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Perhaps some of you have a little time to spare? I want to tell the story of this image. I am paid (among other things) to teach physics, and sometimes the audience consists of colleagues from other disciplines. A few years ago I was given the opportunity to reconcile my artistic and scientific interests by giving a seminar on the principles of image formation in a camera obscura, pinhole camera : the simplest camera you can imagine, a small hole in a box, but curiously rather tricky from a scientific point of view. In the continuity I made images of this busy work place with a 4x5" pinhole camera, with an average 1h30 of exposure time. The concept was : what would you see if your eye only caught one image per second? Many people passed in the corridor and in front of the camera during the exposure, without leaving any trace. A colleague who was interested in what I had said the day before, tried to apply it, and managed to leave a mark. We are still friends, and teaching is
Sabine Weiss
Sabine Weiss (July 23, 1924 – Dec. 28, 2021) is universally recognized as a member of France’s celebrated humanist school. In the first West Coast exhibition, Peter Fetterman Gallery shares the dynamic body of work of this incredible female artist who passed away in December 2021. Times Square, New York, 1955 © Sabine Weiss - Courtesy Peter Fetterman Gallery Sabine Weiss was born in Switzerland in 1924. In 1942, she wondered what to do with her life, and decided to pursue a career in what she loves: photography. Weiss’ mother showed her art galleries and Roman churches at a very young age, and her researcher-chemist father loved to see her print her photos with the resources available at the time. From 1942 until 1945 she was an apprentice at Boissonnas in Geneva, house of a dynasty of photographers that celebrated its 80th birthday. Jardin du Luxembourg, Paris, 1956 © Sabine Weiss - Courtesy Peter Fetterman Gallery In 1945, Sabine Weiss moved to a studio in Geneva, but in 1946
George and Sherryl Kamper in self isolation
Series of photos created by husband and wife team, George & Sherryl Kamper. Shot around their Ft. Lauderdale home. Depicting a humorous approach to self isolation and “Bubble Boy”. Hope you'll enjoy it, more on their site : https://www.georgekamper.com/bubble-boy-gallery
Rene Groebli : The Magic Eye
René Groebli’s exhibition The Magic Eye was abruptly interrupted by the coronavirus crisis. However, it is possible to take a 3D tour.
René Groebli’s “Lying Nude,” taken in Paris in 1952, opens this week’s online exhibition. It was shot during Groebli’s honeymoon with his wife Rita in a Paris hotel room where they had secluded themselves for three days. The picture is a testament to the intimacy and closeness between the newlyweds – a form of familiarity that is difficult to achieve in professional constellations between artist and model.
It is no wonder that the series became the pedestal
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