Apr 12
TruthBeauty: Pictorialism and the Photograph as Art, 1845-1945
TruthBeauty: Pictorialism and the Photograph as Art, 1845-1945
Vancouver Art Gallery from February 2 to April 27, 2008
-from their website:
"The hauntingly beautiful photographs created within the Pictorialist movement in the late-nineteenth and early-twentieth centuries are among the most important works of art in the medium’s history. TruthBeauty will bring together more than 150 of the finest photographs by renowned artists such as Julia Margaret Cameron, Baron Adolph de Meyer, Alfred Stieglitz, Edward Steichen and Josef Sudek. The Pictorialist artists sought to elevate photography—still seen in the nineteenth century as merely a mechanical tool of documentation—into the realm of fine art. Drawing upon major museum collections worldwide, including the George Eastman House International Museum of Photography and Film, the Museum of Modern Art, New York and the Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography, this historic exhibition will reveal the rich aesthetic, diverse approaches and technical innovations of Pictorialism—one of the first truly international artistic movements. "
The exhibition is organized by the Vancouver Art Gallery in collaboration with George Eastman House International Museum of Photography and Film. Curated by Alison Nordstršm, Curator of Photographs, George Eastman House International Museum of Photography and Film.
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I hit this exhibit today. This was pretty powerful - showing the struggle that Americans and others found validating photography as fine art. Well executed with most prints being actual museum vintage , not just replicas on the circuit. $15 was quite reasonable and coat check seemed rather secure with my camera gear. No lineups and some decent multimedia. Worth the hour long stopover.
No commentsApr 12
Series: The Flea Market
Flea Market vendors are a strange bunch. They seem to buy and sell more between each other. They seem oblivious to new prices being HALF what they charge. It's all fun and games. The Vancouver flea market is an indoor and scaled down Canal Street. The knock offs are getting better I'll admit. But Grandma's purple or orange glass art still has a place.


Apr 6
Website redesign
Did it need it? Probably. Has my focus changed? Yes. Did I add fancy new images? A couple. I have to really think about my galleries soon as I feel my work is getting a bit stale. Not the work I do, but the work I've been showing. I think I may never find where I fit in the photo world. Maybe that's a good thing.
Like it? Hate it? go here to see the new front door and etc.
13 commentsMar 30
The world of tilt shift
To many new photographers the idea of tilting and shifting a lens is foreign. It was done for many years before fixed lens cameras were in the hands of the masses. Recently lens babies have been quite popular - front of the lens tilt adapters. A kludge if you will. The Canon range of TS-E lenses in 24mm L, 45mm and 90mm have been around for a bit. I decided on moving to a 24mm TS-E after realising I like out of control DOF and I'm tired of tilting buildings in my architectural work.
Read a bit more here.
A simple series called "Caravan".

Mar 23
So Hollister, why is your blog so wide?
Well Mr. Kott-ehr, I'll tell you why… I run Google Analytics and I've been letting it run wild lately. Getting stats from all the four corners of the universe. And what does it report back? Well NO ONE uses 800×600 anymore and a small percentage of visitors (under %23) used anything less than 1280. Considering many photographers visit here, I've bumped it to 1280. My apologies if you are a sub 1280 user. I'm running dual 1920×1200 here so 1280 doesn't seem that bad in my books.