2012
Signed, titled, dated, and numbered, verso
Archival pigment print
13.5 x 13.5 inches
(Edition of 5)
Contact gallery for price.
Please note that prices increase as editions sell.
2012
Signed, titled, dated, and numbered, verso
Archival pigment print
13.5 x 13.5 inches
(Edition of 5)
Contact gallery for price.
Please note that prices increase as editions sell.
2012
Signed, titled, dated, and numbered, verso
Archival pigment print
13.5 x 13.5 inches
(Edition of 5)
Contact gallery for price.
Please note that prices increase as editions sell.
Silverlake, CA,
2012
Signed, titled, dated, and numbered, verso
Archival pigment print
13.5 x 13.5 inches
(Edition of 5)
Contact gallery for price.
Please note that prices increase as editions sell.
2012
Signed, titled, dated, and numbered, verso
Archival pigment print
13.5 x 13.5 inches
(Edition of 5)
Contact gallery for price.
Please note that prices increase as editions sell.
2013
Signed, titled, dated, and numbered, verso
Archival pigment print
13.5 x 13.5 inches
(Edition of 5)
Contact gallery for price.
Please note that prices increase as editions sell.
2012
Only available as part of the limited-edition box set of the book Barmaid (Edition of 5)
Walnut and steel box
Signed copy of book, plus four 7 x 7-inch archival pigment prints:
“Barmaid”
“The Pool Table (Self Portrait)”
“The VIP Room”
“Embrace”
Contact gallery for price.
2012
Only available as part of the limited-edition box set of the book Barmaid (Edition of 5)
Walnut and steel box
Signed copy of book, plus four 7 x 7-inch archival pigment prints:
“Barmaid”
“The Pool Table (Self Portrait)”
“The VIP Room”
“Embrace”
Contact gallery for price.
2012
Signed, titled, dated, and numbered, verso
Archival pigment print
13.5 x 13.5 inches
(Edition of 5)
Contact gallery for price.
Please note that prices increase as editions sell.
2012
Signed, titled, dated, and numbered, verso
Archival pigment print
13.5 x 13.5 inches
(Edition of 5)
Contact gallery for price.
Please note that prices increase as editions sell.
2012
Signed, titled, dated, and numbered, verso
Archival pigment print
13.5 x 13.5 inches
(Edition of 5)
Contact gallery for price.
Please note that prices increase as editions sell.
For nearly two years, artist John Arsenault worked as a bar-back at the Eagle L.A.—a gay leather bar in the Silverlake neighborhood of Los Angeles. Over the course of that time, he shot thousands of photographs largely with his iPhone. A visual diary of sorts, the collection of images is titled “Barmaid.”
Larry Collins writes:
Édouard Manet’s 1882 Impressionist masterpiece “A Bar at the Folies-Bergère,” in the Courtold Gallery in London, is the touchstone for John Arsenault’s “Barmaid.” It is a painting featuring an expressionless young woman in heavy makeup, seen behind a white marble bar with sparkling glass and foil, bottles of red and green liqueurs and champagne, a bowl of tangerines and a vase of roses.
The key photograph in Arsenault’s “Barmaid” is found somewhere in the middle of his group of 50 images. It re-creates Manet’s painting closely, casting Arsenault himself as the barmaid, but now at the Eagle L.A., 133 years later. Arsenault stands impassively, just as Manet’s model does, with a bowl of limes instead of tangerines, an intense orange backlight as compensation. Behind Arsenault hangs a large painted mural of leathermen engaged in an erotic dance. The Folies-Bergère was like the Eagle in many respects: a place of entertainments and erotic negotiations. In Arsenault’s collection we also find a photograph of the pink rose, a nod to the pink rose in Manet’s painting. Arsenault has bared his furry chest to us, whereas the young woman has a floral posy at her décolletage. Manet’s painting represents a nightclub, a circus even, with a trapeze artist above the crowd, all reflected in the mirror behind the bar. A hallmark and a strength of Manet’s greatest paintings is that much is left unexplained, not meant to be decoded.
From Michael Musto’s article from The New York Times:
Long before “RuPaul’s Drag Race” made cross-dressing a televised form of mainstream entertainment, there was the drag boom of the 1980s and ’90s, when a burgeoning New York club scene was filled with drag performers who perfected the art form.
Much of that scene would be forgotten were it not for the drag comic who goes by the stage name Linda Simpson, who captured it all with a point-and-shoot camera she kept in her purse, making her the Studs Terkel of the nip-and-tucking crowd.
Browse the exhibition “Pages” at ClampArt
Browse all of Linda Simpson’s work at ClampArt
From Andrew Boryga’s article for The New York Times:
In Brian Finke’s photographs of the bodybuilding world, almost everyone and everything is ripped—even the trophies. Many of the men and women boast layers upon layers of muscles stacked like bricks, their thighs rippling with cuts and their bodies glowing from orange dye. Muscles are abundant, clothing is not: glittery bathing suits, thong-like “performance suits” and the occasional pair of heels.
