Portfolio Competition III 2011
de Texas Photographic Society
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The Texas Photographic Society’s quarterly Portfolio Competition with juror Chris Bennett features an Emerging and a Mid-Career Photographer every month. TPS defines an “Emerging Photographer” as a person who has not been featured in a solo gallery exhibition and defines a “Mid-Career Photographer” as a person who may have had a solo gallery exhibition, but is not represented by a commercial gallery.
The 2011 Portfolio Competition III winners are:
Emerging Photographers
Meg Birnbaum (Somerville MA), “Person/Persona”
“I became aware that for many of the people I’ve photographed, the experience of performing and exploring other personas became a positive act and solution towards coping with difficult and problematic personal situations . . .”
Don Norris (Hattiesburg, MS), “Not of Our Time: Ten Antebellum Meetinghouses”
“In my documentation, I wanted to make suitably formal photographs of these formal places of worship.”
Suzanne Hanson (Kingston, MA), “New Days/Old House”
“Life is transient but the house is durable.”
Mid-Career Photographers
David Johndrow (Austin, TX), “Terrestrials”
“The inspiration for this body of work came to me while working in my garden, where the most interesting things happen on a very small scale . . .”
Keith Prue (Boston, MA), “Magical Thicket”
“When I’m looking through the lens, alive to the anticipation and excitement of seeing anew, there is a mysterious convergence of my inner and outer worlds, and I’m drawn into a meditative state.”
Willson Cummer (Fayetteville, NY), “Sacred Paradox: The Onondago Lake Project”
“I hope that my images will cause viewers to contemplate our relationship to the natural world and consider our impact.”
The 2011 Portfolio Competition III winners are:
Emerging Photographers
Meg Birnbaum (Somerville MA), “Person/Persona”
“I became aware that for many of the people I’ve photographed, the experience of performing and exploring other personas became a positive act and solution towards coping with difficult and problematic personal situations . . .”
Don Norris (Hattiesburg, MS), “Not of Our Time: Ten Antebellum Meetinghouses”
“In my documentation, I wanted to make suitably formal photographs of these formal places of worship.”
Suzanne Hanson (Kingston, MA), “New Days/Old House”
“Life is transient but the house is durable.”
Mid-Career Photographers
David Johndrow (Austin, TX), “Terrestrials”
“The inspiration for this body of work came to me while working in my garden, where the most interesting things happen on a very small scale . . .”
Keith Prue (Boston, MA), “Magical Thicket”
“When I’m looking through the lens, alive to the anticipation and excitement of seeing anew, there is a mysterious convergence of my inner and outer worlds, and I’m drawn into a meditative state.”
Willson Cummer (Fayetteville, NY), “Sacred Paradox: The Onondago Lake Project”
“I hope that my images will cause viewers to contemplate our relationship to the natural world and consider our impact.”
Características y detalles
- Categoría principal: Libros de arte y fotografía
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Características: Apaisado estándar, 25×20 cm
N.º de páginas: 42 - Fecha de publicación: oct. 08, 2013
- Idioma English
- Palabras clave Portfolio Competition III, Texas Photographic Society, Photography, TPS
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