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Seen Reading (Oct 2015) by Michael Grace-Martin
15 Thursday Oct 2015
Posted MGM's Photos, Nudes
in≈ Comments Off on Seen Reading (Oct 2015) by Michael Grace-Martin
15 Thursday Oct 2015
Posted MGM's Photos, Nudes
in≈ Comments Off on Seen Reading (Oct 2015) by Michael Grace-Martin
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23 Sunday Aug 2015
Posted Announcements, Fine Art
in≈ Comments Off on Submissions for The Male Nude blog post
I’m planning to do a blog post about the Male Nude in photography. Many of the male nude photos (applies to many female nudes as well) I see are unimaginative, lack drama or artistry, have no sense of humor, and/or are simply smutty or pornographic.
If you have some male nude photos you’ve taken that you think rise above these common pitfalls, I’d like to see them! You may submit up to 3 images. I will feature the ones I like in my upcoming blog post with appropriate photo credit and link to your website.
Please size the images you submit within a 640 pixel high and 760 pixel wide rectangle; the closer they are to 760 pixels wide and/or 640 pixels tall, the better. Please make sure your attached image/s is/are less than 1mb in file size.
Depending on how long it takes to receive enough images I like, I expect to put the blog post up by October 1st, 2015.
Thanks!
Visit Michael's Art Photography Portfolio at SaatchiArt.com! |
24 Wednesday Apr 2013
Posted MGM's Photos, Street
in≈ Comments Off on Cameraman at Turning Stone Casino
While photographing a fashion show at Turning Stone Casino, I looked over and saw this sight. The cameraman was set up to video record the fashion show. It was a pure deadpan, fine art composition to me (having little to do with the actual “content” of the fashion show). So I present it here, separately from the fashion show photos…:-).
Click image..
Visit Michael's Art Photography Portfolio at SaatchiArt.com! |
10 Saturday Mar 2012
10 Saturday Mar 2012
Posted by mgm | Filed under All, MGM's Photos, Nudes
≈ Comments Off on Dragonfly (female nude)
07 Wednesday Mar 2012
Posted All, MGM's Photos, Nudes
inAlthough Upstate New York has some urban areas, the vast majority of it consists of pastures, forests, farms, and rocky gorges. Due to this, it is an ideal place to photograph natural environmental nudes.
This series features a male nude rollicking on a small farm in the Finger Lakes area. Damaris Vasquez of Damaris Photography assisted.
Visit Michael's Art Photography Portfolio at SaatchiArt.com! |
08 Thursday Dec 2011
(1/14/2014) Note: apparently, the photos we linked to are no longer available. We’ll see if we can re-link to them somehow.
“An abandoned western gold rush town sets the stage for a photographic fantasy of three beautiful young women.” Ghost Town is the result of Stephan Würth’s lifelong fascination with the American West. — Clic bookstore & gallery
(Note: this review is based on the 21 photos from the book that *were* displayed at Stephan Würth’s website.)
It would appear that Stephan’s main body of work is in fashion photography; all of the photographs included in his “portfolios” section at his website are fashion-related at the time this review is being written.
Though some of the book’s photos remind me of Playboy-esque soft porn, there’s sufficient artistry in his treatment of the subject matter to bring it back into a primarily art-oriented enterprise–though with a fairly obvious sexual fantasy targeted undercurrent.
I am sure we could endlessly debate whether these photos are “art” or soft porn. I am OK with leaving this an open question.
What I wonder about more than the art versus porn question is what Würth’s conceptual and visual goals were with this project? For example, take a look at the following two photos from the book:
These two photos–and there are more of this sort–seem to be here simply to remind us that we’re in a western ghost town, people; forget those naked women for a moment!
There are a number of purely artsy “detail”-type shots (e.g., a table outside on the plains with a framed photograph of a man that seems to date from early cowboy days) whose purpose seems primarily decorative.
Then, there are these very fashion-oriented photos. For example:
There are also some photos of the women that seem very posed and isolated from the ghost town context (e.g., there’s one of a totally nude woman seated on a chair with a plain canvas backdrop…fairly disconnected from her surroundings).
What it comes down to is this: he seems to be going in 3 or 4 different directions at once with these photos, which I think ends up diluting their overall effect.
Don’t get me wrong…I think he’s got some nice photographs in this book. The problem is they seem loosely put together without a clear visual or conceptual direction. Sure they’re all black & white photos–and maybe they all took place in a single ghost town location–but I don’t think that ensures the sort of continuity the human mind yearns for in a singular book-based project.
Does this review mean you shouldn’t purchase the book? Not necessarily. It’s just what I think; you can make up your own mind.
You can see more of Stephan Würth’s Ghost Town project and book at his website. It’s available for purchase at Clic Bookstore & Gallery and other booksellers.
Visit Michael's Art Photography Portfolio at SaatchiArt.com! |