26/07/98

Photographer David Douglas Duncan Archive at Ransom Center, Austin, Texas

Photographer David Douglas Duncan Archive
Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center, University of Texas, Austin

The Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center at The University of Texas at Austin announces the acquisition of the award-winning photographer David Douglas Duncan's world-renowned archive. The Ransom Center archive captures the career of one of America's great photographers, containing over sixty years of photographs, negatives, correspondence, albums, manuscripts, equipment, and personal memorabilia. "Acquiring David Douglas Duncan's prestigious archive brings the Ransom Center's overview of photojournalism's impact into the modern age," noted Roy Flukinger, curator of the Center's photography collection.

David Douglas Duncan: "Tough, Audacious, and Original"

Born in Kansas City, Missouri, in 1916, David Douglas Duncan began his career as a photojournalist at the age of 18. While a student at the University of Arizona majoring in archaeology, he snapped the fleeing victims of an early-morning hotel fire using a 39-cent camera, a gift from his younger sister. He was later surprised to learn that one frantic guest captured on his film was America's Public Enemy No. 1, the infamous John Dillinger.

From this serendipitous beginning, David Douglas Duncan went on to become one the world's greatest wartime photographers, capturing highly acclaimed and poignant images in World War II, Korea, and Vietnam. Of his combat photography, Duncan himself wrote, "I wanted to show the way men live and die when they know death is among them."

Commissioned as a U.S. Marine Second Lieutenant in 1943, David Douglas Duncan earned numerous decorations for the aerial photographs he boldly snapped from the belly of a P-38 fighter plane. David Douglas Duncan later linked up with Fijian guerrillas, fighting the Japanese from behind enemy lines, and was in China before Peking fell to the Communists.

As a civilian photographer for LIFE magazine, David Douglas Duncan rejoined the Marines in Korea, photographing nameless battles, the liberation of Seoul, and the Marines' harrowing Christmas retreat from the Yalu River. Through Duncan's stark black-and-white photographs, the epic saga of the "Forgotten War" came alive, piercing America's collective memory. Today, that memory remains vital, due largely to what Edward Steichen, former Curator of Photographs at the Museum of Modern Art, called "the greatest photographic document ever produced showing men at war."

Already retired from the military with the rank of Lieutenant Colonel, David Douglas Duncan again rejoined the Marines in Vietnam, most notably photographing the siege of Khe Sanh. In 1968, Duncan flew straight from the besieged outpost to hand deliver the negatives that were to comprise I Protest!, his broadside denunciation of the war.

While perhaps most known for his wartime photographs, David Douglas Duncan has aimed his camera at a wide-range of subjects. He provided the first coverage penetrating the Iron Curtain and, with the assistance of Soviet Premier Nikita Khruschev, spent three years photographing Russia's Kremlin treasures. His intimate friendship with Pablo Picasso and his family produced one of the most exclusive and revealing portraits of the artist and his world. Seven books by Duncan capture these insights including the best seller Picasso's Picassos (1961).

In 1972, David Douglas Duncan set a new standard in photographic achievement, becoming the first photographer to hold a one-person exhibition at New York's prestigious Whitney Museum of Art. His career, aptly described by the esteemed foreign corespondent John Gunther as "tough, audacious, and original," produced a number of legendary images that the Ransom Center will proudly preserve for scholarship, public viewing, and posterity.

The David Douglas Duncan Archive at the Ransom Center

The Ransom Center's collection of David Douglas Duncan's work is expansive and unique. It contains all of Duncan's wartime photos and negatives, including his award-winning coverage of both the Korean and Vietnam wars. In addition, the collection includes the total body of writing, editing, and design work Duncan undertook to produce his war trilogy--This is War! (1951), I Protest! (1961), and War Without Heroes (1970)--and the production materials (correspondence, contracts, text, dummies, layouts, and proofs) for each of Duncan's twenty-one books. The collection also houses extensive correspondence between Duncan and his family and friends, editors at LIFE, and numerous notables of the twentieth century.

The David Douglas Duncan Endowment for Photojournalism

After the Ransom Center attained his archive, David Douglas Duncan, in a gesture characteristic of his legendary individuality, returned the initial purchase fee to establish an endowment in his name. The David Douglas Duncan Endowment, devoted to enhancing the study of photojournalism, will support exhibitions, public events, research, and new acquisitions at the Ransom Center. In partnership with related academic departments, the Center will seek to maximize the educational and public benefit of these activities. With this goal in mind, the Duncan Endowment's first exhibition is currently being planned in conjunction with the Lyndon Baines Johnson Library at the University of Texas. The exhibition, scheduled to open in the first week of March, 1999, will feature the works of the endowment's creator, David Douglas Duncan.

