shots News on April 23rd, 2008 by JenSnow

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From Room Temperature, by Kirby Pilcher

Today’s 20×200 edition is photogaphs by Luke Strosnider, who, as Ms. Bekman points out in her newsletter, is a colleague of Hey, Hot Shot! alums Kirby Pilcher and James Rajotte at the Visual Studies Workshop.

You don’t get her newsletters? You’re missing out. Sign up to get gossip like this and first crack at each 20×200 edition.

Hot Shots in the news: Baguskas review in Design Arts Daily

Posted in Hot Shots News, Media Mentions, Spring '06 Hot Shots, What Are You Up To? on April 21st, 2008 by JenSnow

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Ian Baguskas’s Rincon Artificial Island and Pipeline, Ventura, California, 2007 40×51″ C-print

Peggy Roalf reviews Sweet Water, Spring ‘06 Hot Shot Ian Baguskas’ current show at Jen Bekman Gallery, in Design Arts Daily.

She writes:

“In the last several years, photographers around the globe have taken up the plight of the earth, further endangered today through climate change, deforestation, and drought. The landscape, with human activities accepted as a ‘natural’ aspect of the view for better or worse, provides the raw material, from both a visual and philosophical standpoint. One of the most beguiling exhibitions on view in New York is ‘Sweet Water,’ photographs by Ian Baguskas, at Jen Bekman Gallery.

Baguskas’ Sweet Water is up until May 3, 2008.

Hot Shot Carlo Van de Roer: today’s 20×200 edition

Posted in 20x200, Fall '07 Hot Shots, Hot Shots News on April 17th, 2008 by JenSnow

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Carlo Van de Roer’s Hey, Hot Shot! winning entry.

Carlo Van de Roer
, a Fall 2007 Hot Shot, is almost a sell out. And he will be, soon, surely. For the second time. His Untitled (Bondi Baths, Sydney, Australia), 2007 is today’s 20×200 edition. And there are only two prints left! His previous 20×200 edition, Untitled (Astoria Park, Queens, New York), is long gone.

Carlo’s work is in high demand. He won the 2006 ADC Young Gun Award, the 2007 IPN Go Indie Award, the 2007 PDN Pix Digital Imaging Award, and most recently he won 1st place for fine art at the 2007 APA Awards. So you should hurry.

Links: SVA in MoMA bathroom, Cindy Sherman in the NY canon, Pulitzer Prizes announced, Legos, photography auctions, and Juergen Teller tells Marc Jacobs what to do

Posted in Hot Shots News, Of Interest, web on April 11th, 2008 by JenSnow
  • The New York Times reports that MFA students at SVA show at the MoMA. In the bathroom. The show lives on, online.
  • In the 40th anniversary of New York Magazine, they attempt to define a New York Canon from 1968-2008, and they also run a few Q&As with “iconic New York artists about creating their masterworks.” Mark Stevens talks to Cindy Sherman about her Untitled Film Stills. She discusses process, character creation, and, to some extent, intent.
  • Earlier this week, the Pulitzer Prizes were announced. Adrees Latif of Reuters won for Breaking News Photography “for his dramatic photograph of a Japanese videographer, sprawled on the pavement, fatally wounded during a street demonstration in Myanmar.” Preston Gannaway of the Concord (N.H.) Monitor won the Feature Photography category “for her intimate chronicle of a family coping with a parent’s terminal illness.”
  • Mike Stimpson uses Legos to recreate famous photos from Robert Capa’s Death of a Loyalist, to Cartier-Bresson’s Behind the Gare Saint Lazare. “Strobist.com taught me everything I know,” he says.
  • It’s photo auction time. Controversy over the oldest — or just an old— photo. Even Gawker’s covering the photo auctions, drawn to the nudes. Phillips de Pury canceled a sale of Diane Arbus prints because of concerns about a recent lawsuit. There was even a Fine Photobooks Auction at Christie’s.
  • Cathy Horyn discusses Juergen Teller’s role in Marc Jacobs’ ad campaigns. How great is it to see a photographer so in charge of a commercial campaign? Small thing: the NYT blog swapped out the photo they initially had (Teller’s ad that featured Victoria Beckham’s legs splayed out of a shopping bag) at the top of the post. Why?

