1. ASMP is in the process of gathering information regarding Digital Railroad and the status of any unpaid licensing fees at the time DRR terminated business. If you believe that you were owed licensing fees and have not been paid or have been partially paid, please provide that information and any documentation you might have to drr@asmp.org. All information is currently for internal ASMP use only and no further use will be made without your express consent.

    Thank you for your timely consideration and cooperation.

    Eugene Mopsik
    Executive Director

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  2. I recently received an email from the amazing still life photographer James Worrell who has made a great little film about plastic water bottles (make sure you don't miss the film at the end of this post). I have always loved his sense of color so I asked him about his career and he was gracious enough to respond.

    How did you become a photographer?

    I have been a photographer for as long as I can remember, since that first Instamatic as a kid to the used Watson Press Camera in college. It was when I was living in LA about to start my MFA program at CalArts that I became a commercial photographer. Faced with well over 50 grand in loans I dropped out and started assisting two great photographers in LA and found my calling.

    Whose work inspires you (past or present)?
    Sugimoto, John Baldasari, Joel Peter Witkin, Vic Muniz, Irving Penn, Richard Avedon, Craig Cutler, Carlton Davis, Robert Tardio, Christopher Griffith.

    What brought you to still life?
    I had always been attracted to objects and to arranging objects. In undergrad my work took many elements and constructed them into a single object, usually a group of photographs to be viewed as one image. I assisted pros for about 3 years in my early 20s, and of course we all wanted to be fashion photographers. But I took an immediate liking to the still lifers, less people involved and less attitude. The technical side of commercial still life really complimented by fine art background and after about 6 months of assisting I knew I would be a still life photographer.

    Your work is so clean and your colors so strong. How did your style evolve?

    When I started shooting in the early 90s I became obsessed with clean, simple still life. At the time it seemed to me that everything was over lit and over fussed. It was in the days of shooting chrome, and getting a clean shot, especially on white, was and is trickier than one might think. I started using color as a natural way to add something to the photos without adding more stuff. This in turn became a bit of an obsession with color, monochromatic color schemes in particular. My style is always evolving, but always seems to have a bit of those first years mixed in.

    What's the best advice anyone has ever given you?
    I had been assisting for a few years and was getting burned out. I really wasn't a great assistant anymore but was caught in that classic Catch-22 of not having any money but needing money to start my own business, etc. One of my regular gigs was assisting Carlton Davis, he sat me down one day and said James, it's time. You need to go out on your own and you need to do it now. If you wait too much longer you will get stuck as a full time assistant. I will continue to hire you as an assistant when I can, but it's time. He kicked me out of the nest in such a gentle, encouraging way I will never forget. It was terrifying; it was some of the best advice I have ever gotten.


    What made you do the water film? Was it your first?

    I have been a fan of stop action and fast cut video for years. With the economy in the tank and the rise of the internet it seemed a perfect time to experiment in new ways of using photography. How are we going to stand out in the crowd in this economy? The regular forms of promotion are not working and nobody has any money. So I have begun experimenting with unconventional promotions and it has been a blast. I started last year by doing a poster, something everyone tells you not to do. Then I began self-publishing my own "magazine" on Magcloud.com, a really great way to make a substantial promo for a reasonable amount of money. I have made magnets, bookmarks, greeting cards and have just published a Blurb book. The stop action video is one idea I have been bouncing around for a while and has turned out to be one of the most rewarding of the things I have tried this year.

    What was your aim?
    It began purely as a promotional vehicle, to show what I can do, but I am an environmentalist and a music lover, so I just did something I wanted to do. Plastic bottles really annoy me.

    How hard/easy was it? How have you promoted it?
    It wasn't that hard, but video editing is time consuming. The 1 minute 17 second film took me 3 days to storyboard, shoot and edit. I have promoted it online via email to my existing clients and friends, to hopeful clients and to other cool blogs. It's on YouTube , my website, various blogs, etc.

    Are you going to do more?
    Yes, I had so much fun with this one I am already working on a new one.





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  3. Here are two more upcoming, very cool photo contests. There's still time to enter, and I thoroughly encourage everyone to do so.

    The En Foco New Works Photography Awards Fellowship
    JUROR: Anne Wilkes Tucker, Curator, Museum of Fine Arts / Houston

    The New Works Photography Awards Fellowship, deadline July 31, 2009, is an annual program selecting three or more U.S. photographers of Latino, African or Asian heritage and Native peoples of the Americas and the Pacific.

    New Works helps artists to create or complete an in-depth photographic series exploring themes of their choice, and provides the infrastructure needed for national visibility and a professional exhibition of their new work in the New York area.

    Submissions can be in any photo-based style or genre (documentary, autobiographical, landscape, abstract, digital, pinhole, alternative processes, etc).
    Three photographers will be selected from an open and national call for entries to receive a $1,000 honorarium, photo-related supplies, technical assistance, a photographer's page on enfoco.org, an article in Nueva Luz, an En Foco membership, and a culminating group exhibit in New York.

    Next up C a l l F o r E n t r i e s : T h e S p i r i t W o r l d
    The New Orleans Photo Alliance
    Juried by Russell Joslin, the sole Owner, Editor and Publisher of SHOTS Magazine.
    Entries must be submitted by August 24, 2009.

    "Where is the spirit world? It is right here. Do the good and evil spirits go together? Yes they do..." - Brigham Young

    The New Orleans Photo Alliance
    is seeking photography-based works that explore the theme of spirits and the spiritual world during the season of Halloween and All Saints Day. Submissions may include but are not limited: documentary, fine art, and conceptual images that depict or evoke the spiritual, supernatural and unearthly: including places, people and rituals here on earth which relate to the topic.