HARRY RANSOM CENTER
University of Texas, Austin
300 West 21st Street, Austin, Texas 78712

22/07/98

Polaroid PDC 640 Digital Camera

Polaroid PDC 640 Digital Camera

Building on the success of its PDC 300 digital camera, Polaroid Corporation today announced its newest consumer digital camera, the PDC 640 Digital Camera, offering consumers more features and better resolution for an affordable suggested retail price of $299. Leveraging its consumer and retail marketing expertise, Polaroid is leading the industry in driving digital photography to the mainstream, and is currently the leading digital camera company in the mass merchandising outlets.

“Based on the success the PhotoMAX digital imaging cameras, software and peripherals have had to date with consumers and our retailers, we will continue to focus our efforts on this growing consumer imaging market space,” said Steve Golden, senior marketing manager, Consumer Electronics New Product Team.  “Polaroid understands the consumer’s need for easy-to-use, affordable technology.  The PDC 640 offers our consumers a better value with a higher resolution digital camera and more features to meet the growing needs of the new ‘cyber-shutterbugs.’”

Polaroid’s PhotoMAX PDC 640 provides point and shoot simplicity and offers high quality digital images with 640 x 480 resolution.  The PDC 640 features both an optical viewfinder and a LCD monitor that allows users to record, playback or delete images.  The camera has storage capacity of up to 64 images (24 in VGA resolution), and includes traditional camera features such as a built-in flash and self-timer.

The PDC 640 is bundled with Polaroid’s PhotoMAX Image Maker Software, the fun easy-to-use, creative imaging software package featured in Polaroid’s new consumer digital product line.  PhotoMAX takes the difficulty out of digital imaging with a new, easy-to-use, program for capturing, editing and utilizing digital images on PCs.  PhotoMAX Image Maker Software combines six digital imaging applications in one easy-to-use format, offering consumers all the techniques needed to manipulate and experiment with images.

The new PDC 640 Digital Camera Creative Kit has everything contemporary “cyber-shutterbugs” need to take pictures and download them to the computer.  The Creative Kit includes the PDC 640 Digital Camera, the PhotoMAX Image Maker Software CD, batteries, PC and TV Cables, an AC adapter, a wrist strap, Quick Start Guide and online tutorials.

PhotoMAX PDC 640 is the latest addition to the new line of Polaroid consumer digital imaging products that already includes the Polaroid PhotoMAX PDC 300 Digital Camera Creative Kit, the first truly consumer-friendly digital camera and software package.

Suggested retail price for the complete PhotoMAX  PDC 640 Digital Camera Creative Kit is $299. The PDC 640 Digital Camera Creative Kit and the stand-alone software are available at major retailers, traditional photographic stores and computer and electronic stores nationwide.

To use the PDC 640 Digital Camera a Pentium class personal computer, CD-ROM drive, 12 MB of RAM, 60 MB of hard disk space, a color monitor and sound card are recommended. 

POLAROID CORPORATION
www.polaroid.com

19/07/98

Katharine Dowson, The Whitworth Art Gallery, University of Manchester - Myriad

Katharine Dowson: Myriad
The Whitworth Art Gallery, University of Manchester
24 July - 8 November 1998

A new exhibition in the Whitworth's Mezzanine Court will provoke visitors to look at the beauty of everyday details and the hidden landscapes within nature and the human body. Katharine Dowson will be showing 'Myriad', a wave curtain of optical lenses, alongside other recent works.

'Myriad' is a curtain made up of lenses of differing focal lengths so that the visitor sees a different view through each lens. The view intensifies details and illuminates the act of seeing as you become aware that what you see is not necessarily the truth. The curtain will bisect the Mezzanine Court in a gentle wave running parallel to the red-brick Victorian facade, providing a unique sensory experience.

Katharine Dowson is also interested in life forces, and the ambiguous response we have to images of our body's biology. Her 'Optic Box' series of fragile organic shapes are both sensual and repulsive at the same time. The boxes hang on the wall and use light from within to illuminate the glass, wax and resin images on display. 'Link', a recent work, involves photographs of belly buttons magnified to such a large size as to be unrecognisable and distorted.