AIPAD Photography Show: New York

Posted in Exhibitions, Hot Shots News, Of Interest, tips + tricks on April 10th, 2008 by JenSnow

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Winter ‘07 Hot Shot Mickey Smith

Why visit one gallery, when you can visit 75+ all at once? The AIPAD Photography Show runs today through Sunday at the Park Avenue Armory. “More than 75 of the world’s leading fine art photography galleries will present a wide range of museum quality work by contemporary, modern and 19th century masters at the Park Avenue Armory in New York City,” says AIPAD.

“AIPAD is dedicated to creating and maintaining high standards in the business of exhibiting, buying and selling photographs as art. Acting as the collective voice of the art photography dealers that make up its membership, AIPAD maintains ethical standards, promotes communication within the photographic community, encourages public appreciation of photography as art, concerns itself with the rights of photographers and collectors, and works to enhance the confidence of the public in responsible photography. AIPAD members provide a wide range of services to the public, such as exhibitions, appraisals, expert opinions and consultations.”

And while an armory full of exhibitors can feel like overload, it’s also a great chance to quickly visit with some people you might not usually have the time (or the access) to see.

Hot Shot has a show: Mark Marchesi at Nelson Hancock

Posted in Exhibitions, Hot Shots News, Of Interest, Spring '07 Hot Shots on April 7th, 2008 by JenSnow

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From The Town and the City, by Spring ‘07 Hot Shot Mark Marchesi

Spring 2007 Hot Shot Mark Marchesi has a solo show at Nelson Hancock Gallery, in DUMBO. In The Town and the City, Marchesi travels between New York City and his home in southern Maine. He compares and contrasts, but also proves some similarities that might not be noticable at first glance.

“The Town and the City” is up through April 26.

Stay tuned for more from Mark and interview updates with other Hot Shots too.

20×200: You Are Important

Posted in 20x200, Hot Shots News, Jen Bekman Projects on April 3rd, 2008 by JenSnow

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You Are Important by Spring ‘05 Hot Shot Stephanie Cinelli, one of this week’s 20×200 editions

I was looking at Stephanie Cinelli’s work just last week and I even grabbed You Are Important for possible use with a post. All this without knowing what was to come from 20×200 — a gorgeous print of that very image.

It’s so direct. It’s sort of pretty and sort of sad. But it seems naked, stolen, like that glance you probably shouldn’t take into someone’s bathroom when you’re just passing through their house. Cinelli photographed a private space and a pretty public affirmation propped up there. Every product in the shot is turned away from the sign except for the Vicks VapoRub. The Vicks VapoRub is Important! And so are you.

Hey, Hot Shot, what are you up to?

Posted in Hot Shots News on April 1st, 2008 by JenSnow

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Willow Grove, Pennsylvania, 2007, by Hot Shot Justin James Reed.

We’re about to launch a new feature at the Hey, Hot Shot! blog, a series of interviews to catch up with Hot Shots after they’ve won. So it was great to see this interview with Justin James Reed on Liz Kuball’s site.

L: You were a Hey, Hot Shot! in May 2007. (Congratulations again!) I’m curious about the whole HHS experience. Had you applied before, or did you get in the first time you applied? Has being a Hot Shot opened any doors for you that you’re aware of? What’s your take on contests like this in general? Do you recommend applying to them?

J: HHS was a great experience. Jen Bekman is awesome, and it gave me a ton of exposure. My Web site and blog traffic exploded, and I think it helped me get my name out there to a certain extent. It is impossible to gauge if it “opened doors” for me, but the exposure and experience was irreplaceable. And, of course, it is always encouraging to receive recognition for your work.

This was the second time I applied, however with different work (the first time was with my Westward series). I definitely felt ready and more prepared the second time around, which I believe came through in the work and statement. Jörg [Colberg] was a juror, and had just been kind enough to feature some of my photographs on Conscientious. So, I also knew that he was aware of and liked my work. All of this goes into my feelings about these kinds of contests. They are incredibly necessary for beginning photographers to get exposure—I kind of look at them as the initial testing grounds. However, they are very subjective, so knowing who the jurors are, and applying with the appropriate work, will increase your chances of success. Of course, because these contests are so subjective, I think it is important to not give up and keep applying if you do not succeed at first. This is something I have to remind myself of all the time. There are so many amazing photographers out there that being a juror must be so hard. However, if you believe in your work, and keep plugging away, you will prevail. And hey, if you don’t, well at least you had a blast and made some damn fine photographs!