    Selected entries will be exhinited in the New Orleans Photo Alliance Gallery during the months of October and November 2009. they will also be featured and archived in the Alliance online gallery and considered for publication in the New Orleans Photo Alliance Best of 2009 Photo Annual. in addition, the juror will award cash prizes.

    Timeline:
    Deadline for submission: Monday, August 24, 2009, 12:00 midnight
    Notification of acceptance: Monday, August 31, 2009
    Deadline for receiving accepted works: Tuesday, September 22, 2009
    Opening Reception: Thursday, October 1, 2009, 6-9pm
    Exhibition dates: October 1, 2009 - November 22, 2009
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  4. WIN-Initiative is calling for entries for their open international contest, 10 BEST 10, deadline August 5, 2009. It’s free to enter, and they’re calling for up to 10 images of any kind, any genre. It is a juried competition that is looking for the very best contemporary photography. And in the interest of full disclosure, I want to mention that I am one of the five judges. I’m excited to see what photography the world has to offer.

    According to the site,
    “The winners of 10 BEST 10 will have their work appear in a Gala Event and Exhibition that will kick off this year's Photo Expo Week in the fall. Additionally, interviews and spreads in Resource magazine and WINk magazine (WIN's online photography magazine) will give further exposure and press attention to the winning team of photographers.”

    You can check it out here . Keep watching the site as more prizes are being announced all the time, and you can look at the most recent submissions. I encourage everyone to enter, and submit his or her most interesting and unique work.

    I'll be talking more about WIN-Initiative later this week, so stay tuned.
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  5. So you’re thinking about making a Print-On-Demand book but you don’t know which company to use, or whether it’s going to be worth the money. Well ASMP has done the groundwork for you. Their great idea was to try eighteen different companies and invite people to review and rate the results. About 100 people showed up to studio 385 and here’s how it averaged out (on a scale from 1 to 10. The results are listed from the least expensive to the most):


    Printer Overall Rating
    MagCloud 6
    Create Space 4.8
    Comix Press 4.7
    LuLu 5.7
    Apple 7.4
    Adorama 7.5
    My Publisher 6.7
    Blurb 6.7
    Pikto 6.3
    Shared Ink 7
    White House 7
    Mpix 7.1
    Bay Photo 7.4
    A & I 8.2
    Embassy 6.3
    Fastback 6.9
    Paper Chase 7.3
    Asuka 7.9

    People were asked to rate these categories on a scale of 1 to 10: color, detail, binding and cover, spread (gutter), paper, bang for the buck, overall. There was a handout with other information, including notes on each interface, turn-around information, brand mark and cost. All books were the same amount of pages and used the same photos. If anyone is interested in more of this information, email me and ask and I will get it to you.

    Every photographer I talk to wants someone to publish a book of his or her work. But book publishing is falling apart like every other part of the publishing world, and POD can give you the power to make something happen for yourself. That’s a very good thing. But it’s up to you to take control and make the book what you want to have.

    More and more photographers are using print-on-demand for their portfolios, to promote projects and create leave behinds for photo editors and art buyers. From people I’ve talked to, and from my own experience, the response is pretty much positive across the board. POD gives photographers options that didn’t exist before.

    Now I know many photographers bitch about printing quality and consistency, and if you’ve got a story to tell, tell it here. But there’s more to print-on-demand than that--editing and sequencing are as much if not more important.

    If the images in your book aren’t the best representation of your work, and the flow of the book doesn’t work then I don’t care how perfect the color match is. In all the debate about POD, quality and color match are all I hear photographers talk about. Having been a photo editor for many years, it seems that editing and sequencing are the least valued factors in creating a print-on-demand book.

    You have to put the book together thinking about the people that are going to see it. Don’t get so wrapped up in your own work that you can’t see it clearly. From my point of view print-on-demand gives you the flexibility to put your work together for all kinds of different audiences. But if you aren’t thinking from their point of view your book won’t create the kind of success you’re looking for.

    This is my inaugural blog for ASMP and I want to know what you want to hear about. Send me your comments, your ideas, your suggestions, and if necessary, your criticisms, and I'll let you know what I think.

    Here are the links:
    http://magcloud.com/
    https://www.createspace.com/
    http://www.comixpress.com/
    http://www.lulu.com/
    http://www.apple.com/ilife/iphoto/print-products.html
    http://www.adoramapix.com/PhotoBooks.aspx
    http://www.mypublisher.com/
    http://www.blurb.com/
    http://www.pikto.ca/books/
    http://www.sharedink.com/
    http://www.whcc.com/
    http://www.mpix.com/
    http://www.bayphoto.com/catalog/pp_books.htm
    http://www.aandibooks.com/
    http://www.embassyprobooks.com/
    http://fastbackbooks.com/
    http://www.paperchase.net/
    http://asukabook.com/

    People were asked to rate these categories on a scale of 1 to 10:
    color, detail, binding and cover, spread (gutter), paper, bang for the buck, overall. There was a handout with other information, including notes on each interface, turn-around information, and cost. All books were the same amount of pages and used the same photos.



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About Me
About Me
My Photo
I've been in the art and photography industry for 15 years as a photographer, curator and art consultant. I've been fortunate to work with ASMPNY as a portfolio reviewer as well as a panelist for photography events here in the city. Earlier this year my exhibition, "Hotter Than July" was reviewed by senior art critic of New York Magazine, Jerry Saltz. In the past I founded veaux.org, a site for emerging creatives with a gallery space in Chelsea as well as curator/consultant of exhibitions for the Hipstamatic iphone app. Currently I'm working on a project documenting the New York art world while curating exhibitions around the city.
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