The artist's work seduces the viewer with its surface beauty, but a sense of discomfort remains as we are unsure what lies below.

Katharine Dowson was last at the Gallery as part of Bittersweet last year and previously in Whitworth Young Contemporaries in 1991. She has had solo shows in London and Norwich and her work is included in the Saatchi Collection.

THE WHITWORTH ART GALLERY
The University of Manchester, Oxford Road, Manchester M15 6ER
www.whitworth.man.ac.uk

12/07/98

Futurisme. L'Italie face à la modernité, 1909-1944, Fondation de l'Hermitage, Lausanne

Futurisme 
L'Italie face à la modernité, 1909-1944
Fondation de l'Hermitage, Lausanne
10 juillet - 11 octobre 1998

Après avoir consacré une saison au fauvisme à travers la personnalité de Charles Camoin, puis une exposition à la peinture pointilliste, avant d'aborder le surréalisme de Victor Brauner à l'été 1999, la Fondation de l'Hermitage, poursuivant son approche des grands courants picturaux de la fin du 19e siècle et du début du 20e siècle, présente cet été une exposition consacrée au mouvement futuriste.

Le futurisme est un courant d'avant-garde qui naît en 1909, avec la publication du Manifeste futuriste du poète et théoricien italien Marinetti (1876-1944) dans le quotidien français Le Figaro. Immédiatement, ce texte recueille un écho favorable auprès des artistes qui rédigent le Manifeste des peintres futuristes (1910). Balla, Boccioni, Carrà, Russolo et Severini seront les principaux représentants de ce mouvement qui fait table rase de la tradition et prône une esthétique nouvelle fondée sur le progrès, la machine, la vitesse. L'automobile de course cristallisant dans ce contexte les caractéristiques de leurs idéaux, les futuristes ne tarderont pas à la déclarer « plus belle que la victoire de Samothrace ».

Sur un plan formel, le futurisme prend ses sources dans la peinture néo-impressionniste, comme l'indiquent les oeuvres de jeunesse de Severini ou Balla, ainsi que dans le cubisme, découvert d'abord par Boccioni et Carrà lors d'un séjour à Paris en 1911. Du divisionnisme, les artistes italiens retiennent la couleur exacerbée; aux toiles cubistes, ils empruntent l'éclatement des formes; mais leurs apports essentiels résident dans l'étude du mouvement et sa traduction par des lignes dynamiques.

Le futurisme connaît une phase historique dans les années 1910. Parti de la littérature, il s'étend à la poésie, la musique ou l'architecture. En peinture, Balla parmi d'autres introduit les premiers signes d'une abstraction sur le point d'éclore. Dans les années 1920, les nombreux échanges entre les artistes européens orientent les peintres futuristes vers l'utilisation de formes géométriques hautes en couleur: le style de Depero est caractéristique de ce moment. En 1929, la signature du Manifeste de l'aéropeinture futuriste renouvelle pour une décennie le mythe de la machine et engage la peinture vers une exaltation nationaliste, ainsi qu'en témoigne l'oeuvre de Tato. A la même période enfin, les toiles de Prampolini ou Fillia intégrant des éléments informels suggèrent également une connaissance du surréalisme français.

Entre figuration et abstraction, l'exposition rend compte, à travers plus d'une centaine d'oeuvres, de ces influences croisées, artistiques, littéraires, historiques, politiques et sociales et montre avant tout que le futurisme s'affirme comme un mouvement résolument moderne, à l'origine des avant-gardes de notre siècle.

L'exposition de la Fondation de l'Hermitage est organisée avec le concours du Palazzo Ducale de Gênes et de la Fondation Mazzotta de Milan. Composée principalement d'oeuvres appartenant à des collections italiennes, elle est présentée à Lausanne sous une forme nouvelle, complétée de peintures provenant de collections suisses, allemandes et françaises.