Mr. Finke was sent to Las Vegas in 2003 by “Men’s Journal” to document the annual Mr. Olympia competition, a pageant of modern anatomic marvels. He completed the assignment but was still fascinated. “You can’t really capture how a body looks visually any better than you can in these competitions,” he said. “It’s such an extreme level.”
Browse the series “Bodybuilding” at ClampArt
Browse the exhibition “Most Muscular” at ClampArt
Browse all of Brian Finke’s work at ClampArt
1984
Signed and numbered (4/200) in pencil, recto
Color woodcut
16.75 x 22.5 inches
Sold.
From Dana Rose Falcone’s article for Entertainment Weekly:
Whether you livestreamed the acts or experienced them live in Grant Park, chances are you’ll love the images photographer Jill Greenberg captured behind the scenes from the fest. Featuring stills of artists like Alesso, Tove Lo, and Charli XCX, Greenberg’s photos were taken for Instagram’s Portrait Series.
“I had about three to five minutes for each artist or band, so it was simpler when it was just one singer to get a nice portrait,” Greenberg tells EW via email. “I was working alone with no lights or reflectors and a DSLR. In most cases I had not heard their music so it was a bit crazy!”
Jen Davis will speaking as part of The 2015 Woodstock Photography Workshop & Lecture Series at the Center for Photography Woodstock (CPW) on Saturday, August 8th, 2015, at 7:30 pm.
For the past eleven years, Jen Davis has been working on a series of self portraits that deal with issues surrounding identity, beauty, and body image. Additionally Davis has explored men as a subject and is similarly interested in the notion of relationships with the camera (both physical and psychological).
Jen Davis is a New York based photographer. Her first monograph titled “Eleven Years,” published by Kehrer Verlag (Germany) was released in the Spring of 2014 accompanied by her first solo show in NYC at ClampArt. She received an MFA from Yale University and BFA from Columbia College Chicago.
CPW
59 Tinker Street
Woodstock, NY 12498
845-679-9957
Click here to learn more
Browse Jen Davis’ series “Eleven Years”
Browse all of Jen Davis’ work at ClampArt
Blog post by:
Andrew Kurczak, Gallery Assistant
From Kate Bratskeir’s article for The Huffington Post:
In an effort to help the left-behind pooches get scooped up into welcoming homes and provided with the belly rubs they deserve, photographer Traer Scott started taking powerful closeups of shelter and homeless dogs. Over the past 10 years, Scott, who has a pit bull of her own and volunteers at shelters, has amassed an incredible collection of animal photos. “I found that no matter what, I couldn’t bring myself to delete their photos, which were in some cases, the only record of their existence,” she wrote on her website.
From Amy Touchette’s article for tuts+:
“It is the photographer, not the camera, that is the instrument.” Late, great Magnum photographer Eve Arnold once famously said that, and I’ve yet to meet a photographer who disagrees. But I would add that it’s only true when all is in working order to begin with, when the photographer is able to get out of the camera’s way in order to be the instrument.
Historically, street photographers have preferred small, unobtrusive, quiet cameras, because they allow them to be agile and discreet, the Leica maybe being the most well-known. Soon after Oskar Barnack and Ernst Leitz invented the Leica 35mm camera in 1924, many street photographers happily put aside large format cameras for its compact body and fast captures. For legendary street photographer Henri Cartier-Bresson, it was groundbreaking: “As I photograph with my little Leica, I have the feeling that there is something so right about it: with one eye that is closed, one looks within. With the other eye that is open, one looks out.”
Image: Copyright Frances F. Denny from the series “Pink Crush.”
Brian Paul Clamp juried “The Curator 2015″—Photo District News’ search for outstanding fine art photographers. Work by the six winners—Maija Tammi, Amy Friend, Frances F. Denny, Gina Nero, Heather Evans Smith, and Anna K. Shimshak—can be seen online at http://www.pdncuratorawards.com/gallery/2015/.
The six photographers will display display their work in an exhibition at Foley Gallery from July 29 – August 7, 2015:
Foley Gallery
59 Orchard Street
New York City 10002
http://www.foleygallery.com/exhibitions/focus/pdn_presents_the_curator/images
The three jurists included Brian Paul Clamp, Director, ClampArt; Deborah Willis, Ph.D., Chair of the Department of Photography & Imaging at the Tisch School of the Arts at New York University; and Michelle Dunn Marsh, Executive Director of Photographic Center Northwest, and founder of Minor Matters Books.
For a PDF about the competition which appeared in the July 2015 issue of Photo District News:
PDN—The Curator 2015
Blog post by:
Brian Paul Clamp, Director