LISTE DES ARTISTES
  • Giovanni ACQUAVIVA 1900-1971
  • Roberto Marcello (Iras) BALDESSARI 1894-1965
  • Giacomo BALLA 1871-1958
  • BENEDETTA (Benedetta Cappa Marinetti) 1897-1977
  • Umberto BOCCIONI 1882-1916
  • Anton Giulio BRAGAGLIA 1890-1960
  • Arturo BRAGAGLIA 1893-1962
  • Francesco CANGIULLO 1884-1977
  • Pasqualino CANGIULLO 1900-1975
  • Carlo CARRÀ 1881-1966
  • Mario CHIATTONE 1891-1957
  • Primo CONTI 1900-1987
  • Tullio CRALI 1910-
  • Tullio (Mazzotti) D'ALBISOLA 1899-1971
  • Fortunato DEPERO 1892-1960
  • Nicolaj DIULGHEROFF 1901-1982
  • Gerardo DOTTORI 1884-1977
  • Leonardo DUDREVILLE 1885-1975
  • FARFA (Vittorio Osvaldo Tommasini) 1881-1964
  • FILLIA (Luigi Colombo) 1904-1936
  • Ugo GIANNATTASIO 1888-1958
  • Alf GAUDENZI 1908-1980
  • Alberto MAGNELLI 1888-1971
  • Virgilio MARCHI 1895-1960
  • Filippo Tommaso (Emilio) MARINETTI 1876-1944
  • Ivo PANNAGGI 1901-1981
  • Enrico PRAMPOLINI 1884-1956
  • Angelo ROGNONI 1896-1957
  • Ottone ROSAI 1895-1956
  • Mino ROSSO 1904-1963
  • Luigi RUSSOLO 1885-1947
  • Antonio SANT'ELIA 1888-1916
  • Alberto SARTORIS 1901-1998
  • Gino SEVERINI 1883-1966
  • Mario SIRONI 1885-1961
  • Ardengo SOFFICI 1879-1964
  • TATO (Guglielmo Sansoni) 1896-1974
  • Rougena ZATKOVÀ 1885-1923

FONDATION DE L'HERMITAGE
2, route du Signal - CH - 1000 Lausanne 8
www.fondation-hermitage.ch

08/07/98

Oona Stern, Jeremy Sigler, Cindy Poorbaugh at Sara Meltzer's On view..., New York

INSTALLED: Oona Stern, Jeremy Sigler, Cindy Poorbaugh
Sara Meltzer's On view..., New York
July 7 - July 31, 1998

Sara Meltzer's On View... presents three sculptural installations by three emerging artists. The group show, INSTALLED brings together the work of artists Oona Stern, Cindy Poorbaugh and Jeremy Sigler. Gracefully straddling the line between sculpture, architecture and drawing, all three artists have INSTALLED works that coexist in a compatible yet imposing way.

Oona Stern's stone column subtly parallels the gallery's only actual structural support. As the lone column in the space ambiguously imposes its presence, so to does Stern's stone construction. The handmade stones hang from the ceiling seemingly as an illusion and as a physical reality. Indebted to the beauty of paradox, Stern's piece is simultaneously heavy yet weightless, flat whilst dense, floating but hanging. Oona Stern received her MFA ('96) from the School of Visual Art, New York, NY. Her work is currently on view at White Columns in the "Wall Work" exhibition curated by Lauren Ross and Elizabeth Ferguson.

Jeremy Sigler's clay wall pieces are poetic in both a literal and figurative manner. As the doughy animators' clay encases the column of the gallery, the viewer senses the intense emotional grip of the artist, as well as that of the poem and the sculpture itself. Rather than opposing the architecture of the space, Sigler's piece boldly embraces it. Never just words on a wall, a calm yet confident play arises between literal language and the language of form. Jeremy Sigler received his MFA ('96) in Sculpture from UCLA, Los Angeles, California. He recently exhibited at Tricia Collins Grand Salon, NY.

Cindy Poorbaugh's Blotch exists as an oversized digitally generated drawing. Directly applied to the wall as if it were literally wallpaper, the piece envelopes the physicality of the gallery wall. The image depicted, although two-dimensional, draws the viewer in creating the illusion of depth. Having begun as a small doodle in the artist's notebook, Blotch was then enlarged and therefore transformed. Specifically created to suit the space, Blotch deliberately retains the sense of chance found in the original doodle. Cindy Poorbaugh received her MFA ('95) from Bard College, Annandale-on-Hudson, NY. Her work is also currently on view at White Columns in the "Wall Work" exhibition curated by Lauren Ross and Elizabeth Ferguson.

SARA MELTZER ON VIEW...
588 Broadway, Room 612, New York, NY 10012
www.sarameltzer.com